New York Times, April 29, 2001
David Byrne is the Same as He Ever Was
By Marshall Sella
Dear Francey,
I'm a writer for the New York Times (Sunday) Magazine, and I just
wanted to tell you what a terrific website you have. I've just finished
a profile of David Byrne--and looked really quite carefully through
everything you have online--so I can say with confidence that it's
incredibly well put-together. Dazzling. David has said the same
thing to me.
All the best,
Marshall Sella
David Byrne carries everything he needs in a big
red knapsack. He is
self-contained. Like a strangely merry refugee, he wears the pack
wherever he
goes, his world on his back. "It weighs me down a bit," he says,
"but I'm
kinda married to it. I feel naked without it now. I like bein' portable."
To
prove its utility, he rifles through the miniature household: "Got
my
passport here, just in case. Once in a while you get to the airport
and you
don't have the passport. Makes life easier. Here, got a toothbrush.
And my
Swiss Army knife. Flashlight. Hey, look -- a sewing kit."
Byrne and his effects have come to the Bowery Ballroom to see Los
Amigos
Invisibles, a Venezuelan sextet whose work appears on Byrne's record
label,
Luaka Bop. Now 49, he looks scarcely different than he did in his
days with
Talking Heads, the art-rock band that peaked in the 1980's with
such
critically beloved records as "Remain in Light." His close-cropped
hair, a
boy's cut unmistakably, is now gray. After all these years he remains
a study
in antithesis: a dour man who laughs all the time; a savvy man who
marvels at
the simplest little things.
On arrival at the club, he is greeted in hushed tones, as Revered
Artists
always are. But Byrne's fame tonight keeps to the shadows. Los Amigos
are
blowing the roof off the place. Audience members are swirling around
one
another in joyous Brownian motion. Byrne is transfixed. Ignoring
the heat, he
refrains from shucking his little gray jacket or even the blocky
rucksack,
which he keeps tightly strapped around both shoulders. He stations
himself in
a corner next to a giant garbage can, swiveling his hips and clapping
in
syncopation.
Grooving against the rubbish, he's oblivious to the patrons who
accidentally
bounce empty cups off his jacket and into the bin. Everywhere I've
seen him,
his stage presence is the same. From behind, Byrne is invisible.
People
jostle him, practically walk over him. Out front, they stop in their
tracks.
"I'm pretty anonymous," he insists, rather pleased. "Folks don't
notice me."
It quickly becomes clear that he doesn't notice them, either. Only
now and
then, when something knocks his pack, does Byrne glance over. Just
for a
moment, though; he is mesmerized by Los Amigos. There's nothing
remote or
superior in his expression. Despite having known every boulevard
and back
alley of fame, he is all wonderment. He smiles up at the band as
if dreaming
that one day he, too, might be a rock star. "That's somethin',"
he says more
than once, laughing in the dark. "Look at that!"
Since the demise of Talking Heads, David Byrne has never ceased
performing.
He has made seven solo records since the band expired in 1992. And
on May 8,
he will release his latest, "Look Into the Eyeball." The CD is his
best work
in years, a masterful blend of orchestral string music and what
Byrne calls
"beats for the body." For a record with a unifying musical theme,
its songs
are curiously diverse. The Philly-soul-inspired "Neighborhood" is
as lush and
sunny as an O'Jays tune -- no coincidence, since it was arranged
by Thom
Bell, an inventor of the genre. A disturbing song called "The Accident"
refracts a failed relationship through the twisted metal of an auto
wreck.
Despite the hybrid of influences, it's all indisputably catchy stuff.
It's
complex and poetic, but you can dance to it.
As anxious as Byrne is about the CD's reception, he denies himself
the luxury
of focusing on any one project. He's all over the map. His mornings
are spent
at Luaka Bop's West 12th Street office overseeing the label's 13
genre-hopping recording artists. His short story "A Self-Made Man"
appears in
"Songs Without Rhyme," a collection of prose by songwriters published
last
month by Hyperion. He's always prepping for an exhibition of his
photographs
somewhere, having shown all over Europe and the States. At the moment,
he is
obsessed with a book he was commissioned to write for an arts festival
this
summer in Valencia, Spain: a meditation on the concept of sin. "My
job is to
take the things we think of as virtues," he says, "and explain why
they're
only masquerading as virtues."
