eMusic Review 0
"Watch out!" David Byrne declared. "You might get what you're after." Somehow, Talking Heads had become a party band, largely since they'd figured out that a good dance beat would let them get away with just about anything else: the blorping synths and fugue-state terror of "Girlfriend Is Better," the psychotic rant "Swamp" and Byrne's spluttering scat-singing in "Slippery People" all come off as part of the fun. This 1983 album's lead track, a good-natured stomp called "Burning Down the House," became their biggest hit, but the album bounces cheerfully all the way to its closing masterstroke, "This Must Be the Place (Naïve Melody)," which gropes blindly around the idea of a love song for a few minutes, only to discover that it's become a beautiful one.