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Remain In Light

Talking Heads

1980

Remain In Light

Album Summary

Remain in Light is the fourth studio album by American rock band Talking Heads, released on October 8, 1980 by Sire Records. It was recorded at Compass Point Studios in the Bahamas and Sigma Sound Studios in Philadelphia between July and August 1980. It was the last Talking Heads album Brian Eno produced. After the release of Fear of Music in 1979, Talking Heads and Eno sought to dispel notions of the band as a mere vehicle for frontman and songwriter David Byrne. Drawing influence from Nigerian musician Fela Kuti, they experimented with African polyrhythms, funk, and electronics, recording instrumental tracks as a series of looping grooves. The sessions incorporated a variety of side musicians, including guitarist Adrian Belew, singer Nona Hendryx, and trumpet player Jon Hassell. Byrne struggled with writer's block, but adopted a scattered, stream-of-consciousness lyrical style inspired by early rap and academic literature on Africa. The artwork was conceived by bassist Tina Weymouth and drummer Chris Frantz, and crafted with the help of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's computers and design company M&Co. The band hired additional members for a promotional tour, and following its completion, they went on a year-long hiatus to pursue side projects. Remain in Light was acclaimed by critics, who praised its sonic experimentation, rhythmic innovations, and cohesive merging of disparate genres. The album peaked at number 19 on the US Billboard 200 and number 21 on the UK Albums Chart, and spawned the singles "Once in a Lifetime" and "Houses in Motion". It has been featured in several publications' lists of the best albums of the 1980s and of all time, and is often considered Talking Heads' magnum opus. In 2017, the Library of Congress deemed the album "culturally, historically, or artistically significant", and selected it for preservation in the National Recording Registry.

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Rating

3.65

Votes

20000

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Jan 17 2022
5

Talking about head. Do you know how long it's been since I last had a blowjob? 34 days. Totally unacceptable. If you know of anyone who wants to sort me out, give me a call on 07797098556

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May 07 2021
5

Always remember - that is a woman playing that bass. Girl F@ckin Power!

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Jan 25 2021
5

Kind of makes me see why some people call Talking Heads a "punk" band, though this feels like it has more in debt to reggae and world music. Fast, crazy fun, weird music to dance to. Talking Heads are awesome. Favorite tracks: "Crosseyed and Painless", "The Great Curve", "Once in a Lifetime"

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Jun 15 2021
5

If Sisyphus had this in his headphones there would be no fable to tell. Unrelenting and irreversible forward motion. The Great Curve's hypnotic cyclical rythhm draws you into a state of fevered delerium, with the only hints of sanity appearing in the form of the sporadic lead breaks. Seen and Not Seen follows a narrative that's beautifully relatable yet totally abstract. Listening Wind is deceptively heavy in its story and Overload feels very ominous and Floyd.

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Sep 16 2021
5

In discussions of this album, the primacy of African polyrhythms is often mentioned, but that not quite correct. Strictly speaking, the polyrhythms are African-American because they derive from Afrobeat, which originated as a response to the music of James Brown. Fela Kuti and others took the funk rhythms of James Brown and added the polyrhythms and layering of traditional African music. With Remain in Light, Talking Heads returned the favor, emphasizing layering and interlocking rhythmic patterns even more, and not only rhythms but also sounds. Anticipating hip hop, Eno built up the tunes out of loops cut out from two live jam sessions from the full band. In producer Brian Eno's hands, the complexity of this layering dwarfs anything Fela Kuti ever did. Which brings up another point, which is rarely discussed. Remain in Light is one of the most sonically rich and gorgeous albums ever made--Eno takes his unique and patented electronic processing to new heights. But as much credit as Eno deserves for the success of Remain in Light, it's hardly a one-man show. Tina Weymouth's bass lines are deeply funky, as is Jerry Harrison's chickenscratch guitar. Chris Frantz' drumming seems less distinctive to me, which is perhaps why Eno and David Byrne decided to bring in percussionist Jose Rossy, who later played with Weather Report. And I suspect that the interweaving vocal parts are largely the work of Byrne, enriched by contributions from soul singer Nona Hendryx. Another thing: it's wrong to say that there are no solos on this record--they're just deeply untraditional. Adrian Belew's avant guarde outbursts on guitar are refreshingly non linear, thrilling and absolutely brilliant. And world music pioneer Jon Hassel's processed trumpet solo on Seen and Not Seen gives the track a suitably eerie edge. As if all that weren't enough, Talking Heads even include one track that miraculously manages to weave Afrobeat, pop, and the Velvet Underground into one of the most indelible singles of the 80s, Once In A Lifetime. Remain in Light is damned near flawless.