The celebrity bestowed on Byrne as a Talking Head did not last and
never
could have. "No one -- not David Byrne or David Bowie -- can have
teens
lining up around the block forever," says the composer Philip Glass,
who has
known and occasionally collaborated with Byrne for 25 years. "But
David's
artistic personality is so compelling. People will always be interested
in
him."
In his pop-star incarnation, Byrne's celebrity came from critical
acclaim,
not record sales. When he was on the cover of Time in 1986, hyped
as "Rock's
Renaissance Man," it had been years since "Burning Down the House,"
Talking
Heads' only Top 10 single. "I can't even listen to most of the old
stuff
anymore," Byrne says. "All I can hear are imperfections -- problems
in the
recording, or words I should've chosen."
Byrne has never longed for those glory days. He never designed himself
to end
up as a Mick Jagger or a Jerry Lee Lewis, doomed to spend middle
age
performing Madame Tussaud renditions of feel-good favorites. Instead,
he has
gone small, played the long game. In gambler's terms, he has scattered
his
chips all over the table, offering the public not one Byrne but
a whole
cluster of them. His rock career works partly because it's balanced
by other
passions, and Byrne doesn't waste much energy chasing lost celebrity.
Then
again, if it calls, he's packed up and ready to go.
Distinct from Byrne's old associates at Warner Brothers, who never
stopped
pining for a Talking Heads reunion, Luaka Bop's goals are modest.
The label
is still plugging along in its 13th year. Artists like Cornershop
and Silvio
Rodriguez are hardly household names in the States, but each has
a loyal
following. Luaka's biggest seller to date (at 400,000 records) is
a
compilation of Rodriguez's music -- the first Cuban disc released
on a U.S.
label since the 1962 embargo. Yale Evelev, the label's president,
recently
saw a bootleg of it and, unlike any other record exec ever born,
he was
elated. "Luaka Bop doesn't follow a traditional plan," he says.
"We're trying
not to grow big. It's a balance between enjoying our lives, being
true to our
artists and managing to stay in business."
Luaka Bop wasn't David Byrne's sole offspring in the twilight of
the Talking
Heads era. He married the designer Adelle Lutz in 1987; their daughter,
Malu,
is 11. The three occupy a large but unpretentious brownstone --
an airy,
frugally appointed place with snapshots taped to the fridge. Byrne
likes to
describe it as "livin' near the store," meaning Luaka Bop's chockablock
office.
It's clear that Byrne loves the creative distractions of Luaka Bop.
Even at
the height of Talking Heads' renown, he was taking on side projects.
There
were collaborations not only with Philip Glass but also with the
choreographer Twyla Tharp and the theater director Robert Wilson.
A film
score for Bernardo Bertolucci's "Last Emperor" (with Ryuichi Sakamoto
and
Cong Su) won Byrne an Academy Award in 1988.
But his artistic appetites have sometimes caused him trouble. In
the late
80's, critics assailed him (along with Paul Simon) for what they
saw as
cultural imperialism: exploiting third-world art to attain pop rebirth.
That
debate has since faded to black, and even a single listen to "Look
Into the
Eyeball" explains why. It's a seamless combination of funk, groove,
Brazilian
Tropicalia, blues -- well, name a form. In today's splintered musical
cosmos
of hip-hop, trip-hop and trip-folk, rubrics aren't what they used
to be.
Which makes it a very good time to be David Byrne.
Spending time with Byrne can be disquieting. Those who knew him
in the 1970's
still speak of him a bit like puzzled neighbors describing a serial
killer.
Hilly Kristal, the owner of CBGB, the downtown club where Talking
Heads burst
onto the scene, recalls him as "a pleasant guy who kept to himself."
