Ben McElroy, Soon This May All Be Sea (2020)
Long ago in an entry-level college poetry class, I found myself dissatisfied with the ending of a poem. I don’t recall the poem, only that it raised a question that went unanswered. I pointed this out to my professor as a flaw.
The professor replied that there are two types of people: the kind who need an answer, and the kind who are comfortable with ambiguity. No doubt she was right. Apparently, at that time and in that context, I was the type who needed an answer. Later, I went on to a career in journalism, where it’s malpractice to leave unanswered questions in a story.
Thankfully for all of us, art and journalism are played with different rules. Ben McElroy’s Soon This May All Be Sea is built on ambiguity — and it’s beautiful. In genre and form alike, McElroy is ambiguous, operating at the margins of several genres and thereby creating a sound that’s truly his own. In a world with no shortage of ambient records, McElroy’s musical worldview encompasses ambient but isn’t constrained by it. Instead, he is fluent in ambient, drone and folk, and he combines them masterfully. He is comfortable in the language of fingerpicked guitar and bowed strings, but he can also create wobbly, pulsating drones to go with them.
The opening track, “Fading Rhymes and the Last Flight,” opens with a gentle ambient pulse and a simple three-note motif on acoustic guitar, then brings in a windswept wash of sound interspersed with melodic fragments floating in and out. Once you’ve settled into this musical universe, McElroy changes direction — bird calls enter midway through the six-minute track, followed by a fingerpicked guitar and what sounds like a harmonium, along with strings, snare drum and bells.
“Soon This Will All Be Sea” gives us eerie, layered drones, a bow skating across strings, a muted moan of feedback, a barking dog — and, then, a ramshackle piano building a simple edifice of chords around the continuing drone, feedback and strings.
“Outside the Bubble” is a blissful union of drone with Celtic folk music. McElroy captures the contemplative feeling and resonant sounds often present in Celtic music, making it his own not only by adding the element of drone, but also with the sparing use of his voice. (Used for atmosphere and melody rather than lyrics, vocals also show up on “This Pond is Life.”)
From track to track, McElroy dials up different combinations of his musical vocabulary: The 10-minute “All the Things That Once Were” is all drone and ambient, while the acoustic guitar part on “This Pond is Life” sounds like it could be a Nick Drake outtake.
McElroy’s short, (mostly) instrumental compositions are beautifully constructed works of mood and texture, evoking a full range of thoughts and feelings. But their beauty lies in the journey, not in the destination. The tracks on Soon This May All Be Sea don’t move you through a series of compelling harmonic progressions to a big, satisfying resolution. Instead, the album invites you into a rich, beautiful world of sound that is inviting and comforting — but also fleeting. No, we don’t get the certainty of the musical architecture of a pop song or a classical concerto. In its place, we get an intimate space to ruminate — and then, like so much else in life, it just dissipates.