Forum menu

[Closed] R.E.M

Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Going against the grain, I really enjoyed Monster. Underrated album


 
Posted : 09/03/2017 7:45 pm
Posts: 13554
Free Member
 

I think Monster and New Adventures In Hi-Fi are their best. That's the great thing about them, something for everyone


 
Posted : 09/03/2017 7:58 pm
Posts: 315
 

I'm not a massive R.E.M. fan but have been listening to Country Feedback on an unplugged album and viewing on YouTube almost every night for the past few weeks.
I love playing along to it on my acoustic. A song I'd never heard of before but suddenly discovered it.
Will download all the albums/ songs mentioned here as there might be another gem that I've missed.


 
Posted : 09/03/2017 8:06 pm
Posts: 3275
Free Member
 

I've got a DVD of them in concert from Germany back in 2003 (I think) called Perfect Square. Cracking concert, worth a look if you can find it online.


 
Posted : 09/03/2017 8:11 pm
Posts: 216
Full Member
 

Rubbish quality but some of the bingo handjob gig is on YouTube.
Probably one for the purists.

I was at Madison Square garden for their last tour. Great band.


 
Posted : 09/03/2017 8:50 pm
 Spud
Posts: 361
Full Member
 

Around the Sun is a good album. McAlpine 1994 was a good gig!


 
Posted : 09/03/2017 8:51 pm
Posts: 13554
Free Member
 

Around the Sun is a good album. McAlpine 1994 was a good gig!

I was there too, great gig. Got free tickets too. Worked at the Grahams builders merchants around the corner and we got some freebies through supplying materials for the stadium itself.


 
Posted : 09/03/2017 8:56 pm
Posts: 2624
Full Member
 

Automatic was a bit of a dip but Adventures In Hi-Fi killed my interest off. Monster was good though and some of Up is OK.

Odd, New Adventures In Hi-Fi was probably what turned me from someone who bought the odd R.E.M. CD into an actual fan, but I've never really attuned to Monster at all.

The three albums after New Adventures (Up, Reveal and Around the Sun) feel different to a lot of their other output but things became more familiar with Accelerate and I still rate Collapse Into Now (their final album) fairly highly.


 
Posted : 09/03/2017 9:13 pm
Posts: 6581
Free Member
 

Love all of their stuff, even the later albums. Document is a fantastic album.
Country Feedback is one of my all time favourite songs.


 
Posted : 09/03/2017 9:23 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Quality choice hebdencyclist, Half a World Away along with Gardening at Night are two still regularly on my playlists.


 
Posted : 09/03/2017 9:48 pm
Posts: 142
Full Member
 

Massive fan here. Here's a random offering from later in their career. A fine song in a rather nice Volvo.


 
Posted : 09/03/2017 10:05 pm
Posts: 12809
Free Member
 

I sometimes think of REM like Coldplay (but not shit) you know all the songs, but I've not many people who have them as their favourite band barring all others.

Anyway, they're wonderful, I was listening to the radio the other day and 'Nightswimming' came on and slapped around the face. It a great song, liked it when it was new, but with more mature ears it's better.

The bonus for me of having a streaming service rather than buying tracks is I can really dive into them for a bit, and put them back out to pasture in a few weeks for a few more years.


 
Posted : 09/03/2017 10:14 pm
Posts: 0
Full Member
 

I was listening to the radio the other day and 'Nightswimming' came on and slapped around the face.

Nightswimming reliably makes me go all soppy and nostalgic. In fact, all the early-90s REM stuff pushes buttons, it was huge when I was 16 and discovering girls and parties and whatnot and it basically short-circuits my brain back to hormonal mayhem and teenage angst. Marvellous stuff.

They played Huddersfield on the Monster tour, in the then-brand-new McAlpine stadium. No decent bands [i]ever[/i] played Huddersfield, let alone a genuine Biggest Band In The World™ band, so it was officially a major event and everyone, everyone went to see them. Oasis were supposed to support but the workshy Manc bastards didn't show up. REM were brilliant, though. I didn't even bother going to try to buy overpriced underage beer cos I didn't want to miss any of the songs. Cracking show, great band.


 
Posted : 09/03/2017 10:48 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

If you like something, you should buy it


 
Posted : 09/03/2017 11:18 pm
Posts: 0
Full Member
 

My cousin started me off on REM when I was 13 with Monster. Loved all their stuff, but never got to see them live.

WHERE'S THE CASH COW REUNION ALREADY?!?

