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Spontaneous Composition
By David Lynch
APRIL 19, 1999:
At best, a band's first gig can be a little shaky. Given that there are innumerable
factors at work -- personalities, timing, performance anxiety -- plenty of things can
go wrong. For some, an inaugural gig can be much worse: a comedy-of-errors marriage
between the Keystone Cops and Spinal Tap. It goes without saying, then, that rare
is the band that forms on the day of its first show. Rarer still is the group who
records their first live endeavor and subsequently releases the sonic document as
their first album. Yet this is the christening story of Austin's spontaneously composing instrumental collective, Futura.
"It was the very first time we ever played together," states Craig Chin,
the local trio's bassist.
"Yeah, I met Monte that night I think," adds guitarist Travis Hartnett
referring to Futura's sonic chemist, Monte McCarter.
The date: September 4, 1998. The setting: Fringeware, the hip information kiosk
at the Polaris end of the Drag. There Chin introduced Hartnett and McCarter to each
other, and that same night all three performed together for the first time. The result:
Spontaneous Compositions 1: Live at Fringeware, three amorphous tunes of loops
and beats, underworld bass, and ethereal guitar. Since Spontaneous Compositions
1 is the group's first outing, you'd expect it to be less than perfect. And you'd
be right: You can hear all three musicians negotiating the new terrain. Nevertheless,
even on the first number, "The Other Side of Margo St.," Chin, Hartnett,
and McCarter display shades of uncanny synchronization that have come to define the
group's live performances and recorded output. Call it destiny, call it luck, call
it whatever; the band themselves were just as surprised.
"What's spooky about the whole thing is it really came together," says
the animated McCarter. "We're getting better and better the more we play, but
I think we were all pretty stunned that it worked so well at first. And that people
liked it."
In fact, if burgeoning crowds at the band's regular, last-Friday-of-the-month
Mojo's gig are any indication, more and more locals are liking it. Like another Austin
improvisational trio, Drums & Tuba, the members of Futura share experimental
wanderlust, technical prowess, and musical vision. If that sounds vague, it's because
Futura's style is flexible and proficient enough to traverse established genres;
their improvisational and experimental intent gives many formally trained musicians
the willies: "What, no score? No set song length? No lyrical cues? How do you
even know it's a song?!?!" Live, the effect is like riding in the back of a
speeding truck with your eyes pointed toward the evaporating horizon. You know what
just went by, you can sort of make out the periphery, but you don't have any idea
what's up ahead.

(l-r): Craig Chin, Monte McCarter, Travis Hartnett
photograph by John Davis
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Jazz musicians also live by a similar seat-of-the-pants performing style, but
Futura's music is not jazz -- at least not in the conventional sense. Futura and jazz
both aim for meaningful spontaneous composition, but that's where the comparison
ends -- unless you're counting the University of North Texas in Denton, home to a
renowned jazz program where fellow photography students Chin and McCarter met in
1991. Once the pair relocated to the bohemian Valhalla of Texas, it was only a matter
of time before the Futura triangle came together. Hartnett had checked out McCarter
spinning DJ-style a few times, while McCarter would often go to hear Hartnett's one-man,
guitar-fueled ambient band, TikTok. Bassist Chin knew both parties, and, earning
the moniker "Glue," brought Futura's components together.
"Craig and I wanted to work in a trio format," remarks the soft-spoken
but intense Hartnett. "So we were looking for someone to handle the drum end
of things."
But Hartnett and Chin weren't simply looking for some run-of-the-mill, 4/4 drummer.
They sought something more experimental, more on the fringe: "We wanted someone
who played a weird drum kit," Hartnett continues. "Or something small enough
to play in smaller places. At first we wanted a tabla player, so the songs would
have a different beat."
While not accomplished on the Indian two-drum percussion setup, Monte McCarter
was the duo's wish come true: something with a beat, but different. "I knew
Monte and I had heard his DropCycle stuff -- real good drum loops," endorses
the mellow Chin. DropCycle is McCarter's trip-hop/spaghetti-Western solo project,
the yin to Hartnett's TikTok yang. In Futura, McCarter's turntablist scratching incorporates
everything from children's records such as Babar the Elephant to the soundtrack
of Ben Hur. Also in McCarter's tool chest are samplers, sequencers, digital
drums, and a radio scanner used to pick up police dispatches and weather radar. The
quick-talk of airport control tower dialogue is a favorite: "Usually the dialogue
is real short," interjects Hartnett, "things like, 'Jesus,that was close!'"
But while Futura's beat keeper uses knobs instead of sticks, the result is a far
cry from the poppy cheese of Sugar Ray, another group who uses turntables for drums.
Futura's sound is darker, more introspective.
"I use midtempo beats," explains McCarter, "so I can speed it up
if the crowd looks like they want it, or slow it down if they want to zone out."
