R.E.M.
The One I Love
R.E.M.
Source: rockhall.com
The
rise of R.E.M. from cult heroes to superstars during the New
Wave era proved that deserving, non-gimmicky American rock bands
could still make it on their own terms. R.E.M.’s example of
inspiration, hard work and self-belief served as a beacon that
illuminated an alternative path for many musicians in the Eighties
and Nineties. Without R.E.M., it’s hard to imagine the
alt-rock, indie-rock and college-rock movements of the last two
decades. The patient, deliberate way in which R.E.M.’s
career unfolded could serve as
a textbook example on balancing art
and commerce without compromise. As David Fricke wrote in Rolling
Stone, “R.E.M.’s success has proven to America’s
post-punk generation the power of underground virtues in the
overground world.” In 2003 Buck told the New York Times, “For us
it was always about the music, our music.”
R.E.M. formed in Athens, Georgia, home to the University of Georgia, where all four studied
(though none graduated). Bassist Mike Mills and
drummer Bill Berry were best friends who’d met in Macon, where
they’d played in bands during their high-school years. Guitarist
Peter
Buck was a California emigre whose family settled in Atlanta
when he was in his mid-teens. Singer Michael Stipe was born in
Decatur, an Atlanta suburb, though he lived in many other places
because of his father’s military career.
The group made its debut in 1981 with “Radio Free Europe,” released on the tiny Hib-Tone label. The single became a critics’ favorite, and the group signed with I.R.S., an independent label whose roster featured several bands on the cutting edge of New Wave. The mini-
album Chronic Town (1982) and the full-length Murmur (1983) and
Reckoning (1984) were all produced in North Carolina by Mitch Easter
and Don Dixon, like-minded Southerners who were also musicians. These
three releases announced R.E.M. as a band with one foot in
the
Sixties (the Byrds and Velvet Underground being principal
touchstones) and the other planted in more modern territory. Buck
described the material on those early albums as being “uptempo folk
songs” in which familiar strains of Byrdsy folk-rock were suffused
with nervous energy and murky mystique.
Fables of the Reconstruction (1985) was cut in England with British folk producer Joe Boyd (who’d worked with the likes of Fairport Convention and Nick Drake). It was R.E.M.’s most varied and ambitious work up to that point. Next they teamed up with producer Don
Gehman (John Mellencamp) for Lifes Rich Pageant (1986), which
brimmed with confidence and flirted with accessibility while still
maintaining an aura of uniqueness and inscrutability.
This paved the
way for R.E.M.’s breakthrough with Document (1987), a
powerful and coherent musical statement that moved the group to
rock’s forefront. Both the album and single “The One I Love”
made the Top 10.
At this point, a Rolling Stone cover line proclaimed R.E.M. “America’s Best Rock & Roll Band.” As a group that opened many mainstream ears to alternative music, R.E.M. represented, in Buck’s sly phraseology, “the acceptable edge of the unacceptable stuff.”
Document marked the end of R.E.M.’s
contract with I.R.S., triggering a bidding war for the group’s
services. Yet success can have its drawbacks in the alternative
realm. R.E.M.’s stature as indie-rock standard-bearers was
sorely tested when they signed a multimillion-
dollar deal with Warner
Bros. Still, Peter Buck’s production of numerous left-field artists
and R.E.M.’s penchant for edgy, hand-picked opening
acts—including the Replacements, Hüsker Dü and Sonic Youth—helped
maintain credibility.
Ironically,
R.E.M.’s first album for Warner Bros., Green, failed to
chart as high as Document. Still, the album produced another smash
single, “Stand” (Number Six). The group undertook a nearly
year-long arena tour that raised its profile substantially.
What
happened next, however, was surprising even for a band as
unpredictable as R.E.M. The group withdrew from the road for
five years and became studio hermits, cutting a pair
of carefully
nuanced and introspective recordings: Out of Time (1991) and
Automatic for the People (1992). Despite their reduced visibility,
R.E.M.’s popularity scaled new heights when “Losing My
Religion,” a mandolin-tinged plaint about spiritual disenchantment,
reached
Number Four. “Shiny Happy People,” also from Out of Time,
followed it into the Top 10, and Automatic for the People yielded a
trio of Top 30 hits. Both albums sold more than 4 million copies in
the U.S. alone, ushering R.E.M. into rock’s upper echelon.
The logical next step was a loud, rocking album and a return to the road.Monster was, according to writer Anthony DeCurtis, “a noisy, abrasive, postmodern, sexually charged maelstrom.” During the world tour that followed, R.E.M. decided to work on new material at
soundchecks, in effect readying their next album, New Adventures in
Hi-Fi, while touring the current one. The tour was not without
mishap, as drummer Bill Berry suffered a near-fatal brain aneurysm,
and other maladies—an intestinal tumor for Mills and a hernia for
Stipe, both necessitating surgery— afflicted the band.
Drummer Berry dropped a bombshell in 1997 with the announcement that he would be leaving the band. The group briefly considered disbanding, but the three remaining
members decided to continue. They cut Up (1998) as a
three-piece, and the results were unsurprisingly atmospheric and
understated. “We literally had to reinvent how we made records,”
noted bassist Mills of the painstakingly assembled,
keyboard-dominated album.
They followed Up with the pastoral, reflective Reveal (2001), which found them more comfortable with the trio format. “The whole experience has been very liberating,” Stipe
noted. “We’ve become
acclimated to new conditions and potentials.” On the road, R.E.M.
expanded its lineup with outside musicians, including drummer Joey
Waronker and guitarist Scott McCaughey.
The release of In Time: The Best of R.E.M., 1988-2003 gathered the high points from R.E.M.’s tenure on Warner Bros. The band’s early catalog was given a similar treatment on the 2006 release And I Feel Fine…The Best of the I.R.S. Years, 1982-1987. Both
compilations were issued alone and as deluxe packages with a bonus
disc of rarities. In 2004 R.E.M. released Around the Sun, its
strongest album as a trio. It contained such pensive, arresting
tracks as “Leaving New York.” Stipe noted that it covered “the
usual
R.E.M. territory of identity and memory and dreams and
where the real world and the fantastic world come together and
overlap.”
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