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A Musician Taking Cues From Worlds Near and Far
…it's both a well-wrought show and a delicate mutt: chamber music, mellow marimba tones and domesticated Afro-Cuban rhythm.
New York Times 7.1.05 |
Burning Down the House
How heartening that years later David Byrne still can't resist an over-the top stunt.
Orange County Register 6.28.05 |
Pink linen Suit and another creative hat: David Byrne's show at the Bowl, with inspired new bands, proves he's also an impressario
In music as in life, you can tell a lot about a person by the company he keeps.
L.A. Times 6.28.05 |
David Byrne and The Arcade Fire
As the pom-pom boys and girls in silver sequin thongs lept over the expensive table seats up front, Byrne slithered into his old Stop Making Sense dance moves…
Urb 6.26.05 |
David Byrne Mops Up the World
...impassioned, funky, magnificent…
BoingBoing 6.26.05 |
Live Review: David Byrne in Saratoga, CA
Given the ambitious nature of the event, and the plethora of musical styles on display, the concert felt amazingly cohesive and astoundingly fluid.
LiveDaily 6.23.05 |
David Byrne / The Boat People, Brisbane Convention Centre
Immediately the polyrhythmic interplay of the xylophone and strings betray the profound influence of world music on Byrne's work…
Rave Magazine 2.17.05 |
The name of this act is sheer quality
The audience couldn't quite believe their luck, either, to find Byrne in such spectacular voice — his vocals seem more powerful now than at any time in his career — and able to unite the numerous genres he has investigated into an entertaining, seamless concert.
Brisbane, Courier Mail 2.21.05 |
David Byrne, Architecture In Helsinki, Enmore Theatre
Do you just make peace with your past when you hit 50? For David Byrne, after years of seemingly being embarrassed by the band that gave him fame, or maybe just the rancor surrounding it, now allows himself to make his groundbreaking Talking Heads work to be pat of his concert experience. The result is exhilarating.
Drum Media 3.1.05 |
David Byrne, Enmore Theatre His grin at the end seemed tinged with surprise at the audience's rampant enthusiasm. David Byrne probably never expects people to really love his work.
Sydney Morning Herald 2.18.05
Photo: Domino Postiglione |
Byrning Down Regent Theatre Perhaps that is the secret of Byrne's longevity. (Perhaps it also explains why there were plenty of under-30s in the audience). Many of his early songs were not necessarily about specific subjects but they had the power to conjure up fragmentary images and connections.
abc.net.au/dig 2.15.05 |
David Byrne, Melbourne There is no-one like David Byrne. The word "unique" doesn't even fully explain him. For example, the term "new wave" was first uttered in 1977 by record executive Seymour Stein to describe the sound of his then band The Talking Heads.
Undercover.com 2.15.05 |
And he was...eccentric, but thrilling
Every passing year makes a more remarkable juggling act of David Byrne's musical progress. His return to Melbourne last night encompassed Portuguese lament, particle physics, data sound paintings, African rhythms, and in just a second song, "A grand united theory of everything".
The Age - Melbourne 2.14.05 |
A fine night with Byrne...
After an unassuming entry - the lights came on, and there he was, dressed in black, still wiry thin though his once-jet black hair is now a shock of grey - Byrne launched into a history of his first song, Glass, Concrete and Stone, written for the film Dirty Pretty Things. It was a pattern which would be repeated for most of the set, during which Byrne would reveal a wicked sense of humour, self-deprecating and warm, that further endeared the quirky performer.
The Advertiser - Adelaide 2.14.05
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Former Talking Head David Byrne finds his own rhythm ...There is, but I don't know what it is. Those have a string section but they play things in a different way. The Cole Porter sounds like a country'n'western song but with Brazilian rhythms. For the Hendrix I had all the overdubbed guitar lines transferred to string players. It ends up sounding really Asian, which you don't really notice in his version.
New Zealand Herald 2.06.05 |
David Byrne to 'Head' sold-out show in Charlston Singer, musician, artist, photographer, author, publisher, producer — David Byrne has put his own unusual twist on these crafts in a career that has covered four decades, constantly redefining and re-creating the limits of what a "recording artist" is capable of.
Charleston Post and Courier 10.28.04 |
Byrne Showcases Growth As Vocalist In Tampa Show
David Byrne bridged the musical divide between Europe and Africa on Wednesday night before a crowd of 683 at the Tampa Bay Performing Arts Center's Ferguson Hall.The six-piece Tosca Strings provided sweeping melodies and touches of Old World drama. Drummer Dan Hawthorne, percussionist Mauro Refosco and bassist Paul Frazier provided a simmering mix of interlocking rhythms and jungle-dense grooves.
