Jlin
Jlin (born Jerrilynn Patton, July 30, 1987) is an American electronic musician, composer, and producer based in Gary, Indiana, renowned for her innovative fusion of Chicago footwork, experimental percussion, and classical influences in electronic music.[1][2] A former steel mill worker and self-taught mathematician, she emerged in the mid-2010s as a leading figure in experimental electronic genres, blending polyrhythmic beats with emotional depth and technical precision to challenge traditional boundaries.[2][3] Patton, who performs under the moniker Jlin, began producing music in 2008, receiving early attention in 2011 under the guidance of Chicago footwork pioneer RP Boo, drawing from the high-speed, percussive style of the genre while expanding it into broader experimental territories.[1] Her full-length debut Dark Energy (2015, Planet Mu) established her international profile, earning praise for its dense, hypnotic rhythms.[3] Black Origami (2017, Planet Mu) further solidified her reputation, featuring guests such as Holly Herndon and William Basinski, and appearing on year-end best-of lists from outlets including The New York Times and Pitchfork.[1][3] Throughout her career, Jlin has bridged electronic and classical worlds through high-profile commissions and collaborations, including remixes for Björk, choreography scores for Wayne McGregor and Kyle Abraham, and a 2025 commission from the Library of Congress—the first full electronic music commission, premiered on May 15, 2025.[3][4] Her 2022 percussion suite Perspective, performed by Third Coast Percussion, earned her a 2023 Pulitzer Prize nomination in Music and a United States Artists fellowship, highlighting her ability to integrate acoustic instruments with electronic elements in works that evoke shifting textures and grooves.[2][1] The 2023 mini-album Perspective (Cedille Records) and her 2024 full-length Akoma (Warp Records), meaning "heart" in Twi and featuring contributions from Björk, Philip Glass, Kronos Quartet, and Cécile McLorin Salvant, continued this trajectory, with Akoma receiving acclaim for its emotional and genre-defying scope.[3][2] As of 2025, Jlin remains a pivotal voice in contemporary music, with recent performances including her October 2, 2025, Twin Cities debut at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis alongside violinist Daniel Bernard Roumain and dancer Leonardo Sandoval, and an upcoming multimedia program n! = 3! (Permutation of Three) at venues like the 92NY and UCSB Arts & Lectures.[5][3] Her work has also extended to fashion, scoring Dior's Autumn-Winter 2024-2025 show, underscoring her influence across artistic disciplines.[3]Early life
Upbringing in Gary, Indiana
Jerrilynn Patton, known professionally as Jlin, was born on July 30, 1987, in Gary, Indiana, a Rust Belt city historically dominated by the steel industry.[6][7] As an only child, she grew up in a modest, secluded household amid Gary's economic hardships, where U.S. Steel's massive layoffs in the late 20th century contributed to widespread poverty affecting 28% of families and high vacancy rates in once-thriving neighborhoods.[8] Her parents, Jerry and Donna Patton, both worked demanding manufacturing jobs—her father at Kraft Foods and her mother in management at Nabisco—instilling a structured, resilient family dynamic shaped by the town's industrial decline and the need for stability.[9] Patton's early exposure to music came primarily through her mother's influence, who filled the home with soulful sounds while cooking and dancing, fostering a deep appreciation for rhythm and emotion.[9] From a young age, she immersed herself in R&B and soul records from artists like Anita Baker, Rachelle Ferrell, and Sade, whose innovative vocal deliveries and intricate grooves captivated her and honed her innate sense of timing and texture.[8] These listening experiences, often shared in the warmth of family routines, laid the foundation for her rhythmic sensibilities, emphasizing authenticity and emotional depth over convention.[10] Gary's cultural landscape, marked by its proximity to Chicago—just 30 miles away—provided indirect access to a vibrant regional music ecosystem, where the city's own house and electronic scenes echoed through local airwaves and community gatherings.[8] Despite the economic shadows of abandoned mills and urban decay, Patton's childhood in this environment cultivated a quiet introspection, retreating to her bedroom amid the soul music that her mother championed as a source of joy and connection.[9]Education and early employment
