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Monday, 19 May 2014

CHRIS ABRAHAMS


Christopher Robert Lionel Abrahams was born on 9 April 1961 in Oamaru, South Island, New Zealand. Abrahams, on keyboards, formed jazz group Benders, in 1980 in Sydney with Dale Barlow on tenor saxophone, Louis Burdett on drums and Lloyd Swanton on bass guitar. By the time Benders disbanded in 1985, Abrahams had performed on all three of their albums, 'E' (1983), 'False Laughter' (1984) and 'Distance' (1985). While still with Benders, late in 1983, he supplied piano for Laughing Clowns' second album, 'Law of Nature' (1984).

In 1985 he formed Sparklers, a dance pop group with Bill Bilson on drums (ex-Sunnyboys), Gerard Corben on guitar (ex-Lime Spiders), Ernie Finch on guitar and the Oxley siblings Melanie on lead vocals (ex-Sweet Nothings) and Peter on bass guitar (ex-Sunnyboys). Colin Bloxsom took over lead guitar by the following year. Sparklers released two singles, "Overworking" (October 1986) and "So Often Dreaming" (January 1987) before Abrahams left. The Sparklers issued their debut album, 'Persuasion', in 1988.

The Necks were formed as a jazz trio, in 1987, by Abrahams on piano, keyboards, organ and guitar with former band mate, Swanton, on bass guitar and double bass, and Tony Buck on drums, percussion and guitar (ex-Great White Noise). For his compositions with the group, he has won two APRA Awards (Australia) for Most Performed Jazz Work; "Drive By" in 2005 and "Mosquito" in 2006. As from March 2020 the trio have issued 16 studio albums. Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane, described their sonation, "abstract, improvised, jazzy mood music''.

In 1989, while still with the Necks, Abrahams formed a soul pop duo, Melanie Oxley & Chris Abrahams, with former the Sparklers' band mate, Oxley. They released a four-track EP, 'Resisting Calm', via Spiral Scratch in late 1990. For that EP they used Abrahams' current and former band mates, Buck on drums, Swanton on acoustic bass guitar, Corben (ex-the Sparklers) on guitar as well as Mike Bukovsky on trumpet, Guy Dickerson on guitar, Stuart Eadie on floor toms and Jackie Orszaczky on bass guitar. While periodically collaborating with Abrahams, Oxley maintained her career as a schoolteacher.

The duo's first two albums, 'Welcome to Violet' (1992) and 'Coal' (1994), were released via Remote Records/MDS. They were labelled as, "moody, emotive soul/pop" works by McFarlane. Their next album, 'Jerusalem Bay' (1998), had Hamish Stuart on drums (ex-Ayers Rock, Wig World, the Catholics) and Mike Bukowski on trumpet (ex-Ten Part Invention). In 2001 the pair performed Abrahams' music for a radio travel documentary, South Island, which was broadcast by ABC Classic FM on 6 October 2003. It was created, narrated and produced by Abrahams with The Listening Room's Sherre DeLys.

Melanie Oxley & Chris Abrahams' next work, 'Blood Oranges', appeared in early 2003 via Remote Records/Vitamin Records. The Sydney Morning Herald's John Shand found, "his lyrics are often bleaker than their past work, it is not a despairing bleakness, but one bolstered by stoicism, wit, hope and a love of beauty." Jeremy Green of dB Magazine observed, "it is peculiarly ineffectual. It paws lazily at classic Motown pop but is totally sedated by dinky production and emotional primness."

Abrahams issued his debut solo album, 'Piano', in 1985 via Hot Records/Making Waves. It was recorded at Sydney Opera House's Recording Hall and mastered at Studios 301. Tony Mitchell of Cyclic Defrost described this album in 2017, "nine improvisations... it suggests a virtuoso pianist in the making." After leaving the Sparklers, in 1987, he issued his second studio album, 'Walk'.

His fifth solo album, 'Thrown' appeared in 2005 via Room40. Cyclic Defrost's Max Schaefer noticed, "Technically formidable and conceptually refined, [he] pays homage to the piano by drawing it into tightly articulated and highly personalized forms." Abrahams performed, produced and arranged the music for the Australian film, The Tender Hook (2008), which was released as the soundtrack album, 'The Tender Hook: Motion Picture Soundtrack'. At the 2008 Australian Film Institute Awards his work was nominated for Best Original Music Score.

'Play Scar' (2010), his seventh album, was reviewed by Oliver Laing of Cyclic Defrost, who declared, "it is the glorious sound of well-established artist willing to push the boundaries of sound and technique into new realms." His next effort, 'Memory Night' (2013), shows that "even at his most ominous is also quite listenable, creating jumbled, but still quite accessible soundscapes" according to 4ZZZ's Chris Cobroft.

Abrahams has worked as a session musician on albums by the Triffids (Born Sandy Devotional, 1986), Ed Kuepper (Rooms of the Magnificent, 1986; Honey Steel's Gold, 1991; This Is the Magic Mile, 2005), Skunkhour (Skunkhour, 1993), the Apartments (A Life Full of Farewells, 1995; Apart, 1997; In and Out of the Light, 2020), the Church (Magician Among the Spirits, 1996), the Whitlams (Eternal Nightcap, 1997; Torch the Moon, 2002), Silverchair (Neon Ballroom, 1999), Midnight Oil (The Real Thing, 2000) and Wendy Matthews (Beautiful View, 2001).




ALBUMS
'Piano' 1985 Hot
'Walk' 1987 Hot
'Welcome To Violet' [with Melanie Oxley] 1992 Remote Music
'Coal' [with Melanie Oxley] 1994 Remote Music
'Jerusalem Bay' [with Melanie Oxley] 1998 Remote Music
'Glow' 2001 Vegetable
'Blood Oranges' [with Melanie Oxley] 2003 Remote
'Artery' [with Jon Rose and Clayton Thomas] 2003 the now now
'Thrown' 2005 Room 40
'Oceanic Feeling Like' [with Mike Cooper] 2008 Room 40
'The Tender Hook Motion Picture Soundtrack' 2008 Vitamin
'Germ Studies' [with Clare Cooper] 2009 Splitrec
'Play Scar' 2010 Room 40
'None Of Them Remember It That Way' [with Lucio Capece] 2012 Mikroton
'We Who Had Left' [with Alessandro Bosetti] 2012 Mikroton
'Kopfuberwelle' [with Sabine Vogel] 2012 Absinthe
'Memory Night' 2013 Room 40
'Gardener' [with Magda Mayas] 2013 Relative Pitch
'Luv/Kopfuberwelle' [with Sabine Vogel] 2014 Another Timbre
'Fluid To The Influence' 2016 Room 40
'Climb' 2016 Vegetable
'Peggy' [with Jon Rose]




References

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chris_Abrahams

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