CD I: 1) New Feeling; 2) A Clean Break (Let's Work); 3) Don't Worry About The Government; 4) Pulled Up; 5) Psycho Killer; 6) Who Is It?; 7) The Book I Read; 8) The Big Country; 9) I'm Not In Love; 10) The Girls Want To Be With The Girls; 11) Electricity (Drugs); 12) Found A Job; 13) Mind; 14) Artists Only; 15) Stay Hungry; 16) Air; 17) Love > Building On Fire; 18) Memories (Can't Wait); 19) Heaven.
CD 2: 1) Psycho Killer; 2) Warning Sign; 3) Stay Hungry; 4) Cities; 5) I Zimbra; 6) Drugs (Electricity); 7) Once In A Lifetime; 8) Animals; 9) Houses In Motion; 10) Born Under Punches (The Heat Goes On); 11) Crosseyed And Painless; 12) Life During Wartime; 13) Take Me To The River; 14) The Great Curve.
General verdict: Hard work, adventurous innovation, boundless energy, constant evolution — you know you have yourself the gold standard for live albums when you somehow manage to combine all four.
More than any other classic live album aside
from, perhaps, The Whoʼs Live At Leeds,
this chronological retrospective of the evolution of Talking Headsʼ live sound
from 1977 to 1980 is a living monument to the benefits of the CD format.
Originally released in 1982 as a (relatively) humble double LP that could have
easily fitted onto a single laser disc, twenty-two years later The Name Of This Band was lovingly doubled in length, clocking in now at an
impressive one hundred and fifty-six minutes and containing live versions of
approximately two-thirds of the band's entire catalog up to Remain In Light — preserving the
correct chronological order, and only including duplicate recordings for a
small handful of tunes, many of which had evolved almost beyond recognition
anyway (ʽPsycho Killerʼ).
Was this behemoth mutation necessary, or was it
merely another case of archival overkill? I have no idea how to answer this
objectively; all I remember from my own experience is that the very first notes
of ʽNew Feelingʼ got me hooked so much that I munched through the entire 156
minutes in one sitting, and that The
Name Of This Band is still one of the very
few live albums from post-1975 artists for which I have a very, very special (if no longer exactly
ʽnewʼ) feeling. Not only that, but it is also one of the very few live albums
from post-1975 artists that might arguably be better than the respective studio records — more accurately, I
think that, if I had to choose, I would have easily traded ʼ77 and More Songs for
the first of these two CDs, and that the only reason why Fear Of Music and Remain In
Light would have to remain is Brian Enoʼs production, some aspects of which
understandably could not be recaptured on stage.
One thing that we often overlook, if not
forget, about Talking Heads is that behind all the showmanship, all the
weirdness and eccentricity of their art used to lie an insane amount of harsh
self-discipline — it is totally not a coincidence that out of all the New Wave
acts, it was the Heads that were selected by Robert Fripp, the hardest working
man in progressive rock, as the role model for the Eightiesʼ reinvention of
King Crimson. Their early formative years at CBGB were spent not in merely
trying to find and define their artistic niche, but, perhaps even more importantly,
in turning themselves into a perfectly churning four-headed machine of
funk-pop-a-roll that could find no equals or even similars. Like, the first
thing you obviously notice about David Byrne when watching the bandʼs early
videos are his jerky antics — the second
thing is that behind these antics, the man actually manages to be complex,
precise, and super-expressive on his guitar, even when singing and dancing at the same time. Without
all that grueling, exhausting disciplinary action there would be no Remain In Light — whose polyrhythmic
perfection could only be achieved after years and years of training.
What is even more astonishing, though, is that
the results of this training are even clearer felt on the band's live
recordings than in the studio. Of course, the tracks that constitute The Name Of... were culled from a
variety of shows, ranging from small gigs broadcast live in radio studios
before a very small audience to much larger venues (culminating in a major
performance in New Yorkʼs Central Park) — but even if we cannot guarantee that every night in the bandʼs history of
live performing sounded like that, what difference does it make? All the way
through, Tinaʼs bass typically sounds louder, grumblier, heavier than in the
studio; Chrisʼ drums sound imbued with more energy and precision than in the studio; and the Byrne/Harrison guitar
interplay seems to be locked in even more complex and well-timed grooves than
in the studio. Admittedly, this might be an illusion that is primarily caused
by technical aspects — differences automatically stemming from production
techniques employed in different environments. But I am sure that it also has
everything to do with the same old dilemma that, for instance, used to
transform The Who into two absolutely different bands: one hunting for a more
melodic, polished, nuanced sound in the studio, another one going for an all-out
kick-ass energy ball in the concert venue.
In the New Wave era, this differentiation was
largely abandoned, as one half of the new artists simply sought to reproduce
their studio sound onstage as carefully as possible (which makes live albums by
bands such as The Cure fairly redundant, since it was technically impossible to
transfer all their studio complexities to the stage), while the other half, on
the contrary, were bent on reproducing the wildness of their live shows in the
studio (which is why punk rock usually works better live). Talking Heads were
one of the very few new acts who remembered the old perks of having yourself a
studio avatar vs. a live avatar — all the more charming for one of the most
innovative / progressive acts of the decade — and this is why hearing all your
old favorites in these live versions, instead of being predictably boring, ends
up breathing new life in them. (For the record, I never even began to properly
differentiate between all the different-but-similar numbers on More Songs before being introduced to
their counterparts here).
