DAVID LONGDON (Big Big Train) – Door One (2022)
”Door One” is the posthumous album from the multi-award-winning singer, songwriter, producer and the voice of Big Big Train, DAVID LONGDON. 90% of the album was finished at the time of David’s tragic and untimely death in November 2021. The recording has been completed by a working party of musicians closest to the multi-instrumentalist, spear-headed by co-producer/engineer, Patrick Phillips (Kate Bush, Van Morrison).
The album, charting a journey from darkness into enlightenment has been recorded with 4 core musicians – Jeremy Stacey (King Crimson, Eric Clapton, Sheryl Crow), Theo Davis (Steven Wilson), Steve Vantsis (Fish) and Gary Bromham (Bjork, Sheryl Crow, George Michael)
“Door One” is a truly mesmerizing David Longdon’s posthumous solo album which stands as a beautifully crafted, bittersweet reminder of one of modern prog’s great talents.
“Door One” was made and finished under the auspices of Big Big Train’s English Electric label. Gregory Spawton supplies some gorgeous 12-string guitar parts, but he’s very much a guest on a David Longdon record. Taking on much of the performance duties himself, Longdon selected a fresh set of exceptional musicians, including drummer Jeremy Stacey (King Crimson), bassist Steve Vantsis (Fish), Violaine keyboardist Hazel Mills (touring player for Florence + The Machine), guitarist Stuart McCallum (The Cinematic Orchestra) and old friend Gary Bromham on textural guitar and much else.
Trusted co-producer/engineer Patrick Phillips oversaw the album’s completion after Longdon’s untimely death in November 2021.
Inevitably the record arrives in the shadow of that tragedy, but to view it solely in that context would do its creator a disservice. Especially because – as Longdon looks back on doors opened, paths chosen, and where those choices have led – this personal, emotional and frequently sublime record simply vibrates with life, and living.
Birdsong, echoing piano and a building cinematic atmosphere characterise instrumental prelude ‘Into The Icehouse’, an atmospheric mood-setter that, in a kinder world, might have served well as intro music to a live show.
‘Watch It Burn’ low piano line, new wave guitar riff and great Stacey/Vantsis groove power along as Longdon revisits a toxic relationship with an alcohol-dependent ex-lover. It’s clever, anthemic and pretty stripped proggy rock, with a spine-tingling apex line, where he sings: ‘Take a match, strike and ignite.’
Numerous other doors lead to doomed romances too. The brooding, piano-driven ‘Forgive (But Not Forget)’ looks back at one (‘Our fate perhaps, or were we just ill-matched’), with a grand, expressive guitar solo and overwrought rhythmic variations adding to the drama.
The big, lush strings for the track ‘Sangfroid’ were recorded at Abbey Road during a BBT session. Along with the John Barry orchestral trappings, this irresistible slice of art-pop has an earworm three-chord central hook, and another eye-watering vocal climax.
Catchier still is ‘There’s No Ghost Like An Old Ghost’, a consideration of past regrets, secrets and lies (‘The loose ends you’d left unaddressed’) and their nasty habit of resurfacing later in life, ‘with bones to pick and an axe to grind’. The mandolin and melody line give a folky lilt, the guitar solo and Wurlitzer organ are bluesy, and Theo Travis’ smokey sax outro is pure class (as a steer Longdon’s pointed Travis to Dick Parry’s work on one of his favourite albums, The Dark Side Of The Moon).
A reflection on his craft, ‘The Singer And The Song’ must be at the very least partially autobiographical. It’s vaudeville, with a show tune chorus (‘The stage lights burning so brightly as I stand completely immersed in the song […] I breathe life into the soul of it’), but it’s certainly not naff. It’s more in the Bowie vein. And with some nifty bass from Vantsis, Longdon really sells it.
As he does the moody and enigmatic 10-minuter ‘The Letting Go’. The cathartic lyrical arc here draws on some liberating hypnotherapy sessions Longdon had to treat his fear of flying, set to a strident, proggy, beautifully paced musical backdrop. Travis really goes for it again here, with squalls of soprano, tenor and baritone sax as the song drives to a momentous close.
After that tumult, closer ‘Love Is All’ is all the more affecting for its directness and simplicity.
And perhaps here it’s hardest to separate Door One – with all its heart, soul, love, vitriol, humor and wisdom – from its sad, posthumous circumstances. With that husky, timeless tone of his, David Longdon appeals to us to heed the words: ‘Love is the only thing that matters, Love is all, love is all.’
In this context, it’s so powerful, so poignant. Ultimately, he couldn’t have offered a more meaningful, more human valediction.
“Door One” is a stupendous listening and a truly mesmerizing posthumous release.
01 – Into the Icehouse
02 – Watch It Burn
03 – There’s No Ghost Like an Old Ghost
04 – The Singer and the Song
05 – Forgive (But Not Forget)
06 – Sangfroid
07 – The Letting Go
08 – Love Is All
David Longdon – vocals, keyboards
Jeremy Stacey (King Crimson) – drums
Steve Vantsis (Fish) – bass
Hazel Mills (Florence + The Machine) – keyboards
Stuart McCallum (The Cinematic Orchestra) – guitar
Gregory Spawton (BBT) – guitar
Gary Bromham – textural guitar, percussion, keyboards
Theo Travis – sax
John Barry – orchestral conductor
Pre order:
www.amazon.com/Door-One-David-Longdon/dp/B0B4SPLSZC