Little CreaturesTalking Heads
Release Date: 02/14/2006
Original Release:
1985
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 682439_CD
UPC # 081227645427
Label: Sire Records (USA)
|
Buying Info
|
|||||
| Track Details Credits Reviews Artist Related Shipping |
|
Disc: 1
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: Talking Heads
Artist: Steve Scales; Lenny Pickett; Eric Weissberg; Nana Vasconcelos Engineer: Eric "E.T." Thorngren Producer: Talking Heads Distributor: WEA (Distributor) Notes: Talking Heads: David Byrne (guitar, vocals); Jerry Harrison (keyboards, guitar, background vocals); Tina Weymouth (bass, background vocals); Chris Frantz (drums). Additional personnel: Eric Weissberg (steel guitar); Jimmy Macdonell (accordion); Lenny Pickett (saxophone); Andrew "El Pantalones" Cader (washboard); Steve Scales, Nana Vasconcelos (percussion); Ellen Bernfeld, Erin Dickens, Diva Gray, Gordon Grody, Lani Groves, Kurt Yahijian (background vocals). Recorded at Sigma Sound, New York, New York. This is a DualDisc, which contains a CD on one side of the disc and a DVD on the other. Talking Heads: David Byrne (vocals, guitar); Jerry Harrison (guitar, keyboards, background vocals); Tina Weymouth (bass instrument, background vocals); Chris Frantz (drums). Additional personnel: Eric Weissberg (pedal steel guitar); Jimmy Macdonell (accordion); Lenny Pickett (saxophone); Nan� Vasconcelos (drum); Steve Scales (congas, bongos, tambourine); Andrew "El Pantalones" Cader (washboard); Ellen Bernfeld, Erin Dickens, Gordon Grody, Kurt Yahijian, Diva Gray, Lani Groves (background vocals). After the abstract funk experimentation of REMAIN IN LIGHT and SPEAKING IN TONGUES, the Heads decided to return to their roots with LITTLE CREATURES. They abandoned the modal, polyrhythmic approach in favor of the two-guitars/4/4 pop structures of yore. While LITTLE CREATURES is the band's most accessible, radio-friendly album, it's not a step backwards by any means, because as they return to the quirky "new wave" style that made them famous, they bring a well-earned sophistication (both harmonic and lyrical) to the table. These advances allow the band to knock out a crop of winners, like the anti-anthem "Road To Nowhere," the semi-mystical (but still damn catchy) "And She Was" and the we've-got-a-baby-now, let's-party-with-him rocker "Stay Up Late." Nothing here is as groundbreaking as BUILDINGS AND FOOD, but it's still the Talking Heads, full of idiosyncratic charm and smart-but-infectious tunes.
CMJ (1/5/04, p.16) - Ranked #5 in CMJ's "Top 20 Most-Played Albums of 1985"
Proving you could rock despite having attended the Rhode Island School of Design, Talking Heads' innovative brand of downtown art-pop featured David Byrne's manic yelp, pointed lyrics about mundane subjects, and R&B-meets-Velvet Underground grooves, all without ever tipping over into pretension. The group began making twitchy pop in the punk era, but by the early-1980s the Heads had graduated to a dense, funky style incorporating a phalanx of additional musicians including Adrian Belew and P-Funk keyboardist Bernie Worrell. They made a slight return to their pop/rock roots before imploding at the end of the '80s, moving on to solo projects and production work.
Also Appears On:
Similar Artist:
Ambitious Lovers Anderson, Laurie (Performance A Arcade Fire Belew, Adrian Blondie Clap Your Hands Say Yeah Come On DNA Devo Faint (The) Feelies (The) Franz Ferdinand Gabriel, Peter Liquid Liquid Mars Material Pere Ubu Police (The) Polyrock Psychedelic Furs (The) Radiohead Ramones (The) Television They Might Be Giants Tirez Tirez Urban Verbs Violent Femmes
Influences:
Bohannon, Hamilton Bowie, David Brown, James Eno, Brian Funkadelic Green, Al Kraftwerk Kuti, Fela Parliament Pere Ubu Richman, Jonathan Roxy Music Sly & Robbie Smith, Patti Velvet Underground (The) Young, Neil
Similar Genres:
Pop |