
Stop Making Sense is a Rock album by Talking Heads, originally released in 1984. On Gatefold: 205 pressings tracked, owned by 91 collectors.
Sound DNA
- Rock
- Art Rock
- angular
- restless
- art school
About
On YouTube, there’s a 34-minute video of Talking Heads playing at The Kitchen, a cutting-edge New York venue, as a trio in 1976, before Jerry Harrison joined the band. It’s a very tentative performance, awkward and full of uneasiness, and it’s almost impossible to imagine that only seven years later, they’d make one of the best, most dynamic concert films ever. <i>Stop Making Sense</i>, which was recorded during the <i>Speaking in Tongues</i> tour in Los Angeles in December 1983, begins with David Byrne singing “Psycho Killer” alone except for a beatbox. Then bassist Tina Weymouth joins for the second song “Heaven,” drummer Chris Frantz enters for the third, and Harrison arrives for the fourth. The quartet is augmented by five other musicians, most notably guitarist Alex Weir of The Brothers Johnson, and Parliament-Funkadelic wizard Bernie Worrell, the Thelonious Monk of the synthesizer. The film version of <i>Stop Making Sense</i>, directed by Jonathan Demme, adds an additional layer of visual delight, thanks to delightful staging, especially Beverly Emmons’ dramatic lighting, Byrne’s comically oversized suit (inspired by Japanese Noh theater costumes), his <i>pas de deux</i> with a floor lamp during “This Must Be the Place (Naïve Melody),” and the unrestrained exuberance of percussionist Steve Scales. <i>New Yorker</i> film critic Pauline Kael called Byrne “a stupefying performer” and described the movie as “close to perfection.” A 2023 remastering for the film’s 40th anniversary brought the spectacle to a new generation and prompted the band to cheerily do press together in support of the project—a first since their acrimonious breakup three decades earlier. If you don’t have a DVD, Blu-ray, IMAX theater, or VHS tape at hand, the album is still a delight. It's a good overview of the band’s first five records, played with gusto and mostly true to the originals, though they take “Making Flippy Floppy” at a much faster tempo. There are digressions into Tom Tom Club’s hit “Genius of Love” and two solo Byrne songs, most notably the luminous “What a Day That Was” from his <i>Catherine Wheel</i> album. The record concludes with a version of “Crosseyed and Painless,” whose only flaw is that it eventually ends.
via Apple Music
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Tracklist
Side A
- A1Psycho Killer4:20
- A2Swamp3:50
- A3Slippery People3:35
- A4Burning Down The House4:10
- A5Girlfriend Is Better3:32
Side B
- B1Once In A Lifetime4:34
- B2What A Day That Was5:08
- B3Life During Wartime4:52
- B4Take Me To The River5:36
Credits
Performers
- Ednah HoltBACKING VOCALS VOCALS
- Lynn MabryBACKING VOCALS VOCALS
- Tina WeymouthBASS VOCALS
- Chris FrantzDRUMS VOCALS DRUM
- Jerry HarrisonGUITAR KEYBOARDS VOCALS
- Alex WeirGUITAR VOCALS
- Bernie WorrellKEYBOARDS
- Steve ScalesPERCUSSION
- David ByrneVOCALS GUITAR
- Tom Tom ClubFEATURING
91 collectors on Gatefold own this · 205 pressings tracked on Gatefold
