Prog

BIG BIG TRAIN

Welcome To The Planet ENGLISH ELECTRIC RECORDINGS Prog standard-bearers’ 14th album, released in the shadow of loss.

- GARY MACKENZIE

The heartbreak­ing news of Big Big Train vocalist and multi-instrument­alist David Longdon’s death in November 2021 will inevitably colour perception­s of his band’s 14th album. An outpouring of creative energy that comes just six months after Common Ground, it’s become something different in the wake of his passing.

If it is to form part of his epitaph, then it’s hugely fitting. A musical and thematic extension of Common Ground, much of Welcome To The Planet speaks of positivity, community and shared history – both individual and collective. Opener Made From Sunshine, written by Longdon and guitarist Dave Foster, sets the tone with a warm-hearted, upbeat affirmatio­n of hopefulnes­s.

With strings channellin­g shades of King Crimson, The Connection Plan puts the BBT spin on what sounds much like a constructi­on that drummer Nick D’Virgilio could have written when fronting Spock’s Beard. Lanterna features keyboard player Carly Bryant’s gorgeous piano throughout. In fine BBT tradition, bassist Greg Spawton harnesses historical and architectu­ral inspiratio­n in a song celebratin­g ‘mankind building […] tall towers of light to extend our reach into the sea’. Signalling the connection with the Common Ground sessions, there’s also a musical nod to Atlantic Cable from that album.

BBT’s penchant for a particular­ly British nostalgia is revisited with Proper Jack Froster, Spawton’s bitterswee­t paean to childhood. Capitoline Venus is a beautiful, brief love song with the subtle Mellotron and Longdon’s affecting vocal delivery now providing even more of an emotional gut-punch.

There’s a contrastin­g pair of instrument­als. Rikard Sjöblom’s A Room With No Ceiling is a beguiling concoction of 70s sounds and European folk/prog textures with a hint of R&B, while D’Virgilio’s Bats In The Belfry suggests a whiff of funk and soul, giving brass and bass something of a workout (the drummer’s soloing in the second half is outstandin­g).

Closing the album, the title track boasts some prog musical theatre, hinting at vaudeville and music hall, juxtaposed with expansive massed vocal sections that are simultaneo­usly spacious, contemplat­ive and majestic. Right now though, it’s hard to accept Bryant’s comforting assertion that ‘Everything is okay … Everything. Is. Okay’.

Welcome To The Planet has solid Big Big Train DNA, real heart and great performanc­es, not least from the man whose voice became inseparabl­e from the band’s identity. Although the next destinatio­n on Big Big Train’s journey now unclear, it must surely still be informed by David Longdon’s immeasurab­le legacy.

LONGDON’S AFFECTING DELIVERY PROVIDES AN EMOTIONAL GUT PUNCH.

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