Talking Heads: 77

I Wish You Wouldn’t Say That by Talking Heads: Great B-Sides

New York’s Talking Heads are one of my favourite bands of the new wave era. David Byrne was the nervy frontman, Chris Frantz and Tina Weymouth were a funky rhythm section, while Jerry Harrison filled out their sound on keyboards and guitar. Despite my affection for classic albums like Remain in Light and singles like ‘Burning Down the House’, their debut album has never been a favourite. The single ‘Psycho Killer’ is a great career opener, and I enjoy the cheerful opener ‘Uh-Oh, Love Comes to Town’ with its steel drums, but largely it’s a promising prelude to a sequence of great work between 1978 and 1983.

Part of the problem is the production – the group would shortly link up with Brian Eno, who would furnish them with a darker, more enigmatic sound. On Talking Heads ’77 they worked with Tony Bongiovo, the second cousin of Jon Bon Jovi. Even though he worked with The Ramones in the same era, Bongiovi seems like an odd fit for Talking Heads.

Bongiovi was alternately dissatisfied and dismissive of the group’s music, and the conflict boiled over when Bongiovi attempted to get Byrne in the proper headspace to record ‘Psycho Killer’ .Bongiovi beloved Byrne should inhabit the song, instructing him to add more emotion and infliction in his vocal performance. To illustrate this, Bongiovi went to the studio’s kitchen a pulled out a knife, placing it in Byrne’s hands and instructing him to embody a killer. 

https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/talking-heads-first-love-song-story-uh-oh-love-comes-to-town/

Similar tensions occurred with the b-side of ‘Psycho Killer’, ‘I Wish You Wouldn’t Say That’. Jerry Harrison wrote in the liner notes to the anthology Sand in the Vaseline that “I’m glad we persuaded Tony [Bongiovi] and Lance [Quinn] that the version with the cellos shouldn’t be the only one.”

The Talking Heads have more sophisticated songs than ‘I Wish You Wouldn’t Say That’ – even at two and a half minutes, it runs out of steam. But it fits well with the lighter, more mainstream sound of Talking Heads: 77. Byrne has a clear debt to Jonathan Richman, whom Harrison played with before joining the Talking Heads, and it’s especially pronounced here. The acoustic arrangement and the use of a first name (“I thought I’d have to make it clearer/Now Jimmy’s coming over”) – make it more like a Richman song than anything else the Talking Heads recorded.

“Great B-side” is maybe hyperbolic for ‘I Wish You Wouldn’t Say That’, but it outclasses much of Talking Heads: 77 for my money, and it deserves its place on the compilation Sand in the Vaseline. It also appears to be the only non-album B-side in the Talking Heads’ entire discography.

Read More

16 Comments

  1. Been a long time since hearing this song. Interesting and informative post. You have to know Talking Heads to know this is the only non-album b-side. So strange about the producer trying to get Byrne to inhabit a psycho killer. Sheesh!

    • I didn’t know that fact until I looked it up! I was wondering if they had any others. Sounds like Byrne was a few intellectual steps ahead of his producer.

    • I read the liner notes at a friend’s house once – I almost want to buy it just for that. I think all four members shared the writing?

  2. I first heard 77 in 82 and love the album. However, I have always been impressed as to how they progressed through the years. Also Tina Weymouth is a very underrated bass player.

    • Weymouth is really good – they lucked out, as I think they basically recruited her because she was Frantz’s girlfriend.

    • They had that pretty minimal sound at the start – puts a lot of the spotlight on the bass. Lots of new wave bands had great bass players – some of my favourites like Graham Maby and Colin Moulding emerged in that era.

      • I played with a guitar player, drummer, singer, and me on bass at the first when I started. They gave me room to move on bass in the songs we played…I would say it’s the same thing here. They also had influences the other generation of bass players didn’t have…
        She was dead on in this one. She played to fill in the empty spots…which was perfect for this.

Leave a Reply

Read about the discographies of musical acts from the 1960s to the present day. Browse this site's review archives or enjoy these random selections:

More review pages

The Jam Album Reviews

The Jam was formed by young teens in Woking, a...

L’Rain Album Reviews

Brooklyn’s Taja Cheek comes from a family entwined in the...

Fleetwood Mac Album Reviews

Fleetwood Mac formed as a blues band in 1967, when...
Fleetwood Mac 1975 Album

Robyn Hitchcock Album Reviews

The son of novelist Raymond Hitchcock, Robyn Hitchcock has enjoyed...

MJ Lenderman Album Reviews

Mark Jacob Lenderman was born in Asheville, North Carolina. He’s...

R.E.M. Album Reviews

R.E.M. emerged in the wake of punk from Athens, Georgia...
R.E.M. Lifes Rich Pageant

I add new blog posts to this website every week. Browse the archives or enjoy these random selections:

More blog posts

Warren Zevon Albums Ranked from Worst to Best

Warren Zevon emerged later than most of his LA singer-songwriter...

Sex Pistols: Albums Ranked from Worst to Best

The Sex Pistols weren’t the first punk band to release...

Natalie Merchant and 10,000 Maniacs Albums Ranked

Natalie Merchant recently released her sixth solo album, Keep Your...

Queen Albums: Ranked from Worst To Best

Queen formed in 1970 in London, originally a hard rock...
Queen Made In Heaven

Semi Detached by Split Enz: Great B-Sides

In 1978 New Zealand art-rockers Split Enz were in crisis...
Frenzy Split Enz

10 Best Jimi Hendrix Songs

James Marshall Hendrix was born in Seattle. After his discharge...

Subscribe

Subscribe to receive new posts from Aphoristic Album Reviews.