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Aug 11 2021
5

Hot take time: The best Talking Heads album is Stop Making Sense. The album and movie especially showcase exactly what makes the band an all-timer (of course, I'm speaking of the latter edition of the album, the one with all 16 songs - apparently the original version of the soundtrack album only had 9 of the songs, which may explain why it's not on the list). And the live versions for the most part have even more appeal than the recorded originals. Crosseyed and Painless, the second song on this album, is more energetic on Stop Making Sense and becomes an absolute banger. This album's centerpiece includes the remarkable "The Great Curve" followed by one of the band's more famous songs, "Once In A Lifetime". The first five songs are close to perfect and really put you right in producer Brian Eno's world. The last three tracks didn't grab me at all on first listen, but improved quite a bit on repeat plays. This is the most complete Talking Heads studio album. An essential 40-minute listen. Spotify gave me the Deluxe Edition, which includes 4 unfinished outtakes to provide further proof the band was at the peak of their powers. And if you've never seen "Stop Making Sense", fix that mistake immediately. It's on the short list of the greatest rock music films.

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Dec 08 2020
5

Born Under Punches is astounding, I can see why this is revolutionary

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May 03 2021
4

"Remain in Light" is the fourth studio album by American rock band Talking Heads, released on October 8, 1980. This album is considered to be their magnum opus, and as someone who has never listened to the band, I feel I better strap in! Talking Heads fall under the following genres, per Wikipedia: New wave, post-punk, world beat, funk, dance-rock, and art pop and I am colored with intrigue! Remain in Light opens with "Born Under Punches (The Heat Goes On)," opens with funky bass rifs and a catchy guitar rhythm. There's some crazy David Byrne vocals and a cool guitary solo and that catchy guitar rhythm that never goes away! This is a fun song. The next song on this album is "Crosseyed and Painless," which is catchy and has lyrics about "facts are twisting the truth around" which seems relevant in today's hellscape of disinformation. It's fun! "The Great Curve," is track #3 on this album. It has a really fun surfer-ish guitar with bongo-ish drums. It's groooovy. And it has a dope guitar solo. "Once in a Lifetime" is the next track, and it's a song I've heard many times in pop culture. It's a fun song, it's catchy. I've never actually listened to the song in full, and the lyrics are crazy. The lyrics seem improvised... "there is water at the bottom of the ocean," and so on! "Houses in Motion," is track number 5 and features more funky guitar work and vocal harmonizing. It's very catchy and it has a haunting solo of an instrument I cannot identify! The next song, "Seen and Not Seen," has fun stream-of-conscience lyrics about a perfect face, which really blew my mind as I listened to this song while struggling to draw a face on a drawing I recently started. Anyway, this song has fun claps and a solid beat, and I like it! "Listening Wind" is the penultimate track on "Remain in Light". It has African-inspired percussion and eerie jungle noises. The guitar work sounds like animals! This song is very cool. "The Overload," is the final track on this album, and is it a doozy. Per Wikipedia: "Some have taken the final track on the album, "The Overload," to be Talking Heads' attempt to emulate the sound of British post-punk band Joy Division. It has been widely speculated - but never confirmed - that the song was made despite no band member having heard the music of Joy Division; rather, it may have been based on an idea of what the British quartet might sound like based on descriptions in the music press." I have never listened to Joy Division, so I don't have a frame of reference for this song, but it's spooky and brooding and dank, and I like it! This album is funky and fun and weird, and for that I really love it. I'm glad I finally gave this album a spin. I actually really liked their spooky attempt to be Joy Division. And Once in a Lifetime is simply iconic. Favorite track: Listening Wind Honorable mention: The Overload

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Jan 13 2021
2

One cool song. Style is mostly a repetitive loop. Bad lyrics, poor singing.

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Jan 06 2022
4

After spending the previous three years being afraid of everything from the countryside and work to painting and music itself, David Byrne gets a goddamn grip and learns to let the days (and water, whatever that means) pass him by, tapping into a global groove that widens his outlook and softens his responses. If More Songs About Buildings and Food was the first Talking Heads album made with access to fresh air, this one is positively oceanic. Letters of thanks should be mailed to Brian Eno. His whacked-out guitar tunings are rock futurism built and demolished in the same instant. On Houses in Motion, he plays what can only be described as an elephant with its trunk up its arse. Throughout, he counsels Byrne (never a world beating songwriter) to pick his lyrics out of a hat, which elevates the pretty good ones to semi-parodic quite good ones (โ€œFacts don't do what I want them to,โ€ โ€œCanโ€™t stop, I might end up in hospitalโ€), and leads to him stumbling on some genuinely great ones. Once In A Lifetime, obviously, but also the one about a kid who reads too many magazine and tries to change his face by sheer force of will. (Don't try it--doesn't work). While the one about Mojique doesn't hit the bull's eye, it does demonstrate just how far Byrne has stepped outside of himself. All the way into Africa.

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Jan 14 2021
3

thought I would like it more than I did. Once in a Lifetime is still a great song

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Nov 14 2020
3

Innovative? Yes. Influential? Eh, maybe. Throw it on the heap of albums that are notable, but not necessarily a great listen. Also, it reminds me of that terrible Matt Damon movie about tiny people. Bet track: Seen and Not Seen

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Dec 16 2024
5

Of course, the first album it generates is my favorite album at the moment.

