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Track Listing 1. Long Time Ago, A 2. Angels 3. Crash 4. Self-Made Man, A 5. Back in the Box 6. Sad Song 7. Nothing at All 8. My Love Is You 9. Lilies of the Valley 10. You & Eye 11. Strange Ritual 12. Buck Naked
Album Notes Personnel include: David Byrne (vocals, guitar, lap steel guitar, Clavinet, synthesizer, bells); Arto Lindsay (guitar); Marcus Rojas (tuba); John Medeski (organ, Farfisa); Bill Ware (vibraphone, marimba); Paul Socolow (bass instrument, acoustic bass guitar, background vocals); Todd Turkisher (drums, percussion, sampler); Bashiri Johnson, Sue Hadjopoulos (percussion); Bebel Gilberto (background vocals). Recording information: Clinton Recording Studios, New York, New York (11/1993 - 12/1993). David Byrne's curiosity knows no bounds. As frontman and principal songwriter for Talking Heads, Byrne's creative outreach encompassed the best aspects of new-wave rock, rootsy funk and exploratory electronics. Together with the Heads and producer Brian Eno, Byrne brought African music and other sounds from around the globe into common usage. And as leader of an all-star Latin big band, he sought to reveal the mystery and majesty of Afro-Cuban music to a wider audience. For DAVID BYRNE, the songwriter distills his pan-cultural focus into the kind of stripped-down musical stylings and enigmatic, quirky narratives that made his work with Talking Heads so fascinating. He speaks more from the heart and less from the head than on previous recordings. Songs like the hard-driving "Crash," the moody "A Self-Made Man" and the dancing "Back In The Box" explore themes of insecurity, self-pride and escapism, while "My Love Is You" is one of the simplest, most tender love songs Byrne has ever penned. David Byrne's curiosity knows no bounds. As frontman and principal songwriter for the Talking Heads, Byrne's creative outreach encompassed the best aspects of new wave rock, rootsy funk and exploratory electronics. Together with the Heads and producer Brian Eno, Byrne brought African music and sounds from around the globe into common usage. And as leader of an all-star Latin big band, Byrne sought to reveal the mystery and majesty of Afro-Cuban music to a wider audience. For DAVID BYRNE, the songwriter distills his pan-cultural focus into the kind of stripped-down musical stylings and enigmatic, quirky narratives that made his formative work with the Talking Heads so fascinating. From the ominous opening beats of "A Long Time Ago," the album reprises the singer's concerns with spiritual transformation and renewal in an increasingly hostile world. "I can barely touch my own self/how could I touch someone else?/I am just an advertisement/For a version of myself," he preaches on "Angels," a sort of end-of-the-west/Waiting For Godot epic. Speaking more from the heart and less from the head than on previous recordings, songs like the hard-driving "Crash," the moody "A Self-Made Man" and the dancing "Back In The Box" explore themes of insecurity, self-pride and escapism respectively, while "My Love Is You" is one of the simplest, most tender love songs Byrne's ever penned. "You & Eye" is Byrne's humorous reply to his early Heads' song "Heaven," and portrays Hell as a necessary antecedent, over an infectious soukous groove. The concluding "Strange Ritual" and "Buck Naked" portray spirituality as both a potentiallly insular experience, and a child-like act of sharing and surrender. Byrne once told a writer, "I don't always know what I'm talking about, but I know if a word is wrong," and while the musical pleasures of DAVID BYRNE are instantly apparent, the depth of meaning accrues only over several listenings.
Industry Reviews 3.5 Stars - ...Amid an altogether first-rate record that's both raw and disciplined...those more direct songs strip away the catalog of eccentricities and circle behind the enigma to reveal the man, David Byrne... Rolling Stone Magazine (07/14/1994)
Highly Recommended - ...No longer practicing cross-cultural cryogenics, Byrne simply dashes DAVID BYRNE with essence brought back from his musical travels... Spin (09/01/1994)
...this fourth solo album since the [Talking] Heads' demise is his most stripped-down effort in ages....It's nice to hear a gimmick-free Byrne, but bear in mind that straightforward songs from this guy are still fairly twisted by any reasonable standard... - Rating: B+ Entertainment Weekly (05/27/1994)
...this album gives a whole new musical framework to his persona. Lyrical themes are still skewed; a poetic look at an alternate universe in which love is never what it seems... Option (10/01/1994)
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