Remain in Light

Remain in Light
Album cover containing four portraits covered by red blocks of colour, captioned "TALKING HEADS" (with inverted "A"s) at the top and (much smaller) "REMAIN IN LIGHT" at the bottom.
Studio album by Talking Heads
Released October 8, 1980 (1980-10-08)
Recorded July – August 1980
Studio
Genre
Length 40:10
Label Sire
Producer Brian Eno
Talking Heads chronology
Fear of Music
(1979)Fear of Music1979
Remain in Light
(1980)
The Name of This Band Is Talking Heads
(1982)The Name of This Band Is Talking Heads1982
Singles from Remain in Light
  1. "Once in a Lifetime"
    Released: February 2, 1981
  2. "Houses in Motion"
    Released: May 5, 1981 (Alternate mix)
Back cover
Album cover containing a drawing of a mountain range and four mostly red warplanes flying in formation. There is green text on the left hand side and a barcode in the top right corner.
Art originally created as front cover

Remain in Light is the fourth studio album by American new wave band Talking Heads, released on October 8, 1980 through Sire Records. It was recorded at Compass Point Studios in the Bahamas and Sigma Sound Studios in Philadelphia between July and August 1980 and produced by longtime collaborator Brian Eno. Following the release of Fear of Music in 1979, Talking Heads and Eno sought to dispel notions of the group as a mere vehicle for frontman and lyricist David Byrne. Drawing on the influence of Nigerian musician Fela Kuti, the group experimented with African polyrhythms, funk, and electronics, recording instrumental tracks as a series of looping grooves. The sessions incorporated a variety of side musicians, including guitarist Adrian Belew, singer Nona Hendryx, and trumpet player Jon Hassell.

Byrne struggled with writer's block, but adopted a scattered stream-of-consciousness lyrical style inspired by early rap and academic literature on Africa. The artwork for Remain in Light was conceived by bassist Tina Weymouth and drummer Chris Frantz, and was crafted with the help of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's computers and design company M&Co. Talking Heads expanded to nine members for a promotional tour, and following its completion the band went on hiatus for several years, leaving the individual members to pursue a variety of side projects. The album was the last of the band's collaborations with Eno, though Eno and Byrne's My Life in the Bush of Ghosts was released the following year.

Remain in Light was widely acclaimed by critics, who praised its sonic experimentation, rhythmic innovations, and cohesive merging of disparate genres. The album peaked at number 19 on the Billboard 200 in the US and at number 21 on the UK Albums Chart. Two singles were released from Remain in Light: "Once in a Lifetime" and "Houses in Motion". The record was certified Gold in the US and in Canada during the 1980s. It has been featured in several publications' lists of the best albums of the 1980s and the best albums of all time, and it is often considered Talking Heads' magnum opus. In 2006, it was remastered and reissued with the addition of four unfinished outtakes. The Library of Congress deemed the album "culturally, historically, or artistically significant", and selected it for preservation in their National Recording Registry in 2017.[1]

Origins

In January 1980, the members of Talking Heads returned to New York City after the tours in support of their 1979 critically acclaimed third album, Fear of Music, and took time off to pursue personal interests. Singer David Byrne worked with Brian Eno, the record's producer, on an experimental album, My Life in the Bush of Ghosts.[2] Keyboardist Jerry Harrison produced an album for soul singer Nona Hendryx at the Sigma Sound Studios branch in New York City; Hendryx and the studio were used during the Remain in Light recording on Harrison's advice.[3]

Drummer Chris Frantz and bassist Tina Weymouth, a married couple, discussed leaving Talking Heads after Weymouth suggested that Byrne was too controlling.[4] Frantz did not want to leave, and the two took a long vacation in the Caribbean to ponder the state of the band and their marriage. They became involved in Haitian Vodou religious ceremonies, practised native percussion instruments, and socialised with the reggae rhythm section of Sly and Robbie.[3]

Frantz and Weymouth ended their holiday by purchasing an apartment above Compass Point Studios in Nassau, the Bahamas, where Talking Heads had recorded their second album, More Songs About Buildings and Food.[3] Byrne joined the duo and Harrison there in early 1980.[5] The band members realised that it had been solely up to Byrne to craft songs even though they were performed as a quartet. They had tired of the notion of a singer leading a backup band; the ideal they aimed for, according to Byrne, was "sacrificing our egos for mutual cooperation".[6] Byrne additionally wanted to escape "the psychological paranoia and personal torment" he had been writing and feeling in New York.[7] Instead of the band writing music to Byrne's lyrics, Talking Heads performed instrumental jams, using the Fear of Music song "I Zimbra" as a starting point.[5]