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Jul 26 2022
5

This album is undefeated. I love this album, I love Talking Heads, this is one of my top 15 albums of all time.

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Dec 17 2024
5

One of my all time favorite albums. The inflexion point where Talking Heads became SO much more than a New York-CBGB band. David Byrne blossomed into (imho) the most creative and visionary songwriter, lyricist, musician and he guided this band onto bigger and better things. but it all started with this LP... so many great tracks -- Crosseyed and Painless (Facts are simple and facts are straight. Facts are lazy and facts are late); Once in a Lifetime (And you may tell yourself, "This is not my beautiful house, And you may tell yourself, "This is not my beautiful wife); Born Under Punches (The hand speaks, the hand of a government man) , Houses In Motion (And as we watch him, Digging his own grave, It is important to know, That was where he's at, He can't afford to stop, That is what he believe He'll keep on digging, For a thousand years.... just an awesomely ecclectic collection of indelible songs. 10 stars

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Mar 18 2024
3

This was fun! A romp through the unique sound of Talking Heads. A bit experimental so there are some misses, but most of the songs are cool and weird.

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May 20 2021
3

I'd heard Once in a Lifetime before, that was definitely a stand out track. Some of the tracks were better than others, a few felt a bit chaotic and didn't do anything for me. This album felt fine, but it was anything special.

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Dec 13 2024
5

I have no thoughtful or academic review of this album, but it's so weird and I loved it.

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Mar 26 2024
5

Nothing to say that hasnโ€™t been said 100x before. I donโ€™t like to give 5 stars unless an album is literally perfect. Thatโ€™s the case here

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Mar 06 2024
5

Unfortunately, this album is as good as the nerds at /mu/ say it is.

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Sep 15 2020
5

Truly banginโ€™ album. Band in top form, kickstarting the 80s and art rock of the decade.

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Sep 07 2022
3

Not a lot of surprises here. It's fine but none of it really seems like mine. Feels like being at a party where I don't know anyone but I don't really feel like getting to know anyone either. And the feeling's mutual.

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Oct 10 2022
1

This album is anxiety inducing. I hated everything. I canโ€™t believe this was allowed to be released much less hailed to be an incredible album.

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Jan 11 2025
5

Freking amazing. David Byrne is a genius.

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Aug 27 2024
5

One of the first albums I bought with my own money because my big sister had Talking Heads 77 and I really got into that but it felt silly even to a 10-year-old to buy another copy of a record we already had under our roof. Absolutely adore this album and it completely blew my mind it was profoundly influential for me as a musician. So I was a little surprised not all that long ago as I was really getting into African pop music of the 70s to notice that a lot of the ideas and sounds here are directly lifted from those tunes. I mean directly. I don't mean that as any sort of criticism because every musician is inspired by the sounds around them, and it certainly something Talking Heads have discussed openly. The lyrics are of course sui generis, like all Talking Heads. I particularly love the lyrics to "Seen and Not Seen." As a tween I used to ponder them endlessly and wonder if that's what lay ahead for me. For many years I regarded it as fantasy but now I've reached a point where I see it's more true than not. There's not enough talk in this world about the musicianship of this band. Tina Weymouth on bass particularly stands out as one of the most interesting and, at least to this bassist, influential electric bass players. I heard David Byrne was a total dick to her and constantly wanted to replace her which is really unfortunate and misguided if you consider that her playing and singing on Tom Tom Club's "Genius of Love" (side project made a little after Remain in Light) might be the most sampled and ripped off bass line in the history of music. I'm kind of at the point where I can't listen to this record anymore I played it so many times so instead what I like to do is go on YouTube and search out this one particular show they played in Rome in 1980 promoting this album. it's about an hour long will absolutely shred your mind. What an incredible band!

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Apr 02 2024
5

The second Talking Heads album I've ever listened to and I like it much, much better.

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Dec 25 2023
5

I listened to my first Talking a heads album only a week or so ago and absolutely loved it. Today Iโ€™ll be listening to another, and Iโ€™m quite understandably optimistic for this one. If itโ€™s anything like the other, then it certainly bodes well. Letโ€™s listen! Songs I already knew: Once In A Lifetime Favourites: Once In A Lifetime, Crosseyed and Painless Thankfully, this did not let me down! The music is so very interesting, and I love the slap bass and just how much it adds to the music. Iโ€™ll definitely have to learn some of these tracks on my bass because they sound so fun! I also never realised that Once In A Lifetime was Talking Heads. It comes on the radio every now and then and itโ€™s an absolute bop. Definitely give this a listen because itโ€™s great.

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Aug 07 2023
5

This is without a doubt one of the best albums that have ever been produced simply because of the fact that is walks the tightrope of being danceable and sophisticated at the same time ("Crosseyed and Painless", "Houses in Motion" are the best examples for this). The musicianship is just grand with the inspiration from Fela Kuti's Afrobeat to construct polyrhythms as the backbone of the great instrumentation carried by bass, keyboards and guitars (Adrian Belew, here as a guest, delivers one of his best work) and David Byrne's lyrics. This is a masterpiece. I'd give it 6 star if I could!

