STOP MAKING SENSE

STOP MAKING SENSE

BY GEORGIA GRAHAM

We talk to Talking Heads about their legendary concert film’s re-release, showing at The Cinema at Selfridges.
David Byrne big suit

DAVID BYRNE AND THE SUIT IN ACTION, 1983

In December 1983, David Byrne, the frontman of American rock band Talking Heads, stepped onto the stage at Hollywood’s Pantages Theatre, wearing an outsized grey two-piece. Over three nights, the band’s performances were documented in the legendary 1984 concert film Stop Making Sense, directed by Jonathan Demme (who went on to direct multi-Academy Award winner The Silence of The Lambs). Critics consider it the greatest concert film of all time, and now, 40 years on, acclaimed entertainment company A24 is releasing a newly restored 4K version.

 

The film captures the band on their iconic 80s tour for their fifth album: Speaking in Tongues. The performance starts with David alone on the stage, accompanied by just a boombox and his guitar. The set then begins to build, literally and figuratively. As the songs progress, the rest of the band, including a cast of supporting musicians (Bernie Worrell, Alex Weir, Steve Scales, Lynn Mabry and Ednah Holt), join him, filling the space. Stagehands bring on instruments and props – the props are painted matte black to recede into the background. The performance is like an allegory for creativity, showing the audience how the Talking Heads sound is built and created.

 

“Filming the gig was very important, as we never got to take it to the UK or Europe, which was a shame, but at least the film can travel,” says David. “We’d been on tour for most of the year, so we were very tight and confident,” remembers keyboard player and guitarist Jerry Harrison. “I think the film captures the delight and joy that the band members felt with the music and with each other.” For bassist Tina Weymouth, three words sum up the gig: “inspired magical thinking”. As for the new film version, she describes it as “beyond beautiful! The colour, the picture resolution, the sound – you can see and hear things as never before. We hope audiences will be transported by the fantastically timeless spirit of our music and the musicians on the stage.”

It’s the relationship between the band and the music that gives the film its energy. Cinematographer Jordan Cronenweth (of Blade Runner fame) shot the musicians as if they were actors in a drama. He used the camera to familiarise the audience with each personality, showing how they interact with one another to bring the songs to life. Their roles were not simply technical but emotional, too. David, in particular, undergoes a whole character arc – as the music takes hold, the stiff soloist we see at the start becomes a bona-fide rock star who jogs around the stage, dances with a lamp and writhes on the floor. “It was like finding a great script – something with really good bones that you could add on to,” remembers Sandy McLeod, the visual consultant who worked closely with Jordan and Jonathan on the film. “It has a narrative element to it, which most concerts didn’t in those days.” She describes how they thought of each song as a scene, which informed the lighting.

 

The film is celebrated for this expressive use of lighting, the result of David and Jordan’s shared vision. Still, the partnership didn’t come without its hiccups. “For the opening sequence, Jordan wanted to hang a big light bulb in the stage, which would have created a very different look than what David had originally had, which was flat. [David] called it ‘gymnasium lighting’. Jordan could not understand why you would want to top light anything like that, because it’s so ugly,” Sandy recalls.

 

The costumes were similarly uniform, with everyone wearing muted tones. Nonetheless, one fashion cameo stole the show: David’s now-iconic suit. “On a previous tour, I stayed on in Japan and saw quite a bit of their traditional theatre – Kabuki, Noh, Bunraku,” says David. “Sometimes, the actors would wear these oversize costumes that were almost flat – meant just to be seen from the front. When I said, ‘I’m wondering what to wear on the next tour,’ a designer friend said, ‘Well, everything is bigger in the theatre.’ He meant gestures and all the rest, but I took it literally and sketched a Kabuki-inspired western suit on a napkin…a big suit with a little head, hands and feet. It seemed intuitively right.”

 

For costume designer Gail Blacker, who was tasked with creating the suit, the heat of the performance was a key consideration. “The biggest challenge was figuring out how to construct the ‘armature’ underneath, which would create and hold the shape as well as keep David as cool as possible. I chose an Italian jacquard linen. Linen for its ability to breathe, and jacquard for its added body.”

David Byrne big suit

DAVID BYRNE AND THE SUIT IN ACTION, 1983

So what was it like to be there on the stage? “Hot as fire!” says drummer Chris Frantz. As the film crescendos, so does the energy. “We wanted to capture when that thing happens at a concert when the audience feeds the performers, and the performers feed the audience. And there’s that kind of exchange of energy,” Sandy explains. As the film progresses, the lighting becomes more dramatic, casting ghoulish shadows across the band’s faces, who begin to shine with sweat – effects that are made all the more intense by the crisp visuals of the 4K restoration.

 

In a world where so many things don’t make sense, A24 knows exactly what does – the spirit of pure, unabashed creativity that we see on stage in David’s wobbling dance moves and the meticulous stagecraft. “A show like Stop Making Sense can be unpredictable without resorting to show-business clichés, and yet still rock like crazy,” Chris says of the performance. For Jerry, “Stop Making Sense still has the power to affect an audience with the same energy and groove – as if they were there almost forty years ago.”

 

See a recreation of the big suit in one of our Oxford Street windows at Selfridges London and book your tickets to watch the film at our cinema.

David Byrne big suit

DAVID BYRNE AND THE SUIT IN ACTION, 1983

SOME THINGS THAT DO MAKE SENSE

ACCORDING TO THE BAND...

CONCERTS...

David Byrne: “The first time we played as an expanded band at Heatwave festival near Toronto in 1980. It was a huge risk, but, after much rehearsal, we did it, and the audience responded!”

 

FASHION...

Tina Weymouth: “I love a good belted trench coat. It goes over anything, even nakedness!”

Chris Frantz: “I guess my blue blazer makes the most sense, but what I truly love are the black leather trousers I had made on Christopher Street in NYC and wore the night we were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2002. They still fit!”

 

Talking Heads

TALKING HEADS, NEW YORK CITY, 1983

DOCUMENTARIES...

Jerry Harrison: “Documentary film captures a moment in time, and great documentaries live on forever.”

CONCERTS...

Chris Frantz: “Our first tour was one for the record books. In the spring of 1977, we supported the Ramones on a tour of Europe and the UK. Every show was packed, and when we arrived in London to play two sold-out nights at the Roundhouse, we felt as if we were making history. It was The Queen’s Jubilee, and every punk in London was there at the show.”

 

FOOD...

Tina Weymouth: “New York City’s kosher street vendors’ hot dogs! They’re a tradition, like yellow cabs and baseball.”

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