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This Must Be the Place: The Adventures of Talking Heads in the Twentieth Century

hardcoverApril 3, 2001
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ISBN-13: 9780380978465 ISBN-10: 0380978466
Publisher
HarperCollins Children's Books
Binding
hardcover
Published
April 3, 2001
Weight
1.6 lbs
Dimensions
23.20×3.30×15.50 cm

About this book

This Must Be the Place: The Adventures of Talking Heads in the Twentieth Century by Bowman, David. hardcover edition. ISBN: 9780380978465.

Could there have been a more improbable band to rise from the ashes of punk and the smoldering embers of the disco inferno than Talking Heads? Made up of art school students, "military brats," and an Ivy League dropout, the Heads came of rock age in New York, 1976--the Summer of Sam--thrilling the arty downtown crowd that filled the hallowed dirty halls of the infamous CBGB. This aint no party, this aint no disco: This was something no one had heard the likes of before. In This Must Be the Place, David Bowman gives us a stunning in-depth view of the changing world, the unique sound, and the remarkable clashing personalities of four exceptional artists who refused to paint inside the lines: Jerry Harrison, Chris Franz, the beautiful blond bass player Tina Weymouth ... and her nemesis, a brilliant, loose-limbed, bug-eyed "carny geek" named David Byrne. No band in rock n roll history was ever less mainstream yet so adept at producing FM hits and MTV eye candy, securing the group remarkable pop success. Bowman examines the bands collaborations with artists as diverse as Brian Eno, Robert Rauschenberg, and Robert Wilson, as well as the groups cultural borrowings from African pop, minimalism, and Tin Pan Alley. Few bands managed to hold on to their original personnel as long as the Heads even while enduring the staggering intensity of internal jealousies and all--out ego warfare. Here is Talking Heads with all their flaws and finery, a classic story of the inner workings of a great American rock band told in superlative style and with vivid backstage detail. It is a fascinating mélange of complex personalities, twisted relationships, and dazzlingly creative brio. It has love and anger, genius and pettiness, bitterness, recriminations, even a broken heart or two. This is American pop culture at the end of a millennium, in a city in the throes of a cultural renaissance. This is Byrne, et al., ineffably innovative and relentlessly hip, blurring boundaries and breaking rules with their uncompromising commitment to excellence in the offbeat as they musically confront the volatile discordance of an uncertain future.