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Talking Heads
Remain in Light


5.0
classic

Review

by Electric City USER (135 Reviews)
August 25th, 2006 | 3694 replies


Release Date: 1980 | Tracklist


When David Byrne wails "Take A Look At These Hands!" on what would come to be known as arguably the best Talking Heads album, Remain In Light, he creates a mental image of himself. Paranoid, unstable, and melodramatic, David Byrne is everything most alt bands in the 80's were- with a twist. Byrne, a thinking man, often called into question topics songwriting never delved into before. Unlike the dark bands of the big hair period of American History, Byrne's songs were NOT boy meets girl, girl dies, boy sees ghosts and eventually kills himself to end the ghosts. So typical. Byrne on the other hand, wrote about macabre periods of history, and he had a heavy fascination with the concept of self-image. The lyrical content of his pieces propose ideas that go against stable existence itself. Songs merely brush over ideas that would be considered ridiculous in Maycomb, Alabama. Adding to his sense of mysticism was the producer he had to create his greatest masterpiece, 1980's Remain In Light. The man? Brian Eno. Known for his ambience pieces, Eno seemed the perfect man to make Byrne's creation the darkest, most twisted, hang-yourself album this side of Closer. The only glitch thrown into making this black concoction? The Talking Heads are a good time funk band. Death is not what their music breeds. Songs by these guys pulsate, groove, experiment, and whatever else makes funk the boundary pushing genre it is. So what could you possibly get when you mix David Byrne's passions with Brian Eno's swirling darkness and top it all off with a big glass o funk? Possibly the greatest album of all time. Talking Heads- Remain In Light.

What one must understand about Talking Heads is that they’re not situated properly form wise. As in it’s not 3 guys with guitars and a dude behind drums. There are three men credited with guitars (mainly Adrian Belew), four with basses (Tina Weymouth)), five with keyboards (Jerry Harrison)), and seven with percussion (Chris Frantz). Also, The Heads have a knack for throwing whatever-the-***-they-find into a song and see if it works. Horns, static, video game bleeps, guitar destruction, all find a place in this band’s songs. The unlikely Mormon marriage of Funk and the four wives I mentioned earlier sounds like a cacophonous mesh of holy-***, when in reality, it adds to the unpredictable charm Remain In Light carries throughout it’s eight song lifespan. The fearlessness of Byrne and Eno bleeds through on songs like The Great Curve , where the production throws together 3 vocals hooks, adds in 2 solos of what can only be described as noise (courtesy of Adrian Belew), bangs on for 6 minutes, and is the defining representation of what the Talking Heads are all about. Drawn out, strange, unpredictable, but so goddamn awesome. The experimenting and “see if it works” attitude displayed on this album are what set it apart from the great and what makes it superb. The album opener, Born Under Punches, throws noises of Sega Genesis Pinball over a classic funk riff and stuffs it between twitchy rants of “I’m Not A Drowning Man! And I’m Not A Burning Building! (I’m A Tumbler!) Fire Cannot Hurt A Man. (Not The Government Man!)”. About two-thirds of the way through this deranged gem, the funk literally becomes a marching band procession, with the backup vocals chanting “And The Heat Goes On!” oblivious to the chaos around it. This kind of controlled insanity make Remain In Light so separate from the ordinary, and in only the best possible way.

The eclectic feel of the album is one of the reasons it goes down 26 years later as genius. Each song on Remain In Light is different from any other, leaving the listener with a balanced and satisfying listen. Seemingly everything from the light pop of Once In A Lifetime to the bleak computer ice of The Overload is covered. The Arabian Snake Charmer horns of Houses In Motion are incorporated brilliantly for a catchy but mellower piece off of Remain In Light. Byrne hides creepy words behind the funk and horns, but when dissected, lyrics like “As we watch him digging his own grave, It’s important to know where he’s at. He can’t afford to stop… that is what he believes. He’ll keep digging for a thousand years,” paint what is inside Byrne’s head. What’s more odd is the sneer with which he delivers this line. Byrne’s darker side truly comes out on the hypnotic second half of the album, particularly during the spoken word Seen and Not Seen where light monkish chants support a rhyme-less poem about the metamorphosis of humans. It’s spine chilling stuff, far different from the dancehall feel of the first four songs. Eno’s production tricks really come through here, where stray bleeps and bloops make for what sounds like a musical game of Pong, just far more interesting. On this half of the album though, Byrne’s musical influences come through. The claves that open Listening Wind have an African feel to them, and I already mentioned the horns to Houses In Motion. While granted, some dallies in other culture’s music succeed more than others, the Talking Heads established don’t-care attitude makes the listener not care either. In the end, it sounds like a musical history class, just with funk as the main course.

