Delroy Edwards
Delroy Edwards (born c. 1990 as Brandon Avery Perlman) is an American electronic musician, record producer, and DJ based in Los Angeles, recognized for his influential work in the house music underground through gritty, lo-fi house tracks featuring thick, punk-inflected tape-hiss textures and abstract, experimental mixtapes.[1][2][3] His music draws from Chicago house traditions, lo-fi collage techniques, and the raw energy of Los Angeles's punk scene, often prioritizing atmospheric immersion over polished club precision in both production and DJ sets.[1] The son of actor Ron Perlman and jewelry designer Opal Stone Perlman, Edwards grew up in Los Angeles amid the city's vibrant punk and music subcultures, which shaped his early creative influences.[1] After being expelled from the California Institute of the Arts, he relocated to New York City around age 18–20, where he immersed himself in the electronic music world by working at the influential A1 Records store alongside Ron Morelli, founder of the L.I.E.S. Records label.[1][3] This period marked the beginning of his professional trajectory, leading to his debut release, the critically acclaimed EP 4 Club Use Only in 2012 on L.I.E.S. Records, which established his reputation for raw, tape-saturated house sounds.[1][4] Edwards co-founded his own label, L.A. Club Resource, in 2013 to release his work and support like-minded artists, expanding his output to include full-length albums such as Slowed Down Funk Vol. 1 (2014), Aftershock (2018), and Change the World (2021).[1][4][5] His discography also features notable EPs like White Owl (2013) and Wagon Wheels (2019), both on L.I.E.S., blending funky, distorted beats with experimental elements.[4] As a DJ, he has performed at major events, including the 2024 Club to Club Festival in Turin, Italy, and maintained an active touring schedule into 2025 with sets in New York City and Toronto.[6][7] Through these efforts, Edwards has solidified his role as a key figure in contemporary electronic music, bridging underground house aesthetics with broader experimental influences.[3]Early life
Family and upbringing
Delroy Edwards was born Brandon Avery Perlman on March 28, 1990, in Los Angeles, California.[4] He is the son of actor Ron Perlman and jewelry designer Opal Stone Perlman, who is of Afro-Jamaican descent.[1][8] Edwards has an older sister, Blake Amanda Perlman, born on January 7, 1984.[9] Raised in Los Angeles, Edwards grew up in a creative household shaped by his father's prominent acting career and his mother's background in fashion and jewelry design.[8][10] The family environment provided access to diverse music collections, reflecting the artistic influences of his parents and exposing him to a broad range of sounds from an early age.[11] This included genres such as post-punk, industrial, funk, R&B, and noise, drawn from family record collections that highlighted the eclectic tastes fostered by his upbringing.[1] Additionally, his familial musical heritage featured professional jazz drummers among relatives, including his uncle and grandfather, which contributed to an early rhythmic foundation in his childhood experiences.[11]Musical education and early influences
Edwards received training in jazz drumming from a young age, with his uncle and grandfather serving as professional jazz drummers who provided foundational rhythmic instruction and his first drum kit.[11] His family's exposure to diverse sounds, including through his mother's collection of gangsta rap and dancehall tapes, further shaped his early listening habits.[12] Edwards briefly attended the California Institute of the Arts to study music, where he engaged primarily with an African drum composition course that aligned with his percussion background, though he described himself as mentally disengaged from the program overall, leading to his expulsion.[11][1] This formal exposure reinforced his interest in primal, tribal rhythms, which he later connected to house music's heartbeat-like qualities.[11] A friend's introduction—through his sister's circle—marked Edwards' entry into house music, as the individual played tracks for him and demonstrated how to operate a drum machine, sparking his shift from live drums to electronic production tools.[1] Complementing this, his mother's curation of underground hip-hop on cassette tapes immersed him in bootleg culture and raw, unpolished sounds from the 1980s and 1990s.[12] These influences converged in Edwards' early experiments with recording, where he sampled hip-hop tapes, layered drum beats, and captured the results onto cassettes to achieve a warm, lo-fi aesthetic reminiscent of era-specific underground aesthetics.[12] Often conducted in bedroom settings, these sessions emphasized analog grit over polished production, laying the groundwork for his signature raw style.[11]Career
Move to New York and debut
