Wednesday, December 2, 2020

Talking Heads bring their Funk Orchestra to Europe


Talking Heads : Born Under Punches


On December 1 and 2, 1980 U2 opened for the expanded 9-musician line up of Talking Heads at London's Hammersmith Palais. Joining the four Heads on their tour to promote Remain In Light were guitarist Adrian Belew, Parliament/Funkadelic keyboardist Bernie Worrell, percussionist Steve Scales, bassist Busta Jones and backing vocalist Dollette McDonald. All were musicians Jerry Harrison had met, bouncing around studios  in Philadelphia and New York while David Byrne was getting deeply into African music while working on My Life In The Bush of Ghosts with Brian Eno.

"In the moments when this group really works, the underlying sensibility is very different from what it was before, a real radical shift," Byrne told NME. "This music, when it really comes together right, has a transcendent feeling, like a trance of some sort.

"That's exactly what happens in traditional African music and other Third World music. It's something that isn't sought after in most pop music. We're aiming at something different, although some of the elements may be the same. When it works you get the feeling: forget yourself and become part of the community. It's wonderful and it doesn't happen every night.


In two weeks The Talking Heads took their Funk Orchestra to Rome where they performed in front of television cameras at Palazzo dello Sport. This is the band working at genius level. You can hear this line up on the 1982 live album The Name of This Band is Talking Heads

 As good as it sounds, there is already a rift among the original members after songwriting credits on the collaborative Remain In Light went only to Byrne and Eno. There would be no new Talkings Heads studio album until 1983, just solo records from Harrison, Byrne and, outselling them all, Chris Frantz and Tina Weymouth's Tom Tom Club.



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