Jerrilynn Patton, known professionally as Jlin, enrolled at Purdue University Northwest (formerly Purdue University Calumet) shortly after graduating high school in 2005, to study mathematics, architectural engineering, and computer graphics technology.[11][12] She thrived in math classes where she enjoyed solving complex problems and deconstructing formulas.[12] However, by around 2011, Patton began skipping non-math classes to experiment with music production in the university library, ultimately dropping out as she grew disillusioned with the U.S. education system's emphasis on corporate conformity over personal fulfillment.[8][10] Following her departure from Purdue, Patton took a job at U.S. Steel's facilities in East Chicago and Gary, Indiana, working as a mobile equipment operator from 2012 to 2015.[11] Her role involved transporting massive steel coils across the mill floor, a physically grueling task that required steel-toed boots, protective gear, and endurance through swing shifts often lasting 12 hours or more, sometimes totaling up to 96 hours per week with overtime.[8][10] The demanding labor, characterized by heavy lifting, repetitive motions, and industrial hazards, provided stable union wages of around $21.75 to $23 per hour but starkly contrasted with her creative aspirations, serving as a grounded routine that funded her independent pursuits while fostering camaraderie among coworkers tied to the region's steel heritage.[11] Patton's mathematical background profoundly shaped her approach to music, where she drew parallels between solving equations and crafting rhythms, emphasizing pattern recognition and precision in beat construction.[8] As she stated, "Math is music," reflecting how her studies in deconstructing and rebuilding formulas informed her methodical experimentation with sequences and non-grid timings, such as exploring rhythms in threes and sixes.[10] Beginning around 2008 while still in college, she balanced her academic and later professional demands by self-teaching digital audio software like FL Studio in her bedroom studio, dedicating spare time after long shifts to rhythmic explorations that honed her disciplined production style.[12][10] This dual life of industrial labor and solitary creativity underscored the tension between physical toil and intellectual artistry in her early development.[8]Musical beginnings
Introduction to footwork
Jlin's introduction to footwork came through her exposure to the Chicago scene's burgeoning online presence in the mid-2000s, where the genre's fast-paced, percussive style—rooted in the city's house music evolution since the 1990s—captivated her via platforms like MySpace.[13][14] This sound, characterized by rapid 160 beats per minute tempos and intricate, interlocking drum patterns designed to sync with energetic dance battles, originated in Chicago's South and West Sides as an offshoot of ghetto house, emphasizing chopped samples and syncopated percussion over traditional melodies.[14][15] A pivotal inspiration was DJ Rashad, a key figure in the Teklife collective, whose mixtapes and remixes Jlin discovered online; she connected with him directly through MySpace around 2007, requesting his tracks after being drawn to his remix of Kanye West's "Flashing Lights," which exemplified footwork's dynamic energy.[16][17] The mixtape culture of the era, amplified by online sharing in footwork communities, allowed Jlin to immerse herself in the genre's rhythms from afar in Indiana, adapting its battle-ready intensity to her own creative explorations without formal training.[18][13] Self-taught on a home computer, Jlin began producing in late 2008 after receiving FL Studio from DJ Avery of the Chicago group Tribe, a digital audio workstation that enabled her to experiment with footwork's core elements like layered hi-hats and polyrhythmic snares.[19][20] Her process involved deconstructing the genre's 160 BPM framework and interlocking patterns—often featuring off-kilter kicks and rapid fills—to infuse them with experimental twists, prioritizing rhythmic tension over conventional dancefloor accessibility.[14] This adaptation reflected her intuitive approach, honed through solitary trial and error, where online forums and shared mixtapes served as virtual mentors in rhythm construction.[21] Her mathematical background from Purdue University further aided in navigating the complexity of these patterns.[10]Debut track and initial releases
Jlin's debut track, "Erotic Heat," was released in 2011 on the Planet Mu compilation Bangs & Works Vol. 2: The Best of Chicago Footwork, marking her entry into the electronic music scene.[22] The compilation, curated by label founder Mike Paradinas, featured 26 tracks from Chicago-area producers and was released on November 7, 2011, showcasing the genre's rapid percussion and high-energy rhythms.[23] Jlin also contributed "Asylum" to the album, her second track on the release.[24] Prior to this, Jlin had shared early unreleased tracks online via platforms like Imeem, connecting with footwork artists such as RP Boo and DJ Rashad and gradually building a small following within niche online circles.[19] "Erotic Heat" stood out for its technical innovation, featuring stripped-down percussion, a looping "froggy" synth line, intricate hi-hat patterns, and unexpected rattling elements that created an atmospheric tension diverging from the denser, sample-heavy norms of traditional footwork.[25] Produced using original sounds rather than samples—influenced by her mother's advice— the track emphasized minimalism and emotional depth, with percussive drops evoking apprehension and intensity.[19] This approach earned immediate praise; on a compilation stacked with veterans and newcomers alike, Jlin's tracks stood out: on “Erotic Heat,” she offered up million-ton minimalism that punched above its weight in introducing fresh perspectives to the genre.[26][27] Planet Mu's outreach in late 2010 led to Jlin's inclusion on the compilation, with Paradinas personally encouraging her to submit "Erotic Heat," facilitating her signing to the UK-based label for future releases.[28] As the only woman on Bangs & Works Vol. 2, her debut held particular significance in footwork's male-dominated landscape, where female producers were rare, helping to elevate visibility and inspire greater participation from women in the scene.[19][10] This breakthrough positioned Jlin as an emerging force, blending Gary, Indiana's industrial grit with Chicago's rhythmic heritage.[19]Career development
