eMusic Review 0
Talking Heads were art-school kids before they were anything else — the original trio met at the Rhode Island School of Design — and their debut album feels like a grand, arty gesture: rock 'n' roll with the affected swagger stripped away, punk in button-down shirts and preppy sweaters. Even when David Byrne impersonates a "Psycho Killer," he makes him sound nervous and confused. Byrne's lyrics draw their diction from un-rock sources: psychotherapy, the office, real-estate brochures. What elevates the whole thing above gesturedom is the band's clean, clear instrumental attack (new guitarist Jerry Harrison had previously been in the Modern Lovers, a major source of inspiration for this album), and Byrne's sly way with a bubblegum hook —"Pulled Up" is both as arch and as catchy as the first wave of new wave got.