Review

David Byrne & Brian Eno, Everything That Happens Will Happen Today

  • 2008
  • Label: Todo Mundo / Redeye
  • Pick

After 25 years, Byrne and Eno collaborate again

Elvis Costello once wrote about collaborating with Brian Eno that he "really admired Brian's ruthless and creative use of the erase button." Both Eno and David Byrne do their best work when they've got a creative foil — someone they clearly want to impress, who can offer them the gift of erasure as well as the gift of addition — and their first collaboration in a quarter-century is a return to their curious, push-and-pull synergy, with some of the most solidly crafted songs Byrne has sung since the end of Talking Heads.

Still, anyone expecting it to sound like their previous collaboration, 1981's epochal sound-collage My Life in the Bush of Ghosts, is likely to be surprised: Everything presents eleven straight-ahead rock songs, with Byrne singing and Eno mostly providing backing tracks for him, along with the occasional liquid-milk-chocolate backup vocal. (Eno's old compatriots Robert Wyatt and Phil Manzanera put in cameo appearances, too.)

In fact, if there's any previous Byrne/Eno collaboration that Everything That Happens Will Happen Today takes after, it's their first, Talking Heads '1978 album More Songs About Buildings and Food. As on that record, the songs here are very simple on their surface, but it's the kind of simplicity that comes from stripping down something much more complicated.

Byrne has talked about how Everything That Happens was inspired by gospel songwriting, and that's true of the songs 'tone of hope in despair and emphasis on phrasing more than their structure and sentiments. There are hints of gospel in Byrne's lyrics here, like the line "chains and bars but I am still free" in "Life Is Long"; most of them, though, circle around thoughts of mortality and aging. The album's highlight is "Strange Overtones," a bubbling dance song that obliquely addresses Eno and Byrne's creative process and the worry that music's fashions have passed them by. And the title track is a sort of secular hymn, a profession of faith from which everything beyond what's plainly evident has become subject to the erase button.

Genres: Pop, Rock

Comments 0 Comments

eMusic Radio

0

eMerging Artists

By J. Edward Keyes, Editor-in-Chief

At eMusic, we take pride in being the place you hear about artists first. Whether it's through our eMusic Selects program - which brought you the first releases by Best Coast, Crystal Stilts, Strand of… more »

Recommended

View All

eMusic Activity

  • 05.27.12 Get your free #DailyDownload "Centreville" a rock track by Birmingham, AL–based band Lee Baines III & The Glory Fires http://t.co/DaCjoOGx
  • 05.27.12 UK: To celebrate the release of This is PiL from @pilofficial, John Lydon will be taking over @eMusic this week! #LydonTakeover
  • 05.26.12 Apache Dropout uses infectious hooks on the deluxe version of their debut. We review:#eMusicExclusive @familyvineyard http://t.co/HfuXRuMb
  • 05.26.12 Get today's free #DailyDownload the funky, guitar heavy track "In the Middle of the Night" by Tom Principato http://t.co/hKkE235C
  • 05.25.12 eMusic interviewed @officialcult's Ian Astbury about his abusive childhood, the ethics of punk and more in this Q&A http://t.co/YoqIAWXr
  • 05.25.12 US: We review London-based songstress @coldspecks' I Predict A Graceful Expulsion here: @muteusa http://t.co/cGkoZFXA
  • 05.25.12 US: We caught up with @Garbage's iconic drummer Butch Vig, and talked Garbage's unique sound, going indie & more: http://t.co/JqMk6FYS
  • 05.25.12 Enjoy the howling vocals in today's free #DailyDownload "Dry Basement" by Bloomington, IN trio Apache Dropout http://t.co/2F4SFuYv
  • 05.25.12 EU: We caught up w/ @Garbage's iconic drummer #ButchVig, to talked about Garbage's unique sound, going indie & more: http://t.co/Br8xlO0j
  • 05.24.12 US: eMusic’s editors created a thorough rundown of their favorite ’90s records: #throwbackthursday #sale http://t.co/ZZZuVczQ