Tina Weymouth

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Tina Weymouth. Photograph by her son Egan, 2004.
Tina Weymouth. Photograph by her son Egan, 2004.

Martina Michèle Weymouth (born on November 22, 1950 in Coronado, California), known simply as Tina Weymouth, is an American musician, best known as a founding member of the influential New Wave group Talking Heads and its side project Tom Tom Club (co-founded with Talking Heads drummer and husband Chris Frantz).

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[edit] Profile

Weymouth is of French heritage on her mother's side. In her youth, Weymouth was a cheerleader. A bass guitarist, she combined the minimalist art-punk basslines of groups such as Wire and Pere Ubu with danceable, disco inflected riffs to provide the bedrock of Talking Heads signature sound. Her sound is often very funky in feel, combining low fundamental notes with higher flourishes in clipped, staccato rhythms. She sometimes plays a rare Fender Swinger. Weymouth joined Talking Heads as bass guitarist at the request of then-boyfriend Chris Frantz, and, in fact, according to the liner notes for the Talking Heads collection "Sand in the Vaseline", learned to play the bass guitar for this reason.

[edit] Life outside Talking Heads

Weymouth and Frantz formed the Tom Tom Club in 1980, which kept them busy during a fairly long hiatus in Talking Heads activity. When it became obvious that Talking Heads frontman David Byrne had no interest in another Talking Heads album, Weymouth, Frantz, and Jerry Harrison reunited without him for a one-off album called No Talking, Just Head under the name The Heads in 1996, featuring a rotating cast of vocalists.

They also produced the Happy Mondays' 1992 album, Yes Please! and have recently contributed backing vocals and percussion for the hip hop formation, Gorillaz. Weymouth has been critical of Byrne.[1]

[edit] Personal life

Weymouth has been married to Frantz since 1977. The couple has two sons together, Egan (currently the drummer for Look Look among other bands) and Robin (who records music under the name Kid Ginseng).

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Guy Blackman (2005-02-06). Byrning down the house. The Age. Retrieved on 2007-06-01. “In March last year, Weymouth described Byrne as "a man incapable of returning friendship". She told Glasgow's Sunday Herald: "Cutting off attachments when a thing/person is perceived to have served its purpose or there is a perceived threat to ego is the lifelong pattern of his relations".”

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