Speaking In Tongues

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Speaking In Tongues album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 47:11

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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 »

01.11.10
How the twitchy new wavers became an essential party band
1983 | Label: Warner Bros.

"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.

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I will never forget...

Rich4art

the first time I heard "Swamp"...it driving home to CT from a Grateful Dead show in Richmond, VA. As we were quite 'ecstatic' from a blistering show...the contrast of "Swamp" was brillian. We listened to the cassette in repetition all the way home...10 hours! This one album is a party in itself..put it on auto repeat and dance.

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Non Talking Heads

hummada

Does this group still get air time? average album...maybe i was listening in tongues.

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Plastic fun

Britster

When this came out, the fun of it seemed a little hollow compared to the albums that came before, despite its really great singles. Now, its synthetic nature seems to have aged real well. Go figure...

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They Say All Music Guide

Talking Heads found a way to open up the dense textures of the music they had developed with Brian Eno on their two previous studio albums for Speaking in Tongues, and were rewarded with their most popular album yet. Ten backup singers and musicians accompanied the original quartet, but somehow the sound was more spacious, and the music admitted aspects of gospel, notably in the call-and-response of “Slippery People,” and John Lee Hooker-style blues, on “Swamp.” As usual, David Byrne determinedly sang and chanted impressionistic, nonlinear lyrics, sometimes by mix-and-matching clichés (“No visible means of support and you have not seen nothin’ yet,” he declared on “Burning Down the House,” the Heads’ first Top Ten hit), and the songs’ very lack of clear meaning was itself a lyrical subject. “Still don’t make no sense,” Byrne admitted in “Making Flippy Floppy,” but by the next song, “Girlfriend Is Better,” that had become an order — “Stop making sense,” he chanted over and over. Some of his charming goofiness had returned since the overly serious Remain in Light and Fear of Music, however, and the accompanying music, filled with odd percussive and synthesizer sounds, could be unusually light and bouncy. The album closer, “This Must Be the Place (Naive Melody),” even sounded hopeful. Well, sort of. Despite their formal power, Talking Heads’ preceding two albums seemed to have painted them into a corner, which may be why it took them three years to craft a follow-up, but on Speaking in Tongues, they found an open window and flew out of it. – William Ruhlmann

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