• Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • RSS
June 6, Saturday, 2026
  • Login
CELEBRITY LAND!
  • Home
  • Royalty
  • Royalty
  • Music
  • Entertainment
  • Celebrities
  • Artists
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Royalty
  • Royalty
  • Music
  • Entertainment
  • Celebrities
  • Artists
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
Celebrity Land
No Result
View All Result
Home Music

Boston music’s unexpected role in David Byrne’s new album

Story Center by Story Center
September 22, 2025
Reading Time: 5 mins read
0

RELATED POSTS

Pommelien Thijs, a Pop Star for Half a Country

Marilyn Manson Loses Latest Bid to Toss Ex-Assistant’s Lawsuit

Mimi Barks releases new music video for ‘Power durch Verrat’

It quickly became clear that Byrne was looking to do more than sing a Moondog tune.

“I really liked the Moondog record, and I figured this is a good chance for me to kind of get to know them, to see how they work,” Byrne said.

Within days, Byrne suggested that Ghost Train Orchestra should be the band on the record he was making. The result is the new album “Who Is The Sky?,” which arrived in early September. Byrne and his ensemble bring the project to the Boch Center Wang Theatre Oct. 2-4, followed by an appearance at Providence’s Veterans Memorial Auditorium Oct. 5.

“I like how they have an orchestra sound, but they also have bass, drums, and guitar,” Byrne said via Zoom from the New York home that inspired “My Apartment Is My Friend,” one of the songs on the record.

Byrne also asked Ghost Train Orchestra to do the arrangements of the songs for the album, noting, “I figured that they would know their own strengths and weaknesses.”

One of the songs, “Everybody Laughs,” was arranged by trombonist ​​Curtis Hasselbring, a New England Conservatory graduate whose time in Boston also included playing with the storied Boston jazz group Either/Orchestra and Boston saxophonist Charlie Kohlhase.

ADVERTISEMENT

“They came up with this instrumental passage that happens twice in the song, and it really lifted that section of the song up. It tells you ‘This is a celebration,’” Byrne said. “So the music is doing more than just supporting me. It tells its own story.”

“That’s the beauty of using a band as opposed to random session musicians,” added Carpenter, who said that Byrne biked to the group’s rehearsals for months before the album was recorded. “You already have built-in mechanics and chemistry.”

Carpenter has lived in Boston for 25 years, but the rest of the band, including Massachusetts-raised banjo and guitar player Brandon Seabrook, is based in New York. Over the years, Carpenter’s constant and imaginative creativity have yielded other Boston-based groups, including Beat Circus and the Confessions, and he hosts a weekly WZBC show called “Free Association.”

In his various outfits, Carpenter can be found playing trumpet and harmonica, singing, arranging, and composing. Much of the music he plays on the radio and on stage could be labeled as avant-garde. Byrne looks at that particular world in his song “The Avant Garde,” where he muses, “Now I like the idea, their politics too/ But I’m not really sure if that means that it’s good.”

“The song may sound like it’s being very critical, but it’s actually not,” Byrne explained. “I’ll go see something, whether it’s a theater performance or a music thing or dance, sometimes knowing very little [about it]. So it’s kind of a high risk.”

Like with “American Utopia,” Byrne devotes “Who Is The Sky?” to often off-beat and cheerful music regardless of the social and political environment. One song, “Moisturizing Thing,” imagines an anti-aging skin product that works so well it makes someone of Byrne’s age look like an infant. Another, “A Door Called No,” was inspired by a sign he saw on a door in a public space.

“It just said ‘No,’ and I thought ‘That’s a song title,’” he said. “It could be about racism or different exclusionary parts of society … but it’s not necessarily about going into that door, but about finding a completely different way of looking at things.”

Byrne’s dedication to looking on the bright side includes his digital news outlet Reasons to be Cheerful. A recent post celebrated a Boston cargo bike share.

“In some ways, things are not good at all, and there’s a lot to be concerned about,” he said. “But it is also true that we’ve evolved to be attracted to negative news more than anything positive.”

“Our readership is up, our memberships are up,” he added. “People actually need that kind of news more than they ever did.”

Ghost Train Orchestra was originally organized as part of an event that celebrated the 90th birthday of the Regent Theatre in Arlington, where Carpenter lives. The group’s first records drew on the sounds and repertoires of early jazz bands, but Carpenter said that “Songs and Symphoniques” marked a new direction for the band. Its next project, which premieres at Roulette in Brooklyn in November, is “CITIES,” which Carpenter described as a “musical travelogue” of pieces composed by group members that were inspired by urban locales around the world, such as Beijing and Las Vegas.

Meanwhile, Byrne is embarking on a tour supporting “Who Is The Sky?” that will find him and his ensemble of dancers and musicians using wireless technology that allows them to be fully mobile on stage. It’s an approach he started with “American Utopia.”