Eno arrived in the Bahamas three weeks after Byrne. He was reluctant to work with the band again after collaborating on the previous two albums. He changed his mind after being excited by the instrumental demo tapes.[5] The band and Eno experimented with the communal African way of making music, in which individual parts mesh as polyrhythms.[6] Afrodisiac, the 1973 Afrobeat record by Nigerian musician Fela Kuti, became the template for the album.[7] Weymouth said that the beginnings of hip-hop music made Talking Heads realise that the musical landscape was changing.[8] Before the studio sessions began, longtime friend David Gans instructed the band that "the things one doesn't intend are the seeds for a more interesting future". He encouraged them to experiment, improvise and make use of "mistakes".[9]

Recording and production

A balding man speaking into a microphone is standing in front of an abstract painting containing blotches of orange and lime green and corrugated lines.
Eno, here photographed in 2007, produced Remain in Light using stylised methods and sonic experiments.

Recording sessions started at Compass Point Studios in July 1980. The album's creation required the use of additional musicians, particularly percussionists.[10] Talking Heads used the working title Melody Attack throughout the studio process after watching a Japanese game show of the same name.[11] Harrison said the ambition was to blend rock and African genres, rather than simply imitate African music.[12] Eno's production techniques and personal approach were key to the record's conception. The process was geared to promote the expression of instinct and spontaneity without overtly focusing on the sound of the final product.[13] Eno compared the creative process to "looking out to the world and saying, 'What a fantastic place we live in. Let's celebrate it.'"[8]

Sections and instrumentals were recorded one at a time in a discontinuous process.[14] Loops played a key part at a time when computers could not yet adequately perform such functions. Talking Heads developed Remain in Light by recording jams, isolating the best parts, and learning to play them repetitively. The basic tracks focused wholly on rhythms and were all performed in a minimalist method using only one chord. Each section was recorded as a long loop to enable the creation of compositions through the positioning or merging of loops in different ways.[15] Byrne likened the process to modern sampling: "We were human samplers."[16]

After a few sessions in the Bahamas, engineer Rhett Davies left following an argument with the producer over the fast speed of recording. Steven Stanley, who since the age of 17 had engineered for musicians such as Bob Marley, stepped in to cover the workload.[15] He is credited by Frantz with helping create "Once in a Lifetime", which was released as a single.[17] A Lexicon 224 digital reverb effects unit, obtained by engineer and mixer Dave Jerden, was used on the album.[18] The machine was one of the first of its kind and able to simulate environments such as echo chambers and rooms through interchangeable programs.[19] Like Davies, Jerden was unhappy with the fast pace at which Eno wanted to record sonically complicated compositions, but did not complain.[15]

The tracks made Byrne rethink his vocal style and he tried singing to the instrumental songs, but sounded "stilted". Few vocal sections were recorded in the Bahamas.[11] The writing process for the lyrics occurred when the band returned to the US and was split between New York City and California.[20] Harrison booked Talking Heads into Sigma Sound, which focused primarily on R&B music, after convincing the owners that the band's work could bring them a new type of clientele. In New York City, Byrne struggled with writer's block.[11] Harrison and Eno spent their time tweaking the compositions recorded in the Bahamas, while Frantz and Weymouth often did not show up at the studio. Doubts began to surface about whether the album would be completed. The recording sessions only built up pace after the recruitment of guitarist Adrian Belew at the request of Byrne, Harrison and Eno. He was advised to add guitar solos to the Compass Point tracks, making use of a Roland guitar synthesiser.[21]

Byrne recorded all the tracks, as they were after Belew had performed on them, to a cassette and looked to Africa to break his writer's block. He realised that, when African musicians forget words, they often improvise and make new ones up. He used a portable tape recorder and tried to create onomatopoeic rhymes in the style of Eno, who believed that lyrics were never the center of a song's meaning. Byrne continuously listened to his recorded scatting until convinced that he was no longer "hearing nonsense".[22] After he was satisfied, Harrison invited Nona Hendryx to Sigma Sound to record backing vocals for the album. She was advised extensively on her vocal delivery by Byrne, Frantz, and Weymouth, and often sang in a trio with Byrne and Eno.[23] The voice sessions were followed by the overdubbing process. Brass player Jon Hassell, who had been working on parts of My Life in the Bush of Ghosts, was hired to perform trumpet and horn sections.[24] In August 1980, half of the album was mixed by Eno and engineer John Potoker in New York City with the assistance of Harrison, while the other half was mixed by Byrne and Jerden at Eldorado Studios in Los Angeles.[25]

Music and lyrics

The testimony of Watergate scandal conspirator John Dean was one of several inspirations for the lyrics on Remain in Light.