TBO.com 10.28.04 |
Byrne Stays Cool, But His Music's Still Hot Same as he ever was? Not really. "I think I've got this touring thing down finally," says David Byrne with a laugh. After years on buses and planes -- first with the Talking Heads, the band he fronted from 1976 to 1988, and then as a solo artist -- Byrne says he's finally enjoying himself on the road.
The Sun-Sentinal 10.26.04 |
Noche con acento inglés El británico se presentó en un Salón 21 al la mitad de su capicidad, pero animado con fans incondicionales que calentaron el ambiente. Diario Monitor 10.25.04 |
Versatile David Byrne changes direction
Change is good, but it can also be a b- - - -. In the four years since his last album, David Byrne parted ways with Luaka Bop, the eclectic label he founded.
Miami Herald 10.22.04
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Speaking in Tongues
If some despistado (confused person) had bet that David Byrne's show would be centered on his last album, "Grown Backwards", clearly lost the bet.
La Nacion 10.21.04
Photo: Alejandro Querol
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Recordando a Talking Heads
En su show del jueves, el escocés repasó hits propios y de su ex banda con cuerdas y percusión.
Marrones la camisa y el pantalón que bien podrían ser marca Ombú y cubrir el cuerpo de un encargado de edificio. Pero no, ese flaco alto al que le cuelga una guitarra en el escenario del Luna Park es David Byrne, el mismo de Talking Heads.
Clarion.com 10.16.04
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Brazilian Revolutionaries at Town Hall
His concert at
Town Hall involved his official role as well as his previous jobs:
songwriter, singer, bandleader and rubber-legged dancer. The concert
was a benefit, sponsored by Wired Magazine, for Creative Commons,
which has devised a new copyright license that lets creators permit
their work to be freely shared on the Internet and sampled and reused
by others.
New
York Times 9.25.04 |
Speaking
in tongues, David Byrne WOMAD, Reading
Stop
the world he wants to get on. Byrne hits the heights at The Guardian
reader's favourite weekend out. MOJO October
04 |
This CD is Meant To Be Copied and Shared
For more than a year,
the music industry has held firm on its zero-tolerance position
on online file swapping, suing 4,679 alleged digital pirates to
drive its point home. But now, 16 high-profile artists, many of them signed to the same
global music companies that have brought the lawsuits, are participating
in a project that will allow music lovers to freely copy and trade
some new songs without risking legal retaliation.
The
Wall Street Journal 9.20.04 |
David
Byrne
If
Thursday night's David Byrne concert at the Sheldon Concert Hall
is any indication of what they venue has in store for this 2004-05
season, concert-goers are in for one heck of a time. Byrne's quirky
showmanship and relentless rhythms made for a near-flawless two-hour
show.
St. Louis
Today 9.17.04 |
Byrne continues to redefine rock
Few
musicians possess the ability to have Wookie-lookalikes and bespectacled
old men in high-water pants dancing side by side in the aisles.
David Byrne, though, displays a limitless imagination and unparalleled
work ethic that few musicians could even dream of having.
Lawrence.com
9.17.04 |
Growing
Forward: David Byrne moves with operatic direction, and it works
The
first song Talking Heads covered with distinction was Al Green's "Take Me To the River," a natural fit for a band that
made dance songs for people who frequent museums.
The
Kansas City Star 9.10.04 |
No
style proves too difficult for Byrne
At
this point in his career, it's less a matter of what David Byrne
does musically -- which is anything imaginable -- than how
he does it. Last night at Bass Performance Hall, Byrne brought along
a three-piece rythm section and the six-piece Tosca Strings from
Austin, and the resulting hypnotic cacophony had the near-capacity
crowd up and dancing from first notes...
Star-Telegram
(Ft. Worth, TX) 9.14.04 |
Growing
Forward: David Byrne moves with operatic direction, and it works
The
first song Talking Heads covered with distinction was Al Green's "Take Me To the River," a natural fit for a band that
made dance songs for people who frequent museums.
The
Kansas City Star 9.10.04 |
Tosca
burning down the house with David Byrne
What
do you call a rock star who is, among other things, a noted photographer,
graphic artist, film score composer, film director and a writer/performer
who has recently added "Au Fond du Temple Saint" from
Bizet's opera "The Pearl Fishers" and "Un Di, Felice"
from Verdi's "La Traviata" to his play list?
Well, David Byrne would work.
The
Austin American-Statesman 9.09.04
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Backwards
and Sideways with David Byrne
Talking
Heads Icon Never Stops Making Sense:
David Byrne,
though born in Scotland, is New York through and through. He lives
fewer than three blocks from Madison Square Garden. He is ecstatic
that his My Backwards Life Tour, which includes four Colorado dates
in the next four days, kept him away from the 2004 Republican National
Convention.