Breakthrough with Dark Energy
Jlin's debut album, Dark Energy, was released on March 23, 2015, by the London-based label Planet Mu.[29] The album features 11 tracks, including standout pieces such as "Erotic Heat," which served as a precursor to her full-length work, and "Guantanamo," known for its intense, dialogue-driven intensity.[30] Jlin produced the album in relative isolation in her hometown of Gary, Indiana, crafting the material during off-hours between demanding 12-hour shifts at a local steel mill.[19] This laborious routine influenced the record's creation, as she refined tracks like "Guantanamo" over months, drawing from her personal experiences of apprehension and trauma to infuse the music with raw emotional depth.[30] Thematically, Dark Energy employs rhythm and energy as metaphors for personal and societal struggles, evident in its dense, glitchy footwork arrangements that blend frenzied pacing with arrhythmic kicks and stark silences.[30] Tracks explore narratives of racialized experiences and existential unease, such as the state violence evoked in "Guantanamo" or the crystalline aggression of "Black Diamond," using synthesized sounds and mangled vocals rather than traditional samples to create a sense of austere beauty amid tension.[31] This approach results in a homespun mutation of footwork, balancing dancefloor momentum with open-ended emotional resonance that reflects broader inequalities tied to Chicago's cultural orbit.[30] Critically, Dark Energy was hailed for its innovation within footwork, earning an 8.1 rating from Pitchfork, which praised its "clear-eyed self-determination" and bending of genre conventions through original instrumentation like symphonic piano loops and erhu violin.[30] The Wire named it the top album of 2015, recognizing its technical skill and daring reconfiguration of footwork's raw elements into new forms.[32] The Quietus lauded its "creative depth" and ability to transcend tropes, calling it a "unique and self-contained piece of work" that packs ingenuity into concise tracks.[31] The album's acclaim propelled Jlin into wider visibility, leading to her first international tours in 2015 and 2016, including European dates such as a performance at Bristol's Exchange that captivated audiences with her live sets.[33] These live outings, often featuring the album's volatile rhythms, expanded her reach beyond Chicago's footwork enclaves to global electronic music scenes.[34]Black Origami and genre expansions
Jlin's second studio album, Black Origami, was released on May 19, 2017, via the British electronic label Planet Mu.[35] The record marked a significant evolution from her debut, incorporating guest contributions from a diverse array of artists across electronic and experimental scenes, including Holly Herndon on the track "1%", ambient composer William Basinski on "Holy Child", Halcyon Veil producer Fawkes on "Calcination", and South African rapper Dope Saint Jude on "Never Created, Never Destroyed".[36] Tracks like "Kyanite" exemplify the album's intricate percussion programming, drawing on Jlin's footwork roots while venturing into broader sonic territories.[37] The album's title draws from the art of origami as a metaphor for Jlin's compositional approach, where simple sonic elements are folded and layered to form complex, multifaceted structures—mirroring the rhythmic precision and depth she achieves through beat manipulation.[37] This concept facilitated genre expansions beyond traditional footwork, blending its rapid, syncopated drums with minimalist influences reminiscent of composers like Philip Glass and Steve Reich, as well as IDM's abstract textures and global percussion elements such as African shakers on "Nyakinyua Rise".[38] The result is a hybrid electronic sound that prioritizes rhythmic innovation over melody, pushing footwork into experimental realms while maintaining its dancefloor intensity.[39] Much of the recording process relied on remote collaborations, with contributors sending vocal and instrumental elements to Jlin in Gary, Indiana, underscoring her growing network in electronic, ambient, and international music circles—Herndon's experimental vocals from San Francisco, Basinski's looping textures, and Dope Saint Jude's rap from Cape Town all integrated seamlessly into her productions.[40] This method allowed for a global dialogue in sound design, emphasizing Jlin's role as a curator of hybrid forms.[41] Black Origami received widespread critical acclaim as a landmark in electronic music, praised for its rhythmic sophistication and boundary-pushing fusions, earning an 8.3/10 from Pitchfork and inclusion in The New York Times' best albums of 2017.[39] Reviewers highlighted its status as a "gorgeous and overwhelming piece of musical architecture," cementing Jlin's reputation as a forward-thinking producer.[39]Collaborations and compositional projects