Remain in Light features new wave,[26][27] post-punk,[28][29] worldbeat,[30][31] dance-rock,[32] and different types of funk, specifically afrofunk[32][33][34] and avant-funk.[35] Critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine described the album as a "dense amalgam of African percussion, funk bass and keyboards, pop songs, and electronics."[36] It contains eight songs that possess a "striking free-associative feel" according to psychoanalyst Michael A. Brog, in that there is no long-lasting coherent thought process that can be followed in the stream-of-consciousness lyrics. David Gans instructed Byrne to be freer with his lyrical content by advising him that "rational thinking has its limits".[13] The frontman included a bibliography with the album press kit along with a statement that explained how the album was inspired by African mythologies and rhythms. The release stressed that the major inspiration to the lyrics was Professor John Miller Chernoff's African Rhythm and African Sensibility,[37] which examined the musical enhancement of life in the continent's rural communities.[38] The academic travelled to Ghana in 1970 to study native percussion and wrote about how Africans have complicated conversations through drum patterns.[39] One of the songs, "The Great Curve", exemplifies the African theme by including the line "The world moves on a woman's hips", which Byrne used after reading Professor Robert Farris Thompson's book African Art in Motion.[20] He additionally studied straight speech, from John Dean's Watergate testimony to the stories of African American former slaves.[40]

Like all the other tracks, album opener "Born Under Punches (The Heat Goes On)" borrows from "preaching, shouting and ranting".[7] The expression "And the Heat Goes On", used in the title and repeated in the chorus, is based on a New York Post headline Eno read in the summer of 1980 whilst Byrne rewrote the song title "Don't Worry About the Government" from Talking Heads' debut album, Talking Heads: 77, into the lyric "Look at the hands of a government man".[22] The "rhythmical rant" in "Crosseyed and Painless"—"Facts are simple and facts are straight. Facts are lazy and facts are late."—is influenced by old school rap, specifically Kurtis Blow's "The Breaks" given to Byrne by Frantz. "Once in a Lifetime" borrows heavily from preachers' diatribes.[40] Some critics have suggested that the song is "a kind of prescient jab at the excesses of the 1980s". Byrne disagreed with the categorisation and commented that its lyrics are meant to be taken literally; he stated, "We're largely unconscious. You know, we operate half awake or on autopilot and end up, whatever, with a house and family and job and everything else, and we haven't really stopped to ask ourselves, 'How did I get here?'."[8]

Byrne has described the album's final mix as a "spiritual" piece of work, "joyous and ecstatic and yet it's serious"; he has pointed out that, in the end, there was "less Africanism in Remain in Light that we implied ... but the African ideas were far more important to get across than specific rhythms".[12] According to Eno, the record uniquely blends funk and punk rock or new wave music.[7] None of the compositions include chord changes and instead rely on the use of different harmonics and notes.[22] "Spidery riffs" and layered tracks of bass and percussion are used extensively throughout the album.[11] The first side contains the more rhythmic songs recorded—"Born Under Punches (The Heat Goes On)", "Crosseyed and Painless", and "The Great Curve"—which include long instrumental interludes.[41] The last-named track contains extended synthesiser-treated guitar solos from Adrian Belew.[21]

The second side of Remain in Light features more introspective songs.[41] "Once in a Lifetime" pays homage to early rap techniques and the music of art rock band The Velvet Underground.[8] The track was originally called "Weird Guitar Riff Song" because of its composition.[40] It was conceived as a single riff before the band added a second, boosted riff over the top of the first. Eno alternated eight bars of each riff with corresponding bars of its counterpart.[11] "Houses in Motion" incorporates lengthy brass performances from Jon Hassell, while "Listening Wind" features Arabic music elements. The final track on the album, "The Overload," was Talking Heads' attempt to emulate the sound of British post-punk band Joy Division. The song was made despite no band member having heard the music of Joy Division; rather, it was based on an idea of what the British quartet might sound like based on descriptions in the music press. The track features "tribal-cum-industrial" beats created primarily by Harrison and Byrne.[41]

Packaging and title

Black-and-white aerial shot of four planes (with white stars on each wing and the body) flying in formation adjacent to each other over clouds.
Grumman Avengers, used by the US Navy, in which Weymouth's father had served, inspired the initial cover art, later used on the back of the LP sleeve after the album name change.

