Divide and Dissolve made sense from the very beginning. When Takiaya Reed met Sylvie Nehill five years ago, âit was an instant connectionâ, Reed remembers. The pair instantly became friends, and soon after began making music together as a thunderous instrumental duo: Reed plays saxophone and often foreboding guitar to Nehillâs intense drumming. Their connection is intuitive: âBeing a two-piece, you have to trust that person,â Nehill tells NME.
That tight friendship and working relationship has been interrupted by COVID. Texas native Reed is temporarily based in San Francisco while Nehill, who was raised in Geelong in regional Victoria, remains in Australia, where the band began.
While the pandemic has halted touring for so many artists, itâs especially frustrating to see this particular pair separated by an ocean just as theyâre releasing their third album. âGas Litâ is a marked evolution of their absorbing sound, which spans doom, drone, and classical across a nuanced spectrum.
Nehill and Reed are purveyors of sonic extremity. Observe the delicate flutter of saxophone on âObliqueâ that opens the new album, hovering and looping in mid-air with the utmost tranquility â until the bandâs signature crush of low-end guitar and concussive drums descends, 90 seconds later. That effects-warped sax motif persists in the backdrop, emerging unscathed when the other instruments fall away with a satisfying buzz of distortion. The almost eight-minute single âDenialâ revels in similar extremes: the song slows and stretches, establishing a brutal inner peace before the saxophone again leaves us haunted in the aftermath.
Asked about such seismic contrasts, Nehill points out that Reed is classically trained on the saxophone. âItâs inevitable that [sheâs] going to make beautiful sounds,â says Nehill. âBut I also think the heavy stuff is pretty. Equally as pretty.â
Thatâs clear throughout âGas Litâ, from the rolling waves of âProve Itâ to the cinematic sweep of lead single âWe Are Really Worried About Youâ. While âMental Gymnasticsâ makes for a quieter showcase of the pairâs subtle interplay, the menacing âItâs Really Complicatedâ fully commits to an overdriven, swarm-like effect.
âThe spectrum of prettiness and heaviness is reflective of us as people,â says Nehill. âWe need to create music that reflects the spectrum of us. Weâre really chill [but] we also love talking about whatâs going in the world.â
Thatâs no small feature of the band. Divide and Dissolveâs longtime mission statement is to âdecolonise and dismantle white supremacyâ through their music. Their 2017 debut âBasicâ featured such song titles as âBlack Powerâ and âBlack Supremacyâ while 2018âs âAbominationâ followed suit with âResistanceâ and âIndigenous Sovereigntyâ.

Reed is of Black and Tsalagi (Cherokee) heritage, while Nehill is of MÄori heritage. In the notes for their 2020 single âTFWâ, they write: âWhen we first met, one of the first pieces of information we chose to share with each other is that we are Indigenous.â That experience of being Indigenous in a world shaped by colonialism is key to the title âGas Litâ â a term for the way people are forcibly convinced to doubt their own experience and, often, their own suffering.
âIt feels like an underrepresented experience,â Reed says, âand itâs extremely important to bring to light experiences that may be missed. People will tell you that youâre not having them, but they profoundly affect your life. And that is not a good way to heal from trauma. So we wanted to provide a space where weâre like, âHey, we see you.â
âThere are all these experiences people have that they might struggle to put words to,â Reed continues. â[Like] not being able to connect with your culture, your ancestors â feeling isolated, lonely, broken-hearted. Experiencing the woes of colonial governance. So âGas Litâ is creating that spaciousness for those experiences. You might be being impacted by colonisation, white supremacy [and] genocide, and society will tell you, âNo, youâre not. Youâre fineâ, when everything is not OK.â
âThe spectrum of prettiness and heaviness is reflective of us as people… Weâre really chill but we also love talking about whatâs going in the worldâ â Sylvie Nehill
Profound connection has always been Divide and Dissolveâs modus operandi, regardless of whether words are involved. âWe were really driven by the feeling, like the vibrations,â says Nehill. âWe just wanted resonance.â Reed adds, âWeâve always been trying to convey ideas, and sometimes weâre more direct than other times. Itâs such a blessing to be able to speak about what we feel passionately about with our music.â
And if they donât use words in their music, the pair make a point to talk to fans about these feelings â including oppression and dispossession â at shows, long after theyâve finished playing. âWe talk to people all night,â says Reed. âWe spend a lot of time chatting and making connections, and just being in our communities. And that feels awesome.â
âGas Litâ is set to be Divide and Dissolveâs highest-profile album yet. The band signed to Invada, a record label as well-known for releasing adventurous television and film scores as for helping to break UK solo artist Billy Nomates last year, after a mutual friend played their music for Portishead member and label co-founder Geoff Barrow.
âGas Litâ was also produced by Unknown Mortal Orchestraâs Ruban Nielson, who heard the band and invited them to join UMO on a New Zealand tour in 2018. Being of MÄori descent, Nehill reflected on her background before embarking on the UMO tour. âI was talking a lot about my family,â she says. âWe had a lot to look forward to when we wrote âGas Litâ.â
The breezy psychedelic bounce of Nielsonâs own band might position him as an odd fit for Divide and Dissolveâs doom-laden gravitas. But the duo say he honoured their vision, telling them he wanted the record to sound like the experience of seeing them live.
âWe knew that more people would probably get to hear this album,â recalls Nehill, âso we took a little bit longer to write it. But the process was still the same.â Much of that process is conversation, whether about the pairâs shared passion for food and music or about something more profound.
âYou might be being impacted by colonisation, white supremacy and genocide, and society will tell you, âNo, youâre not. Youâre fineâ, when everything is not OKâ â Takiaya Reed
Working primarily with only each other, Nehill and Reed take their outside collaborations seriously. All three of their albums have included a spoken-word guest turn from Brooklyn poet Minori Sanchiz-Fung. On âDid You Have Something to Do With Itâ from âGas Litâ, Sanchiz-Fung describes the invasive, wasteful effect of greed while the band shadow those words with a chilling halo of slowed, hazy saxophone.
âIt just flows so well. All of us match each other,â says Nehill of their continuing collaboration with Sanchiz-Fung. Reed observes that employing an accomplished poet for an instrumental band makes perfect sense: âMinori knows how to use words. Why would we talk when Minori could?â
When Divide and Dissolve tour, though, itâs just Nehill and Reed. They had started playing together as a two-piece, but with others joining in here and there. When they were about to go on tour for the first time, they decided to commit to the two-piece format, especially after Reed worked out how to get what Nehill calls âincredible low-endâ out of her guitar. Reed, in turn, calls Nehill âan incredible percussionist,â adding with a laugh: âSylvie hits the drums harder than all the bros. Itâs amazing.â
The two play live together when recording so that they can lock in and connect, which enables the music to reach its natural, and reliably powerful, conclusion. They donât record much that they canât reproduce live, including the transformative effects they apply to their instruments, and thereâs a lot of rehearsal in the lead-up to recording. As for how the songs first find life in the early jamming process, thereâs no exact formula. âThey just start,â says Reed.
Even without the aid of lyrics, listening to Divide and Dissolve is the best way to understand both Nehill and Reedâs close friendship and their individual personalities â especially until theyâre back together in Australia, ready to play live again.
âItâs a really good reflection of who we are as people,â agrees Reed. âItâs definitely the most vulnerable space I could be in with someone else.â
Divide and Dissolveâs âGas Litâ is out January 29 on Invada
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