Fear Of Music

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Fear Of Music album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 40:43

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Douglas Wolk

eMusic Contributor

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 »

01.11.10
An artistic breakthrough and a full-bodied, headlong plunge into funk and mental dissociation
1984 | Label: Warner Bros.

A full-bodied, headlong plunge into funk and mental dissociation, Talking Heads' second collaboration with Brian Eno was an artistic breakthrough — the album on which they stopped trying to rebel against the archetypes of rock and started seeing how far they could take their own eccentricities (David Byrne's adenoidal gulp and cracked naïvété) and gifts (especially Tina Weymouth and Chris Frantz's rubbery thump). A hot-on-the-one setting of a Dada poem by Hugo Ball leads it off, and makes it clear that they're trying to come up with a fresh approach to lyrics. For the rest of the album, Byrne writes and sings from the perspective of some kind of alien groping toward understanding human customs—cities, paper, electric guitars. The album's centerpiece is "Life During Wartime," an apocalyptic fantasy about the band's entire subculture becoming meaningless, but its secret gem is "Heaven," whose affected oddness loops all the way around until it becomes genuinely poignant.

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Heads Discover the Funk

sonikitty

This is the transition album (er, um collection of mp3 files) from seminal new wave band to world class art-funk multi-cultural band. Perhaps their most wide ranging collection of styles in song on one album. Er, um collection of mp3 files.

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Outstanding album

jP

Just can't get tired of this album. Great music and way ahead of the time.

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Album Only

Knutt

Album only tracks are garbage. Thanks again emusic.

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A Freakin' Masterpiece

LivingxLarge

All you chill-wavy trendmeisters who think synthesizers and distorted vocals are cool, sit down and listen to this album start to finish. I still get chills listening to I Zimbra.

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WTF?

word-ape

How does this album not get an editor's pick? Seriously.

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They Say All Music Guide

By titling their third album Fear of Music and opening it with the African rhythmic experiment “I Zimbra,” complete with nonsense lyrics by poet Hugo Ball, Talking Heads make the record seem more of a departure than it is. Though Fear of Music is musically distinct from its predecessors, it’s mostly because of the use of minor keys that give the music a more ominous sound. Previously, David Byrne’s offbeat observations had been set off by an overtly humorous tone; on Fear of Music, he is still odd, but no longer so funny. At the same time, however, the music has become even more compelling. Worked up from jams (though Byrne received sole songwriter’s credit), the music is becoming denser and more driving, notably on the album’s standout track, “Life During Wartime,” with lyrics that match the music’s power. “This ain’t no party,” declares Byrne, “this ain’t no disco, this ain’t no fooling around.” The other key song, “Heaven,” extends the dismissal Byrne had expressed for the U.S. in “The Big Country” to paradise itself: “Heaven is a place where nothing ever happens.” It’s also the album’s most melodic song. Those are the highlights. What keeps Fear of Music from being as impressive an album as Talking Heads’ first two is that much of it seems to repeat those earlier efforts, while the few newer elements seem so risky and exciting. It’s an uneven, transitional album, though its better songs are as good as any Talking Heads ever did. – William Ruhlmann

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