Discover the Inspiring Journey of Big Big Train Following the Loss of Frontman David Longdon
The river Stour meanders through the stunning Dorset countryside just 300 yards from Gregory Spawtonâs door. Quietly brimming with fauna, flora and fungi, itâs one of the songwriter/ bassistâs favourite spots to meander, too; a place for rumination, or just to catch some vitamin D. One July day in 2023, Spawtonâs constitutional took on extra significance. Excited but a little nervous, he put on his headphones and reached for his Sony MP3 Walkman, then pressed âPlayâ on the final mixes of tracks for a new album by his band Big Big Train. The music unfolded, and the mixes were good â great, in fact â across a suite of songs remarkable for even existing, given what the group had experienced over the previous 20 months. âThere was a strong sense of catharsis,â Spawton tells Classic Rock. âI had to blink away some tears.â After a time of calamity, sorrow and uncertainty, Big Big Trainâs sixteenth studio album, The Likes Of Us, truly signposted their future.
The band began in 1990 in Bournemouth. Spawton had graduated from Reading Uni with an archaeology degree and relocated to Wessex, and formed Big Big Train â as guitarist and keyboard player â with bassist Andy Poole. Two demo albums later, theyâd signed to the Giant Electric Pea label owned by venerable neo-prog group IQ. Influenced by golden-era 70s prog such as Van der Graaf Generator, Genesis, and King Crimson, alongside Marillion, It Bites and Prefab Sprout, the songs had dramatic themes ranging from history and mythology to childhood memories. Goodbye To The Age Of Steam in 1994 commenced a run of high-quality modern progressive rock albums exhibiting tight musicianship and ambitious arrangements, which reached an apogee with the Sean Filkins-fronted Gathering Speed (2004) and The Difference Machine (2007).
In 2009, the line-up strengthened with Spawton settling into a bass role, and guitarist Dave Gregory (ex-XTC) and Spockâs Beard superstar drummer Nick DâVirgilio joining. âOne of the cool things I liked about BBT was Gregâs vision, musicality, great songwriting and an unapologetic love of progressive rock,â DâVirgilio says.
Filkins had left, so producer-engineer Rob Aubrey recommended Nottingham songwriter and multi-instrumentalist David Longdon to the group. Longdon had lost out on becoming Genesisâs vocalist in 1997, but forged on as a solo artist and lauded session player. His superb, soulful vocal and boundless creativity gave BBT â and the already high-achieving composer Spawton â wings. The band gained a legion of ardent fans who called themselves Passengers.
By Common Ground, album 13, released in July 2021, the band had their own label, English Electric Recordings, and were an award-winning, chart-tickling success. Although the seven members were spread across the globe, thanks to DâVirgilioâs âbitching and moaning, asking âWhy canât we play live?ââ they finally convened and played some rapturously received shows, souped-up by a flat-capped, Colliery-style brass section, adding further grandeur to their cinematic storytelling.
Then, tragedy struck when, on November 20, 2021, David Longdon died following a catastrophic accident at home. The band, and Passengers, went into shock. For Longdonâs fiancĂ©e Sarah Louise Ewing, BBTâs official artist, her world collapsed. Spawton reeled from the sudden loss of his creative partner of more than 20 years, his friend, his âbrotherâ.
While deep in grief and emotional devastation, a practical question the band needed to address was: what was going to happen to Big Big Train? âInitially, I couldnât contemplate the band continuing at all,â Spawton, says, shaking his head. âIt took some time. And Sarah was important to the decision because David had spoken about this to her: âIf something happens to me, the band must carry onâ. I felt I had consent.â
The next step was to speak with BBTâs âeldersâ: drummer Nick DâVirgilio, and Beardfish guitarist/ keyboard player/vocalist Rikard Sjöblom, a permanent member since 2015. Spawton made it clear that if either one of them had any reservations, then the band would cease.
âDavidâs passing was just horrible,â says DâVirgilio. âWe had so many plans. And Davidâs life had changed through meeting Sarah. We saw his self-worth grow, he was conquering long-standing fears. Then everything was taken away.â
âOur friend had gone,â Spawton says, âbut weâd all put our heart and soul into Big Big Train for the last decade or so, so we all felt: âOkay, letâs see if we can pick ourselves up, find a vocalist, go forward. And of course it was important to find the right guy.â
Welcome To The Planet was released on January 28, 2022, a reluctant farewell to Longdon. On April 27, Alberto Bravin was introduced to the world as Big Big Trainâs new frontman.
Bravin was an outsider, a fan of BBTâs music but one whoâd never met Longdon or Spawton. Talent-spotting for a potential solo album, Spawton remembers seeing Bravin play with Italian proggers PFM at Camdenâs Electric Ballroom in 2015.
âI thought: âWhoâs that young guy singing and playing keys at the back? He should be the frontman!â I wrote âPFM keyboard guyâ on my phone. When we started looking for singers, I thought of him.â
Spawton had to find out âPFM keyboard guyââs name and track him down. With Bravin also on our Zoom interview call, Spawton is able to address him â who he calls Alby â directly. âIt wasnât that easy,â he says, âAlby wasnât so into social mediaâŠâ
âYou sent me a message on Facebook,â says Bravin. âAnd I didnât reply [laughs].â
But he did respond to a subsequent email, and sent demo vocals back for consideration.
