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Home T Talking Heads Biography

Band Picture

Talking Heads consists of Chris Frantz (drums), David Byrne (vocals, guitar), Jerry Harrison (keyboards), Tina Weymouth (bass).

For the Alan Bennett monologues, see Talking Heads (plays).

Talking Heads were an American rock band existing between 1974 and 1991, and composed of David Byrne, Chris Frantz, Tina Weymouth, and Jerry Harrison.

Talking Heads married punk rock sensibilities with poppy sounds, clipped funk, art school intellectualism, and later, world music. In David Byrne, they had one of the most distinctive front men of the period; they remained popular during their lifetime, and their concert film Stop Making Sense (which was made at the Pantages Theater in Hollywood, and directed by Jonathan Demme) is widely acclaimed as one of the finest examples of the genre .

Formed in 1974 at the Rhode Island School of Design, the band first consisted of three members: David Byrne (vocals, guitar), Chris Frantz ( drums), and Tina Weymouth ( bass). The group settled on the name 'Talking Heads' from an issue of TV Guide featuring definitions of commonly used terms in television. A talking head is a shot sometimes used in news programs that reveals only the head and shoulders of the person speaking. 'All content, no action' seemed to fit the band's musical style and stage presence, so the name stuck.

Moving to New York the nascent Heads landed a gig, opening for The Ramones at the legendary CBGBs club. In 1976, they added one more member, Jerry Harrison ( keyboards and guitar), formerly of Jonathan Richman's band The Modern Lovers. The group quickly drew a following and was signed to Sire Records in 1977. Their first album, Talking Heads: 77 was released soon afterward. Combining a taut rhythm section with David Byrne's signature neurotic vocals, '77 was a potent slab of art-punk virtuosity that, despite poor sales, instantly endeared the band to the more experimental elements in New York's burgeoning punk scene.