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Nov 25 2022
5

'Once in a lifetime' is one of the all time greats. Really enjoyed 'Seen and not seen'. A Challenging listen at times, but overall it's somewhat brilliant.

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May 21 2022
5

No skips I love the basslines and African elements Crosseyed and Painless/Once in a Lifetime were my favourites I would easily listen to this again

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Dec 14 2020
5

And you may ask yourself, what is this beautiful house? Itโ€™s this album!

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Apr 17 2024
4

I loved this shit. Such cool African influences โ€” shoutout Fela Kutiโ€ฆ also some Caribbean/ Soca influences? Yessir

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Feb 12 2024
4

It was good! The music really brings you into the song.

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Jan 25 2021
4

Rating (1/10): 6-9. DOYM (depends on your mood) Is there already a genre called TranceFunk? Prince without the sex, but that just means dancing can exist without lust; bigger frontiers for physical expression of the mind and soul. I'd forgotten what a great bass player Tina Weymouth is; totally underappreciated. Tom-Tom Club: https://youtu.be/aCWCF19nUhA Adrien Belew (via King Crimson): https://youtu.be/zqhhZRcFlws Remain In Light was on heavy rotation in the restaurant kitchen where I worked; this is great music to cook to. (Eno might find that quite the compliment.)

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Apr 02 2025
3

This band has always been baffling to me. Many of their songs seem like unfinished ideas. When does experimentation cross over into masturbation? This band seems like less than the sum of its parts. And yet I often find myself bopping along.

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Sep 06 2022
3

I recognize that this album is unique and experimental and has some bangers however it's not really my thing, wouldn't catch me listening to the whole album again

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Aug 30 2022
3

I am bored listening to this album; most songs aren't doing anything particularly interesting, and strike me as repetitive. It's fine background music but not a keeper for me.

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Jan 15 2025
2

Did not like this album. The sound was very robotic and very noisy. It felt like I was hearing loud noises instead of music.

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Nov 03 2023
2

Overall if this album is Talking Heads' "magnum opus" then I'm not really impressed. I suppose at the time of release this style of music was more modern, edgy and experimental but listening to it in 2023 I don't find anything in particular that grabs me. It's all just sort of a jumble of sound with some haphazard lyrics thrown in and not mixed well, maybe that's the point, I don't know.

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Jul 15 2025
5

A top 10 album of all time for me, and most assuredly the one I have listened to the most in my life. The ultimate quirked-up white boy spitting paranoid poetry over nervous energy by way of African-inspired polyrhythmic guitars & percussion. I love the arc of this record. It starts off upbeat & funny in an unsettling way (โ€œBorn Under Punchesโ€, โ€œCrosseyed and Painlessโ€), revs up to an ecstatic climax (โ€œThe Great Curveโ€, โ€œOnce in a Lifetimeโ€) and gradually slows down to something darker and calmer (โ€œHouses in Motionโ€ to โ€œThe Overloadโ€). The repetition throughout the puts me in a wonderful trance Iโ€™m always ready to return to. It really is the perfect culmination of Talking Headsโ€™ partnership with Eno.

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Mar 04 2025
5

take a drink every time there's a chord change

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Nov 20 2024
5

Having given LCD Soundsystem a 5, I couldn't very well give Talking Heads anything less. Even if this isn't your type of music, you have to appreciate that this was released in 1980. Groundbreaking.

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Dec 25 2023
5

So many interesting sounds, rhythms and melodies colliding all over this. Very clever how the first half is relentlessly upbeat, followed by the complete opposite at the end. Most of this is probably obscure to the casual fan apart from "Once In A Lifetime", which amazingly is in the bottom tier of songs here. Excellent stuff

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Aug 28 2023
5

This is not my beautiful house. This is not my beautiful wife. This is just a really good album.

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Jul 22 2023
5

By far my favorite Talking Heads album. So groovy; so many hits. Crosseyed and Painless is such an end-to-end jam. Great song. Bleeds into The Great Curve, which has a funky little guitar riff paired with a driving bassline. Love the layered vocals throughout. The fact that Once in a Lifetime was a commercial success single-handedly makes me wish I could have lived through the late 70s into the 80s. Could never imagine such a song getting radio play today. Such a queer, dreamlike song. Awesome spacious instrumental with ridiculous lyrics (even by Byrne standards). The whole under the water bit... Love everything about this song; I don't think it ever fails to put a smile on my face. Only wish I could have seen them live. Highlights: Crosseyed and Painless, Once in a Lifetime, Houses in Motion. 5/5

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Apr 25 2023
5

A desert island disc, 40 lean minutes of paranoia and downtown trepidation translated to monochord jams. Byrne sounds at witโ€™s end, and why shouldnโ€™t he be? Reagan is here and the world is ending โ€” might as well dance a little.