Deborah
Harry, lead singer of Blondie, says: "Not many people did have a
sense of
him. He was very private."
But Harry hastens to defend Byrne's air of reserve. "There's a distinction
between artists, who write their own words, and pop stars, who perform
other
people's words," she says. "If you're presenting your own ideas,
reaching out
in a sort of verbal assault, that is a pure expression of yourself.
And that
should be enough for the public."
Byrne himself says his aloofness isn't so calculated. "Performing
is
something I do partly for my mental health," he says. "I'm pretty
shy. More
than most people, I bet. I was at a dinner party the other night
and someone
commented, 'David, you didn't say a word the whole evening' " --
here he
indulges in a gust of laughter -- but I felt I was engaged. They
were all
sayin' such interesting things. Why interrupt?"
In person, David spends warmth like money, and money never lasts.
When we met
for dinner before the Los Amigos concert, he was as jovial as a
boyhood pal.
He'd chosen a fine little Mediterranean place about a block from
CBGB. When
his entree of octopus arrived, he proceeded to scarf it down like
a prisoner,
only faster. He went after the legs first, pouring himself glasses
of red
wine between gobbles, then attacked the head. "Have some," he offered.
"It's
not really so gelatinous." Everything was funny, everything was
goofy. But as
an hour or two passed, he wound down. Conversation became halting,
even
painful. By the time I dropped him off at his place in the Village,
it felt
as if we'd quarreled. "Well, see you soon," I said, jutting my hand
out. But
he had vanished.
Later, I'd learn that Byrne was famous for this. He didn't mean
anything by
it. But it was still baffling; he'd always start out cordial, then
gradually
disappear. I told Chris Frantz, the Talking Heads' drummer and co-founder
of
Tom Tom Club, that the more time I spent with Byrne, the less I
understood
him. Frantz chortled and said, "Yeah, that's David all right." Tina
Weymouth,
bass guitarist of Talking Heads (as well as Frantz's wife and Tom
Tom Club
bandmate), had seen it all before, ruefully adding that "David really
doesn't
know how to say goodbye."
Yale Evelev had a gentler explanation. "Of course he doesn't like
big
emotional goodbyes," Evelev said, though no one had mentioned anything
remotely big or emotional. "David decides to leave and, boom! He's
gone. And,
you know, he's . . . nervous. He has an awful lot going on."
David Byrne has often adopted the persona of Rock Star as Spaceman.
As a
Talking Head, he stared out through pinched features, as if the
air were all
wrong for him. He was always singing about factories, or paper,
or the wheel
of a large automobile -- metaphorically examining humankind by rifling
through its big red backpack. "I'd like to write a song about hairdos,"
he
once said, "not the people under 'em."
In his more recent works -- music and photography alike -- Byrne
has never
lost that animist sensibility. Five months ago, influenced by Caribbean
religions (voodoo in particular), Byrne and Lutz mounted an art
exhibition in
Italy in which household objects were dressed up as members of a
wedding
party. The idea, in Byrne's phrase, was to see if this might "give
the
objects life and a sense of power." Accordingly, they presented
an end table
wearing underpants, a clock in a sombrero, a radio in a bikini.
This sort of
disordering technique has been a hallmark of Byrne's fractious career.
The
boundary between people and their possessions all but vanishes.
It's fecund terrain. "The Accident," Byrne's eerie allegory of ruined
love on
the new CD, is a prime example of the fixation. "The inspiration
for that was
a George Jones song called 'The Grand Tour,' " Byrne says, always
proud to
cite a nonintellectual influence. "He takes you through his house
and
describes the furniture, but it's completely heart-rending: 'There's
the
chair where we sat and talked, there's our bed. . . . ' It's simply
a list of
objects, and each one has more emotional attachment than the one
before."
For all his remoteness, though, Byrne is a fiercely pragmatic man.
