The tension is unbelievable here - fresh off Byrne taking the other three to court for releasing an album and performing as "The Heads" a few years earlier.
I actually expected this to be a lot more awkward than it was. All things considered, they were adults and there was no real cringey moments. If anything from this it seemed like 4 people very content with their legacy and its only when you dig deeper do you find out how they really feel.
@@gajaga789 Weymouth and Frantz were brought up too well to lower themselves to public spats - they feel genuinely gaslighted, down and sorrowful that Byrne is taking his stance. Byrne in his later years is essentially playing a Heads greatest hits tour and passing off his treatment of his former band mates as a result of his recent autism diagnosis. I am calling utter BS on that. As much as I think Byrne is a genius, He's one of these guys who is so financially self serving and thinks the world revolves around him which is so utterly lame considering TH were a real band. It is what it is.
@@scottblack9213Yes I always thought it a bit hypocritical that he says he is forward looking and not into nostalgia, yet his setlist is 75% songs that are over 40 years old..
Too bad they couldn't get the other guest band members who were also in the movie. Even a remote connection would have been appreciated. After all, Edna Holt, Lynn Mabry, Bernie Worell and Steve Scales were all part of the magic.