The Million Things That Never Happened | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Billy Bragg |
Cover: | The Million Things That Never Happened.jpg |
Border: | yes |
Studio: | Echo Zoo, Eastbourne |
Genre: | |
Length: | 46:15 |
Label: | Cooking Vinyl |
Producer: | Romeo Stodart and Dave Izumi |
Prev Title: | Bridges Not Walls |
Prev Year: | 2017 |
Next Title: | The Roaring Forty (1983–2023) |
Next Year: | 2023 |
The Million Things That Never Happened is a 2021 studio album by the English singer Billy Bragg. The title track refers to various social events that could not take place due to lockdowns in the COVID-19 pandemic.
Bragg describes the album as "first pandemic blues album of our times but also a heartfelt paean to human resilience."[1] The album was produced by Romeo Stodart, of the Magic Numbers, with Dave Izumi. The instrumentation includes a 1960s mellotron, which provided a "wonderful kind of woozy, dreamlike sound", according to Bragg.[2]
"To me, it spoke to the ambiguity of lockdown. The ambiguity of not knowing what the future holds — not knowing when we'll go back to what we used to refer to as "normal." So, I kind of liked that sound. I said to Dave, "We should use a little bit more of that to try and evoke that weird feeling, that space where we're not sure if we're going forward or backward.""
The final track, "Ten Mysterious Photos That Can't Be Explained", was co-written with Bragg's son, Jack Valero, after Bragg played him an early draft of the song over Christmas. Valero suggested the inclusion of a middle eight, and reportedly wrote one for the song in half an hour.
NME reviewed the album as 3 out of 5 stars, describing it as "mellow and empathetic".[3] Americana UK stated that the album was "remarkable" and that it "may be Bragg’s best album so far", adding that he "remains a barb in the side of the establishment."[4]
Iain Key of Louder Than War gave the album a positive review, opining that "those expecting the slightly off-kilter cockney of yesteryear will be disappointed as age has been kind to the singer, his voice seemingly becoming richer with each release",[5] while in The Guardian, Jude Rogers called it "a woozy, melancholic affair, full of Mellotrons, Moogs and resonant Dobro guitars."[6]
Writing for Paste, Eric R. Danton stated that "The Million Things That Never Happened is as contemplative an album as Bragg has released", and that the album "is in many ways subtler and even more subdued than much of his work, but it’s an album that sticks."[7] Nick Hasted, of The Arts Desk, highlighted the track 'Lonesome Ocean', writing: "This sanguine song, sung with a mature balladeer’s voice, shows this album’s qualities: reflective not raw, rueful not raging, an honest evolution from scrappy youth into elder. And there it sits, a little back from the fray, a little too comfortable, but always trying."[8]
Peak position | |
Australian Albums (ARIA)[9] | 98 |
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