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CD - Multi-Item Set / Remastered / Includes DVD
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| CD | $10.39 |
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Disc
4 | |
| 1 | Once in a Lifetime |
| 2 | Wild Wild Life |
| 3 | Stay Up Late |
| 4 | Blind |
| 5 | Crosseyed and Painless |
| View all tracks on this disc | |
| See all tracks | |
You can't always judge a book -- or a box set -- by its cover, but in the case of this retrospective of the artiest element in New York's first punk generation, it's fairly safe to do so. After all, the odd-sized (16 3/4" x 5 1/4"), uniquely constructed collection -- which looks more like a high-end art book than a set of compact discs -- fits perfectly with the off-kilter aesthetic that David Byrne and company exuded in their time together. Once in a Lifetime cherry-picks the Talking Heads' best-known material, from early churners like "Psycho Killer" to more ornate latter-day favorites like "Nothing but Flowers," but the set also puts more shadowy material into focus. The band's earliest singles, "Love Goes to Building on Fire" and "Uh, Oh Love Comes to Town," are not only aired but, in the case of the latter, presented in an alternate version laced with steel drums. Byrne even went back to the band's embryonic phase to cull the charmingly raw, previously unreleased "Sugar on My Tongue." Diehards will find other compelling cuts tucked away on the three audio discs: An alternate take of "Drugs" spotlights Robert Fripp's angular guitar line, while "A Clean Break," which never made it onto a studio album, is presented in a fast-and-furious concert setting. The collection is rounded out by a DVD version of the Heads' 1988 video collection, Storytelling Giant, expanded from its original issue by three clips, including the hazy "Sax and Violins" (the accompaniment for a song that appeared in Wim Wenders's Until the End of the World). The set's extensive 80-page booklet features commentaries from the band members and others, a detailed time line, and archival photos. There's plenty to free your mind in these grooves, and plenty of incentive for your ass to follow. David Sprague, Barnes & Noble
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March 30, 2008: I have heard a lot of people complain about this boxset for 3 reasons - the price, the way in which it's presented, and the material within. Honestly though... aren't those the top 3 things to complain about when discussing a piece of art? I work at a music and book store, and even with my discount, the price tag was daunting. However, this box set caught my eye even before I knew it was a Talking Heads set. Perched above all the other CDs, the size of the set, and the lovely art work that was painted across it stood out to me. Once I read that it was from the Talking Heads, I knew I wanted it (more for my mother than myself). Yes, the artwork is strange, and yes, it is out there - but aren't the Talking Heads? Isn't David Byrne? Both the band and this boxset are weird and wonderful, in the most perfect ways possible. As for the complaints about this box set having basically every track previously released..... hello? It's a box set. Part of a box set is containing all the previously released tracks of said artist, along with extra material. I love the DVD that comes with the 3 CDs, as well as the in-box booklet, complete with photos, essays, and memorable pieces of art. The "box" alone that it comes in is worth it for me. This is not a box set for the music freak who already owns every Talking Heads album, song, and concert DVD, just so that they can say "Hey, I own every Talking Heads song EVER." This box set is for the person who loves the Talking Heads, and who can say with great confidence that the Talking Heads and their music were a large part of their lives. I grew up listening to Talking Heads - I'm now 19, and this box set means a lot to me. If you, or someone you know, would treasure this for what it is, then it would make a tremendous gift.
You can't always judge a book -- or a box set -- by its cover, but in the case of this retrospective of the artiest element in New York's first punk generation, it's fairly safe to do so. After all, the odd-sized (16 3/4" x 5 1/4"), uniquely constructed collection -- which looks more like a high-end art book than a set of compact discs -- fits perfectly with the off-kilter aesthetic that David Byrne and company exuded in their time together. Once in a Lifetime cherry-picks the Talking Heads' best-known material, from early churners like "Psycho Killer" to more ornate latter-day favorites like "Nothing but Flowers," but the set also puts more shadowy material into focus. The band's earliest singles, "Love Goes to Building on Fire" and "Uh, Oh Love Comes to Town," are not only aired but, in the case of the latter, presented in an alternate version laced with steel drums. Byrne even went back to the band's embryonic phase to cull the charmingly raw, previously unreleased "Sugar on My Tongue." Diehards will find other compelling cuts tucked away on the three audio discs: An alternate take of "Drugs" spotlights Robert Fripp's angular guitar line, while "A Clean Break," which never made it onto a studio album, is presented in a fast-and-furious concert setting. The collection is rounded out by a DVD version of the Heads' 1988 video collection, Storytelling Giant, expanded from its original issue by three clips, including the hazy "Sax and Violins" (the accompaniment for a song that appeared in Wim Wenders's Until the End of the World). The set's extensive 80-page booklet features commentaries from the band members and others, a detailed time line, and archival photos. There's plenty to free your mind in these grooves, and plenty of incentive for your ass to follow. David Sprague
Talking Heads are one of a handful of seminal rock bands whose catalog has been curiously overlooked in the CD era. Their albums have not been remastered, their legendary 1982 double-live album, The Name of This Band Is Talking Heads, has never made it to disc, and apart from 1992's Popular Favorites 1976-1992: Sand in the Vaseline, there has been no retrospective assembled (to make matters worse, in the U.K. that set was condensed to the single-disc The Best of Talking Heads: Once in a Lifetime). So, Rhino/WSM's 2003 box set Once in a Lifetime (sure, the title is repeated, but what else could it reasonably be called?) is noteworthy for many reasons, because it marks the first remastering of the group's catalog (and the new sound is terrific), marks the first time any of The Name of This Band reached CD (alas, there's only one cut, "A Clean Break (Let's Work)," which never made it to another album), unearths a few rarities, and most importantly, provides an excellent three-disc retrospective on this seminal quartet.