In 2017, Jlin composed the original score for Wayne McGregor's ballet Autobiography, a work inspired by the choreographer's genetic code and exploring themes of personal identity through dance.[42][43] The score, characterized by layered electronic rhythms and intense sound design, premiered alongside the ballet at Sadler's Wells in London and was performed live by Jlin during subsequent productions.[44][45] This collaboration marked a pivotal expansion of Jlin's practice into interdisciplinary performance, blending her footwork roots with contemporary dance. The accompanying album, Autobiography (Music from Wayne McGregor's Autobiography), was released in September 2018 by Planet Mu, featuring tracks that capture the ballet's dynamic energy and abstract emotional depth.[46][47] Building on this, Jlin ventured into acoustic composition with Perspective, a three-movement work commissioned by and performed by the Third Coast Percussion ensemble in 2020.[48][49] The piece reinterprets her electronic beats through live percussion, incorporating explosive rhythms, taut silences, and shimmering textures that fuse footwork's precision with the ensemble's acoustic palette.[50] Recorded during the COVID-19 pandemic and released in 2022 on the album Perspectives alongside works by Danny Elfman and Philip Glass, it highlights Jlin's ability to translate digital production techniques into organic, collaborative settings.[51] This project underscored her growing emphasis on hybrid forms, where electronic origins inform live instrumentation without losing their experimental edge.[52] In 2022, Jlin launched her first educational initiative, the online course Jlin: Rhythm, Variation, & Vulnerability through Soundfly, designed to teach aspiring producers her approaches to rhythmic creativity and emotional expression in music-making.[53][54] Comprising 16 videos, readings, exercises, and a community Slack group, the course draws from her compositional process, emphasizing variation in beats, vulnerability in artistic risk-taking, and practical techniques for building impactful tracks.[55] It reflects her shift toward mentorship, making her innovative methods accessible beyond performance and recording.[56] During this period, Jlin's compositional reach extended through select remixes and features, such as her 2018 rework of Björk's "Arisen My Senses," which infused the track with footwork's intricate percussion and spatial dynamics, signaling her integration into broader experimental electronic circles.[57][58] These efforts, alongside guest appearances on her 2017 album Black Origami, illustrated her evolving role as a composer bridging genres and mediums.[59] In 2025, Jlin premiered A Dance With My Favorite Grandson as the Library of Congress's first complete electronic music commission on May 15 in the Great Hall.[4]Akoma and post-2023 works
Jlin's third studio album, Akoma, was released on March 22, 2024, via Planet Mu, marking her first full-length project in seven years.[60] The 11-track record centers on the Akan word "akoma," meaning "heart" in the Ghanaian language, using percussion as a metaphorical heartbeat to evoke themes of love, acceptance, and emotional maturity throughout her oeuvre.[61][62] Notable guest contributions include Björk on "Borealis," Philip Glass providing piano on "The Precision of Infinity," and the Kronos Quartet on several pieces, blending electronic rhythms with acoustic elements.[63][64] In 2024, Jlin scored the music for Dior's Autumn-Winter 2024-2025 fashion show.[3] The album's production drew from Jlin's intuitive layering techniques, starting with simple sounds and building intricate, maximalist compositions inspired by HBCU marching bands and personal narratives like her mother's stories.[63] Global events, including pandemic-related scheduling disruptions, influenced the process, notably delaying the Björk collaboration while prompting inward reflection and emotional depth in tracks like "Challenge (To Be Continued II)," which explores maturity through call-and-response structures.[63] Live instrumentation, such as Glass's piano and the Kronos Quartet's strings, added organic texture to the percussive core, enhancing the record's hypnotic and genre-defying vision.[63][65] Critics praised Akoma for its rhythmic innovation and thematic cohesion, with Pitchfork awarding it an 8.0 and highlighting how Jlin's extreme percussive precision creates a psychedelic effect, "yanking the synapses" in a way that feels both controlled and boundless.[65] The album was lauded for evolving post-footwork into compositionally rich territory, radiating "cool, simmering control" while demanding active listener engagement through its evolving repetitions and intricate soundscapes.[65][66] In 2025, Jlin continued promoting Akoma through live performances, including n! = 3! (Permutation of Three) on October 2 at the Walker Art Center's McGuire Theater in Minneapolis, featuring solo electronic sets alongside genre-defying collaborations with violin and string quartet.[67] She performed at UCLA's Nimoy Theater on November 15, showcasing her multidimensional sound.[68] An interview with Liquid Music on September 16 discussed her creative evolution, though focused more on early influences than Akoma's specifics, with no major unreleased projects announced by November.[69]Artistic style
Footwork foundations