The cover art was conceived by Weymouth and Frantz with the help of Massachusetts Institute of Technology researcher Walter Bender and his MIT Media Lab team.[24][42] Using Melody Attack as inspiration, the couple created a collage of red warplanes flying in formation over the Himalayas.[24] The planes are an artistic depiction of Grumman Avenger planes in honour of Weymouth's father, Ralph Weymouth, who was a US Navy Admiral.[38] The idea for the back cover included simple portraits of the band members. Weymouth attended MIT regularly during the summer of 1980 and worked with Bender's colleague, Scott Fisher, on the computer renditions of the ideas. The process was tortuous because computer power was limited in the early 1980s and the mainframe alone took up several rooms.[24] Weymouth and Fisher shared a passion for masks and used the concept to experiment with the portraits. The faces (except for eyes, noses and mouths) were blotted out with blocks of red colour. Weymouth considered superimposing Eno's face on top of all four portraits to insinuate his egotism—the producer wanted to be on the cover art together with Talking Heads—but decided against it in the end.[43]

The rest of the artwork and the liner notes were crafted by the graphic designer Tibor Kalman and his company M&Co.[42][43] Kalman was a fervent critic of formalism and professional design in art and advertisements.[44] He offered his services for free to create publicity, and discussed using unconventional materials such as sandpaper and velour for the LP sleeve. Weymouth, who was sceptical of hiring a designing firm, vetoed Kalman's ideas and held firm on the MIT computerised images. The designing process made the band members realise that the title Melody Attack was "too flippant" for the music recorded, and they adopted Remain in Light instead.[43] Byrne has noted, "Besides not being all that melodic, the music had something to say that at the time seemed new, transcendent, and maybe even revolutionary, at least for funk rock songs." The image of the warplanes was relegated to the back of the sleeve and the doctored portraits became the front cover. Kalman later suggested that the planes were not removed altogether because they seemed appropriate during the Iranian hostage crisis of 1979–81.[41]

Weymouth advised Kalman that she wanted simple typography in a bold sans serif font. M&Co. followed the instructions and came up with the idea of inverting the "A"s in "TALKING HEADS". Weymouth and Frantz decided to use the joint credit acronym C/T for the artwork, while Bender and Fisher used initials and code names because the project was not an official MIT venture.[41] The design credits read "HCL, JPT, DDD, WALTER GP, PAUL, C/T".[38] The final mass-produced version of Remain in Light boasted one of the first computer-designed record jackets.[8] Psychoanalyst Michael A. Brog has called its front cover a "disarming image, which suggests both splitting and obliteration of identity" and which introduces the listener to the album's recurring theme of "identity disturbance"; he states, "The image is in bleak contrast to the title with the obscured images of the band members unable to 'remain in light'."[9]

Talking Heads and Eno originally agreed to credit all songs in alphabetical order to "David Byrne, Brian Eno, Chris Frantz, Jerry Harrison and Tina Weymouth" after failing to devise an accurate mathematical formula for the split,[43] but the album was released with the label credit: "all songs written by David Byrne & Brian Eno (except "Houses In Motion" and 'The Overload", written by David Byrne, Brian Eno & Jerry Harrison)".[10] Frantz, Harrison, and Weymouth disputed Byrne and Eno's attempt to claim sole credits, especially for a process they had partly funded.[17] According to Weymouth, Byrne told Kalman to doctor the credits on Eno's advice.[38] Later editions rectified the error.[45] In 2009, Frantz recalled, "we felt very burnt by the credits dispute".[17]

Promotion and release

A guitarist, a drummer, and a keyboardist are performing a song live in concert.
Talking Heads hired five additional musicians for the Remain in Light promotional tours.

