In December 1975, the 26-year-old Wakeman finished his three-month tour of North America and Brazil in following the release of his recent studio album
The Myths and Legends of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table (1975) and the soundtrack album
Lisztomania (1975). After a brief rest period, he relocated to
Herouville, France in January 1976 to record a new studio album
No Earthly Connection with his rock band, The English Rock Ensemble. His previous two albums,
Journey to the Centre of the Earth (1974) and
King Arthur, were
concept albums that featured a symphony orchestra and choir that were costly to produce. When it came to recording
No Earthly Connection, management at
A&M Records insisted to Wakeman that an album with an orchestra and choir was no longer an option. For his 1975 tour, Wakeman had added two brass players to now six-piece band, Martyn Shields on trumpet and Reg Brooks on trombone. Guitarist Jeffrey Crampton was also replaced by John Dunsterville. During a stop in
Miami, Florida on the 1975 tour, a time when material for the album was being prepared, Wakeman claimed he saw a
UFO in the night sky at his beach house and alerted bassist Roger Newell as a witness. He resisted to inform others at first as he thought they would merely disbelieve him, despite the incident attracting local news coverage on the following day. Wakeman used the incident to write musical themes that entered his mind as he thought of it, much of which was put down during flights on the 1975 tour. Wakeman also wrote some passages in the airplane toilet. Wakeman ended up writing a considerable amount of music during the making of the album as he was determined to record everything that came to mind, but had to throw out approximately sixty percent of the material. He later revealed that he wrote it without playing any of it back to listen. Wakeman said he could not explain half of the album, and gave the album its title because of his inability to fully explain it. Biographer Dan Wooding believe the album is Wakeman's "own personal journey into the unknown". == Recording ==