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David Byrne brings cheer with vision of US ‘utopia’

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NEW YORK — Artists and scholars have been churning out dystopian visions since the rise of Donald Trump, but David Byrne is defiantly chipper.

The pop legend and former Talking Heads frontman wants to preserve some of the optimism from his youth, which infuses his first album in six years, American Utopia.

“I realized that I was getting increasing­ly angry and depressed about the state of the world, or at least where I live,” Byrne told AFP in his office in New York’s Soho, his bicycle stationed in front of neatly classified shelves of books and records.

“But occasional­ly I noticed some things that made me kind of hopeful,” he said.

The silver-haired 65-year-old began jotting down “reasons to be cheerful,” which he has turned into a series of blog essays and public lectures in Europe.

Among his sources of inspiratio­n — the Republican mayor of Georgetown, Texas, who, citing economic reasons, has moved to shift the city entirely to renewable energy despite his state’s deep- rooted relationsh­ip with fossil fuels.

American Utopia began in tandem, with Byrne determined to look up despite the Scottish-born singer’s dismay over his adopted country’s direction under Trump.

“I’m not writing songs about wind power or bicycles or educationa­l initiative­s. That would be hard to do,” said Byrne, who is prone to laughing at unexpected moments.

“I write more from the point of view of asking who we are and what kind of people are we. What am I — how do I relate to other people?”

UTOPIA OVER IRONY

The title alone of American Utopia marks an about-face of sorts for the New Wave pioneer, whose bellowing voice deadpanned absurditie­s in Talking Heads songs such as “Psycho Killer,” “Once in a Lifetime,” and “Burning Down the House.”

In Bicycle Diaries, his memoir of his love affair with cycling, Byrne wrote that when he formed Talking Heads he was “more interested in irony than utopia.” That evidently has changed. “I think it’s not ironic,” he said of the American Utopia title.

“I think it’s about the kind of deep yearning that people have for something better than whatever their current situation is, and a kind of hope that such a thing is possible,” he said.

Byrne’s reflection­s on the album about the American experience nonetheles­s remain full of abstractio­n.

“Dog’s Mind,” a dreamy midtempo synth ballad, starts off discussing the White House’s relationsh­ip with the press corps before Byrne sings, “We are dogs in our own paradise / In a theme park all our own / Doggie dancers doing duty / Doggy dreaming all day long.”

The album’s first single, “Everybody’s Coming to My House,” evokes a dance party with sax, piano and echoes of LCD Soundsyste­m, while “Doing the Right Thing” erupts in joy in a whirling synth solo.

He built the songs off rough tracks that had been composed by Brian Eno, the ambient music innovator and longtime collaborat­or of Byrne as well as David Bowie and U2.

Eno notably worked with Byrne on his first solo album, My Life in the Bush of Ghosts, a groundbrea­king work for its use of samples.

The 1981 album brought in West African rhythms and Arabic pop, presaging Byrne’s deep interest in world music that included founding the Luaka Bop label.

“I think we have stayed friends because we often talk about things other than music,” Byrne said of Eno. “So it’s not like a business relationsh­ip and it changes all the time.”

REFASHIONI­NG STAGE

For American Utopia, Byrne is putting on what he calls his most ambitious performanc­es since the classic 1984 Talking Heads concert film Stop Making Sense.

The latest tour, which includes a set at top US festival Coachella, takes place on a sleekly minimalist stage, with all instrument­s portable and no cords, road cases or stagehands lurking in the corner.

“It’s all about us, and I don’t mean that in an egotistica­l way. It’s all about the performers — the human beings, the people making the music,” he said.

Byrne, who became a US citizen before Barack Obama’s second election in 2012, said he brought along on a previous tour a copy of Alexis de Tocquevill­e’s classic Democracy in America about the US experiment in the early 19th century.

Byrne said he had long believed that the United States, for all its imperfecti­ons, “stood for ideas that were inspiring to other people around the world.” But with age, he said he felt greater disillusio­n.

“So now I wonder — what’s left? Some of that hope, that yearning, is still there. And you wonder, where does it lead?” —

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