Footwork, also known as juke or Chicago juke, is an electronic dance music genre that emerged in Chicago's Black communities during the late 1990s and early 2000s, evolving from ghetto house and incorporating hip-hop elements. Characterized by tempos ranging from 160 to 180 beats per minute, it relies heavily on drum machines such as the Akai MPC for production, featuring repetitive bass lines, chopped and manipulated vocal samples, and syncopated percussion designed to accompany high-energy battle dancing. The genre's rhythmic complexity stems from its ties to competitive dance crews, where participants perform intricate footwork moves in response to the music's rapid, unpredictable patterns.[14][70][71] In her early productions, Jlin draws directly from these footwork foundations, employing booming 808 bass kicks for propulsion, rapid hi-hat patterns to create tension, and layered polyrhythms—such as interlocking three-against-four pulses—to evoke the genre's frenetic energy while infusing a sense of hypnotic precision. This approach adapts traditional footwork's drum-machine-driven intensity into a more introspective framework, where polyrhythms build emotional depth rather than solely serving dance-floor immediacy. For instance, tracks like "Erotic Heat" showcase her skillful manipulation of these elements to maintain the genre's core drive.[72][73][74] Jlin deviates from conventional footwork by stripping away much of the genre's reliance on dense sample collages, opting instead for a minimalist aesthetic that prioritizes negative space and rhythmic clarity, as evident in her debut album Dark Energy. This reduction in sampled material—often limited to sparse vocal snippets—allows individual drum hits and silences to resonate more starkly, transforming the high-BPM assault into a compositionally rigorous form that emphasizes architectural tension over chaotic exuberance. Her tracks on Dark Energy, such as "Black Diamond," exemplify this shift, where arrhythmic kicks and hi-hat flourishes float amid vast empty spaces, redefining footwork's textural density.[30][75][76] Footwork holds profound cultural significance as a pillar of Black American expression within electronic music, originating in Chicago's South and West Sides as a sonic and kinetic outlet for urban Black youth amid socioeconomic challenges. Rooted in African diasporic rhythms and house music traditions, it fosters communal creativity through dance battles that celebrate agility, innovation, and resilience, positioning the genre as a modern extension of Black cultural resistance and joy in digital soundscapes. Jlin's engagement with footwork amplifies this legacy, channeling its battle-born vitality into broader artistic dialogues while honoring its origins in Black expressive traditions.[77][78][79]Experimental evolutions
Jlin's experimental evolutions began with her 2015 debut album Dark Energy, characterized by intense, glitchy percussion patterns that adhered closely to footwork's high-speed, fragmented rhythms, often exceeding 160 BPM and emphasizing raw percussive energy. By her sophomore release Black Origami in 2017, she expanded this foundation into a more architectural soundscape, incorporating polyrhythmic tensions, '90s drum machine timbres, and influences from avant-garde electronic traditions like Autechre, while stripping away melodic elements to heighten disorienting textures and global percussive explorations such as gamelan and tribal rhythms. This shift marked a departure from dance-floor utility toward rhythm as a structural force, amplifying physicality through cross-firing drum lines and escalating rolls devoid of traditional harmony.[39] Over the subsequent years, Jlin further integrated orchestral and ambient dimensions, culminating in Akoma (2024), where she collaborated with Philip Glass and the Kronos Quartet to fuse contemporary classical minimalism with her electronic core, creating sparse, recursive arrangements that evoke emotional depth. Techniques central to this progression include deliberate tempo variations to disrupt predictability, as seen in her bar-by-bar compositional approach that avoids repetitive loops, and an emphasis on rhythmic vulnerability—drawing from personal introspection to infuse beats with honesty and unpredictability. Informed by her background as a self-taught mathematician, Jlin often incorporates concepts like permutations into her polyrhythmic designs, treating rhythm as a mathematical equation that evolves unpredictably. She also employs silence strategically to build tension, allowing percussive elements to breathe and heighten dramatic impact, a method she explores in depth in her 2022 Soundfly course on rhythm and creativity.[16][80][81] This hybridization extended to IDM aesthetics, blending footwork's glitch with industrial edges reminiscent of Autechre and Aphex Twin, while minimalist sparsity and composed structures nod to modern classical forms. In Akoma, heartbeat motifs serve as a thematic anchor, symbolizing the "original drum" of nature and human pulse—derived from the Akan word for "heart"—interwoven with ancient drums, marching band samples, and found sounds to connect organic vitality with virtual constructions, as in tracks like "Auset" that pulse with recursive, emotive layers.[61] In live performances, Jlin adapts these evolutions through hardware-centric setups, using Ableton Live to layer improvisational elements in real time, enabling spontaneous rhythmic manipulations and dynamic sound evolutions that mirror her studio unpredictability. This approach, influenced by mentors like DJ Rashad, relies on minimal gear—a computer and basic speakers—to prioritize on-the-fly creativity over pre-programmed rigidity.[82][16]Influences
