Talk Talk Talk

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (78 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 41:13

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pick the good ones

goatwhisperer

Take some time to cherry pick the good tracks (4 or 5) because the others are quite annoying. I remember now listening to this disk selectively.

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Strong Furs Effort

ProgNosticator

80's art-rockers, the PSYCH Furs explode with their patented WALL of sound (& noise) in Talk,Talk,Talk...Featuring the mammoth new-wave hit "Pretty In Pink"..the FURS show they can do it all from power "Into You Like A Train" to beauty "She Is Mine"..a unique group & record..

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New Wave, but still good

jolo

This was very much a transitional album for me, new wave right before I got into HC. Of course, new wave was always good to have around, especially when wanting to have something to play when fairer sex was around. This album still holds up suprisingly well, and does not sound dated. Pretty in Pink is still a great tune.

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she is mine

lunchpail

great track on a great album.

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desert island

yayhooforanna

I wore this record out in the 80's. Even though I was a bit on an American music snob, I loved this band, and this record especially. It still sounds good to me!

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They Say All Media Guide

This time working solely with Steve Lillywhite, the Furs introduce a brighter, poppier side to their underground rock edge, with smashing results throughout. The group produces some powerful songs, even more rough-edged than before. Especially striking is “Dumb Waiters,” with its queasy, slow-paced arrangement that allows both Kilburn’s sax and Ashton’s guitar to go wild. However, the six still create some undeniable pop classics. Most well-known is the lead track, “Pretty in Pink,” inspiration for the iconic John Hughes film years later and re-recorded as a result. The original is still where to go, though, with Butler’s catchy description of a romantically unsure woman matched by a killer band performance. Similarly lighter numbers on the record call to mind a rockier version of Roxy Music’s output in later years: elegant, romantic angst given a slightly rougher edge in both music and vocals. “She Is Mine” is especially fine as a gently swinging number with some of Butler’s best, quietly ruminative lyrics. Straight-up anthems abound as well, the best being the amazing “Into You Like a Train,” which mixes the blunt desire of the title with a sparkling Ashton guitar line and a fast rhythm punch. Talk Talk Talk ends on another high with “All of This and Nothing.” A soft, acoustic guitar-sax-rhythm combination introduces the song, then fades away for the main section to begin; Butler details bits and pieces from a lost relationship over a sharp full-band performance, and a final drum smash leads into a reprise of the start — a fine way to end a fine record. – Ned Raggett

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