Brian Eno advised Talking Heads that the music on Remain in Light was too dense for a quartet to perform.[25] The band expanded to nine musicians for the tours in support of the album. The augmenting members recruited by Harrison were Belew, Funkadelic keyboardist Bernie Worrell, bassist Busta "Cherry" Jones, Ashford & Simpson percussionist Steven Scales, and backing vocalist Dolette MacDonald.[2] The larger group performed soundchecks in Frantz and Weymouth's loft by following the rhythms established by Worrell, who had studied at the New England Conservatory and Juilliard School.[46]

The expanded band's first appearance was on August 23, 1980 at the Heatwave festival in Canada in front of 70,000 people; Robert Hilburn of the Los Angeles Times called the band's new music a "rock-funk sound with dramatic, near show-stopping force".[47] On August 27, the expanded Talking Heads performed a showcase of tracks to an audience of 125,000 at the Wollman Rink in New York City's Central Park.[48] The Canada and New York gigs were the only ones initially planned, but Sire Records decided to support the nine-member band on an extended tour.[2] Following the promotional tour, the band went on hiatus for several years, leaving the individual members to pursue a variety of side projects.[36]

Remain in Light was released worldwide on October 8, 1980. Remain in Light received its world premiere airing in its entirety on October 10, 1980 on WDFM.[49] According to writer David Sheppard, "it was received as a great cultural event as much as a vivid art-pop record."[50] It was certified Gold by the Canadian Recording Industry Association in February 1981 after shipping 50,000 copies,[51] and by Recording Industry Association of America in September 1985 after shipping 500,000 copies.[52] Over one million copies have been sold worldwide.[53]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[54]
Chicago Tribune[55]
Christgau's Record GuideA[56]
Encyclopedia of Popular Music[57]
The Irish Times[58]
Rolling Stone[59]
The Rolling Stone Album Guide[60]
Slant Magazine[61]
Spin Alternative Record Guide10/10[62]
Uncut[63]

The album attained widespread acclaim from media outlets. Ken Tucker of Rolling Stone felt it was a brave and absorbing attempt to locate a common ground in the early 1980s divergent and often hostile musical genres; he concluded, "Remain in Light yields scary, funny music to which you can dance and think, think and dance, dance and think, ad infinitum."[64] Robert Christgau, writing in The Village Voice, described the record as one "in which David Byrne conquers his fear of music in a visionary Afrofunk synthesis—clear-eyed, detached, almost mystically optimistic".[34] Michael Kulp of The Daily Collegian commented that the album deserves the tag "classic" like each of the band's three previous full-length releases,[65] while John Rockwell, writing in The New York Times, suggested that it confirmed Talking Heads' position as "America's most venturesome rock band".[66] Sandy Robertson of Sounds praised the record's innovation,[67] while Billboard wrote, "Just about every LP Talking Heads has released in the last four years has wound up on virtually every critics' best of list. Remain in Light should be no exception."[68]

AllMusic's William Ruhlmann wrote that Talking Heads' musical transition, first witnessed in Fear of Music, came to full fruition in Remain in Light; he stated, "Talking Heads were connecting with an audience ready to follow their musical evolution, and the album was so inventive and influential."[54] In the 1995 Spin Alternative Record Guide, Eric Weisbard praised Eno's production effort which helped rein in any excessive appropriations of African music by Talking Heads.[62] In 2004, Slant Magazine's Barry Walsh labelled its results as "simply magical" after the band turned rock music into a more global entity in terms of its musical and lyrical scope.[61] In a 2008 review, Sean Fennessey of Vibe concluded, "Talking Heads took African polyrhythms to NYC and made a return trip with elegant, alien post-punk in tow."[28]

Accolades

Remain in Light was named the best album of 1980 by Sounds, ahead of The Skids' The Absolute Game, and by Melody Maker,[69][70] while The New York Times included it in its unnumbered shortlist of the 10 best records issued that year.[71] It figured highly in other end-of-year best album lists, notably at number two, behind The Clash's London Calling, by Robert Christgau,[72] and at number six by NME.[73] It featured at number three—behind London Calling and Bruce Springsteen's The River—in The Village Voice's 1980 Pazz & Jop critics' poll, which aggregates the votes of hundreds of prominent reviewers.[74]

"So they congregated in a Nassau studio with Brian Eno and created a record without precedent ... Both daringly experimental and pop-accessible, Remain in Light may be the Talking Heads' defining moment."[75]

—Pitchfork Media's Ryan Schreiber in 2002

In 1989, Rolling Stone named Remain in Light as the fourth best album of the decade.[76] In 1993, it was included at number 11 in NME's list of The 50 Greatest Albums Of The '80s,[77] and at number 68 in the publication's Greatest Albums Of All Time list.[78] In 1997, The Guardian collated worldwide data from renowned critics, artists, and radio DJs, which placed the record at number 43 in the list of the 100 Best Albums Ever.[79] In 1999, it was included by Vibe as one of its 100 Essential Albums Of The 20th Century.[80] In 2002, Pitchfork Media featured Remain in Light at number two behind Sonic Youth's Daydream Nation in its Top 100 Albums Of The 1980s list.[75] In 2003, VH1 named the record at number 88 during its 100 Greatest Albums countdown,[81] while Slant magazine included it in its unnumbered shortlist of 50 Essential Pop Albums.[82] Rolling Stone placed it at number 129 in its December 2015 issue of "The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time", higher than three other Talking Heads releases.[14] In 2006, Q ranked Remain in Light at number 27 in its list of the 40 Best Albums of the 80s.[83] In 2012, Slant listed the album at number six on its list of the "Best Albums of the 1980s".[84]