Early musical inspirations
Growing up in Gary, Indiana, Jlin, born Jerrilynn Patton, was deeply immersed in the smooth vocals of Anita Baker and the expansive vocal range of Rachelle Ferrell through her parents' record collection, which introduced her to soul and R&B from an early age.[10] These artists profoundly shaped her sense of melody, teaching her the power of emotive phrasing and dynamic expression that would later inform her compositional hooks.[10] Sade's atmospheric soul music served as a foundational template for Jlin, emphasizing the strategic use of space within dense arrangements—a principle she adapted to balance the intensity of electronic beats with subtle emotional layering.[10][8] This influence is evident in her appreciation for Sade's timeless duality, blending vulnerability and strength to create resonant, introspective soundscapes.[8] In her family's home in Gary, radio broadcasts and shared listening sessions exposed Jlin to a rich tapestry of vocal-driven soul and R&B, often playing as background to everyday life, while occasional mixtapes from local sources further blended these emotive elements with rhythmic energy.[83][9] This environment fostered an intuitive fusion of heartfelt vocal traditions with beat-oriented music, allowing her to internalize emotional narratives without relying on lyrics.[8] These early R&B and soul inspirations continue to underpin the emotional undercurrents in Jlin's non-vocal tracks, infusing her abstract electronic compositions with a profound sense of melody and human feeling derived from Baker's intimacy, Ferrell's versatility, and Sade's spatial elegance.[8][10]Modern and interdisciplinary sources
Jlin's rhythmic complexity draws heavily from the Chicago footwork scene, particularly the pioneering work of DJ Rashad and contemporaries like RP Boo, who shaped her early approach to intricate, high-speed beats. Rashad, a key figure in footwork's development during the late 2000s, mentored Jlin after she connected with him via MySpace, encouraging her to pursue her distinctive sound within the genre's frenetic framework.[16] This influence is evident in her layered percussion and asymmetrical patterns, which extend footwork's emphasis on rapid, dance-driven polyrhythms into more experimental territories, as she adapted the genre's core energy while studying at Purdue University.[17] Chicago footwork pioneers like Rashad emphasized emotional intensity through rhythmic innovation, inspiring Jlin to prioritize unpredictability and personal expression over conventional structures.[84] Her collaborations with composer Philip Glass and choreographer Wayne McGregor have profoundly shaped her embrace of minimalism and ballet scoring, bridging electronic production with classical and performative forms. Working with McGregor on the 2017 ballet Autobiography, Jlin composed a score that integrated her beat-driven style with the piece's genomic algorithm, which randomized choreography based on McGregor's DNA sequence, pushing her to explore sparse, evolving textures suited to live movement.[85] This project expanded her compositional palette, introducing minimalist restraint to complement ballet's precision and narrative flow.[81] Similarly, her 2024 collaboration with Glass on Akoma's track "The Precision of Infinity" reflects her long-standing admiration for his piano maximalism, which she views as a counterpoint to traditional minimalism, influencing her use of repetitive motifs layered with emotional depth in orchestral settings.[16] Jlin's mathematical background, from her time studying architectural engineering (with a math minor) at Purdue University, informs the algorithmic patterns in her beats, creating structured yet organic complexities as highlighted in recent discussions. She applies mathematical principles to compose rhythms that mimic procedural generation, allowing beats to unfold with precision and variation, much like computational models.[17] In a 2024 interview promoting Akoma, Jlin described composition as "one big proof," integral to her experimental phase, where numerical logic guides the interplay of percussion and harmony to evoke interdisciplinary depth.[86] Broader electronic influences, such as Holly Herndon's innovative vocal processing, have impacted Jlin's manipulation of voices as textural and rhythmic elements, incorporating IDM-like glitches and abstractions. Their 2018 collaboration on the AI-generated track "Godmother," using Herndon's Spawn model, explored vocal synthesis to blend human timbre with algorithmic distortion, inspiring Jlin's textured soundscapes in later works.[87] Herndon's focus on vocal experimentation as a tool for emotional and structural innovation aligns with Jlin's shift toward IDM-infused electronics, where voices serve as percussive layers rather than melodic leads.[82]Discography
Studio albums
