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Ice-T says that "Psycho Killer" was a starting influence for his band Body Count's controversial song "Cop Killer". [35] Singer Selena Gomez samples the bassline on her 2017 single " Bad Liar ." [ 36 ] A Talking Heads tribute band based in Baltimore , active since 2011, call themselves the Psycho Killers.
The first Talking Heads album, Talking Heads: 77, received acclaim and produced their first charting single, "Psycho Killer". [22] Many connected the song to the serial killer known as the Son of Sam , who had been terrorizing New York City months earlier; however, Byrne said he had written the song years prior. [ 23 ]
Stop Making Sense includes performances of the early Talking Heads single, "Psycho Killer" (1977), through to their most recent hit at the time, "Burning Down the House" (1983). It also includes songs from the solo career of frontman David Byrne and by Tom Tom Club , the side project of drummer Chris Frantz and bassist Tina Weymouth .
Talking Heads: 77 is the debut studio album by the American rock band Talking Heads. It was released September 16, 1977 through Sire Records. The recording took place in April 1977 at New York's Sundragon Studios. The single "Psycho Killer" reached number 92 on the Billboard Hot 100.
Born in Coronado, California, Weymouth is the daughter of Laura Bouchage and U.S. Navy Vice Admiral Ralph Weymouth (1917–2020). The third of eight children, her siblings include Lani and Laura Weymouth, who are collaborators in Tina's band Tom Tom Club, and architect Yann Weymouth, the designer of the Salvador Dalí Museum in Florida.
Apparently, per NME, Will.i.am. originally "wrote the chorus" for rock icons U2 and was also inspired by Earth, Wind & Fire and Talking Heads during the track's creation.
The discography of American new wave band Talking Heads consists of eight studio albums, two live albums, ... Talking Heads: 77 "Psycho Killer" 92 ...
Janovitz claims that the "thick menage of polyrhythmic percussion, staccato guitars, popping bass, and Devo-like electronic blips and bleeps" make this protagonist even more threatening than the one in an earlier Talking Heads song, "Psycho Killer". [2]