Jerry Harrison of Talking Heads
At some point in my interview with Jerry Harrison, guitarist and keyboardist for Talking Heads, I asked him to respond to a quote by the iconic Beat poet Allen Ginsberg. Harrison told me that Ginsberg was a friend. And that’s why he’s Jerry Harrison.
Talking Heads are one of the most influential acts of the past 50 years. Call it new wave, art pop, post punk, whatever; any act with that label can at least partially thank Talking Heads.
This conversation centers not just on the writing process—Harrison loves felt tip pens because of the "scraping feeling,"—but on literature. We talked about prose and poetry, which says something: great musical artists are voracious readers. As for the writing ritual, Harrison said, "The rituals are a way for our minds to accept that we're writing. They create signals of positive reinforcement as a way of saying, 'There are no excuses since I'm in my writing space.'"
Talking Heads' Stop Making Sense is considered one of the greatest concert films, and in September it's being re-released in 4k.