Denver
Post 9.03.04
|
Don't
Touch Me I'm a Real Live Wire
Ex
Talking-Head Proves It's Better To Byrne Out Than Fade Away: Watching
him at Zellerbach Hall Friday, reprising his awkward pseudoacrobatics
from his days busking in front of Cody’s Books, his status
as not just the suavest, but also coolest and most self-assured
human alive became more apparent than ever.
The
Daily Californian 9.02.04
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David
Byrne
David
Byrne is no stranger to high-end concert halls: He's trod the board
at Carnegie Hall, London's Royal Festival Hall and the Santa Fe
Opera House. But as the leader of the first full-sized pop band
in the Disney Concert Hall, he seemed a little tentative stepping
onto the stage.
Variety
8.31.04 |
Byrne
Still Moved By Global Rhythms
David
Byrne's musical expeditions have taken him over
an ever-expanding swath of territory culturally, stylistically and
chronologically. But one thing was clear from his career- and planet-spanning
performance Saturday at Walt Disney Concert Hall: No matter where
he journeys, he'll never get far from the beat.
Los
Angeles Times 8.30.04
|
Byrne
Baby Burn, Opera, Melody Light New Fires Under Ex-Talking Heads
ChiefIt probably ranks somewhere down near polka and zydeco on a list of influences that have worked their way into Byrne's music, far below funk, high life, samba and the various Brazilian styles that he helped introduce to U.S. audiences through the popular compilations on his Luaka Bop label.
San
Jose Mercury News 8.20.04 |
David
Byrne: Unquestionably Brilliant
When
David Byrne performs on stage, he does this funny little dance.
His hips swing and twitch sideways, moving precisely to the beat.
His arms flap and stir the air beside him.
Seattle
Post Intelligencer 8.17.04
|
Byrne's
New Music Seduces Heads Fans
"We decided that
if George Bush gets elected, we're all moving here," said David
Byrne shortly after taking the stage with his 9-piece band at the
Centre for the Performing Arts on Tuesday night. By the end of Byrne's
mesmerizing set - which spanned three decades of material, four
languages and styles that ranged from art pop to dance to opera
- there were undoubtedly at least a few fans secretly wishing for
a George W. win.
Vancouver
Sun 8.12.04 |
Same
as he ever was: David Byrne's remarkable new album, Grown Backwards,
is his most accessible
Last
Thursday morning, the former Talking Heads member David Byrne woke
up, did laundry, got a haircut, took his computer to the repair
shop, had lunch with relatives and then bicycled to an office near
his Manhattan home to call Vancouver for an interview.
Vancouver
Sun 8.9.04
|
David
Byrne Explores Everyday Minutiae
After a day of delayed flights and missed appointments, David Byrne
has finally settled into his room at the Holiday Inn in Reading,
England. It's 10 p.m. He's tired. Maybe he'll have a shower using
complimentary hotel soap. Maybe he'll check to see if there's a
bible in the drawer next to the bed. Or maybe he'll stick his head
outside and watch particles spinning around a nucleus or planets
encircling the sun before flicking on the news.
Straight.com
8.5.04 |
Innovation
continues to be the calling of creative David Byrne
An
innovator to the core, singer-songwriter David Byrne took a new
approach to writing sons for his current album "Grown Backwards".
Byrne, who started his career as frontman for the Talking Heads,
hummed melodies into a micro-cassette recorder and then unscrambled
the fragments to create the 15 songs in the album. It was a departure
from his usual practice of adding melodies to improvised sounds
and textures.
Seattle
Post-Intelligencer 8.3.04
|
David
Byrne in the Radisson
David
Byrne is
not known as "the most intelligent man in rock" for nothing.
Who else could sing about particle physics and chaos theory in a
three minute song and have the audience hanging on his every word?
Galway
Advertiser 7.29.04 |
Unlocking
classical brackets
David
Byrne, former frontman of Talking Heads, the band that revolutionized
music in the late 1970s and the early 1980s, brings his My Backward
Life tour to Russia, performing in St. Petersberg, in between dates
in Tempere and Stockholm.
The
St. Petersburg Times 7.16.04
|
Byrne balances dark and light
Byrne can make disaster and paranoia fun, and that might be the
key to his staying power. In his musical persona, at least, he is
a sophisticated man, aware of the harsh realities but philosophical
enough to enjoy life in spite of it all.
