It's the summer of 1979. A fifteen-year-old boy listens to WNEW on the
radio in his bedroom in Brooklyn. A monotone voice (it's the singer's)
announces into dead air in between songs The Talking Heads have a new
album, it's called Fear of Music - and everything spins outward from
that one moment.
Jonathan Lethem treats Fear of Music (the third album by the Talking
Heads, and the first produced by Brian Eno) as a masterpiece - edgy,
paranoid, funky, addictive, rhythmic, repetitive, spooky and fun. He
scratches obsessively at the album's songs, guitars, rhythms, lyrics,
packaging, downtown origins, and legacy, showing how Fear of Music hints
at the directions (positive and negative) the band would take in the
future. Lethem transports us again to the New York City of another
time - tackling one of his great adolescent obsessions and illuminating
the ways in which we fall in and out of love with works of art.