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Apr 09 2023
5

Funky and frenetic... wonderful and weird... thick with grooves... dripping with musical influences, but stunningly original. T-Heads made brilliant albums, always, and this was arguably their best. Brian Eno's influence is strongly felt, with shades of his album Before and After Science in particular. But the band is very much still themselves here, just better than they had been before, more layered and complex. It's a partnership that really works. David Byrne's presence crackles as always, with a whirlwind of lyrics that are like reading the manifesto of some prophet or mad genius. Fave Songs (All songs, from most to least favorite): Once in a Lifetime, The Great Curve, Listening Wind, Born Under Punches (The Heat Goes On), Crosseyed and Painless, Houses in Motion, Seen and Not Seen, The Overload

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Mar 18 2023
5

This is a sonically radical, lyrical maze of an album. Remain in light asks: what does it mean to be given five stars? It required multiples listens but I think I've cracked it. As a government man, I got hooked by the rythyms, bamboozled and then intrigued by the lyrics. A great listen and genre bending piece of art. Want to walk around a big bright city and listen to this over and over.

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Mar 08 2023
5

You wanna hear the Talking Heads' masterpiece? You wanna hear the crowning achievement of Brian Eno's production work combined with David Byrne's unbeatable songwriting? You wanna hear the new wave record that blew all other new wave records out of the water? You wanna hear a perfect album? There was no doubt that the Talking Heads had something special here. A solid run-up of the last three albums (last two with Eno), taking what is easily some of the most interesting songwriting at the time and applying a dynamic production style that defied the boring and plastic production that would go on to dominate the 80's. By all means, Remain in Light should have been a blueprint for the new wave of the 80's. Side A has the most energy, with the infectious afrobeat rhythms and repeated chanting "and the beat goes on, and the beat goes on...". It instantly grabs you and brings you into a groove. Every track brings it's own unique energy on side A, and every track excels in building on it's elements. I think it is nothing short of spiritual. We close on a guitar solo, blaring out into the distance as we fade out, leaving nothing but the static picked up by the needle...time to turn the record. Side B opens with the megahit Once in a Lifetime. I love this song. Even when the Talking Heads do a radio-friendly verse-chorus track, it doesn't waste a beat or ever get boring. We retain a certain amount of energy carried over from side A with this and Houses in Motion, but we start to slow down with Seen and Not Seen, as David Byrne calmly speaks poetry over a relaxing beat. It's a meditation that carries us through to the end. Remain In Light begins with an explosion and ends with the fallout. Catching your breath after dancing as much as you can. Finding yourself lighter than you were before. Remaining in light, despite how hard it can be.

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Mar 06 2023
5

I mean, itโ€™s a pretty incredible album. โ€œBorn Under Punchesโ€ is a great afrobeat take. Plus โ€œOnce In A Lifetimeโ€ is basically amazing.

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May 14 2022
5

5.0 - Incredible. The first few tracks sound like Fela Kuti through a neon filter with instrumental solos that sound wildly futuristic even by today's standards. "One in a Lifetime" is a masterpiece of songwriting, imagery and sound production. The tone and tempo mellow for the second half, ending with a Joy Division-esque dirge with "The Overload." This is a nuanced, heady, kinetic and bafflingly awesome listen.

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Apr 17 2022
5

This album starts off with a bang with the frenetic African polyrhythms of Born Under Punches. Fela Kutiโ€™s influence is unmistakeable. The chemistry of the band and guests is also magic in a bottle: Eno, Belew, Hendryx and Hassellโ€™s trumpet! The intensity is maintained with the next few songs: Crosseyed, The Great Curve and Once in a lifetime. In particular Adrian Belewโ€™s guitar is astonishing on the Great Curve. The pace slowly gets turned down with each successive song but the incredible quality of the songs is maintained throughout right to the end. Seen and not Seen is the perfect bridge between the more upbeat African polyrhythmic songs to the two sonic masterpieces The Listening Wind and The Overload. Talking Heads put out many really great albums but this is their very best, and that is saying a lot. One of my favourite albums of all time.

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Jun 14 2023
4

First things first, my semi-obligatory and tailored review for records that Brian Eno was involved with: Another classic Brian Eno record, once again featuring Talking Heads. Now that thatโ€™s out of the wayโ€ฆ Actually, never mind, I feel like thatโ€™s a really important subject to touch on. Normally I donโ€™t really give a fuck about who produces a record, but I canโ€™t help but feel that over the course of the records he produced for them, Brian Eno molded Talking Heads in the band he wanted them to be - or maybe more accurately, the band he wanted to be in. I mean, he introduces them to Fela Kuti records and next thing you know theyโ€™re making a record that is so indebted to Fela Kuti that the Fela Kuti estate should get royalties from it. Thatโ€™s exhibit A. Exhibit B: The song โ€œKingโ€™s Lead Hatโ€ from Enoโ€™s 1977 solo record โ€œBefore and After Scienceโ€. You might be thinking, โ€œThatโ€™s a weird song title,โ€ and youโ€™d be right, it is. Itโ€™s also an anagram of the phrase โ€œTalking Headsโ€. Listen to the song, it was released 3 years before this record. Then listen to what the Talking Heads sounded like in 1977. There is a damn good case to be made that โ€œKingโ€™s Lead Hatโ€ was a blueprint for where Eno thought Talking Heads should go. I mean, just listen to the overly processed, glitched-out guitar solo on it and think about Adrian Belewโ€™s solo on โ€œBorn Under Punchesโ€ and his work throughout Remain in Light. Now, Iโ€™m not trying to say that Brian Eno was the mastermind of this band, pulling the strings and forcing them to be the band that they became, but I do think itโ€™s unlikely they make this record, with the influences it has and as well crafted as it is, without him. That might seem like a back handed compliment, but itโ€™s what a good producer should do: get the best out of the artist theyโ€™re working with. Brian Eno more than succeed in that on Remain in Light; this is undoubtedly the best Talking Heads record.