He is well
organized and enchanted by machines. One of the most technical hours
of my
life was spent at a gallery in Washington, watching Byrne and a
digital-printing expert discuss the arcana of how best to reproduce
Byrne's
photos. Speaking what seemed to be a secret language only twins
comprehend,
the two men plumbed the depths of computer-monitor calibration and
the subtle
advantages of imperceptibly different paper textures. "Can't we
heat up this
pink?" he said at one point, indicating a photograph in his recent
series on
surveillance cameras, a wry balance of beauty and repugnance. "I
like when it
kinda hurts to look at it!"
Yale Evelev is well acquainted with Byrne's practical side. "He
loves knowing
how things work, how everything works," he says. "Even when he's
immersed in
writing, whether it's in the Catskills or in Spain, he'll call every
day to
find out exactly how some cover art is coming along."
Byrne is frugal and a bit of a control freak. Though he divides
his days
between commerce and art (Luaka Bop in the morning, compositions
after),
there is nothing dreamy about him, at least before lunch. Even Byrne's
music
is grounded in pragmatism. He has never shunned the marketplace.
"I don't
hold much with downtown snobbism," he says. "The kind of thing where,
if
people like something, it can't be good."
"Look Into the Eyeball" was conceived two summers ago. Partly spurred
by a
concert in Madrid that Byrne thought was "all wrong rhythmically
and
sonically, but with a great vibe," he was driven to combine the
romance of
orchestral music with percussive forms. But, as Byrne sees it, art
must show
fiscal promise if it's ever to grow up strong. So he searched out
examples of
the concept he was after: evidence that his impulse had forebears
in the real
world of music and money.
"I wanted to create a historical confirmation," he says. "This was
a
tradition I was going to expand on, not something out of the blue."
He made a
combo tape, a mix of Bjork, Serge Gainsbourg, Caetano Veloso (a
founder of
Brazilian Tropicalia) and even Isaac Hayes's "Theme from Shaft."
The idea was
to give his collaborators a sense of what he was looking for --
to create not
only a musical palette but a commercial one.
"A lot of those songs were very successful," he says. "Our record
wasn't
meant to be some pretentious, arty project. It could be accessible
without
pandering. And here was the proof."
Byrne and his friends laid down musical tracks. As is his custom,
the words
weren't yet written. The only way to arrive at the right lyrics,
Byrne finds,
is to speak in tongues a little. Listen to the early demos from
"Eyeball" and
you hear everything in place -- only, Byrne is singing gibberish.
Not
tentative gibberish. The "words" are clear and confident: oh mefah,
sye
kalyaneu-sheu! Incredibly, in the harmony track, Byrne often seems
to be
mouthing the very same sounds. His main objective is to avoid censoring
himself. "It's like fishing in your unconscious," he says. "A lot
of what you
find gets thrown back. The music makes it rise out of you -- whatever
you've
been thinking about. Usually it even takes me a year or two to understand
what any given song is about."
Hitting his stride in this second act of his career has not come
easily for
David Byrne. Born in Dumbarton, Scotland, he spent most of his childhood
in
Maryland. From the beginning of his life, he has felt like a bit
of an
outsider. "There were always little reminders," he says. "Like the
fact that
we ate usin' a knife and fork at the same time. The way we did things
weren't
the way people were livin' in the rest of the world!"
Byrne always talks that way: half-amazed, a sophisticate who has
just seen
the damnedest thing. His cadence is clipped one moment and fluent
the next,
as if various speeds are battling for control of his mind. His gerunds
lack
the final "g" sound, a byproduct of growing up with Scottish parents
and of
his stubbornly folksy demeanor. Everything in him is an explicit
marriage of
the utterly ordinary and the utterly foreign.
As he recounts his early life, we're on a train from New York to
Washington,
hurtling toward the very patch of ground where he grew up. His boyhood
home
no longer exists; it was sacrificed for Interstate 95. "I've tried
to find
the woods where I used to play," he says. "But I can never get my
bearings.
It's pretty disorienting."
