Product description
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THE TALKING HEADS Stop Making Sense CD
.co.uk
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The soundtrack to the Jonathan Demme documentary, Stop Making
Sense captures the Talking Heads live in 1984 on what would turn
out to be their last major tour. This collection, and the film,
is a true gift to the band's fans, a testament to their
extraordinary talent, both in the studio and especially onstage.
Frontman David Byrne infuses each song with a jolt of energy and
drama that could only have come from a late-1970s New York
art-school student. Now-classic tracks such as "Psycho Killer",
"Girlfriend Is Better", "Once in a Lifetime", "Take Me to the
River", and "Burning Down the House" have never sounded better.
--Lorry Fleming
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Review
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It was a show about ment. Whether in David Byrne’s now
iconic ‘big suit’ – an outfit better suited to a power-dressing
Joan Collins that set the bar for the 80s shoulder-pad obsession
at ridiculous heights – or in the way the band builds from a solo
Byrne on an empty stage with a boombox and an acoustic guitar for
Psycho Killer to a stage full of horn sections, backing singers
and ex-Funkadelic players making Take Me to the River a blitz of
sound and colour. Or, indeed, in the way the visual and artistic
pretensions of this 1984 concert film and its soundtrack (the
first rock movie made using entirely digital audio techniques)
catapulted post-punk NYC oddballs Talking Heads from the art-funk
underground into the mainstream ubiquity enjoyed by Road to
Nowhere and Little Creatures the following year.
Though both open with the minimalist off-the-cuff intro of "Hi,
I’ve got a tape I wanna play you," the original nine-song,
40-minute soundtrack release leaps straight from Psycho Killer to
the funk stomp of Swamp, failing to capture the movie’s portrayal
of the band’s slow build through the stark Byrne/Weymouth duet on
Heaven and Thank You for Sending Me an Angel’s rockabilly rattle
along the way. This is a set worth the long journey round, so you
are directed to the 1999 reissue including a full half-hour’s
extra material: the wheeled-on expansion of the band unravels in
full, right up until arrival of the soul choir and o basher
for Slippery People and a dazzling Burning Down the House.
Here we find the 80s at their most edgy and vital – the chart-y
synth sheen that dominated the decade from Nik Kershaw to The
Buggles to the Pet Shop Boys to Timbuk3 to SAW given a sinister
collegiate twist and an afrobeat edge. You could argue that Stop
Making Sense kept the 80s cheesy beyond its years and opened the
door for Sting and his tribe-bothering millionaire muckers to
keep world music uncool for decades to come; certainly it imbued
the keytar generation with an intelligence and credibility
previously stymied by its piano key ties and voluminous chinos.
But, damn, it’s good fun. An essential glance at the 80s
mainstream’s underbelly, and showcase for some of the era’s most
thoughtful and inspired tunes – Once in a Lifetime’s effervescent
bemoaning of life’s inexorable drag towards mundanity or, at the
other end of the emotional scale, What a Day that Was and its
jubilant celebration of romance’s minutiae. Technically dated,
sure, but the Heads’ coming of age still makes near perfect
sense.
--Mark Beaumont
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