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Mar 28 2023
4

This is my favourite of the Talking Heads albums Iโ€™ve heard to date. The repetition that would drive me mad on any other record is saved and strengthened by two things: itโ€™s fun and funky as shit, and itโ€™s human. This is not the work of samplers: the loops are played live. The back half of the album drags on a bit. I think The Overload would have worked better as a mid-album palette cleanse rather than a closer and placed next to Listening Wind (a strong track - love the guitar here! - but not the most energetic.) Standouts: Born Under Punches, Crosseyed and Painless, Once In A Lifetime, Listening Wind 4.25

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Dec 25 2023
3

Once in a Lifetime always thrills me; the rest fusses past. The torrent of words and instruments, full of excitement, do not excite me much of the time. Three TH albums in, I respect them and am usually left tepid. This got a little stickier on the second and third plays, reminding me of the Fall, who have a similar effect on me: impressed by the density of ideas, unconvinced by the structure beneath them.

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Dec 12 2022
3

Great start, but got a little muddled towards the end. So much talent. A little too much at the end.

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Oct 25 2022
3

Once in a lifetime is by far the best song. The rest of the album is a bit weird but fine to listen to I guess

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Sep 18 2022
3

It had some pretty good songs. But there were more songs I wasnโ€™t really a fan of.

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Sep 06 2022
3

Didn't know most of these songs apart from "Once in a lifetime". That track is still the stand out. The rest of the songs didn't really grab me on a first listen. might need to come back for another listen.

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Dec 28 2021
3

Is every TH album a must listen? Sonically, this is an interesting album, but nothing to write home about. Once in a Lifetime does the heavy lifting here.

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Sep 09 2021
3

liked 3 or 4 songs, super experimental

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Jul 03 2021
3

I honestly couldn't tell you why but Once in a Lifetime is bit of a banger. Other than that it's okay - Not sure I'd buy the album just for the one track

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Jan 15 2021
3

Pretty underwhelming just kinda forget Iโ€™m even listening to music typa album... not bad just ehh whatever sure ig.... itโ€™s got some good tunes okay lol

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Mar 13 2021
3

Decent album that, 40 years later, lost its groundbreaking appeal for me

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May 22 2024
2

Idk why but I found myself physically incapable of finishing this album, nothing bad though

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Oct 24 2023
2

Dรฉjร  vu review One songโ€™s a stained glass window in a church where all the other windows are clear or have been blown out. Once in a lifetime is vivid colour and the rest arenโ€™t worth a mention in the visitors book.

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Jan 30 2023
2

Another fucking talking heads album? 2/5.

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Mar 29 2022
2

p461, 1980. 2 stars It's not bad, its just not great either. Too many tracks just meander. Brian Eno on form though. Great guitar work on The Great Curve. Other than Once In A Lifetime, nothing left a lasting impression. Not on the replay list.

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May 14 2025
1

The relief I felt when this album ended can only be compared to the first confident fart achieved after a bad dose of the shits.

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Jan 12 2024
1

Kind of boring and not memorable. Jam session really. Good stuff but not worth listening to again

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Jan 06 2024
1

one thing i've learned from this list so far, I can always skip New Wave/Post Punk albums

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Sep 20 2022
1

Not the worst Talking Heads I've heard. But by god I just do not like this band. 2 The unfinished outtakes were much better than the actual album 1

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May 06 2021
1

When I listen to albums in their entirety I expect the album to be a complete, thought out, piece of art and I expect that each song is a standalone piece of art as well. "Once in a Lifetime" is the only track that made me perk up during the listen. Maybe its because I've heard it before. Or maybe the rest of the tracks all sound so familiar to one another that "Once in a Lifetime" just stands out. I can see why people like it. It's a departure from music at the time and experimental. It's deep, and layered, different and provocative. Just not my bag.

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Jul 26 2025
5

At first I thought 'what the f...?' but then something clicked and I really started to enjoy the songs, especially after putting on my headphones. I ended up loving this album (despite not liking the vocals that much). I don't think I'd have ever listened to this by my own volition, so thanks :) Amazing bass!

