"We
wanted to play a kind of music
that I couldn’t even describe,”
says guitarist Nigel Barnes
when asked about the impetus
behind Portland, Oregon, electroacoustic
duo Wroom (pronounced "room").
“We wanted to make music
for a nature documentary that
exists only in your mind.”
Like a plant
shown growing in a time-lapse
film, the percolating compositions
of Wroom unfurl at a measured
pace. Songs and seeds both need
time to germinate, and Barnes,
along with electronics manipulator
Rian Callahan, has taken plenty
of that. Some of the kernels
on the duo’s debut double
album, What We Mean By Hot and
Cold, date back four years.
“We wanted
to create something less descriptive
and more evocative,” says
Barnes.
“To use
our intuition to find something
tangible, but not concrete.
Going back to the example of
the nature film, the sounds
aren’t meant to make you
think of, say, when a cheetah
takes down a wildebeest; but
maybe just the yellow grass
of the veldt with their smudged
shapes moving around in it as
they run.”
For their first
show, Wroom played at an art
gallery showing graffiti collages.
The duo played for four hours
non-stop, as they were asked
to provide ‘atmosphere.’
“And halfway through the
set a woman came up to us to
ask when we were going to start
playing,” laughs Barnes.
“I guess it was because
we weren’t rocking out,
doing Pete Townshend windmills.”
Indeed, the
work of Wroom is imbued more
with scientific wonder than
primal _expression. In Wroom’s
explorations, the duo discovers
and refines fragmentary melodies,
building on accidental interactions
between reoccurring patterns.
Blending minimalist atmospherics
with textural layers, the collections
of tonal drifts embody a paradox:
the mechanical creation of something
organic. They strive for the
balance between two effects:
physically calming and mentally
stimulating; simultaneously
intimate and detached.
The seeds of
Wroom were planted when Barnes
and Callahan met in 1999 while
recording sound for an independent
film. They were thrown together
by chance through mutual friends,
including Portland-based Arena
Rock Recording Co. artists Swords.
Callahan is also a member of
the electronic trio ML, and
he and Barnes swapped early
four-track recordings. They
also exchanged diverse influences
such as Brian Eno, Don Caballero,
To Rococo Rot, Angelo Badalamenti,
and Nobukazu Takemura. They
discovered a mutual interest
in improvisation and the remolding
of slightly outdated “technology”
-- whether guitar through effects
pedals, analog synthesis, or
applying the harmonic foundation
of Eastern European folk music
to the layering of loops. It
was immediately clear that there
was a strong resonance between
them. “The first time
we played together, we played
nonstop for two or three hours,
and we didn’t say anything
the entire time. It just clicked,”
says Callahan. “I had
my synthesizers going through
various effects, and Nigel was
playing his guitar through some
primitive pedals. Over time
the gear hasn’t gotten
any fancier, the signal chain
and the songs have just gotten
longer. We improvise the compositions
and record everything to ProTools,
mixing it later. We just throw
out a net and see what we can
catch.”
In addition
to composing music, Barnes and
Callahan are both visual artists,
creating paintings and drawings
as well as video work. They
love Eno and Peter Schmidt’s
Oblique Strategies (cards which
are drawn at decision-making
points to prompt abstract creative
direction), Jacques Cousteau,
and the work of visual information
designer Edward Tufte, but also
the simple pleasures of kung
fu and zombie movies. Looked
at closely everything has its
role in the latticework of Wroom.
Barnes concludes, “it’s
important not to demystify things
too much.” |