New Wave Band:
Talking
Heads
by New Wave
Dave
I don't view Talking Heads as
"the most New Wave band" [whatever that might mean]. They're
just - just! - my favorite.
Of course, I'm specifically thinking of
some of their early albums. David Byrne & crew became so
chameleon-like, turning out music of many genres, that you
can't simply tab them as New Wave. For instance, the superbly
funky Remain in Light album -
thanks for producing it, Brian Eno! - is
wonderful aural entertainment, but New Wave it
ain't.
New Wave music was about new rhythms, new
attitudes, and pushing listeners out of their comfort
zones and into new ways of thinking. One of the first shots in
the New Wave revolution came in 1977, with the aptly
named Talking Heads :
77. The best-known song, "Psycho Killer", was
puzzling and yet enthralling; was this nervous guy, thrashing
out weird lyrics, playing the role of a psycho killer? But
other tracks deserve to be heard - and moved to. Crank up "New
Feeling" or "The Book I Read" or "Pulled Up", and you'll find
your head snapping, your limbs flailing, and your mind moving
in unfamiliar ways.
Their next salvo, the following year, was the
wonderfully titled More Songs About Buildings and Food. As on Talking Heads: 77, this album featured
vocals and rhythms that both reflected and induced anxiety
... but in a melodic and thought-provoking way. While the
huge hit was a geeky remake of Al Green's "Take Me to the
River", the album is littered with oddly catchy nuggets
like "Artists Only" and "Stay Hungry".
1979 brought Talking Heads' best-selling
album so far, Fear of Music.
This one straddled several flavors of music: New Wave ("Mind",
"Paper"), more traditional [and commercially successful] rock
("Cities", "Life During Wartime"), and oddball trippiness
("Heaven", "Electric Guitar", "Drugs").
Fear of Music is the last Talking Heads
album that I would count as largely New Wave. But you shouldn't
miss the compilation Popular Favorites 1976-1992/Sand In ..., which contained many of their well-known New Wave
songs as well as some earlier singles (from the 1977 period)
that hadn't been on an album, such as "Love -- Building on
Fire". Certainly worth a listen!
To get more details about - or buy -
any of these albums, just click on an album cover
below.

 
 
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