Overhead, a red-lighted ad for Amtrak's Railfone service blinks
out the sort
of hollow corporate appeal that always makes Byrne laugh. treat
yourself! the
sign urges. you deserve it! But Byrne is staring out the window.
"Look," he
says, suddenly buoyed. "There's my sign!"
Outside, bolted on old steel across the Delaware River, dilapidated
electric
letters trumpet the fact that Trenton makes, the world takes. David
loves
signs. (His 1999 book of photos, "Your Action World," is full of
them.) He's
drawn to motivational rhetoric and advertising -- even rusty declarations
of
Trenton pride. He loves it and he hates it. "Funny," he says, "I
never
noticed that sign when I was young."
When he wasn't in the woods, the boy David was hunting for exotic
music in
the Baltimore Public Library: Stockhausen, Balinese gamelans, recordings
of
chain gangs. Anything and everything. "It seemed a cool habit, not
a nerdy
one," he says. "Well, maybe it was nerdy too. But you didn't have
to like it
all. If you hated it, you'd just take it back. Didn't cost you anything."
By his early 20's, Byrne was intoxicated by the idea that anything
could be
art. Andy Warhol intrigued him. "I really liked his pictures of
car crashes,"
he says. "And you'd hear all these things about the whirlwind of
activity
around him. People nominating themselves to be superstars. I thought,
Wow!"
Without explicitly nominating himself, Byrne did become something
of an
art-world superstar. Even in the era of New Wave, no band was more
"art rock"
than Talking Heads. Byrne's intricate songs evoked everything from
Steve
Reich to Kurt Weill to "The Golden Bough." At the same time, Talking
Heads
never relaxed into any single genre. There was no catching them.
Anchoring
all the experimentation was Byrne's jittery, clenched persona, which
endured
through Jonathan Demme's 1984 film "Stop Making Sense," arguably
the best
concert movie ever made.
The images in "Stop Making Sense" remain arresting to this day.
In one scene,
Byrne, the pop animist, sings a love song to a Woolworth's lamp.
Seemingly
random supertitles ("Grits. Dog. Time Clock.") loom over the stage,
goading
the audience into considering how all the things of this world relate
to one
another. Most famously, there is Byrne's Big Suit, which he conceived
as "a
Mr. Joe Average suit that turns into a trap or cage."
Of course, to the band members, Talking Heads itself was beginning
to feel
like a cage. Exasperated by the media fixation on Byrne as a rock
"master,"
Tina Weymouth quipped, "David Bowie, David Byrne, David Berkowitz."
During Talking Heads' "Stop Making Sense" tour, Byrne's bandmates
were
dismayed by his perfectionism, which often took the form of a fanatical
adherence to the all-black set. "I was turning into a little dictator
at the
time," he has said. "Nobody could have a cup of water! That would
detract
from the look of the show." Byrne hopes he has changed somewhat.
"I deal with
stress a lot better than I used to," he says, shaking his head.
"There were
times when I threw microphones. At crew people. It's really embarrassing."
Years after the breakup, the band members are not on speaking terms.
Byrne
says "things are tense-not-relaxed," sounding tense-not-relaxed
just
answering the question.
"It's been a long time since we've been in touch," says Chris Frantz.
"But
that's just David being David. He's one of a kind -- with all the
pros and
cons that go with that. The band was always secondary to what he
envisioned
for himself. We've learned not to take that personally."
Tina Weymouth adds, "We just wish David the best," pouring sugar
before the
punch. "We can only pray that he finds whatever it is he's looking
for, so
that maybe he won't be so angry."
Watching David Byrne is like peering into an ant farm. His tics
suggest
nothing so much as a covert division of labor that governs his mind.
He's
intensely focused, but on several things at once, and each issue
seems to be
vying for position. As you speak to him, his eyes dart wildly, as
if he's
simultaneously puzzling out a melody, working out schedules and
craving a
sandwich.