These three discs run 54 tracks, which is quite a bit more generous than it sounds, since all Talking Heads' studio albums apart from their last, 1988's Naked, are represented by over half of their songs (counting alternate takes, but not outtakes; these alternates are notably but not radically different, though "Cities" has brand new words), often coming three or four cuts from the total. Thematically, the three discs are sharply arranged, accentuating different eras for the band. After three early sides, all found on Sand in the Vaseline, the first disc is largely devoted to the debut Talking Heads: 77 and its 1978 sequel, More Songs About Buildings and Food. Instead of following strict chronological order on this collection, the two albums are interwoven, to play up at first the tense, nervy post-punk of early Talking Heads, and then it steadily reveals their growing immersion in funk and African rhythms. This has the effect of slightly downplaying Brian Eno's contributions to More Songs, but he returns to the forefront on disc two, which captures Talking Heads at their creative peak for 1979's Fear of Music, 1980's Remain in Light, and 1983's Speaking in Tongues, which is when their collaboration with Eno ended. This is the sound of classic Talking Heads -- David Byrne spitting out frenzied, fractured words over the tightly wound yet supple art-funk grooves laid down by Chris Frantz and Tina Weymouth, given melodic flair by Jerry Harrison. It's filled with timeless moments: "I Zimbra" filtering Fela Kuti through the New York boho punk; the deliriously paranoid "Life During Wartime," as potent during the war on terrorism as it was during the cold war; the brilliant "Once in a Lifetime," still Byrne's signature piece; "Crosseyed and Painless," spinning early hip-hop into uptight punk-funk; the Technicolor burst of "Burning Down the House," the single that brought them into the Top Ten; the sweet, aching "This Must Be the Place (Naive Melody)." Disc three deals with the aftermath of this brilliant run. At first, the group scaled the groove back and turned toward relatively straight-ahead pop with 1985's Little Creatures, represented here by such songs as "And She Was," "Stay Up Late," and the careening "Road to Nowhere," all of which retain their potency. After that, the box loses momentum as Talking Heads lost momentum, stumbling through the film project True Stories (which did produce a couple of pretty good songs in "Wild Wild Life," "Love for Sale," and "People Like Us") before ending after the worldbeat inclinations of Naked (containing the excellent "(Nothing But) Flowers" and the pretty good "Blind"; "In Asking Land" was an outtake released here for the first time, and it's not particularly noteworthy).
If Once in a Lifetime does run out of steam toward the end, it has to be said that it doesn't outstay its welcome, and apart from a track or two at the very end, this is a compelling, entertaining listen from start to finish. Although it bypasses Stop Making Sense entirely, it's not missed, and it's hard to quibble with the track selection ("The Great Curve" is the only song that perhaps should have been here but isn't, and for only one song out of eight albums, that's not bad at all), which means Once in a Lifetime is about a good of a retrospective as could be imagined, if judged just on musical terms. But this box set offers more than music. There's a fourth disc, a DVD that is an expanded version of their video collection Storytelling Giant, containing all the group's videos by adding clips from True Stories, Naked, and Sand in the Vaseline to the original programming. This is hardly padding or an extra feature; it's an integral part of the box set, since there was always a strong visual element to Talking Heads, and they were one of the great pioneers in music video. Watching the videos of Storytelling Giant now, decades after their original release, it's startling how they remain fresh even as their production techniques age. "Once in a Lifetime," "Burning Down the House," and "And She Was" are still played frequently, at least on VH1-Classic, but lesser-known videos for "Crosseyed and Painless" and "Road to Nowhere" are equally vibrant (and that's to say nothing about the nostalgia trip "Love for Sale" provides; intended as a commentary on advertising, it's now a time capsule of slogans, logos, and lingo from ads from 1986, making it a delight for entirely different reasons than the rest of the collection).
