Talk Normal: The Laurie Anderson Anthology

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (61 ratings)
Talk Normal: The Laurie Anderson Anthology album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 35   Total Length: 152:09

Write a Review 5 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Talk Normal: The Laurie Anderson Anthology

g-rip3

Great overview of her work, but I feel compelled toward completism as regards Ms. Anderson. Just so much that is so interesting, one listens to this knowing full well there are gems left out of the collection.

user avatar

Talk Normal

nowalls

If you like Laurie Anderson and don't already have her albums, this is a good bet. It has some of her best numbers, but a few of the versions are not as good as the ones on Big Science.

user avatar

A truer word never spoken

wrenstir

There are a lot of great storytellers alive in this world. Bless us all, we are so lucky ... But there is no other storyteller who has so profoundly affected and inspired this reviewer to create art. When I was a young electronic sound whipper snapper just cutting my chops in film, I thought Laurie was hella funny. Over 30 years later, I'm still in awe. Usually, when I see an artist's work in anthology, I think- "oh sigh, another fading star." Not so with Laurie, her show earlier this year (2010) was just as riveting, inspiring and at the end, rattling to the core. Awesome. Indeed. Keep on listening.

user avatar

Awesome!

frethepig

Awesome, indeed! It's been thirty-odd years and Laurie's early stuff is still light years "out there" And this sounds so good.

user avatar

Awesome!

iame1948

I have listened to Laurie Anderson for many years. This is a good anthology of her materiel thru the years. Unfortunately, she has recorded no new music since her live album in 2001:Live in New York. That piece includes newer music as it was done only a few days after 9/11. You enjoy sarcasm and wit, she is one to listen to and listen to closely. Almost all of her music has a message and a point! Enjoy her with an open mind. bobbie

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

Scene: Downtown New York Punk and Post-Punk, 1976-83

By Douglas Wolk, eMusic Contributor

There's always music going on in New York City, always young artists coming to town to seek their fortune. But from the mid '70s to the early '80s, a bunch of interlocking music scenes popped up around downtown Manhattan, where the rents were still low enough for young people to find a cheap loft to live in, make big noises and push their art as far as it could go. The center of the early New… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Talk Normal: The Laurie Anderson Anthology gathers 35 career highlights that range from Anderson’s most performance art-oriented material to her poppiest moments. Leading off with “O Superman (For Massenet),” her unlikely 1981 hit, the first disc pares down Big Science — itself a distillation of her four-hour piece United States — to its starkest and most hypnotic tracks, including “From the Air,” “Born, Never Asked,” and the title track. “Sharkey’s Day,” “Excellent Birds,” and “Langue D’Amour,” all from the more melodic, emotional Mister Heartbreak, close out disc one, along with more pieces from United States, including “Walk the Dog,” “Cartoon Song,” and “Lighting Out for the Territories.” Similarly, the second disc picks highlights from the Home of the Brave soundtrack — “Smoke Rings” and “Language Is a Virus” chief among them — and includes six tracks from her most melodic, song-structured album, Strange Angels. “Coolsville,” “The Day the Devil,” and the title track work especially well outside of the album’s context and mix nicely with Bright Red tracks like “Speak My Language” and “In Our Sleep.” The anthology closes with a sampling of The Ugly One With the Jewels’ vignettes, including “The Night Flight From Houston,” “The Rotowhirl,” and “The End of the World.” Though the anthology distills Anderson’s work so much that it tends to blur the character of her individual albums, Talk Normal still presents most of the nuances in Anderson’s distant yet open, ironic yet emotional style. For new listeners who want a bigger, more representative picture of Anderson’s work than Big Science provides, Talk Normal is a good starting point. – Heather Phares

more »