Stop Making Sense: Special New Edition
|
| List Price: | £10.99 |
| Price: | £5.98 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £5. Details |
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk
37 new or used available from £2.48
Average customer review:Track Listing
- Psycho Killer
- Heaven
- Thank You For Sending Me An Angel
- Found A Job
- Slippery People
- Burning Down The House
- Life During Wartime
- Making Flippy Floppy
- Swamp
- What A Day That Was
- Naive Melody (This Must Be The Place)
- Once In A Lifetime
- Genius Of Love
- Girlfriend Is Better
- Take Me To The River
- Crosseyed And Painless
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #25339 in Music
- Released on: 1999-09-06
- Number of discs: 1
- Formats: Live, Soundtrack
- Dimensions: .24 pounds
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
The soundtrack to the Jonathan Demme documentary, Stop Making Sense captures the Talking Heads live in 1984 on what would turn out to be their last major tour. This collection, and the film, is a true gift to the band's fans, a testament to their extraordinary talent, both in the studio and especially onstage. Frontman David Byrne infuses each song with a jolt of energy and drama that could only have come from a late-1970s New York art-school student. Now-classic tracks such as "Psycho Killer", "Girlfriend Is Better", "Once in a Lifetime", "Take Me to the River", and "Burning Down the House" have never sounded better. --Lorry Fleming
CD Description
The Talking Heads concert film STOP MAKING SENSE, recorded at a 1983 Hollywood performance, brought audiences everywhere face to face with the very visual aesthetic of conceptual artiste David Byrne and his cohorts. Playing the part of performance artist, Byrne used elaborate visual gimmicks to enhance the themes of his songs for maximum visceral impact. Serendipitously, STOP MAKING SENSE captured the band at an artistic peak, as it consists mostly of material from the glorious funk-inspired albums REMAIN IN LIGHT and SPEAKING IN TONGUES. Live, complemented by a phalanx of great auxiliary musicians, the Heads emphasise the funkier aspects of their jumpy art-dance concepts, and tunes like "Burning Down the House" and "Girlfriend is Better", already impressive in their studio versions, seem to jump off the album.
Customer Reviews
Talking Heads at their best.
I couldn't for the life of me understand why this special edition version wasn't the original version of the Stop Making Sense soundtrack. This CD contains (almost) all of the tracks that were performed at the concert whereas the original release only contained a handful.
As other reviewers have suggested, if you are thinking of obtaining this album, make sure you 'check out' the Stop Making Sense DVD/video. Back to this CD though....We are hit with live versions of some of the best Talking Heads songs including Burning Down The House, Girlfriend Is Better and Psycho Killer. There is also a performance of 'Genuis Of Love' by the Tom Tom Club (of which David Byrne and Jerry Harrison weren't/aern't members of). Talking Heads manage to top their studio recorded versions of many of the songs on this album in terms of their 'enjoyabilityness' and that is what makes this album really special as the songs were simply brilliant even before this album was made. The versions of Making Flippy Floppy and This Must Be The Place are epecially better than the studio recorded versions. As an added bonus, the recording method for the concert was technologically advanced so you get the sound quality you'd expect from a studio recorded session which makes it easier to listen to (no static noise etc)
The band line-up was extended for the Stop Making Sense performance and featured Bernie Worrell on keyboards/synthesizers, Alex Weir on Guitar and Steve Scales on percussion. This enabled the band to produce more complex rythmns and more energy within their songs. David Byrne is as enthusiastic as ever and plays some excellent guitar solos in Making Flippy Floppy and Crosseyed And Painless. My personal favourite on this album is 'This Must Be The Place' The version of this song on in album is definately one of the best tracks i've ever come across/ever will come across.
A great live album all in all from one of the most energetical and original concerts in music history - a real treat.
Astonishing
Tremendous achievement both conceptually and musically. Like most Talking Heads stuff this is artistically challenging. Like most Talking Heads stuff this is exceptionally funky. But unlike most Talking Heads stuff this album breaks both of those parameters to become emotionally effecting and genuinely warming. This is a review stuffed with verbs because Talking Heads' music does things rather than being things. A great introduction to a great band as well as the proper conlusion of the band's career. I can't recommend both this CD and the film itself highly enough.
Same As It Ever Was (But Better)
This album was my introduction to Talking Heads, and on the strength of "Stop Making Sense" I've bought four more of their albums. Forget about "Greatest Hits" packages - this is the ultimate Talking Heads collection. All the best stuff is here, but it sounds so much better live.
The standout tracks are "Heaven", "Slippery People" and "What a Day That Was". If you're a fan of Talking Heads then you'll already have this in your collection, but if they haven't infiltrated your psyche yet then listen to this and I guarantee you'll become a convert like me.