Milwaukee
Journal Sentinal 6.21.04 |
Audience
appreciative of eclectic Byrne
After
being greeted with a two-minute standing ovation, David Byrne began
his Thursday night concert at Skyline Stage with "Glass, Concrete
& Stone", a breezy first-person narrative of a city dweller's
daily routine among fabricated surroundings that threaten to mute
personality and emotion.
Chicago
Tribune, 6.18.04
|
David
Byrne, Walker Art Center share construction hats
Byrne himself has seemingly
been under construction since the Talking Heads last worked together
in 1989. His eight proper solo albums have varied from Latin dance
to lush Scottish ballads to the opera-styled pop of his latest CD, "Grown Backwards."
Star
Tribune 6.18.04 |
Byrne
Keeps Amazing, Bemusing Fans
"It's like he's got a different dance move every night," marveled violist Ames Asbell of the Tosca Strings, which accompanies
Byrne on the My Backwards Life Tour.
Grand
Rapids Press, 6.13.04
|
On-line
interview with Carol Cooper
Strings
have an unfortunate reputation. They're seen as the last refuge
for a pop star who craves respect and to be finally taken seriously.
They also signify upwelling of passion, sentimentality and romantic
emotion- these I may be occasionally guilty of, in measured doses....but
if anything I've been taken too seriously for years, so hardly need
more of that.
Village
Voice |
David
Byrnes Down The Hall
When you think of a musician playing a solo gig at Carnegie Hall, you
think about artistic achievement and contemporary relevance — and David Byrne cemented both
of those qualities in his triumphant concert at the venerable hall
Tuesday.
NY
Post, 6.10.04
|
David
Byrne, Backward and Forward
Byrne, working with his longtime
backing band (bassist Paul Frazier, drummer Kenney Wollesen and
percussionist
Mauro Refosco) as well as the Tosca Strings, has been having great
fun reshaping material for his current "My Backwards Life" tour.
Washington Post, 5.28.04 |
Byrne
offers a brilliant, joyful journey of sound ...he wrestled Cesaria Evora's "Ausencia" (a difficult, sensuous ballad) to the ground
and had his way with it...
Boston Globe, 5.22.04 |
David
Byrne connects with his audience at the Byham On just about any given night in
any given concert hall, performers and their audiences develop some
rapport. On good nights they share real symbiosis. And at their height
they work together like David Byrne and the crowd at his Byham Theater
show...
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 5.15.04 |
Binary
Stars Sensually syncopative Brazilian
and American alter egos do their part for global warming
Village Voice, 4.26.04 |
Caetano
Veloso and David Byrne at Carnegie Hall, NYC
A Brazilian Singer Reveals Some American Roots
The New York Times, 4.19.04 |
Gaetano
Veloso/ David Byrne
...accompanied only by a cellist and percussionist, it well demonstrated
the artistic
influence each performer has had on the other...
The Hollywood Reporter, 4.18.04 |
David
Byrne @ Bridgewater Hall
...It was as electric as it was eclectic, an adjective which could
have been invented solely for Byrne, for whatever genre takes your
fancy – jazz, Latin, folk, bluegrass, pop, rock, and even opera
– David Byrne does it.
Manchester Online, UK, 4.16.04 |
Byrne
may sweat like the rest of us but he doesn't show it -
it's like rocking out with Dr Spock in a uniform that doesn't quite
fit. The music is sublime and flawlessly delivered, all the words
make too much sense, and his cracked tenor carries the evening through
to "Lazy", where Byrne, alone on stage, seems as strange
and captivating as he ever was.
The Independent, UK, 4.13.04 |
Byrne's
voice, high and langorous, is in fine shape,
especially in the impassioned ballad "Ausencia", from Emir
Kusturica's Underground, and the band slowly warms to its task.
London Financial Times, 4.12.04 |
While
the Talking Heads catalogue has been repackaged more often David Byrne has kept moving decisively forwards as photographer,
entrepreneur, author and musician...
The Guardian, UK, 4.12.04 |
Pop
Rock's original, left-field psycho killer shows his warm and funny
Today, with his bouncy white quiff, and rubbery limbs, he is
more like the Steve Martin of left-field pop...
The Times, London, 4.12.04 |
Heaven
for fans as Byrne revives classics ...It's hard to imagine, but
hundreds of people were dancing deliriously in the aisles of the
Usher Hall on Saturday night to the sounds of a six-piece string
section....
Scotsman, 4.12.04 |
North-East
concert was once in a lifetime gig
David Byrne has spent nearly three decades experimenting with musical
styles as diverse as punk, opera and rumba. And
last night the Scottish-born New Yorker was at the Opera House in
Newcastle exploring his extensive and eclectic back catalogue.
icNewcastle, 4.12.04 |