Speaking in terms of highlights and lowlights
makes no sense for an album like this, so I will just mention a couple of special
moments to illustrate my general points. For one thing, the scary intro to
ʽMemories (Can't Wait)ʼ is made just a bit scarier when Harrison brings in more
diversity to his lead guitar countermelody, playing scragglier, jaggier,
angrier chords butting against Davidʼs steady rhythm playing (for some reason,
in this arrangement the songʼs main melody reminds me even more of one of
Iommiʼs riffs from Black Sabbathʼs ʽWar Pigsʼ — coincidence or not, this is the
main source of the creepy vibe). The slightly extended intro to ʽPsycho
Killerʼ, with David and Jerry playing in different tonalities, the former doing
his chunky-funky thing and the latter weaving in a bit of a blues-pop guitar
melody, adds delicious tension as you wait with bated breath for them to «come
together» for the main twin riff. And the crescendo coda to ʽFound A Jobʼ, with
both guitar players, perfectly aware of each other's presence, laying on extra
volume and intensity with every next few bars, just makes it all so much more real than the studio version, where the
idea of mutual competition was nowhere near as well-pronounced.
Special mention should be made of ʽA Clean
Break (Letʼs Work)ʼ, one of the bandʼs best early songs which, for some unknown
reason, never made it onto any of the studio albums — a true funk-pop thunderstorm
and an excellent showcase for Byrne/Harrison «guitar dialogue» techniques, with
Byrne, as usual, providing most of the funk and Jerry compensating for this
with poppy licks and occasional blues-rock explosions, all taken at top speed
and seasoned with some more trademark vocal hysterics (although the song is so
fun that it is hardly possible to take David's "in a minute I'll wash that
love away!" close to serious).
The second disc, whose tracks were all taken
from the Remain In Light tour, is a
much different affair: this was the «deluxe» version of Talking Heads, the
expanded ultra-special show with a grand entourage, adding backing vocalists
(Nona Hendryx in particular), extra keyboard and percussion players, and, most
significantly, Adrian Belew on third (or second, depending on whether Byrne was
playing or clowning) guitar. This partially justifies the inclusion of
alternate versions of some of the songs — the coda to ʽPsycho Killerʼ, for instance,
is completely transformed under Adrianʼs maniacal influence as he
single-handedly turns the song into ʽPsycho Arcade Game Playerʼ; but it also
makes possible to render sufficient justice to all those Remain In Light masterpieces like ʽThe Great Curveʼ that would have
been nowhere near as impressive without Adrian or the extra singers supplying
the kaleidoscope of vocal melodies and countermelodies. Unfortunately, the
second disc is still just a tad less effective than the first one because there
is less space left for improvisation and individual touches — nevertheless,
Belew never plays the same solo twice, and the disclaimer is really only valid
for Remain In Light material that occupies
less than half of the discʼs running time. (In contrast, this live version of
ʽLife During Wartimeʼ kicks the shit out of the studio original — in no small
part due to Bernie Worrellʼs added clavinet solos that complement the songʼs
paranoid mood admirably).
Regardless, one of the great aspects of this retrospective is that it
is... well, a retrospective. Some of those «watch-me-through-the-years»
spectacles end up relatively disappointing, like Bruce Springsteenʼs Live 1975–85, where you see the artist,
while consistently retaining the same level of energy and professionalism,
gradually succumb to more and more arena-rock clichés. Here, on the contrary,
you see Talking Heads grow and develop from a local club phenomenon to a
massive force of nature without ever losing a single inch of adequacy — the
bigger they get, the harder they work at justifying that bigness. The distance
traveled from the humble-subtle opening of ʽNew Feelingʼ to the grand
mother-Earth finale of ʽTake Me To The Riverʼ and ʽThe Great Curveʼ is
enormous, but it feels so natural and logical that you will probably not even
sense the transition if you listen to the whole record in one go. All in all,
this is the single greatest story of musical evolution from the «Silver Age» of
rock music unfurling here before your ears over two and a half hours, and,
needless to add, one of the greatest live albums of all time.
This version of "Take Me to the River" is in the running for my favourite live track of all time. The combination of the gospel vocals and megalithic bass work makes it sound like the end of the world.
ReplyDeleteStill waiting for Def Leppard reviews.
ReplyDeleteAnd Bachman-Turner Overdrive, one of the great heavy pop bands.
DeleteJust wanted to say I'm glad to see you back to reviewing George, you've been missed!
ReplyDeleteThe boy is back in town.
ReplyDeleteThank God you are back! We thought Putin kidnapped you or something..
ReplyDeleteYour old site is what turned me onto in in the first place (I believe it's the second newest album you gave a 14 too). It's still one of my favorite album, I can listen to 'Electricity' forever.
ReplyDeleteComment - the main attraction of this live album is that, prior to the Speaking In Tongues era (and that live "act" was made even more theatrical in the Stop Making Sense film), Talking Heads defied post-punk musical politics by putting a substantial amount of improvisation into their performances.
ReplyDeleteAs did the Cure (which is why we still need a warts-and-all Cure live album from the '80s and '90s with one of those ten minute Forests or Forevers...I should've put this comment on another page!)