In 2010, at the age of 20, Edwards relocated from Los Angeles to New York City to pursue opportunities in electronic music production and DJing.[1] Upon arriving, he took a job at the renowned A1 Records, a key hub for vinyl collectors and electronic music enthusiasts, where he worked closely with Ron Morelli, the founder of the influential L.I.E.S. Records label.[3] This role provided Edwards with direct access to the city's underground electronic scene, allowing him to build connections among producers, DJs, and label operators through daily interactions at the shop and exposure to rare records and emerging talent.[12] Edwards' time at A1 lasted approximately 1.5 years, during which Morelli mentored him on dance music history and production, deepening his understanding of genres like house and techno.[12] These experiences helped him network within New York City's tight-knit electronic community, including attendance at underground parties and collaborations with like-minded artists associated with L.I.E.S.[3] His professional breakthrough came in 2012 with the release of the 4 Club Use Only EP on L.I.E.S. Records, a four-track 12-inch vinyl that showcased raw, lo-fi house tracks such as "Bells" and "When the Glue Won't Burn." The EP quickly established Edwards as a rising figure in the outsider house movement, praised for its gritty, DIY aesthetic that blended classic house elements with experimental edge, and it marked his debut as a professional producer in the scene.[13] Following the release, Edwards began performing at intimate underground venues and parties in New York, further solidifying his presence through sets that highlighted his burgeoning DJ skills.[3]Founding of labels and relocation
After gaining experience in New York City's underground scene, Edwards returned to his hometown of Los Angeles around 2013.[13][1] There, he founded the label L.A. Club Resource in 2013 along with Jimmy Mock and Henoch Moore, initially as an extension of L.I.E.S. Records but quickly establishing its own identity to facilitate self-releases and support emerging artists in the local house music community.[13][14][11] The label emphasized raw, lo-fi electronic sounds reflective of Los Angeles nightlife, providing a platform for Edwards' productions as well as contributions from like-minded producers.[8] In conjunction with L.A. Club Resource, Edwards helped establish Gene's Liquor, an indie distribution firm and reissue label operated with collaborators, focusing on experimental and obscure underground works such as long-lost New Orleans rap albums and gritty funk recordings.[8][15] This venture handled distribution for L.A. Club Resource releases while excavating and reissuing rare tapes from genres like Chicago house and Memphis rap, broadening Edwards' influence in archival and experimental electronic music.[12][16] Post-relocation, Edwards intensified his DJing activities, often performing under the alias DJ Punisher for his techno-oriented sets, which featured noisy and corporeal explorations.[12][17] This period saw him secure local residencies and gigs in Los Angeles venues like Avalon, while expanding internationally with his first European tour alongside the L.I.E.S. crew in March 2013, and subsequent appearances at festivals such as Club to Club in Italy.[8]Key releases and collaborations
Delroy Edwards achieved a breakthrough with his 2014 album Teenage Tapes, released on The Death of Rave, which featured a collection of raw, tape-recorded tracks blending outsider house elements with lo-fi aesthetics.[18][19] This debut full-length marked his shift toward more experimental production, drawing from cassette tape manipulation and guitar pedal effects to create a gritty, immersive sound.[20] Subsequent releases solidified Edwards' reputation in underground electronic music. In 2016, he issued Hangin' at the Beach on L.I.E.S., a tape of sun-soaked, vaporwave-inflected house tracks that captured a laid-back Californian vibe. This was followed by Aftershock in 2018 on L.I.E.S. Records, exploring post-rave deconstructions with distorted synths and rhythmic fragmentation. Edwards continued this trajectory with Slap Happy in 2020, a playful yet abrasive LP on L.I.E.S. Records, and Change the World in 2021, which incorporated more polished techno influences while retaining his signature raw edge.[21] A significant collaboration came in 2018 with Desert Sessions, a joint album with Dean Blunt released on L.A. Club Resource, featuring 19 improvised tracks that merged Blunt's hazy, psychedelic production with Edwards' house foundations for an experimental, desert-noir atmosphere.[22][23] The project highlighted Edwards' ability to adapt his style in partnership, resulting in a critically noted fusion of their respective underground scenes.[24] In recent years, Edwards has revisited and expanded his catalog with reissues and new mixes. Slowed Down Funk Vol. I and Vol. II: Hate Is Beneath Me, originally from 2014 and 2015, were reissued in 2025, updating their chopped-and-screwed tributes to Houston's DJ Screw with fresh digital availability and remastered audio.[25][26] Culminating the year's output, Palace: Delroy Edwards Winter Mix, a DJ mix released on November 7, 2025, via Apple Music, showcased his live set curation with 18 tracks blending archival cuts and new edits for a seasonal, introspective flow.[27] Edwards has maintained an active touring schedule, including performances at the 2024 Club to Club Festival in Turin, Italy, and sets in New York City and Toronto in 2025.[6][7] Edwards' output has evolved from early EPs on labels like L.I.E.S. to full-length albums on his L.A. Club Resource imprint, increasingly influenced by his live DJ performances that emphasize spontaneous mixing and tape manipulation techniques.[4] This progression reflects a maturation in his production, prioritizing immersive, set-like experiences over standalone tracks.[3]Musical style
