Leave it to
People Like Us' Vicki Bennett to turn one of the most significant delays in aviation history into a creative opportunity. Thanks to the massive amounts of carbon dioxide and ash spewed into Europe’s airspace in March and April 2010 by the Icelandic volcano Eyjafjallajökull, Bennett was stranded in the United States, laying the groundwork for the first
People Like Us album since 2003. In the years between albums, Bennett released much of her discography for free on the Internet and started the sound art radio show Do or DIY on WFMU. However, her skills are just as sharp as ever on
Welcome Abroad; joined by
Half Japanese's
Jason Willett and
Matmos' M.C. Schmidt, she captures the frustration of her enforced stay in the States as it stretched from days to weeks. Using perky elevator music and orchestral versions of well-known pop songs as the base for her finely chopped sampling and recontextualizing, Bennett's tracks have a drifting, rootless feel, traveling without a particular destination in mind and hovering like so much volcano smoke over Europe. As usual, her collages aren’t just amusing in a “spot the sample” way, although pairing
Julie Andrews and
Jim Morrison on “The Sound of the End of Music” and
Marilyn Monroe with
the Beatles on “You’ve Got to Know When” is undeniably witty. Instead, she uses this humor to craft
Welcome Abroad's narrative, tracing her impatience and frustration. “Happy Lost Songs” wanders from “Do You Know the Way to San Jose?” to “Fly Me to the Moon” to “Country Roads”; “The Seven Hills of Rome” spells out culture clash in a hypnotic singsong; and “Wonderful Wonderful” is downright slaphappy, setting a loop of “I want go home” to applause over a buoyant waltz. And despite the cartoony brilliance of tracks like “Driving Flying Rising Falling,” which melds “Bridge on the River Kwai” and
Petula Clark, among other sources, into a bustling metropolis, many of
Welcome Abroad's best tracks are unabashedly soft and even romantic. “Ever” is an abstract girl group confection, mixing
the Ronettes' “Walking in the Rain” and
Petula Clark (again) into a hypnotic concoction filled with longing, while “The Look” is one of the album’s tours de force, melding snippets of everyone from
Edvard Grieg to
Santo & Johnny to
Lionel Richie to
Elton John into a seven-and-a-half-minute epic of fractured elegance. Like any concept album worth its salt,
Welcome Abroad closes with a big finish. “The Atlantic Conveyor” leaves listeners soaring with a pastiche of “Hello Goodbye” and “Born Free,” and nearly as adrift in song as when the album began. Fortunately, Bennett eventually got home to England to complete this playful, thought-provoking album, making it a welcome return in more ways than one. ~ Heather Phares