Two forward-thinking musical innovators who continue to carve out interesting new projects, Jerry Harrison and Adrian Belew aren't the type to reminisce about the good ol' days. But they did keep coming back to that one day in Rome in 1980.
"We would have dinner every once in a while," recalled Harrison, "and inevitably we would get back to talking about the tour we did in 1980 and specifically that Rome concert, and just the pure joy of it."
The co-founding guitarist/keyboardist of Talking Heads was referring to his old band's performances after the release of "Remain in Light," their landmark 1980 LP with producer Brian Eno. Ranked the fourth-best album of the 1980s by Rolling Stone, it boldly infused Afrobeat and electronic music influences into rock music, most famously evidenced by the hit single "Once in a Lifetime."
That 1980 tour was the first on which the four original Heads brought along extra musicians. Among them was P-Funk keyboard legend Bernie Worrell as well as Belew, the experimental guitar hero who played with King Crimson, David Bowie and Frank Zappa and was featured on "Remain," too.
Four decades later, Harrison and Belew have paired up again on tour celebrating that album and tour, including a concert Friday at First Avenue.
"Adrian and I kind of agreed, 'The world needs this again,' because there was such a joy in it," Harrison explained of the outing, originally planned pre-COVID-19 to mark the 40th anniversary in 2020.
A Milwaukee native also known from the punk-pioneering Boston band the Modern Lovers, Harrison has spent ample time in Minnesota, including many summer visits to a friend's lakeside villa in Crosslake and a 1993 stayover at Pachyderm Studio in Cannon Falls south of the Twin Cities. That's when he produced alt-rock band Live's multiplatinum album "Throwing Copper" — right after Nirvana made "In Utero" there.
"I still recognize the drum sound on both those albums as being very similar," he noted.