“I didn’t realize that that would kind of democratize the performance experience — all the musicians can come to the front,” he said. “Now that I’ve figured out how we can all be kind of liberated from that, it would be hard to go back.”

And don’t be surprised if you see a familiar shock of white hair riding in a Boston bike lane. Byrne noted that his touring gear will yet again include folding cycles for the ensemble members to ride in each city they perform in: “We’re bringing the bikes!”

DAVID BYRNE

At the Boch Center Wang Theatre, 270 Tremont St., Boston, Thursday, Oct. 2-Saturday, Oct. 4, 8 p.m. Tickets: $79.50 and up. BochCenter.org

‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’

‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.bostonglobe.com ’

Tags: {keyword:audience{keyword:band{keyword:byrne{keyword:dancing{keyword:delivery{keyword:end{keyword:face{keyword:hbo{keyword:lee{keyword:music{keyword:night{keyword:relief{keyword:rock{keyword:show{keyword:something{keyword:song{keyword:songs{keyword:stage{keyword:thing{keyword:uplift{keyword:utopia{keyword:way{keyword:workfrequency:10}frequency:2}frequency:21}frequency:3}frequency:4}frequency:5}frequency:6}frequency:9}score:0.05666395250514161score:0.06020544953671297score:0.0649274455788081score:0.06543337372617543score:0.07082994063142702score:0.07177433983984605score:0.07319093865247457score:0.08239883093456009score:0.08337695868613694score:0.08357932994508388score:0.08971792479980756score:0.09207892282085513score:0.09562041985242647score:0.09916191688399782score:0.10713028520503336score:0.12531840210288908score:0.15582586938913945score:0.22665581002056645score:0.27084020155731375score:0.32959532373824035score:0.6756923372164454tag:nountag:proper_noun
Story Center

Story Center

Related Posts

Pommelien Thijs, a Pop Star for Half a Country
Music

Pommelien Thijs, a Pop Star for Half a Country

June 6, 2026
Marilyn Manson Loses Latest Bid to Toss Ex-Assistant's Lawsuit
Music

Marilyn Manson Loses Latest Bid to Toss Ex-Assistant’s Lawsuit

June 6, 2026
Mimi Barks releases new music video for 'Power durch Verrat'
Music

Mimi Barks releases new music video for ‘Power durch Verrat’

June 6, 2026
Plague Of Angels 2025
Music

Plague of Angels release new music video for ‘Pangea’

June 6, 2026
Local Events | dailypostathenian.com
Music

Local Events | dailypostathenian.com

June 6, 2026
South Shore festivals 2026 bring live music, food and family events
Music

South Shore festivals 2026 bring live music, food and family events

June 6, 2026
Next Post
‘House on Fire’s’ Dani de la Orden Set to Helm ‘El Director,’ Based on David Jiménez’s Lid-Lifting Non-Fiction Book (Exclusive)

‘House on Fire’s’ Dani de la Orden Set to Helm ‘El Director,’ Based on David Jiménez’s Lid-Lifting Non-Fiction Book (Exclusive)

Kansas City Royals news: Seth Lugo shut down, Carter Jensen rakes

Kansas City Royals news: Seth Lugo shut down, Carter Jensen rakes

Recommended Stories

Caleb Awiti Shines With Hypnotic New Single “DEATH DO US PART”

Caleb Awiti Shines With Hypnotic New Single “DEATH DO US PART”

August 21, 2025
'Puppets in Paradise' at Retreat Farm | Entertainment

‘Puppets in Paradise’ at Retreat Farm | Entertainment

October 8, 2025
Bill Skarsgård In Gus Van Sant’s True Story That Luigi Mangione Might Like – Venice Film Festival

Ben Stiller On Expanding ‘Stiller & Meara’ From His Parents Life To His Own As Highly Personal Doc Premieres At New York Film Festival

October 6, 2025
Plugin Install : Popular Post Widget need JNews - View Counter to be installed

Ads

ADVERTISEMENT

Recent News

Princess Anne had a very strained first marriage #royal #viral #shorts #royalty #royalfamily

Princess Anne had a very strained first marriage #royal #viral #shorts #royalty #royalfamily

June 6, 2026
Royals gather in Gloucestershire for Peter Phillips' wedding - BBC

Royals gather in Gloucestershire for Peter Phillips' wedding – BBC

June 6, 2026
Pommelien Thijs, a Pop Star for Half a Country

Pommelien Thijs, a Pop Star for Half a Country

June 6, 2026

Categories

  • Artists
  • Celebrities
  • Entertainment
  • Gossip
  • Horoscopes
  • Music
  • Royalty
  • Videos

Contact Us

  • Privacy & Policy
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA Compliance
  • Terms and Conditions

© 2020 Celebrity.Land

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Royalty

© 2020 Celebrity.Land