Were on the Road to Nowhere Were on the Road Again Lyrics

1985 single past Talking Heads

"Road to Nowhere"
Talking Heads - Road to Nowhere.jpg
Single by Talking Heads
from the album Little Creatures
B-side "Television Human being"
Released September 1985
Recorded October 1984 – March 1985
Genre
  • Pop rock
  • new moving ridge
Length
  • iv:19 (album version)
  • 3:59 (single edit)
Label Sire
Songwriter(s) David Byrne
Producer(southward) Talking Heads
Talking Heads singles chronology
"The Lady Don't Mind"
(1985)
"Road to Nowhere"
(1985)
"And She Was"
(1985)

"Road to Nowhere" is a rock vocal written by David Byrne for the 1985 Talking Heads album Little Creatures. It too appeared on All-time of Talking Heads, Sand in the Vaseline: Pop Favorites, the Once in a Lifetime box set and the Brick box set up. The song was released as a unmarried in 1985 and reached No. 25 on the Billboard Mainstream Stone Tracks nautical chart and No. half dozen on the British, German and South African[one] singles charts. It also fabricated No. 8 on the Dutch Pinnacle 40.[2]

Production [edit]

"I wanted to write a song that presented a resigned, even joyful look at doom," recalls David Byrne in the liner notes of Once in a Lifetime: The Best of Talking Heads. "At our deaths and at the apocalypse... (ever looming, folks). I call back information technology succeeded. The forepart flake, the white gospel choir, is kind of tacked on, 'cause I didn't think the rest of the song was enough... I hateful, it was only two chords. Then, out of embarrassment, or shame, I wrote an intro section that had a couple more in it."

Music video [edit]

The video for the vocal was directed by Byrne and Stephen R. Johnson and features the ring and various objects revolving, including boxes revolving around David Byrne's caput, as well as a couple growing older, masked businessmen pummeling each other with briefcases and a runaway shopping cart, as if in their own "route to nowhere".

Some parts were shot in the back yard and pool of actor Stephen Tobolowsky, who was co-writing Byrne's film True Stories at the time.[3] Director Johnson re-used some of the effects techniques in award-winning videos for Peter Gabriel the following year: "Sledgehammer" and "Big Time".

Information technology was nominated for Best Video of the Yr at the 1986 MTV Video Music Awards, losing out to "Money for Nothing" by Dire Straits.

Personnel [edit]

Talking Heads

  • David Byrne – atomic number 82 vocals and backing vocals, electric guitar
  • Jerry Harrison – organ and bankroll vocals
  • Tina Weymouth – bass and backing vocals
  • Chris Frantz – drums

Boosted musicians

  • Andrew Cader – washboard
  • Erin Dickens – backing vocals
  • Diva Gray – bankroll vocals
  • Gordon Grody – backing vocals
  • Lani Groves – backing vocals
  • Jimmy Macdonell – piano accordion
  • Lenny Pickett – saxophone
  • Steve Scales – tambourine
  • Kurt Yahijian – backing vocals

Cover versions and other uses [edit]

  • The Kalamazoo, Michigan based bluegrass ring Greensky Bluegrass recorded a version of this melody on their 2007 release Live at Bell's.
  • The British a cappella grouping The Flight Pickets covered the song on the anthology The Original Flight Pickets.
  • The French ring Indochine recorded a encompass to support Reporters Sans Frontières.
  • The French band Nouvelle Vague recorded a cover for their 2009 album three.
  • The song was featured in the 2008 documentary Young@Center.
  • Australian vocalist-songwriter Sarah Blasko uses the lyrics and limerick to stop her song "Over & Over" on her 2009 anthology As Solar day Follows Night.
  • The song appeared during the catastrophe credits to the 1989 movie Piffling Monsters.
  • The song also appears in the 1994 movie Reality Bites.
  • The Mystery Science Theater 3000 episode featuring the film Hobgoblins has Tom Servo crooning the offset verse over the background music playing inside a room (a trap) as the film lot security guard runs inside to fulfill his rock-star fantasy.
  • The song accompanies the end-credits of the 2008 picture show Religulous.
  • John Nolan of Straylight Run and Taking Back Sun covered the song on his 2010 EP, Songs I Didn't Write.
  • Charlie Crist, in his unsuccessful 2010 run for the U.S. Senate in Florida, used the vocal in a campaign video without obtaining permission. David Byrne sued for copyright infringement and, in a legal settlement, Crist issued a video apology for his improper use.
  • A cover of the song was used in the Season one finale of Shameless.
  • A embrace of the song by Release the Sunbird was featured in the series finale of the tv set series Gossip Daughter,[4] as well as their 2012 album Imaginary Summer.
  • The song plays at the end credits of Christian Petzold's 2022 moving picture Transit, based on Anna Seghers' novel of the same name.
  • German band Bananafishbones released a cover the vocal in 2002.
  • A encompass of the song was released past New York Urban center based rock band Linfinity in 2010.

References [edit]

  1. ^ "SA Charts 1965 – 1989". Retrieved 8 April 2014
  2. ^ Talking Heads: Road To Nowhere top40.nl
  3. ^ "The Tobolowsky Files Episode 44: The Voice from Some other Room". slashfilm.com. 18 February 2011. Retrieved 2011-02-nineteen .
  4. ^ Riles, Cortney (December 17, 2012). ""Gossip Girl" Music Recap: No Greater Goodbye". Neon Tommy . Retrieved December 28, 2012.

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Road_to_Nowhere

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