Track listing

All lyrics written by David Byrne, except "Born Under Punches (The Heat Goes On)" and "Crosseyed and Painless", written by David Byrne and Brian Eno; all music composed by Byrne, Eno, Chris Frantz, Jerry Harrison and Tina Weymouth.

Side one
No.TitleLength
1."Born Under Punches (The Heat Goes On)"5:49
2."Crosseyed and Painless"4:48
3."The Great Curve"6:28
Side two
No.TitleLength
4."Once in a Lifetime"4:23
5."Houses in Motion"4:33
6."Seen and Not Seen"3:25
7."Listening Wind"4:43
8."The Overload"6:02
Expanded CD reissue unfinished outtakes
No.TitleLength
9."Fela's Riff"5:19
10."Unison"4:50
11."Double Groove"4:28
12."Right Start"4:07

Notes

  • The remastered reissue was produced by Andy Zax with the help of Talking Heads.
  • The DVD portion of the European reissue contains videos of the band performing "Crosseyed and Painless" and "Once in a Lifetime" on German music show Rockpop in 1980.

Personnel

Those involved in the making of Remain in Light were:[41][42][45]

Charts


Certifications and sales

Region CertificationCertified units/Sales
Canada (Music Canada)[91] Gold 50,000^
France (SNEP)[92] none 175,000 [93]*
United States (RIAA)[94] Gold 500,000^
United Kingdom (BPI)[95] Silver 60,000^

*sales figures based on certification alone
^shipments figures based on certification alone


See also

References

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  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Rees, Dafydd; Crampton, Luke (1991). Rock Movers & Shakers. Billboard Books. p. 519. ISBN 0-8230-7609-1.
  3. 1 2 3 Bowman, p. 165
  4. Bowman, p. 164
  5. 1 2 3 Bowman, p. 167
  6. 1 2 Pareles, p. 38
  7. 1 2 3 4 Helmore, Edward (March 27, 2009). "'The business is an exciting mess'". The Guardian. Retrieved August 25, 2009.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 Karr, Rick (March 27, 2000). "'Once In A Lifetime'". National Public Radio. Retrieved August 25, 2009.
  9. 1 2 Brog, p. 167
  10. 1 2 Remain in Light (LP sleeve). Talking Heads. London: Sire Records. 1980.
  11. 1 2 3 4 5 Bowman, p. 169
  12. 1 2 Pareles, p. 39
  13. 1 2 Brog, p. 166
  14. 1 2 Rolling Stone staff (November 12, 2003). "The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time". Rolling Stone. p. 126.
  15. 1 2 3 Bowman, p. 168
  16. Lewis, John (November 2007). "The Making Of... Once in a Lifetime by Talking Heads". Uncut.
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  24. 1 2 3 4 Bowman, p. 176
  25. 1 2 Bowman, p. 179
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  28. 1 2 Fennessey, Sean (September 2008). "Talking Heads: Remain In Light". Vibe. p. 104.
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  37. Bowman, p. 182
  38. 1 2 3 4 Bowman, p. 183
  39. Bowman, p. 173
  40. 1 2 3 Bowman, p. 172
  41. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Bowman, p. 178
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  48. Bowman, p. 181
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Bibliography

  • Bowman, David (2001). This Must Be the Place: The Adventures of Talking Heads in the Twentieth Century. HarperCollins. ISBN 0-380-97846-6.
  • Brog, Michael A. (June 2002). ""Living Turned Inside Out": The Musical Expression of Psychotic and Schizoid Experience in Talking Heads' Remain in Light". The American Journal of Psychoanalysis. 62 (2): 163–184. doi:10.1023/A:1015181228250.
  • Pareles, Jon (May 1982). "Talking Heads Talk". Mother Jones. pp. 36–39.

Further reading

  • Wilcox, Tyler (October 3, 2016). "Talking Heads' Road to Remain in Light". Pitchfork.

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