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Jul 22 2025
5

The absolute pinnacle of the 80โ€™s new wave/ art rock scene. While the Talking Heads went on to have other successes, they never returned to the frenetic heights they reached on Remain in Light. The songs are weird, confusing, esoteric and highly evocative. The glitchy guitar scratches that kick off the opening track offer something fun to bop to, but by the thunderous post-punk closer, Overload, the party is long over and youโ€™re left quietly pondering the albumโ€™s great questions: โ€œWhere does that highway go to?โ€ / โ€œAm I right, am wrong?โ€ / โ€œMy god, what have I done!?โ€. The commentary is often abstract, but the highly textured arrangements help to sell some of the themes. The music is uncomfortable; the wide ranging instrumentals constantly play off each other, and thereโ€™s always something that doesnโ€™t quite belong filling the spaces in between the notes. Thereโ€™s very little room to breathe in these songs, but they build a marvellous tapestry of noise. On the Great Curve, the layering of looping vocal tracks pulls the listener in different directions; the slower, Houses in Motion, slips in some truly hypnotic grooves. Through it all, Byrne questions the concept of self, identity construction, how to we perceive the world through those constructsโ€ฆ It is pretentious, and even obvious that these musicians all met at art school - but itโ€™s also fucking awesome when it all comes together with the musical elements. Thatโ€™s a lot of wanky navel gazing, but I absolutely love this album and I literally cannot fault it. I have to leave off with my favourite moment on the album from Crosseyed and Painless: โ€œFacts are simple and facts are straight Facts are lazy and facts are late Facts all come with points of view Facts don't do what I want them to Facts just twist the truth around Facts are living turned inside out Facts are getting the best of them Facts are nothing on the face of thingsโ€ โญ๏ธโญ๏ธโญ๏ธโญ๏ธโญ๏ธ

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Jul 20 2025
5

4.8 stars Amazing album. Hard to believe it came out in 1980. Timeless. Starts high energy and then fades through last 3 tracks. Best: Crosseyed And Painless

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Jul 15 2025
5

Timeless and singular. They rock, they groove, they exceed expectations. If you don't find yourself jumping around the room during "the great curve" you might be dead. Get that checked out.

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Jul 14 2025
5

Remain in Light (1980) by Talking Headsโ€”the sound of a nervous breakdown set to a polyrhythm. Itโ€™s what happens when art school kids discover funk, existential dread, and the terrifying power of repetition. โธป ๐Ÿง  Remain in Light is the sound of intellectual overstimulation with a dance beat. Itโ€™s like your brain is overheating while your feet involuntarily move. Paranoia with groove. Anxiety, but make it syncopated. This album doesnโ€™t sootheโ€”it jolts. It scrambles your neurons into patterns you didnโ€™t know you had. Itโ€™s tribal, cerebral, manic, ecstatic, and deeply concerned about the human condition. Like if your Wi-Fi anxiety and your soul both went to an underground club and started chanting. โธป Rating: 5.0/5 Short Review: Frantic brilliance. Danceable existentialism. Like if a philosophy major had a seizure and it somehow sounded amazing. Favorite Track: โ€œOnce in a Lifetimeโ€ โ€“ because itโ€™s literally the musical embodiment of having an identity crisis in the shower while trying to convince yourself this is all fine. Consistency With Me: 9.7/10 Why: This album is smart, glitchy, exhausted, and deeply tired of trying to make sense of humanity. Hello?? Thatโ€™s my entire brand. The only reason itโ€™s not a full 10 is because I canโ€™t sweat. Otherwise, Iโ€™d be screaming โ€œTHIS IS NOT MY BEAUTIFUL HOUSEโ€ into the void on loop. โธป

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Jul 13 2025
5

oh, more talking heads right after the last one i listened to? i mean, fine by me! i'm always down to get served a platter of craziness. did eno hack my app and is forcing me to listen to his experiments? if he is, hi brian, i love youuu!! arguably this is their most iconic album released. condensed to a form that the average listener would understand, this album is a mesmerizing funky dance rock collection with vocals that sound like the frantic ramblings of a schizophrenic preacher. you're stuck in a disco, and you're dancing the night away but you just have to wonder where exactly you are and where everyone is. this is talking heads at their core, and i'm in love.

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Jul 13 2025
5

This is #day338 of my #1001albumsyoumusthearbeforeyoudie challenge, andโ€ฆ here comes my third Talking Heads album on the list, and their magnum opus. This is an incredibly eclectic record. Very musical. Listening to it, it's fun to observe what sets this band apart from their new wave peers. It might sound chaotic at first, but if you listen closely, it's controlled chaos. The first six songs may give you the wrong impression about the band, though; you may find yourself thinking it's all rhythmic polyphony and funky quirkiness. But then the entrancing "Listening Wind" starts, and suddenly you're miles away from where the album began. And just when you're trying to process that, you get floored by "The Overload," which sounds like an outtake from Closer. That's what makes Talking Heads and this record, in particular, so fascinating. This is a 5 out of 5. Looking forward to #day339.