While the DVD is more than welcome, the packaging is a little problematic. It's designed as a long narrow book, with rather garishly precious artwork, and the discs are inserted into pouches within the covers of the book. This design makes it difficult to read the numerous essays, which are all designed as reminiscences, whether it's from all four bandmembers, rock critic David Fricke, novelist Rick Moody, performance artist Maggie Estep, or other assorted New York luminaries. These are generally good and interesting, and the collection of press clippings of the time is rather brilliant, but a basic history would have been welcome. Then again, this set isn't really designed to be read or played -- it's designed to be looked at once or twice, then sat on the shelf. Which is too bad, because those three CDs are everything a Talking Heads retrospective should be and the DVD is essential viewing. It's enough to keep the box from being essential itself. Stephen Thomas Erlewine
The music transcends its era, as the excellent remastering shows. Tom Moon
Loading...Album Credits | ||
| Performance Credits | ||
| Talking Heads | Primary Artist | |
| Wally Badarou | Synthesizer, Keyboards | |
| Jon Hassell | Trumpet | |
| Mory Kanté | Kora | |
| Naná Vasconcelos | Percussion | |
| David Byrne | Bass, Guitar, Percussion, Keyboards, Vocals, Bells, Synthesizer Drums, Group Member | |
| Jerry Harrison | Synthesizer, Bass, Guitar, Percussion, Piano, Keyboards, Marimbas, Hammond Organ, Background Vocals, Group Member | |
| Kirsty MacColl | Background Vocals | |
| Bernie Worrell | Synthesizer | |
| Robin Eubanks | Trombone | |
| Charlie Sepulveda | Trumpet | |
| Nona Hendryx | Background Vocals | |
| Eric Weissberg | Dobro, Steel Guitar | |
| Gordon Grody | Background Vocals | |
| Shankar | Violin | |
| Tawatha Agee | Background Vocals | |
| Manolo Badrena | Conga, Shaker, cowbell, Wood Block | |
| Ellen Bernfield | Background Vocals | |
| Moussa Cissokho | Conga | |
| Paulinho Da Costa | Percussion | |
| Raphael Dejesus | Percussion | |
| Erin Dickens | Background Vocals | |
| Eno | Synthesizer, Guitar, Percussion, Piano, Background Vocals | |
| Angel Fernandez | Trumpet | |
| Chris Frantz | Percussion, Drums, Keyboards, Tambourine, Group Member | |
| Laurie Frink | Trumpet | |
| Robert Fripp | Guitar | |
| Mitch Frohman | Alto Saxophone | |
| Earl Gardner | Trumpet | |
| Diva Gray | Background Vocals | |
| Lani Groves | Background Vocals | |
| Stan Harrison | Alto Saxophone | |
| Richard Landry | Saxophone | |
| Julie Last | Background Vocals | |
| Abdou M'Boup | Conga, cowbell, talking drum | |
| Johnny Marr | 12-string Guitar | |
| Tom Morrell | Pedal Steel Guitar | |
| Yves N'Djock | Guitar | |
| Lenny Pickett | Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone | |
| Bobby Porcelli | Alto Saxophone | |
| Jose Rossy | Percussion | |
| Steve Sacks | Baritone Saxophone | |
| Steve Scales | Percussion | |
| Sweetbreathes | Background Vocals | |
| Sydney Thiam | Conga | |
| Dale Turk | Bass Trombone | |
| David Van Tieghem | Percussion | |
| Brice Wassy | Shaker, cowbell, Wood Block | |
| Alex Weir | Guitar | |
| Lani Weymouth | Group Member | |
| Laura Weymouth | Group Member | |
| Tina Weymouth | Synthesizer, Bass, Guitar, Percussion, Keyboards, Background Vocals, String Bass, Group Member | |
| Gene Wilder | Conga | |
| Al Acosta | Tenor Saxophone | |
| Andrew Cader | Washboard | |
| Steve Elfon | Baritone Saxophone | |
| Steve Gluzband | Trumpet | |
| Dolette MacDonald | Background Vocals | |
| Jimmy Macdonell | Accordion | |
| Tommy Camfield | Fiddle | |
| Bert Choir Cross | Background Vocals | |
| Ari Wilder | Conga | |
| Jóse "Ito" Jérez | Trumpet | |
| Kurt Yahijian | Background Vocals | |
| Technical Credits | ||
| Jon Hassell | Horn Arrangements | |
| David Byrne | Liner Notes, Concept, Video Producer, Video Director | |