Jlin's debut studio album, Dark Energy, was released on March 23, 2015, by Planet Mu, comprising 11 tracks that delve into the raw, frenetic energy of footwork with minimal sampling and original instrumentation like symphonic piano and erhu violin.[30][88] The album explores tensions between happiness and fear, incorporating themes of blackness, history, and culture through tracks evoking political narratives, all executed with arrhythmic kick drums and stark spatial dynamics characteristic of the genre.[30] Her sophomore effort, Black Origami, arrived on May 19, 2017, also via Planet Mu, featuring 12 tracks that expand footwork into polyrhythmic and minimalist territories through collaborations with artists including William Basinski, Holly Herndon, and Dope Saint Jude.[37][36] The album emphasizes rhythmic architecture, blending martial percussion, tribal influences, and avant-garde electronics to probe the origins and evolution of rhythm, moving beyond dancefloor constraints toward introspective intensity.[39] Jlin's third studio album, Akoma, was issued on March 22, 2024, by Planet Mu, with 11 tracks anchored in the primal "heartbeat" drum motif and incorporating live organic percussion alongside guests like Björk, Philip Glass, and Kronos Quartet.[61][89] Drawing from HBCU marching bands, African rhythms, and jazz traditions, it represents a maturation in her experimental post-footwork style, prioritizing precision and unpredictability over melody.[65] Commercially, Akoma achieved modest visibility, peaking at number 36 on the UK Official Album Downloads Chart.[90]Extended plays
Jlin's extended plays function as concise experimental vehicles, bridging her album releases by honing specific sonic innovations and previewing evolving aesthetics within her footwork framework. These EPs often emerge from transitional phases in her career, tying into live performances, label affiliations, or broader compositional endeavors. Free Fall (2015)Released on November 27, 2015, via Planet Mu, Free Fall is a four-track EP that arrived shortly after Jlin's debut album Dark Energy, serving as a post-debut refinement of her glitch-laden footwork style.[91] The EP features tracks such as "Eu4ria," "I Am the Queen," "BuZilla," and "Nandi," which emphasize intricate rhythmic glitches and poised sonic explorations, marking early experiments toward deeper sound design.[92] This release aligned with Planet Mu's milestone of showcasing innovative electronic producers, while tracks like "BuZilla" became staples in her live sets, bridging club performances and studio work.[93] Dark Lotus (2017)
Dark Lotus, issued on February 10, 2017, by Planet Mu, is a two-track EP positioned as a companion to her sophomore album Black Origami, introducing darker, more atmospheric tones to her palette.[94] Comprising "The Escape of the Blvck Rxbbit" (featuring Avril Stormy Unger) and "Nyakinyua Rise," it transitions from the intensity of prior work, with brooding percussion and vocal elements that foreshadow the album's complexity.[95] Released amid preparations for Black Origami, the EP highlighted Jlin's growing interest in narrative depth, often performed in live contexts to build anticipation for her evolving sound.[96] Embryo (2021)
On December 10, 2021, Planet Mu released Embryo, a four-track EP that acts as a transitional piece during Jlin's shift toward interdisciplinary compositional projects, including dance and film scores.[97] Tracks including "Embryo," "Auto Pilot," "Connect the Dots," and "Rabbit Hole" experiment with bold, introspective rhythms as "exercises in trying to get out of [her] comfort zone," reflecting her multi-platform growth.[98] This EP tied into Planet Mu's ongoing support for her boundary-pushing output, with the title track previewing themes in her live electronic sets amid a period of broader artistic expansion.[99] Perspective (2023)
Perspective, a six-track mini-album/EP released on September 29, 2023, via Planet Mu, focuses on percussion-driven compositions, directly linked to Jlin's collaboration with Third Coast Percussion on their 2022 album of the same name.[100] Featuring "Paradigm," "Obscure," "Fourth Perspective," "Derivative," "Dissonance," and "Duality," it serves as a catch-up release, evolving her sound through layered rhythms and spatial dynamics born from that percussion ensemble partnership.[101] The EP underscores her integration of acoustic elements into electronic forms, aligning with live performances that blend footwork energy with contemporary classical influences, while marking a label milestone in her discography's maturation.[102]
Singles and soundtracks