"Yeah," adds Chin, "we're heading into a more chill direction."
Much of that cool, laid-back feeling is the product of Chin's exploratory bass
lines. The bassist, who currently plays and sings in local rockin' pop combo Sector
7G, uses foot pedals and signal processors to change the character of his electric
four string, a crucial component of Futura's sound.
"I've been listening to dub a lot recently -- Laswell," responds Chin
when asked about his influences. "In an improv setting, everything I listen
to leaks in because there's no telling what's going to happen. I don't know where
I'll have to pull stuff out of. Spacey, groove-oriented Seventies Miles -- that'd
be my stepping-off point for this group."
If McCarter and Chin approach their instruments from unorthodox angles, then Hartnett's
whole raison d'être is to be different. The longtime local guitarist, the veteran
in the trio, has performed live in Austin for over 10 years now. This experience
includes lead guitar duties in Skellington, Britt Daniel's precursor to Spoon, and
playing bass in Swag/Hollowbody with former Poi Dog Pondering guitar wizards Adam
Sultan and Ted Cho. Hartnett formed improvisational duo TikTok with multi-instrumentalist
Jon Matis several years ago, the guitarist's partner approaching the duo's sound
in typically unconventional style. "Non-musical, Fred Frith-prepared sounds,"
states Hartnett. "He'd also tape a mike to his throat and do circular breathing
chants."
According to Hartnett, TikTok the duo played everywhere in town -- once. When Matis
moved to the East Coast to begin compositional studies, Hartnett decided to keep
TikTok alive as a solo act. The guitarist, who's currently delving into Philip Glass'
operatic and ensemble works, is most visibly influenced by Robert Fripp, string savant
founder of King Crimson and sonic texturalist par excellence. Yet Fripp's influence
isn't based solely on distant appreciation: Hartnett has been taught by Fripp directly,
in the guitar master's classes in Argentina and Seattle. Thus, in both TikTok and
Futura, Hartnett's guitar sometimes sounds like a spaceship, other times like an
organ, and more often than not, like a science experiment; in short, seldom like
a stereotypical guitar.
The man can shred with the best of them, but in Hartnett's hands, the instrument
is more like a strung electronic trigger than speed metal stroker or an acoustic
string piano. His stereo amp setup emanates lush, evaporating chords and thick walls
of sound. To create his sonic pastiche, Hartnett uses a formidable rig of echoes,
processors, and foot pedals he calls "the Deathstar." It turns out that
the game plan of both the former duo-incarnation of TikTok and Futura share much
in common.
"It's basically the same thing," chuckles Hartnett. "We'd just
show up and set up our equipment. Someone would start making noise, and the others
would follow. It was never planned or anything."
Starting from scratch is one thing when you're playing by yourself. It's quite
another when you're playing in a group context. How does Futura rehearse for gigs?
"Every gig is a rehearsal," explains McCarter. "Every rehearsal
is a gig."
What happens if it doesn't click, if the magic's not there?
"Sometimes it doesn't come together on a song," continues McCarter,
"but then we just stop and fire up some new beats and see where that goes."
How does the trio know what they're going to play on any given night?
"We don't know," says Chin matter of factly. "We find out when
we start."
"Yeah, we never really know quite what will happen." adds McCarter.
It's not wise, then, to view Futura's 4-CD canon, recorded and released in the
span of eight months, as established songs that are reinterpreted at each gig. Futura
songs are not static compositions with stock chord changes, mandatory bridges, or
clichéd endings. They're snapshots of an amorphous, continuously composed musical
flow; a truly unique musical event never heard before, and never to be performed
again. Of course, in less than proficient hands, this free improvisation ethic can
fall flat fast, coming across like a gaggle of noodling wankers. The key is to play
as a group, not as three individuals playing by themselves.
"After you get to a certain point as a musician, anything you do is going
to be competent," voices Hartnett. "You can play in key and hold up your
end. But at some point, things suddenly get much, much better. And everything locks
in."
So, if Spontaneous Compositions 1 sounds like a band in heavy research
and development mode, their latest album, Futura Live 3.11.99, documents the
band's signature sound in true form. Chin gives the lowdown.
"In the first three releases, we would take out the segues to make it more
concise. But our last release is just a straight show from beginning to end. It's
the most representative of exactly what it is we do. We didn't do anything to it,
other than dump it onto disc."
No overdubs, no multi-tracking, just a straight-to-tape recording of the chilled
wall of sound which poured forth from the Mercury's stage, site of the live recording.
In addition to their DIY recording ethic, Futura's use of new technology and incorporation
of diverse styles is a symbolic glimpse into the future of improvised music. "It's
a way to explore a lot of musical spaces that you wouldn't necessarily get to in
a regular band," opines Hartnett.
Futura may not be destined for the Procrustean bed known as the Top 40, but don't
be surprised if in the near future more bands follow their spontaneously composed
lead.

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