Genres and production techniques
Delroy Edwards primarily works within the genres of lo-fi house, outsider house, techno, chopped and screwed, and minimal synth, blending elements of electronic dance music with raw, experimental edges.[16][13][28] His lo-fi house tracks emphasize distorted, atmospheric grooves that deviate from polished club standards, while outsider house influences appear in his unconventional, DIY-leaning interpretations of house rhythms.[29] Techno elements surface in his offbeat, pulsating compositions, often infused with hip-hop undertones from chopped and screwed techniques, as seen in slowed-down, pitch-shifted reinterpretations of funk and rap sources.[30][28] Minimal synth aspects emerge in sparse, synth-driven pieces that evoke coldwave and early electronic minimalism.[31] Edwards' production techniques center on achieving analog warmth and imperfection through cassette recording and intentional tape hiss, which impart a gritty, low-fidelity aesthetic to his work.[16][30] He frequently employs slowed-down samples drawn from '80s funk, house, and rare punk records, manipulating them to create disorienting, trippy soundscapes that blur genre boundaries.[30][16] Minimalist arrangements dominate his output, featuring sparse layering of elements like live-played basslines and short, looped structures that prioritize mood over complexity.[30][16] Industrial and post-punk influences are incorporated via abrasive textures and noisy loops, adding unease to otherwise danceable tracks.[16][30] In terms of tools and methods, Edwards relies on hardware synths such as the Sequential Circuits Pro One and Roland SH-101 for melodic and bass elements, paired with drum machines like the Roland TR-8 to drive urban, machine-like rhythms.[32][30] DIY editing techniques, including bouncing tracks through vintage compressors and radio transmitters, further enhance the abstract, lo-fi character of his productions, often resulting in bedroom-recorded pieces that feel intimate yet expansive.[16] These approaches draw briefly from early Chicago house's stripped-down ethos but evolve into distinctly hazy, experimental forms.[1]Influences and evolution
Delroy Edwards' musical influences draw heavily from the foundational sounds of Chicago house, pioneered by figures like Ron Hardy and Gene Hunt, whose raw, DIY ethos and infectious rhythms shaped his early appreciation for underground dance music.[12][13] This connection is evident in Edwards' reissues of classic Chicago tracks on his L.A. Club Resource label, such as Gene Hunt's After School, which highlight the genre's innovative Black artistry from the 1980s.[13] Additionally, the chopped and screwed techniques of Houston producer DJ Screw profoundly impacted Edwards, inspiring his Slowed Down Funk mixtape series, where he reworks Southern rap and '80s R&B into hazy, pitched-down grooves that evoke Screw's lean-infused alchemy.[33][34] Edwards' style also reflects exposure to '80s industrial and post-punk acts, including noise experiments and new wave bands like Joy Division, Depeche Mode, and New Order, which his family introduced through punk-pop radio and underground shows during his youth in Los Angeles.[1] These elements contributed to the gritty, unpolished textures in his work, blending abrasive noise with rhythmic drive.[17] In the early 2010s, Edwards emerged with raw, tape-based outsider house productions, characterized by lo-fi analogue recordings and a nostalgic warmth derived from cassette culture and bootleg tapes he encountered growing up.[12] His 2012 debut EP 4 Club Use Only on L.I.E.S. Records exemplified this phase, focusing on unrefined techno and house tracks that prioritized underground club utility over polish.[1] Edwards' relocation to New York City in 2010 immersed him in the underground scene, where working at A-1 Records alongside Ron Morelli expanded his palette and prompted a shift toward experimental mixtapes incorporating hip-hop samples and abstract collages.[1][12] This evolution continued into the late 2010s and 2020s, yielding more structured yet gritty outputs like the eclectic Hangin' at the Beach (2016), which fused post-punk basslines, psychedelic funk, and tape-decayed grooves, marking a departure from strict genre confines toward broader, hip-hop-inflected abstraction.[13] By the 2020s, Edwards' productions had refined their edge while retaining raw energy, increasingly weaving in Memphis rap influences and boogie elements, as seen in releases on L.A. Club Resource that prioritize forward-thinking hybrids over traditional house forms.[13] Post-2021, his focus intensified on slowed funk reimaginings, extending the Slowed Down Funk aesthetic into ongoing DJ mixes and 2025 releases such as the track "Swingin The Bitch" on L.I.E.S. Records and new volumes of Slowed Down Funk, which continue to emphasize his lo-fi, experimental house style.[35][36][26]Discography