Jlin's early career featured several influential standalone singles that highlighted her footwork roots and garnered attention within the electronic music scene. Her debut track, "Erotic Heat," released in 2011 on the Planet Mu compilation Bangs & Works Vol. 2 (The Best of Chicago Footwork), showcased her innovative percussion and rhythmic complexity, marking her emergence as a producer from Gary, Indiana.[103] This track later appeared on her 2015 album Dark Energy but originated as a pivotal non-album release that influenced subsequent footwork compilations. In 2017, Jlin issued "Challenge (To Be Continued)" as a lead single for her album Black Origami, released on May 2 via Planet Mu in digital format. The track drew from HBCU marching band traditions, incorporating thunderous toms and echo-drenched vocals to create a deconstructed club sound that emphasized her evolving experimental style. A sequel, "Challenge (To Be Continued II)," followed in 2024 as part of promotional efforts for Akoma, released on March 22 through Planet Mu, further exploring rhythmic escalation at 158 BPM in D minor.[104] Jlin's compositional work extended to soundtracks, most notably Autobiography (Music from Wayne McGregor's Autobiography), a 2018 release on Planet Mu comprising 13 tracks totaling over 58 minutes. Commissioned for British choreographer Wayne McGregor's ballet Autobiography, which premiered in October 2017 at the Sadler's Wells Theatre in London, the score blended electronic pulses with introspective themes across pieces like "First Overture (Spiritual Atom)" (5:08) and "The Abyss of Doubt" (3:36), reflecting the performer's life stages through DNA sequencing-inspired structure.[46] The project, which toured internationally, underscored Jlin's interdisciplinary approach, earning praise for its integration of footwork elements into contemporary dance.[105][106] Beyond original singles, Jlin has contributed remixes for prominent artists, expanding her footprint in electronic and experimental genres. In 2018, she remixed Max Richter's "Vladimir's Blues" for Deutsche Grammophon, infusing the piano-led composition with glitchy percussion and intensified dynamics.[107] That same year, her rework of Factory Floor's track appeared on a Tate-commissioned project for Philippe Parreno's installation, adding footwork-driven energy to the industrial post-punk original.[108] In 2021, Jlin delivered a remix of Martin Gore's "Capuchin" for Mute Records, transforming the synth-pop track into a percussive, bass-heavy excursion.[109] Additional remixes include Steve Lehman's "Cognition" (Pi Recordings, 2021) and Marie Davidson & L'Œil Nu's work in 2021, where she layered intricate rhythms over vocal abstractions.[110][111] These efforts, often released as standalone digital singles, demonstrate Jlin's versatility in reinterpreting diverse source material while maintaining her signature rhythmic innovation. In 2025, Jlin released the single "B12" on May 9 via Planet Mu, commissioned by the Powerhouse Museum and transforming samples from their collection to highlight connections between mathematics and music.[112] She also contributed a rework of Hatis Noit's "A Caso," released on June 26 via Erased Tapes as part of the Aura Reworks album.[113]Recognition
Awards and nominations
Jlin has received several prestigious awards and nominations that highlight her innovative contributions to electronic and contemporary music, particularly in bridging footwork, classical, and experimental genres. These honors have elevated her profile, leading to expanded collaborations, international touring opportunities, and broader media coverage in outlets like The New York Times and The Guardian.[114] In 2023, Jlin was named a USA Fellow by United States Artists, receiving an unrestricted $50,000 award in the Electronic Composer category, recognizing her as one of 45 exceptional artists across disciplines for her boundary-pushing work. This fellowship underscores her role as a trailblazing figure in electronic music, providing resources to further her compositional projects.[114] She was also a finalist for the 2023 Pulitzer Prize in Music for her composition Perspective, a seven-part suite commissioned and performed by Third Coast Percussion, which explores rhythmic complexity and emotional depth through percussion and electronic elements. This nomination marked a significant milestone, affirming her transition from underground footwork producer to acclaimed contemporary composer and increasing her visibility in classical music circles.[2] The album Perspectives (2022), featuring Jlin's Perspective alongside works by Philip Glass and others, performed by Third Coast Percussion, earned two Grammy Award nominations at the 65th Annual Grammy Awards in 2023: Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance and Best Engineered Album, Classical. These nods highlighted the technical and artistic innovation in her contributions, boosting her recognition within the recording industry.[115] In genre-specific honors, Jlin's debut album Dark Energy (2015) was ranked among the top albums of the year in Resident Advisor's annual poll, praised for its fresh take on footwork that stripped away samples to focus on intricate percussion and abstraction. Her subsequent releases, including Black Origami (2017), have been included in year-end "best of" lists by The Wire magazine, cementing her influence in experimental electronic music communities.[116][117]| Year | Award/Nomination | Work | Category/Organization | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2015 | RA Poll Top Albums | Dark Energy | Electronic/Resident Advisor | Ranked in top 20 |
| 2023 | USA Fellowship | N/A | Electronic Composer/United States Artists | Recipient ($50,000 award) |
| 2023 | Pulitzer Prize in Music | Perspective | Music/Pulitzer Prize Board | Finalist |
| 2023 | Grammy Award | Perspectives (feat. Jlin) | Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance/Recording Academy | Nominee |
| 2023 | Grammy Award | Perspectives (feat. Jlin) | Best Engineered Album, Classical/Recording Academy | Nominee |