However, while Brian Eno and David Byrne deserve a lot of credit for their struggles and achievements on this album, credit must be given where credit is due. The musical virtuosity of everyone in the Talking Heads make Remain In Light an album to go back to and admire with a musician's ear. Each member of the band shines at one point or another with all three showing off in the aforementioned opener Born Under Punches. Adrian Belew’s guitar work throughout the first four songs is perfectly executed, particularly the shredding he does on The Great Curve. As I said before, it's weird noise, but controlled in some strange way. Bassist Tina Weymouth grooves steadily on the opener and beyond, and provides the simple but catchy line to the lost single Once In A Lifetime with ease. Jerry Harrison works the crap out of the keys whenever he can, and his solo spot on the opener is like unpouring a digital clock's pieces onto the floor and seeing how the mesh. And while it be true this group has it's own talents, what Eno does to their sound is unrivaled. The smooth monotonous bassline that beats the slow pulse of The Overload is an Eno staple, and Harrison plays it perfectly, while Belew and Weymouth bounce stray sounds into the air. This track, the finale, is a death march, with the band playing the parts of the organists and casket holders. Byrne sounds so nearly posthumous on this song, as he speaks as wearily as an old man, a far cry from the freestyle rap he dropped on early album rocker Crosseyed And Painless. As he breathes lines like "A terrible signal too weak to even recognize", you get the sense of darkness mentioned earlier in the review.

That darkness is what powers the emotional songs on the album. Perhaps Byrne's strongest lyrical moment is the penultimate The Listening Wind, where the recites the tale of a cheated Native American bent on revenge is told with a narrative but sympathetic third person. Through 3 verses and a sighingly catchy refrain, the listener learns this Native American is a terrorist, but Byrne twists it so the listener sides with the terrorist. I think the Matrix guys should do a movie on this... Either way, the way Byrne vocally gets into the atmosphere he wants is admirable. He can sound like a paranoid monkey one minute, and the next an ascending martyr. It's all a result of what's going on in that head of his, and the twistedness comes out in his songs both lyrically and musically. It takes someone geniusly out of his mind to write something as wondefully weird as The Great Curve, and while Byrne probably isn't crazy at all, when tapping into that far off psyche in someone's mind, you're bound to get something beautiful. Byrne didn' just get something beautiful. He came away with one of the greatest albums of all time.

Recommended Tracks

Born Under Punches
The Great Curve
Listening Wind
The Overload




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user ratings (2106)
4.5
superb
other reviews of this album
derho (5)
I feel like this album is too good for me to listen to....

Zebra (5)
...

Scott Herren (5)
...



Comments:Add a Comment 
metallicaman8
August 25th 2006


4677 Comments


Wowzerz, it's been quite some time since you've submitted a review.

Nice.

Intransit
August 25th 2006


2797 Comments


good review, Ive yet to hear this album, but I love Stop Making Sense, so I guess I should give this a listen.

heyseuss
August 25th 2006


384 Comments


I had a bizarre desire to read this really, really fast.

The Jungler
August 25th 2006


4826 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Good to see you reviewing something great that isn't Radiohead. Fantastic job, you should submit more.



This is still a 5/5 for me.

Electric City
August 25th 2006


15756 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Thanks sirs, maybe I'll get some Smiths or Kasabian in before school. Feels good to review again.

C20H25N3O
August 25th 2006


583 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

Never got all the hub bub about this album, I think it's a good album, but definately not classic.



Oh yeh, good review too.This Message Edited On 08.25.06

Zebra
Moderator
August 25th 2006


2647 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

This is such a brilliant review, much better then mine.

Remain in Light is my favorite album of all time. It took me a while to get into the slow-paced, darker songs but they just got better everytime I listened to them.



Bron-Yr-Aur
August 25th 2006


4405 Comments


This is probably the best review I've read in a month or so.

Electric City
August 25th 2006


15756 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Wow, thanks man. I wanted to come back with something really good, so I worked really hard on this one. Thanks again, meboy.

Serpento
August 25th 2006


2351 Comments


Great review Downer. Back in the saddle.This Message Edited On 08.25.06

ToolBox
August 26th 2006


26 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Okay, a few mistakes I believe.

Tina Weymouth is the bassist and Jerry Harrison is the keyboardist.

Just for clarification on The Listening Wind. You mean Native American as in someone from the Americas, or Native American as in American Indian?This Message Edited On 08.25.06

Electric City
August 26th 2006


15756 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

American Indian and will correct the other one.

ToolBox
August 26th 2006


26 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

I don't think there were free trade zones when Americans conquered the American Indians (Native Americans).



So, in the Listening Wind Mojique is not an American Indian.

Electric City
August 26th 2006


15756 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Well what do you think it isabout?

Sepstrup
August 26th 2006


1567 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

[quote=Zebra]It took me a while to get into the slow-paced, darker songs but they just got better everytime I listened to them.

[/quote]



I feel that way right now, but this album is growing on me a lot. It's a really cool album.

AlienEater
August 26th 2006


716 Comments


I really dislike the Talking Heads.

Electric City
August 26th 2006


15756 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

It took me a fair amount of time to get into the slower songs, but they're growing more and more on me, especially the backup vocals on "Seen and Not Seen".

Cygnus Inter Anates
August 26th 2006


721 Comments


[quote=review]Unlike the dark bands of the big hair period of American History, Byrne's songs were NOT boy meets girl, girl dies, boy sees ghosts and eventually kills himself to end the ghosts. So typical.[/quote] Uh what?

Electric City
August 26th 2006


15756 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Its a joke meant to make fun of bands that sing about death, such as JD or The Cure.

Chewie
January 4th 2009


4544 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

I'm detecting some Dead Kennedys within this band's sound



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