The Necks - Aether - Lloyd Swanton (bass); Chris Abrahams (piano); Tony Buck (drums)
The Necks began as an improvisation workshop, formed by three key members of the late 80s Australian jazz scene. Swanton, Abrahams and Buck were keen to try something new, in part inspired by their experience of working in other musics, particularly those where long-form repetition is common (salsa, funk, dub reggae, some African and Indonesian music...). They moved away from standard jazz forms, and worked to break down the usual distinction between soloist and rhythm section (Tony Buck: "we wanted to play in a way where no one was soloing.")(1). Buck contrasts this with the "everyone solos" approach of some improvised music.
Decades on, we have a good idea what to expect: a typical Necks live performance consists of an hour-long piece of music, created in the moment, with no plan or rehearsal (Buck: "we don't have anything we have to do.")(2) Long, slowly evolving grooves are common, but not compulsory. On record, The Necks still tend towards hour-long epics. They make full use of the studio, though, bringing in extra instruments, and recording multiple overdubs, mixing and matching until they're happy. The first Necks record I heard was the only one in the shop that day, Hanging Gardens. This, their fifth release, begins with a skittering cymbal figure, which sets up a head-nodding drum n bass flavoured groove (with strong hints of electric Miles Davis). According to Lloyd Swanton, the first mix was "really full on", so the band "decided to be ruthless with the laser scalpel and cut it right back."(3) The finished record got me hooked - the brilliant playing, and skilful studio sculpting makes for an absorbing 60+ minutes (I'd love to hear that full on mix, though)
Live, The Necks are known for impressive displays of stamina. I've no idea if those pulsing pianos and drums were set down in single takes, but the final third of this record gives a good idea of their more muscular mode. Listening again to Aether just now, it still seems unlikely that this is where the music will end up. Ultimately, though, I've always found the journey from Morton Feldman-like mystery to ecstatic, pounding minimalism totally convincing. For me, it's a special record - have a listen here (my attempts to describe the music inevitably fall short).
(2) From a Guardian article
(3) From the Uncut magazine review of the year 2023
(4) The Uncut article above offers some clues about how Aether was put together. Apparently, the band played to click tracks at two different tempos, which may well account for some of this rhythmic unpredictability.
(Record 2 is Bang On A Can play Eno's Music For Airports. Coming as soon as I've written it).
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