| Jerry Harrison | Liner Notes, Concept | |
| Steve Morse | Author | |
| Talking Heads | Producer | |
| Tony Schwartz | Author | |
| Toni Basil | Video Director | |
| Tom Harrison | Author | |
| Joe Barbaria | Engineer | |
| Tony Bongiovi | Producer | |
| Hugh Brown | Creative Supervision | |
| Chris Carroll | Author | |
| John Miller Chernoff | Author | |
| Eno | Producer | |
| James Farber | Engineer | |
| Angel Fernandez | Horn Arrangements | |
| Chris Frantz | Liner Notes, Concept | |
| Michael Gross | Author | |
| Dave Jerden | Engineer | |
| Butch Jones | Engineer | |
| Nick Launay | Producer | |
| Steve Lillywhite | Producer | |
| Bob Ludwig | Remastering | |
| Richard Manwaring | Engineer | |
| Jack Nuber | Engineer | |
| Rod O'Brien | Engineer | |
| Gary Peterson | Annotation | |
| Lenny Pickett | Horn Arrangements | |
| Johnny Potoker | Engineer | |
| Lance Quinn | Producer, Horn Arrangements | |
| Alex Sadkin | Engineer | |
| Jay Scott | Author | |
| Ed Stasium | Engineer | |
| Mark Wallis | Engineer | |
| Wim Wenders | Video Director | |
| Tina Weymouth | Liner Notes, Concept | |
| David Wild | Creative Consultant | |
| Maggie Estep | Liner Notes | |
| Mark Spector | Producer | |
| Neal Teeman | Engineer | |
| Paul Christiansen | Engineer | |
| Rhett Davis | Engineer | |
| Russ DeVault | Author | |
| Steve Hirsch | Cinematography | |
| Lance Loud | Author | |
| Anthony DeCurtis | Author | |
| Bruce Pilato | Author | |
| Roy Trakin | Author | |
| Brad Baker | Horn Arrangements | |
| Jim Jarmusch | Video Director | |
| Larry Kelp | Author | |
| Joe Nick Patoski | Author | |
| Fernando Kral | Engineer | |
| Marc Kirkeby | Author | |
| Steven Chean | Editorial Research | |
| Ted Bafaloukos | Video Director | |
| Jim Blashfield | Video Producer, Video Director | |
| Anatole Dauman | Video Producer | |
| Alan Lewis Kleinberg | Video Producer | |
| Ira Mayer | Author | |
| Melvin Sokolsky | Video Director | |
| James Wolcott | Author | |
| Jonathan Taplin | Video Producer | |
| Greg Tate | Author | |
| Rabindranath Tagore | Poetry | |
| Mike McClain | Engineer | |
| Stephen Stanley | Engineer | |
| Tina Silvey | Video Producer | |
| Mikal Gilmore | Author | |
| John Rockwell | Author | |
| Tim Scanlin | Liner Note Coordination | |
| Max Bell | Author | |
| Stephen Kirk "Jelly Roll" Johnson | Video Producer | |
| Sandy McLeod | Video Producer | |
| Michael Aron | Author | |
| Jacques Attali | Quotes Researched & Compiled | |
| Joe Beirne | Video Producer | |
| Robyn Bensinger | Video Producer | |
| Robert Blau | Author | |
| Aurobindo Bose | translation | |
| Debra Burchett Lee | Author | |
| Jim Czarnecki | Video Producer | |
| Vladimir Dubossarsky | Cover Painting | |
| Mary Gaitskill | Liner Notes | |
| Dick Hebdige | Liner Notes | |
| Annabel Jankel | Video Director | |
| Judy Jarvis | Author | |
| Tibor Kalman | Video Producer, Video Director | |
| Peter Kobel | Author | |
| Roman Kozak | Author | |
| William LAmato | Author | |
| William Leith | Author | |
| Tony Liose | Author | |
| Melissa Marsland | Video Producer | |
| Michael Maslow | Video Producer | |
| Ed McCormack | Author | |
| Bill Melo | Author | |
| Joyce Millman | Author | |
| James Nold Jr. | Author | |
| Craig Zeller | Author | |
| Alexander Vinogradov | Cover Painting | |
| Pete Oppel | Author | |
| Michael Owen | Video Producer | |
| Frank Veldkamp | Web Design | |
| Mark Peel | Author | |
| Lynn VanMatre | Author | |
| John Podhoretz | Author | |
| Steve Pond | Author | |
| Carter Ratcliff | Author | |
| Frank Rose | Author | |
| Stefan Sagmeister | Art Direction | |
| Munro Sickafoose | Author | |
| Sylvie Simmons | Author | |
| Ken Tucker | Author | |
| Kyoichi Tsuzuki | Liner Notes | |
| Paul Tassie | Creative Consultant | |
| Amanda Stern | Collage | |
| Tom Carson | Author | |
| Rick Moody | Liner Notes | |
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