Conversely, he still has an outsider's knack for nailing the absurdity
upon
which good-and-noble society is based. His pose is as a naif who
buys it all:
corporations' can-do rhetoric, the caring embrace of government,
how
convenience makes life easier. Byrne was once called "the Typhoid
Mary of the
irony epidemic," but that's a fundamental misreading of him. His
stance is
one of ambivalence, not condemnation.
"I really think he sees the total madness of things with a sweeping
breath of
love," says Beth Henley, who co-wrote Byrne's 1986 film "True Stories."
"He
doesn't miss anything. He's not out to judge. Just to see."
Even when gazing at one of the corporate-headquarters signs he likes
to
photograph -- the tattoo on the belly of the beast -- he says, "You
have to
admit there's somethin' beautiful and seductive there." If societal
comforts
weren't so alluring, they wouldn't be dangerous. Byrne has no use
for rage
when left-handed exaltation will do the job just as well. Rage doesn't
communicate.
"Take Eminem," he says, laughing mirthlessly for once. "I can never
lose
sight of the fact that his music is corporate rebellion marketed
in a
corporate way. He's said to have this threatening quality -- but
how can he
be threatening if his music is sold by one of the biggest companies
in the
world? I think teenage fans realize that it's safe, a safe kind
of
rebellion."
As we chat, Byrne and I are sitting in the basement of Luaka Bop.
A young
assistant named Kate has just finished arranging 53 of Byrne's pictures
on a
vast wall. Many are wire-service news photos of world leaders, all
caught in
seemingly insignificant moments: President Jiang Zemin of China
with head in
hands, Mayor Rudolph Giuliani staring off into space somewhere.
Everyone
seems to be between events. Byrne has chosen these images precisely
for the
fact that they're unremarkable -- that they're "part of the weird
dance of
gestures, random moments from a dance performance."
I ask if the pictures, with the implication that government is nihilistic,
could be described as subversive. "Not very!" he says, as if I've
failed to
hear. "It's a straightforward documentation of a performance."
Kate fiddles with a rumbling Macintosh G4 computer at a large desk;
David and
I are seated in front of the desk as she readies more digitized
photographs
for printing. "I'm never intentionally tryin' to be cryptic in my
work,"
Byrne says, leaning into the hot breath of the computer. "It works
for me
when it's just metaphorical enough so that I'm not screaming in
your face,
'This is what I'm tellin' you!' "
The discussion caroms from the utility of art to the question of
government
financing. But I can't stop noticing the way David is endlessly
contorting
himself on his tiny blue chair. One moment his left leg flies over
his right,
until he's practically lying sideways on the seat; the next, his
furry arms
wind around each other until his hands fold in momentary alliance.
The poses,
at times, are hilarious. Tina Weymouth once claimed that David had
to find
interesting ways even to sit in a chair, all to prove his individuality
--
but these days, there's nothing contrived about it. He's a twisty
guy. He has
sat in chairs for a long time now. If it ever was an affectation,
that was
long ago. Even Cary Grant, in time, became Cary Grant.
One frigid spring night in Toronto, David Byrne is on public display,
but
sadly, there are no chairs involved. It is his second live performance
to
include songs from the new record. The venue is a harborside spot
called the
Orange Room. This is not so much a concert as an industry party
thrown by
Virgin Records, and it's a tough room. Everybody knows everybody
else, and no
one wants to seem easily impressed.
The singer quietly meanders on stage wearing a khaki shirt and khaki
pants.
That's David Byrne all over: he's an art-technician, here to perform
a
service like a plumber or repairman. He refuses to present music
as any one
thing. It transports, yet is a workaday task. It is a spiritual
release and a
bodily function. It's ecstatic and ridiculous.
Byrne knows this is an industry crowd, so he sings to an unseen
listener 10
degrees above eye level -- that is, directly to an empty balcony.
His remarks
between songs offer no mention of titles but rather come out in
the form of
absurdist snippets. When he brings out the string section he has
hired for
tonight's show, comprising three cellists and three violinists,
his intro is
limited to an amazed "These people are from here!"
