Talk Talk
Such a shame
Talk Talk
Source: allmusic.com
With
the exception of a handful of common threads -- chief among them the
plaintive vocals and haunting lyrics of frontman Mark Hollis -- there
is little to suggest that the five studio LPs that make up the Talk
Talk oeuvre are indeed the work of the same band throughout.
After
beginning their career with records virtually epitomizing the
new wave era that spawned them, the British group never looked back,
making significant strides with each successive album on its way to
discovering a wholly unique and uncategorizable sound informed by
elements of jazz, classical, and ambient music; their masterful final
recordings, while
neglected commercially, possess a timelessness rare
among music of any genre, and in retrospect they seem the clear
starting point for the post-rock movement of the 1990s.
The story of Talk Talk begins with singer/songwriter Hollis, the younger brother of Ed Hollis, a disc jockey and producer who went on to manage such punk-era bands as Eddie & the Hot Rods. Mark originally planned to become a child psychologist, but in 1975, he left
university to relocate to London, eventually forming a band
called the Reaction; Ed Hollis called in a few favors, and in 1977,
the Reaction recorded a demo tape for Island Records. Among the
tracks was a Hollis original titled "Talk Talk,"
which later surfaced on the
Beggars Banquet punk compilation Streets.
After just one single, 1978's "I Can't Resist," the
Reaction disbanded, and through his brother, Hollis was first
introduced to bassist Paul Webb, drummer Lee Harris, and keyboardist
Simon Brenner, with whom he formed Talk Talk in 1981.
The Party's Over After recording a number of demos with producer Jimmy Miller, Talk Talk signed to EMI, who assigned Duran Duran producer Colin Thurston to helm their first two singles, "Mirror Man" and "Talk Talk." Clearly, EMI's intent was to mold the band in the
spirit of the new romantic movement, and toward that
end, they also tapped Talk Talk as the opener on Duran Duran's
1982 U.K. tour. Their debut LP, The Party's Over, was indeed a
product of its times, defined by contemporary synth pop sensibilities
but with an honesty
and lyrical depth absent from most other records
of the moment. In 1983, Talk Talk resurfaced with the single
"My Foolish Friend," which in itself marked a major leap
from the first record with its denser and more mature sound; the
subsequent dismissal of Brenner
made it plain that the band's days of
relying on synthesizers were over for good.
It's
My Life The remainder of 1983 was spent writing and recording It's My
Life, Talk Talk's breakthrough recording. The turning point
was the arrival of producer and multi-
instrumentalist Tim
Friese-Greene, who was to remain an unofficial fourth member of the
band for the remainder of its existence. In Friese-Greene, Hollis
found the ideal partner to realize his ambitions; It's My Life made
major strides away from The Party's Over, rejecting
the debut's new
wave trappings in favor of richer, more natural textures. The gambit
worked, with the title track becoming a hit on both sides of the
Atlantic. Released in 1986, The Colour of Spring continued the trend,
and on the strength of the smashes "Life's What You
Make It"
and "Give It Up," it became Talk Talk's best-selling
album to date. A major world tour followed, with EMI allotting an
enormous budget for the group's next effort.
Spirit
of Eden In 1987, Talk Talk settled into an abandoned Suffolk
church to begin working
on their fourth LP. EMI executives eagerly
awaited the finished product, and they were to continue waiting, as
the group worked far past its deadline, seemingly with no end in
sight. Already well over budget, Hollis refused to allow label heads
any advance tapes, and
informed EMI that not only would there be no
singles from the record, but that the group would be unable to
re-create the complex arrangements on-stage and, as a consequence,
would perform no live dates in support of the disc's release.
Finally, after some 14 months
in the studio, Spirit of Eden was
issued to thunderous critical acclaim, albeit little commercial
interest; an intricate, meditative work, it bore little resemblance
to standard pop music, with its lengthy songs and spacious, organic
arrangements perhaps closest in theme and texture to jazz.
Natural
History 1982-1988 With relations between EMI and Talk Talk at
a breaking point,
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