😀


 
Posted : 09/03/2017 11:31 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Fascinating piece about out of time here
[url=

http://99percentinvisible.org/episode/longbox [/url]" title="99PERCENTINVISIBLE.ORG" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" >

99PERCENTINVISIBLE.ORG "http://99percentinvisible.org/episode/longbox] http://99percentinvisible.org/episode/longbox [/url]"


 
Posted : 09/03/2017 11:46 pm
Posts: 7
Free Member
 

Long time fan here, got pretty much everything. Some beautiful melodies and Michael Stipe has some beautiful sentiments when you get to grips with a lot of his lyrics. Their reputation for being depressing is, IMO from people who've not actually listened to what he's saying properly. Everybody Hurts for e.g. was showing great empathy for people feeling down - supportive, not negative.

Either way, I think they made the right decision to split when they did - I don't think their songwriting was the quality it had been when they were younger and less famous.

I still rate Murmur as one of their best - Perfect Circle, Shaking Through - songs of huge beauty...

Fables, Life's Rich Pageant, Green are the best of the early albums for me. Out of Time is a timeless classic, Automatic v good but have probably overlistened to it. Up, Reveal and Around The Sun have some great songs but maybe not as consistent as whole albums as the early stuff. Last album Collapse Into Now had some good stuff too.

If you don't have access to a streaming service I would start with the IRS Best Of and the WEA Best Of and take it from there - they're both accurate representations of their best stuff.

I'm hoping Michael Stipe will do some solo stuff - it's bound to be interesting


 
Posted : 09/03/2017 11:54 pm
Posts: 10747
Full Member
 

Another New adventures in hi fi appreciator here.
I was surprised when I found the lyrics to sidewinder weren't "calling Chuck Baker" but we're "come on in try and wake her up now".


 
Posted : 10/03/2017 12:06 am
Posts: 7
Free Member
 

come on in try and wake her up now".

Actually it was

Call me when you try to wake her up / Call me when you try to wake her

I believe that came about because the lyrics were written by Michael Stipe whilst Berry, Buck and Mills wrote the music and then they crowbarred it all together into a song in the studio - hence the gabbling trying to fit in more syllables for which there were notes 🙂


 
Posted : 10/03/2017 12:09 am
Posts: 237
Full Member
 

You have some exciting listening ahead of you, brilliant.

I saw them live around 1998 in California and they are one of my favourite bands. Don't miss out on Collapse into Now, it may be their last album but it's great and I was listening to it a few nights ago

Jealous in a way that it's all ahead of you. Enjoy.


 
Posted : 10/03/2017 6:59 am
 Pook
Posts: 12698
Full Member
 

I, like the OP, never really liked them but a few years back my friend had a spare ticket and invited me along to their arena gig in Sheffield. I wasn't expecting much.

Anyway, we got in and while waiting for them to come out found out that it had been cancelled as one of them was sick.

So what did they do? Stipe and the other one played a five song acoustic set. It was brilliant and made the arena seem like a back room in a pub. And they honoured the tickets for their return gig.


 
Posted : 10/03/2017 7:21 am
Posts: 1
Free Member
 

REM were a huge chunk of the soundtrack to my defining years as a student and as such means a while lot to me. Hearing them switches buttons much like the effect described by mintimperial above. Just dreamy wistful tear-jerking uplifting stuff.

I wish I was 19 again. I truly do.


 
Posted : 10/03/2017 8:26 am
Posts: 0
Full Member
 

Life's Rich Pageant , Document & Green for me.
There was an interesting REM bbc radio documentary a while back....


 
Posted : 10/03/2017 8:32 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Out of Time for me. Any album will be improved by having Kate Pierson sing on it.

And Talking Heads were a great band. I saw their "Stop Making Sense" tour and it's still the best concert I've ever seen.

It was more years ago than I care to think, though...


 
Posted : 10/03/2017 8:37 am
Posts: 2091
Full Member
 

REM - a major part of the soundtrack to my late 30's, with all the crap of divorce and then ill-considered, short term "relationships", if you could call them that.
And gigging a lot and racing a lot and being as fit as a butcher's dog......

And then meeting my, then recently widowed, wife. We laughed together, cried together and did pretty much everything else with REM somewhere around. Here we still are, 26 years later.


 
Posted : 10/03/2017 9:46 am
Posts: 1311
Full Member
 

I love REM, probably my favourite band.
I keep going through phases of the early stuff, then recently it was Out of Time because of the 25 anniversary. Which made me feel old.
Around the Sun is the only album I wouldn't listen to as an album - definitely their weakest in my eyes...but even then it has 'Leaving New York' which I love.
Was at Murrayfield in 95 and saw them about another three times. Glad they quit with dignity.


 
Posted : 10/03/2017 9:57 am
Page 2 / 2