Big Suit: Difference between revisions

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The costume was designed in part by Gale Blacker. Underneath the outer suit, David would wear a "kind of girdle" which attached to the pants and the jacket, "so the pants kind of just hung down. They barely touched my legs and same with the jacket. The jacket had a big shoulder armature, and the jacket just kind of hung down from that and barely touched my chest.."<ref name=":0" />
The costume was designed in part by Gale Blacker. Underneath the outer suit, David would wear a "kind of girdle" which attached to the pants and the jacket, "so the pants kind of just hung down. They barely touched my legs and same with the jacket. The jacket had a big shoulder armature, and the jacket just kind of hung down from that and barely touched my chest.."<ref name=":0" />
= Sources =

Revision as of 22:07, 20 August 2024

The "Big Suit" was a costume worn by David Byrne during the live performances of the 1983-1984 tour. It is one of the most iconic visual symbols of the band.

Background and Creation

The idea for the suit came to David Byrne while in Japan in 1982. Talking Heads had just finished a tour there, and David was staying behind. While talking to somebody about live performances, David heard the line "on stage everything is bigger!" Taking this to heart, David started scribbling a design on a napkin, "it was just a little line drawing [...] it was basically a rectangle with feet sticking out the bottom and a little tiny head on top."[1]

The costume was designed in part by Gale Blacker. Underneath the outer suit, David would wear a "kind of girdle" which attached to the pants and the jacket, "so the pants kind of just hung down. They barely touched my legs and same with the jacket. The jacket had a big shoulder armature, and the jacket just kind of hung down from that and barely touched my chest.."[1]

Sources

  1. 1.0 1.1 Gross, Terry. “For David Byrne, Talking Heads Was about Making Emotional Sense — Not Literal Sense.” Spokane Public Radio, 5 July 2024, www.spokanepublicradio.org/2024-07-05/for-david-byrne-talking-heads-was-about-making-emotional-sense-not-literal-sense. Accessed 10 July 2024.