This is the best concert that I have never been to. And this month, it celebrates its 30th anniversary.
Talking Heads were one of these bands that proudly embraced their weird side. They looked preppy and nerdy, their songs were artsy, disturbing and intellectual, their vocalist danced like an epilepsy sufferer. When asked about music they create, David Byrne responded: "It's not music you would use to get a girl into
bed. If anything, you're going to frighten her off." That may be true, but nevertheless, by incorporating post-punk, funk and world music to their records, Talking Heads made some of the best music of the decade and turned being uncool into the new cool.
Stop Making Sense was released in 1984, two tears after the iconic live album The Name of the Band Is Talking Heads. This time, the band decided to go a step further and make a concert movie with an intention of showing it at cinemas across the US. The effect is no less than extraordinary: what we receive is a fantastic compilation of Talking Heads songs, played by a live band expanded to nine members in a cinematic ambience. No special effects, no colorful lights, just pure energy and joy that comes from performing the music. Jonathan Demme, the director of the movie, recalls: “In early 1983, Gary Goetzman and I went to see my favorite band, the Talking Heads, at the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles. The show was like seeing a movie just waiting to be filmed. (...) David [Byrne] really saw this movie in his own head long before we came and pitched him on letting us shoot it.” To capture the essence of the band, Demme decided on long camera shots and avoiding the audience footage. Everything else – lighting, the staging, the choreography, the song line-up – was ready before the shooting even began, and when it finally did, Byrne put on his big suit and started the party.
'What do the words of your songs mean to you? I mean, You don’t write love songs, do you?'Stop Making Sense was released in 1984, two tears after the iconic live album The Name of the Band Is Talking Heads. This time, the band decided to go a step further and make a concert movie with an intention of showing it at cinemas across the US. The effect is no less than extraordinary: what we receive is a fantastic compilation of Talking Heads songs, played by a live band expanded to nine members in a cinematic ambience. No special effects, no colorful lights, just pure energy and joy that comes from performing the music. Jonathan Demme, the director of the movie, recalls: “In early 1983, Gary Goetzman and I went to see my favorite band, the Talking Heads, at the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles. The show was like seeing a movie just waiting to be filmed. (...) David [Byrne] really saw this movie in his own head long before we came and pitched him on letting us shoot it.” To capture the essence of the band, Demme decided on long camera shots and avoiding the audience footage. Everything else – lighting, the staging, the choreography, the song line-up – was ready before the shooting even began, and when it finally did, Byrne put on his big suit and started the party.
If anything can make you
psychically prepared for Stop Making
Sense, it must be the interview that Byrne did with himself – or rather
various versions of himself – to promote the movie:
'Um... I try to write about small things: paper,
animals, a house... love is kind of big. I have written a love song, though. In this
film, I sing it to a lamp.' *
* The song that he is talking about is "This Must Be the Place", the highlight of this concert, and probably one of the best songs ever created. The audience cried, I cried, some guy was so inspired that he made a movie of the same title and made Sean Pean cry, too.