
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


For the better part of a decade, David Byrne was the front-man of Talking Heads. To celebrate the revival of Jonathan Demme’s concert film, Stop Making Sense, we’re revisiting our special talk with the legendary musician himself.
At the top, we discuss how Byrne processed the pandemic in New York City (6:45), finding creativity in unlikely places (9:50), the evolution of his Broadway show ‘American Utopia’ (10:47), the influence of poet William Blake (13:00), his gift for collaboration (16:36), and the power of the song, Glass Concrete & Stone (20:54).
On the back-half, he opens up about his pivot from New Wave to Latin music (23:40), getting comfortable with creating on his own terms (30:35), and why he turned to performance as a response to being neurodivergent (36:32). He also reflects on his relationship to the Talking Heads (41:30), the cross generational impact of his art (44:15), the unique interpretations of American Utopia (46:30), and how he “found the world” through making music (50:25).
Purchase tickets to see Stop Making Sense in theaters here.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
By Lemonada Media4.8
12991,299 ratings
For the better part of a decade, David Byrne was the front-man of Talking Heads. To celebrate the revival of Jonathan Demme’s concert film, Stop Making Sense, we’re revisiting our special talk with the legendary musician himself.
At the top, we discuss how Byrne processed the pandemic in New York City (6:45), finding creativity in unlikely places (9:50), the evolution of his Broadway show ‘American Utopia’ (10:47), the influence of poet William Blake (13:00), his gift for collaboration (16:36), and the power of the song, Glass Concrete & Stone (20:54).
On the back-half, he opens up about his pivot from New Wave to Latin music (23:40), getting comfortable with creating on his own terms (30:35), and why he turned to performance as a response to being neurodivergent (36:32). He also reflects on his relationship to the Talking Heads (41:30), the cross generational impact of his art (44:15), the unique interpretations of American Utopia (46:30), and how he “found the world” through making music (50:25).
Purchase tickets to see Stop Making Sense in theaters here.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

91,000 Listeners

38,466 Listeners

6,815 Listeners

29,055 Listeners

11,529 Listeners

3,958 Listeners

7,716 Listeners

1,078 Listeners

397 Listeners

319 Listeners

5,126 Listeners

4,632 Listeners

759 Listeners

598 Listeners

15,938 Listeners

3,472 Listeners

387 Listeners

244 Listeners

88 Listeners

119 Listeners

1,591 Listeners

1,894 Listeners

1,187 Listeners

622 Listeners

649 Listeners

87 Listeners

971 Listeners

448 Listeners

46 Listeners

150 Listeners

76 Listeners

22 Listeners

10,609 Listeners

169 Listeners