Album artwork for Mindset by The Necks

now in their 24th year, the necks' release 'mindset', their 16th album - and first lp, featuring two starkly contrasting tracks: the pulsating, raw, rum jungle and the slower building, rather hypnotic daylights. polyrhythms imbue both pieces with powerful forward motion, embroiled with which ethereal piano patterns interweave with bass, drums, electronics, churning hammonds and noise-guitars. drummer and percussionist tony buck writes: "mindset shares some elements in common with our previous album silverwater (2009), mostly in some mixing approaches and rhythmic devices - a reflection of our ongoing fascination with polymetric material and varying simultaneous pulses... but it's a whole other thing again, and the two tracks are very different from one another - rum jungle captures the live approach of the piano, bass, and drum trio a lot more, while daylights features a bed of electronics and little sounds that slowly converge, coalescing into a multi-layered, multi-tempo, swirling soundscape."

The Necks

Mindset

Album artwork for Mindset by The Necks
CD

£14.99

Released 31/10/2011Catalogue Number

rernecks10

Learn more
The Necks

Mindset

Album artwork for Mindset by The Necks
CD

£14.99

Released 31/10/2011Catalogue Number

rernecks10

Learn more

now in their 24th year, the necks' release 'mindset', their 16th album - and first lp, featuring two starkly contrasting tracks: the pulsating, raw, rum jungle and the slower building, rather hypnotic daylights. polyrhythms imbue both pieces with powerful forward motion, embroiled with which ethereal piano patterns interweave with bass, drums, electronics, churning hammonds and noise-guitars. drummer and percussionist tony buck writes: "mindset shares some elements in common with our previous album silverwater (2009), mostly in some mixing approaches and rhythmic devices - a reflection of our ongoing fascination with polymetric material and varying simultaneous pulses... but it's a whole other thing again, and the two tracks are very different from one another - rum jungle captures the live approach of the piano, bass, and drum trio a lot more, while daylights features a bed of electronics and little sounds that slowly converge, coalescing into a multi-layered, multi-tempo, swirling soundscape."