David Byrne Ignites Brisbane with a Transcendent Tour Opener
David Byrne, a perpetual innovator with a five-decade legacy of redefining live music, made a triumphant return to Australian stages. Launching his highly anticipated ‘Who Is the Sky?’ tour at the Brisbane Entertainment Centre, Byrne delivered a performance that was equal parts art installation, political rally, and infectious dance party.
The evening began not with a support act, but with a serene soundscape of birdsong, setting an immediate tone of organic connection. Byrne’s own calming voice then echoed through the venue, offering warm, almost meditative instructions that included a heartfelt encouragement for the audience to dance.
The stark, lunar landscape of the stage—a giant, open box—hinted at the theatrical journey to come. Byrne emerged in a signature orange jumpsuit, opening with Talking Heads’ hauntingly minimalist “Heaven.” As images of our planet bloomed on the screens behind him, the song’s meaning was beautifully recast: Earth itself is the heaven we must collectively protect.
He was joined by a supremely talented ensemble of twelve singers and musicians, also in orange. Untethered from cables, they flowed across the stage with precise, kinetic choreography by Steven Hoggett, an evolution of the acclaimed American Utopia show. This freedom of movement became a powerful visual metaphor for the evening’s central theme: human connection as an act of resistance.
The setlist was a masterful blend of solo material and Talking Heads classics, weaving lyrical themes from the mundane to the surreal. Early highlights included “Everybody Laughs” and the Brian Eno collaboration “Strange Overtones.” The night gained a primal energy with grooves like “Slippery People” and a stunning, machine-pulse reinvention of “Psycho Killer,” performed for the first time in nearly twenty years.
A subtle political undercurrent grew into a forceful statement. The screens displayed imagery of global turbulence before launching into a mighty “Life During Wartime.” Byrne then slipped into full evangelist mode for a transcendent “Once in a Lifetime.”
Following a crescendo, the show scaled down to a moment of profound intimacy with “Everybody’s Coming to My House,” before the entire ensemble launched back into the stratosphere for the inevitable, explosive finale of “Burning Down the House.”
Despite the vastness of the venue, Byrne achieved a magical feat: he transformed an epic, heart-tapping art installation into something that, by the end, felt as warm and inviting as a lounge room. The ultimate triumph of the night was joy—pure, unadulterated, and collective joy. Bravo, indeed, Mr. Byrne.





