The old twitching is gone from his performance. His voice is utterly
assured,
stronger than it ever was. He performs his usual mix of old and
new -- Once
in a Lifetime" as well as the current "Like Humans Do." After eight
songs,
Byrne abruptly says, "That's all I'm going to do today." He wanders
offstage
distractedly, as if he's puttering around in a garage somewhere.
The core
band follows him off, leaving the string section bewildered. The
six of them
turn to one another, looking stranded. Classical people never behave
this
way. Is that it?
Of course, that is not it. After a long pause, Byrne ambles back
onstage.
"O.K.," he says improbably, "this next song is not one of ours."
For several lines, the piece sounds familiar -- then the recognition
clicks
in, at precisely the same instant for the entire crowd. We feel
a wave of
electricity and hear gasps as we realize that Byrne is singing Whitney
Houston's "I Wanna Dance With Somebody." It's silly, then fantastic.
With his
drive and the arrangement's staccato beat, the song takes on an
urgency it
never possessed in life.
Having won over the crowd -- and dazzled even these jaded insiders
--
something perverse takes hold of Byrne. He knows that rock 'n' roll
law
dictates that he must wow us at the finish, leave us shouting for
more. But
instead of kicking the door shut with an upbeat song like "And She
Was" or
"Take Me to the River," he chooses the new CD's most haunting number.
Of all
the songs in the history of rock, he heads straight into "The Accident."
This is not an act of self-sabotage. Having foregone the secure
confines of a
rock niche, Byrne is exempt from the rules of traditional showmanship.
"He
doesn't feel he has to prove anything anymore," Jonathan Demme tells
me a few
weeks later, after seeing a similar gig in Paris. "He's way beyond
that. I've
never seen him so liberated."
As the strings swell in the opening bars of "The Accident," Byrne's
hands
clasp behind his back, lending him the dual air of schoolmaster
and
supplicant. The tune is minor-key and melancholy to the point of
being
unsettling. By the time he's through the first lines ("When you
see an
accident/Do not turn your head and look away"), everything's turned
around.
Now the string players know what they're up to -- it's the audience
that's
mystified. Byrne reaches the grim climax: "TV crews arrive on the
scene/And
the anchormen, they break down and weep/Living proof that things
are not what
they seem/It takes all these wild and wonderful things/To set me
free."
In any other setting, it's an exquisite piece, but the partygoers
receive it
like a suicide note. After a pause they cheer nonetheless, howling
for all
the David Byrnes they've loved over the years; they'll cheer for
a false
deity when the man is not enough. "Thank you very much," he says,
chuckling
with what might be either exasperation or mischief. Again he wanders
off,
just as uncertainly. But the classical musicians exit briskly. They're
not
taking any chances.
An hour after the concert, Byrne and I are riding over to another
local hot
spot, the Rivoli, to hear Moreno Veloso -- son of the great Caetano
Veloso,
whose music was part of the "inspirational tape" David used as the
groundwork
for "Look Into the Eyeball."
"I think it was a while before they realized we were doin' a Whitney
Houston
song," he says in the car, laughing at the weirdness of it while
still loving
the song. "That felt O.K."
This is followed by another gale of laughter as we pass a bank's
billboard
that proclaims, "Smile, you're making money!" With its sly confusion
of joy
and success, it's practically a Byrne lyric itself, like "My building
has
every convenience/It's gonna make life easy for me" -- or, for that
matter,
"We're on a road to nowhere/Come on inside."
We reach the Rivoli, a narrow railroad car of a place. Moreno Veloso
sings
his tales of regret beautifully. After six songs, Byrne drifts off
toward the
washroom. Unencumbered, he could walk the 20 feet in a matter of
seconds, but
the sensible gear on his back makes him wider than he is. He keeps
plodding
along. Eventually, all that can be seen of him is his bright red
knapsack
wiggling side to side in the sea of bodies, pulling him down as
it frees him
up.
Marshall Sella is a contibuting writer for the magazine. He last
wrote about
political comedy.
Thanks to jg for sending the article
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