âI was listening to several peopleâs guide vocals, and my wife Kathy came in the room,â Spawton recalls. âKathy isnât a muso, or prog [fan], she just likes good music. She heard Alby and went: âOoh, goosebumps.â I knew I was on to something.ââ
PFM (Premiata Forneria Marconi), founded in 1970, are the biggest prog band in Italy; Bravin giving them up for BBT was a big deal, but a sacrifice he was ready to make. The multi-instrumentalist and engineer/producer had the opportunity to shape music created in a mould that he loved.
Bravinâs presence upped BBTâs Italian contingent, alongside Nick DâVirgilio âand my own Italian heritage,â says Spawton. Bravinâs appointment was warmly received by the majority of Passengers â they missed Longdon terribly, but trusted the bandâs decision. His first shows with the band, that September, showcased the singerâs personality, and a look that was more hi-tops, skinny jeans and bomber jackets than tailoring. His training as an opera singer blended with an affection for metal; Ozzy Osbourneâs Crazy Train became BBTâs intro music. Bravin carried BBTâs, and Longdonâs, flame in a congenial and kind-hearted manner that elicited a lot of emotion, alongside DâVirgilioâs touching tribute. Bravin was âthe right guyâ.
Spawton, Bravin, DâVirgilio and Sjöblom were now at the centre of BBT, joined by violinist Clare Lindley, prog guitar favourite Dave Foster and 30-year-old Norwegian keyboard player Oskar Holldorff, from English Electric signing Dim Gray. The chemistry was undeniable, and led to a wealth of new material.
Ditching their usual MO of working remotely, in May 2023 the group âwent old-schoolâ and headed to Trieste, Bravinâs home town in Italy, and spent three weeks at Urban Recording making their new album, The Likes Of Us.
It was a happy, harmonious time they spent in Trieste, with bonds deepening. DâVirgilio notes: âThe life in the songs on that record is because we were in the same room, and thereâs something pretty special about this bunch of people. It was a great vibe.â
The Likes Of Us will gladden the hearts of Passengers, and anyone seeking adventurous, inviting rock songs with emotional heft. It begins with the gorgeous overture Light Left In The Day, which features Bravinâs voice from the get-go (âAlby is the new voice of Big Big Train, we couldnât wait five or six minutes in to hear himâ), followed by Oblivion, a Dave Foster/Nick DâVirgilio co-write that enabled BBT to âget the guitars out â weâre not a folk rock band!â Spawton says with a laugh.
Seventeen-minute centrepiece Beneath The Masts was written on a cheap 12-string guitar bought by Spawton while living temporarily in Rome. It was an unwieldy song, informed by the death of his stepfather, which Bravin streamlined.
âA lot has happened in my life in the last couple of years, and not a lot of thatâs been positive,â Spawton explains. âThis was a serious attempt to deal with grief and bereavement. I needed someone to enunciate these raw feelings.â
âThat was the most emotional vocal,â says Bravin, nodding. âWith me, Greg and Fulvio in the room, we all just lost it.â
From here we have the punchy, melodic slice of carpe diem that is Skates On, the wild, romantic story of Triesteâs famous castle folly, Miramare, and Bravinâs own Love Is The Light, speaking of a struggle with depression, the start of three songs about friendship.
âBookmarks is where I talk directly about what happened with David,â Spawton says of this classic, BBT-style ballad. âI was incredibly low, and I had support from my wife and close family. But I found that my oldest childhood friends came to the fore and rallied round.â
Album closer The Last Eleven finds Spawton revisiting his school days, being picked for the cricket team â or not. âI was a weedy kid in the second, âextraâ team, the lowest of the lot. However, I was a secret weapon, a really good fast bowler [laughs]. This is about finding people on your wavelength, who stay with you for life.â
When recording had been completed, Spawton â whoâd normally guide the process from start to finish â stepped back to let Rob Aubrey and Bravin do the mixes. BBT were now signed to progressive music champions InsideOut. Everything they did was set to go up a level and continue the journey â records, touring, promotion, the works. Theyâve embraced it wholeheartedly. But The Likes Of Us had to be right first, and thatâs what Spawton listened for while on his river walk on that July day in 2023.
âI wanted to capture the soul of the band,â says Spawton. âWeâre going to evolve, but weâre rooted in seventies progressive rock and I didnât want us to come adrift from our moorings. When I heard the mixes, I just went: âWow. The boys have really nailed this.ââ
âI needed something in my life, a positive thing to face down the wall of pain,â he continues. âFinding Alby as a friend, a colleague, someone to create with and talk shit with has been important. Itâs made me feel that this is a band I want to be in. Thereâs raw emotion on there, but a record we can deliver live. Itâs about us, the band, the likes of us.â
âItâs also about all the people who supported the band through the difficult times,â offers Bravin. âThe likes of us, we are together.â The Likes Of Us is out now via InsideOut.