Everything That Happens Will Happen Today

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (704 ratings)
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Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 47:16

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Douglas Wolk

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Douglas Wolk writes about pop music and comic books for Time, the New York Times, Rolling Stone, Wired and elsewhere. He's the author of Reading Comics: How Gra...more »

10.07.08
After 25 years, Byrne and Eno collaborate again
2008 | Label: Todo Mundo / Redeye

Elvis Costello once wrote about collaborating with Brian Eno that he "really admired Brian's ruthless and creative use of the erase button." Both Eno and David Byrne do their best work when they've got a creative foil — someone they clearly want to impress, who can offer them the gift of erasure as well as the gift of addition — and their first collaboration in a quarter-century is a return to their curious, push-and-pull synergy, with some of the most solidly crafted songs Byrne has sung since the end of Talking Heads.

Still, anyone expecting it to sound like their previous collaboration, 1981's epochal sound-collage My Life in the Bush of Ghosts, is likely to be surprised: Everything presents eleven straight-ahead rock songs, with Byrne singing and Eno mostly providing backing tracks for him, along with the occasional liquid-milk-chocolate backup vocal. (Eno's old compatriots Robert Wyatt and Phil Manzanera put in cameo appearances, too.)

In fact, if there's any previous Byrne/Eno collaboration that Everything That Happens Will Happen Today takes after, it's their first, Talking Heads '1978 album More Songs About Buildings and Food. As on that record, the songs here are very simple on their surface, but it's… read more »

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Everything that happens

EMUSIC-029E1CFA

Pretty good. Par for the course for Eno and Byrne. I second the comment, "worth the wait".

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Everything that happens

EMUSIC-029E1CFA

Pretty good. Par for the course for Eno and Byrne. I second the comment, "worth the wait".

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Not so great

Emusic-Dave

I only downloaded a couple tracks and didn't really like them

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Wish Eno would tour, too

OldSchool2000

Four stars for the album - it doesn't cover any new ground, but it is competent and comfortable. As a long time Heads/Eno/Byrne fan I welcomed this album enthusiastically and prefer it to Eno's most recent solo vocal album (first in 30 years?). I give it an extra star for a combination of sentiment and how well it plays live. Byrne did one of the great stage shows with this material over the last year.

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Worth the wait!

bigdoc13

It has been too long since David Byrne came out with new stuff. Thank goodness he finally did it.

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My Favorite of 2008/2009

Sapshot

Nothing retro here. Two artists growing with age. Worth every download.

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I like it

tokers

Caught my attention with their performance on The Colbert Report. Got a good beat to it. I could dance to it... If I still had feet...

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Essential David Byrne

JetFred

Stand-out tracks are I Feel My Stuff and Strange Overtones. So good that Byrne themed a tour after it and the earlier Byrne-Eno collaboration.

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Electronic gospel...

donato

Two great talents got together to produce this album and it's a pretty good one at that. It can be described as interesting and laid back. It's the music of Brian Eno and the lyrics of David Byrne and together they make something that is a good listen. My favorite tracks on this would have to be Life Is Long and One Fine Day. I was hooked on the song Life Is Long when I saw a performance of it late one night. David Byrne is one to combine art and dance with song and to provide an interpretation of what he feels the song represents. He does an excellent job at it. The album is referred to by the duo as "electronic gospel" and as far as gospel music, this is now my favorite type.

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and more

jarrodallen

Overtones is a strong track. Definitely has skip worthy songs. get it.

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They Say All Media Guide

The musical reunion between David Byrne and Brian Eno comes with a fair amount of baggage. After all, they produced some of the greatest records in rock history: the trio of Talking Heads records that Eno worked on, culminating in Remain in Light, and followed by the duo’s My Life in the Bush of Ghosts, where all manner of funky beats and freaky sampladelic rhythms were wedded to Pentecostal exorcisms and African ceremonial bush chants. Everything That Happens Will Happen Today is a nearly 180-degree turn from the duo’s collective musical past. These 11 songs are loopy pop tunes that wed Byrne’s strange hearing of gospel and folk to Eno’s continually evolving rhythmic and electronic palette — they refer to it as “folk-electronic-gospel.” Granted, Eno’s compositional frameworks are all written in major keys, and Byrne’s poetically funny, sophisticated lyrics express possibility and hope in the middle of cultural darkness, but while it’s clear that the emotional component is shared between the two principals, this is far from “message” music. The set opens with “Home.” Strummed acoustic guitars and drum loops textured by sonic wonkery introduce an elegantly simple melody where Byrne, at his full-throated best, sings: “The dimming of the light/Makes the picture clearer…I memorized a face so it’s not forgotten…Come back anytime/And we’ll mix our lives together/Heaven knows what keeps mankind alive/Every hand — goes searching for its partner in crime.” Brokenness and paradox are also addressed: “Home where my world is breaking in two/Home with the neighbors fighting/Home — were my parents telling the truth?” Likewise, the title track — with its warm, liquid guitars (à la Daniel Lanois), out-of-the-ether sonic architecture, and Byrne’s lyric coming from both dream and reflection — is slower and less jaunty, but poetically moving: “Oh my brother, I still wonder, are you all right/And among the living, we are giving/All through the night….” The backing choral voices give the track its “church” feel, but the message is more human and existential than divinely inspired. Another winner is “Life Is Long,” which evokes remembrance as the continuation of the chain of human events. Its horn section touches on soul and rhythm & blues, but is blanched and diluted wonderfully. The only track that consciously attempts the rhythmic complexity of anything on My Life in the Bush of Ghosts is “Poor Boy,” which is cosmic science-fiction white-boy funk at its best. It’s a warning against following the established order and rampant, empty materialism for their own sake — its guitar riff comes straight outta the Rolling Stones’ “Brown Sugar.” Everything That Happens Will Happen Today is, despite the long odds, a truly inviting, musically adventurous, and mature musical statement. It reveals in spades how willing artists are capable of redefining themselves when they refuse to take themselves too seriously. This is unfettered joyful listening, and in its own small way, even profound. – Thom Jurek

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