By Nick Ostrum
A mysterious bass hum slithers into a series of fluttering beeps and stutters and creaks. Twangy strings, resembling a muted and detuned sitar, then chimes pierce the background, a long with a choice selection of swipes, beeps, and tweaked nobs, or tuning keys. Sine tones, echoed pixilations, a heavy buzz join for a while. It turns out, this delicious computerized nature walk all comes from two musicians: Robert Wheeler on EML ElectroComp 101 and Gayle Young on her own invention, the amaranth .
From Grimsby to Milan captures the duo on six compositions like that described above. The density runs from sparse to moderate and the elements remain discrete, evoking tightly angled collage-work. It begs and rewards close listening. Rarely do the pieces fall into anything resembling a groove or melody, or even clear movements. Still, the cuts cohere, even as they wander from incidental and acousmatic sounds to glitchy electro ambience and string-entangled-ring tones and scratches of various haptic and synthetic origin. This makes those moments when semblances and hints at melodic progression, frequently derived from the amaranth, develop for a few seconds to, in the 16-minute finale Constant Harmony, several minutes. In places like this one can hear the best of Young and Wheeler’s playful rapport. Young seems intent on drawing out more “music” from the collaboration. Wheeler seems intent on making her stumble, but in the process feints toward, then embraces stretches of rhythmic scratching and tonal dispatches from his ElectroComp. They even fall in (and out of) line, flirting with a sort of harmony toward the middle of the piece, before Young leans into a droning rhythm and Wheeler returns to his role of agitator.
What is remarkable about this duo is the fine line they walk between cacophony and quiet. From Grimsby is neither. Noises rarely overwhelm, leaving them open to textural listening. They also persist at moderate levels. Never does this dip too far into lowercase territory. But the energy is harnessed and, in all its curiosity and exploration, the duo never really break that energy in either direction. Young and Wheeler clearly were on the same aesthetic page on this one and exercise considerable self-restraint to remain there.
From Grimsby to Milan is available as a CD and download here.
