Studio albums
Delroy Edwards released his debut studio album, Teenage Tapes, in 2014 on The Death Of Rave, a mini-LP compiling experimental analog synth and noise tracks he recorded during art school.[37][38] Hangin' at the Beach followed in 2016 via L.A. Club Resource, a 30-track double LP blending lo-fi house, minimal synth, and personal reflections on youth and escapism that marked a pivotal moment in his growth as a producer.[39][40] In 2018, Edwards issued Rio Grande on L.A. Club Resource, an eclectic collection of raw house and electro tracks evoking borderland vibes and underground club energy.[41][42] That same year, he released Aftershock on L.I.E.S. Records, a 14-track double LP drawing from Chicago house influences with sparse rhythms, fat basslines, and italo-inspired arpeggios for high-energy dancefloors.[43][44] Desert Sessions (2018, L.A. Club Resource), a collaborative album with Dean Blunt, features untitled experimental soundscapes blending ambient noise, distorted electronics, and abstract improvisation born from improvised studio sessions.[22][45] Edwards returned to L.I.E.S. Records for Slap Happy in 2020, an eight-track LP of mature, measured lo-fi house workouts rooted in vintage drum patterns and catchy melodies.[46][47] His most recent studio album, Change the World (2021, L.A. Club Resource), delivers firmly house-oriented rhythms across eight tracks, emphasizing irreverent takes on classic club sounds to energize listeners.[48][21]EPs and singles
Delroy Edwards' early extended plays (EPs) and singles established his reputation in the underground electronic scene, often released on vinyl through independent labels like L.I.E.S. Records and his own L.A. Club Resource imprint. These shorter-form releases typically featured raw, lo-fi house and techno tracks optimized for club play, with limited pressings emphasizing analog formats.[4] His debut EP, 4 Club Use Only, arrived in 2012 on L.I.E.S. Records as a 12-inch vinyl pressing. The release includes three tracks: "4 Club Use Only," "Bells," and "Love Goes On and On," blending gritty percussion and synth lines characteristic of his outsider house sound.[49][50] In 2013, Edwards followed with White Owl on L.I.E.S. Records, another 12-inch EP available in both standard and white-label editions. Key tracks are "White Owl," "The Fast Lane," and "Drop Dead," noted for their high-energy, Chicago-influenced rhythms. The same year, he launched L.A. Club Resource with the Untitled EP, a 12-inch vinyl featuring two untitled tracks described as dark, rough beats tailored for club environments; it was issued in limited quantities, including promo white labels.[51][52][53][54] Subsequent notable EPs include Kickin Butts!! (2015, L.A. Club Resource, 12-inch vinyl), a high-tempo collection of five tracks emphasizing aggressive basslines and stripped-back production. Later releases like Dubonnet (2019, Apron Records, 12-inch) and Wagon Wheels (2019, L.I.E.S. Records, 12-inch EP) continued this trajectory, with the former exploring dub-infused house across six tracks and the latter delivering six raw jams in limited edition.[4] Post-2020 output shifted toward standalone singles and remix contributions, including the "Juice B Crypts (Delroy Edwards Mix)" single in 2020, a remix for Caribou released digitally via Merge Records, which reworks the original track with Edwards' signature lo-fi grit. No further EPs or singles were issued through 2025, though limited digital availability persists for earlier works.[55]| Release Title | Year | Label | Format | Key Tracks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4 Club Use Only | 2012 | L.I.E.S. Records | 12" vinyl | 4 Club Use Only, Bells, Love Goes On and On |
| White Owl | 2013 | L.I.E.S. Records | 12" vinyl | White Owl, The Fast Lane, Drop Dead |
| Untitled EP | 2013 | L.A. Club Resource | 12" vinyl | Untitled A1, Untitled A2 |
| Kickin Butts!! | 2015 | L.A. Club Resource | 12" vinyl | Kickin Butts!!, Say Goodnight, Die Motherfucker Die, Str8 Fuckd, Insane In the Membrain |
| Dubonnet | 2019 | Apron Records | 12" vinyl | Live And Let Live, Fat Dynamics, Dubonnet, In Orbit, How High Is The Moon, Funny Styles |
| Wagon Wheels | 2019 | L.I.E.S. Records | 12" vinyl EP | Crazy Cool Beats, Mrs. Mauva, Wagon Wheels, Jockin The 808s, Do Do, OK Track |
| Juice B Crypts (Delroy Edwards Mix) | 2020 | Merge Records | Digital single | Juice B Crypts (remix) |