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Album: David Byrne & Brian Eno, Everything That Happens Will Happen Today

(Rated 4/ 5 )

Friday, 22 August 2008

David Byrne

David Byrne

The last time David Byrne and Brian Eno linked up, the resulting album — 1981's My Life In the Bush of Ghosts — changed the course of pop music, although it would take the industry the best part of a decade to catch up with their collaging techniques, which in effect invented sampling.

Harnessed to lock-tight rhythms, its layered montages of sonic bric-a-brac sought to encompass the vast breadth of audio-social experience becoming more easily available as communications technology shrank the world.

On its reissue in 2006, the pair touched base again and cooked up this follow-up, about as different in sound and attitude from Bush of Ghosts as could be imagined.

This time, duties were more strictly delineated, Byrne writing lyrics for Eno's tracks, the two winging ideas back and forth via the internet.

They characterise the result as a sort of "electronic gospel", Byrne's vocals embedded in a choir of Eno's multitracked backing. Compared to its predecessor, it's a simpler, more reflective affair, the work of older men contemplating the limits of mortality and gazing back to the comforts of childhood.

With its hissing iron-lung rhythms and gently strummed guitar, the opener Home nods to Paul Simon's Homeward Bound as Byrne peruses an old photo from "when the world was just beginning"; elsewhere, a glowing keyboard timbre illuminates the inevitability of death in The Big Nurse. The prospect that "one sad day I will tiptoe away" is buoyed in The River by an arrangement with a colour and lightness recalling The Beach Boys.

Both Everything That Happens and Life Is Long take a similarly gentle approach to ageing, using respectively the lambent guitar chording long one of Eno's sonic trademarks, and in the latter, the swaying gait of a gospel chorale with flute highlights.

"I'm lost, but I'm not afraid," Byrne sings, perhaps anticipating the decay of mental faculties.

"Life is long, if you give it away." It's a mature attitude towards an unavoidable fact of life.

By the time The Lighthouse brings things to a close in a shimmering shroud of ambient tones, the twin fears of decrepitude and death have been tackled with maturity and warmth, and thereby diminished.

A consolation for some, a miracle for others.

(www.everythingthathappens.com )

I went to the David Byrne show last night in Baltimore (Sept. 18), where he played a half dozen songs from his new album with Eno. Those songs, already very good, were even better in concert. But playing tunes from his Eno albums "My Life in the Bush of Ghosts" and "Remain in Light," Byrne created a hypnotic trance-like atmosphere of sound and frenetic fury, completely losing himself and the audience in a musical set that was pure art and awe-inspiring. He brought the crowd flying to its feet in wild and frantic ovations that were far louder than the unbelievably loud but perfectly mixed songs. Spectacular.

Posted by Richard McCormack, Washington, D.C. | 19.09.08, 01:40 GMT

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