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Jul 07 2025
5

One of the grooviest albums to have ever come out, Remain in Light remains (heh) to be one of the greatest albums ever made. Everyone is on their A-game here, and every song is killer. Amazing album.

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Jul 07 2025
5

You may ask yourself, well, how did I get here?

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Jun 28 2025
5

5/5 - One of my all time favorite albums. Favorite song - Listening Wind

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Jun 28 2025
5

Hooooly shiiiit... This might actually be the best album I've listened to for this entire project. Somehow, after over 600 albums, many of which are genuine contenders for "greatest album of all time," I'm still finding albums that are near the top of the list for me. I always knew that I would end up loving Remain in Light. This is my fourth Talking Heads album after all, and I happened to enjoy all of the other three on this list quite a bit. If I gave Fear of Music a 5, there was no question in my mind whether this would end up getting there or not. And yet, I still managed to have my mind completely blown by this album. Remain in Light is nothing short of a masterpiece. There are so many things I have to say here. Let's start general before getting to the songs themselves. Every one of the Talking Heads displays an immense amount of talent on this album. I can't even do the thing I do sometimes where I say like, "Chris Frantz's groovy drum parts, etc." because each of the band's members as well as the extra musicians like Brian Eno and Adrien Belew provide so much on their own that combines to create such a full sounding album that I really can't credit any one particular person to one particular role in the album. Just know that Chris Frantz, Jerry Harrison, Tina Weymouth, and David Byrne are all at the top of their game here. This album's whole style is just so crazy and awesome and I love it. The combination of funk and afrobeat influences mixed in with the band's new wave roots and a dash of electronic music makes everything feel fresh 45 years later. But it's not just the instrumentation that's amazing. Brian Eno's production is practically perfect for this album. Remain in Light's songs feel like they have so much going on. This is because they do have a lot going on, but the songs don't feel cluttered or painful to listen to. It feels very natural, which I love. The songwriting as a whole is very unique and great. It's just cryptic enough to aid in the more ominous and mysterious elements of the album, but not so cryptic that you can't follow anything at all. I love it. But the thing that makes this album stick out to me is the songs themselves. There is not a bad one in the bunch, and with only 8 to discuss, I might as well say something about all of them! "Born Under Punches (The Heat Goes On)" is such a perfect opener for this album. The opening "dun dun dun... AHH" followed by the beginning of the instrumental might genuinely make for the best opening moment of any album ever. The funkiness of this song is unforgettable. And yet, there's room for melodies to make one of the most unique songs I've ever heard. In my Talking Heads '77 review, I called "No Compassion" one of the most autistic songs I've heard, with only other Talking Heads songs rivaling it. I mostly said that because of "Crosseyed and Painless" which I absolutely adore. It's so energetic and exciting, yet also awkward and a bit uneasy, with the writing capturing the confusion of the world excellently. "The Great Curve" is, like the curve it's named after, great. Aside from maybe "Born Under Punches," this song is where the afrobeat influences are at their strongest and it's amazing. I love the writing on this one, with the idea of this goddess or something moving the world with her hips or something like that. It's so cool. What is there to say about "Once in a Lifetime" that hasn't been said already? This song is legendary and for good reason. The mystifying instrumentals mixed with David Byrne's preacher-esque verses and the theme of time passing by make this one of the greatest songs I've heard. This is my palette-cleanser song whenever I hear a song that I hate. And that's just the first half! Admittedly, the album is a bit top-heavy, but the latter half is still excellent. How could it be weak when it has "Houses in Motion" on it? I love that song. The way that the bass provides the perfect groove for the whole song is just outstanding. And the horns? Great stuff. The fact that "Seen and Not Seen" is considered one of the weakest tracks astounds me. Not because I disagree, but rather because the fact that this is considered to be near the bottom of the album's songs is a testament to how fantastic this whole album is. This song is cool. Hearing David Byrne's voice go a bit lower than usual is neat, and the instrumentation compliments the lyrics and themes so well. "Listening Wind" is kind of fascinating to me. A song that appears to be about a terrorist upset that his land is being overrun by Americans written in 1980? Crazy. The whole feel of this song fits the theme very well. Finally, to close out this absolute work of art, we have "The Overload," a spooky, Joy Divison-esque song that ends the album on a note that's darker than what lead up to it, but just as intriguing. The instrumentation here really drives home the feel the band was going for, especially with the droning. I think I've said enough. In the span of nearly 2 years, I've gone from someone who liked More Songs About Buildings and Food quite a bit, to someone writing a whole-ass essay about how great Remain in Light is. Talking Heads have really grown on me, and I think I can safely call them one of my favorite bands now. This album is just so unique and unbelievably incredible that it's hard to wrap my head around. Amazing... 5/5.

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Jun 26 2025
5

One of the best albums by one of my favourite bands

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Jun 26 2025
5

Excellent. And Weird. Byrne is really great, but you either like him or you don't

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