Around 1965, he joined a group led by Rutherford and Watts. The band's music became more avant-garde than was welcome in regular jazz clubs, so from 1966 they played their free jazz in the Little Theatre Club, a small theater in the West End of London. The Rutherford-Watts group became Spontaneous Music Ensemble. Soon, Wheeler joined the group, then Evan Parker did as well. SME recorded its first album in 1966. By 1967 the band had grown to a septet, with the addition of Bailey and bassist Barry Guy. Stevens' playing became increasingly textural and minimal. At his instigation, the band's music as a whole became more subdued. Except for Parker, the other members dropped out, and by mid-1967 Stevens had become the band's sole leader (eventually Parker joined the ranks of the SME's sometime members). Over the next several years such players as Peter Kowald, Barre Phillips, Maggie Nicols, and Johnny Dyani passed through Stevens-led ensembles. In the late '70s, Stevens used younger players: Nigel Coombes, Roger Smith, and Colin Wood. Wood dropped out in 1978, and the others played (very occasionally) as a trio until 1992. The last SME included Smith and saxophonist John Butcher. The group's final album, A New Distance, was taken from live performances recorded in the year before Stevens' death in 1994.
While SME was probably his most important association, Stevens never stopped playing in other contexts, from rock to bop. At various times he led a large Spontaneous Music Orchestra and the jazz-rock group Away. Stevens died of a heart attack at the age of 54. ~ Chris Kelsey, Rovi
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