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In Time: The Best of R.E.M. 1988-2003
In Time: The Best of R.E.M. 1988-2003
R.E.M. / CD / 2003
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Artist
R.E.M.
Format
CD
Genre
Rock
Label Name
Warner Bros.
Producer
Scott Litt, Patrick McCarthy, R.E.M.
Release Date
2003 10 28
Song List
1: Man on the Moon (5:14)
2: The Great Beyond (5:07)
3: Bad Day (4:07)
4: What's the Frequency, Kenneth? (4:01)
5: All the Way to Reno (You're Gonna Be a Star) (4:45)
6: Losing My Religion (4:29)
7: E-Bow the Letter (5:26)
8: Orange Crush (3:52)
9: Imitation of Life (3:58)
10: Daysleeper (3:40)
11: Animal (4:02)
12: The Sidewinder Sleeps Tonite (4:08)
13: Stand (3:12)
14: Electrolite (4:07)
15: All the Right Friends (2:48)
16: Everybody Hurts (5:18)
17: At My Most Beautiful (3:36)
18: Nightswimming (4:18)
Style.Categories
American Underground, College Rock, Jangle Pop, Alternative Pop/Rock
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R.E.M.
began their
Warner
contract in 1988 as the biggest band to emerge from the college-radio-fueled
American underground
. Fifteen years later, they released
In Time: The Best of R.E.M. 1988-2003
, the first overview of their long stint at
Warner Records
. During that decade and a half,
R.E.M.
had a turbulent journey. At the outset, their legend and influence as one of the key -- if not
the
key -- bands of the
American underground
was firmly in place, but their success kept growing, culminating in a breakthrough to international stardom in 1991 thanks to
"Losing My Religion"
and
Out of Time
. For a few years there, they were one of the biggest bands in the world, standing as role models and godfathers for the
alt-rock
explosion of the '90s; even as
grunge
ruled the U.S. and U.K.,
R.E.M.
were having their biggest hits with the brooding
Automatic for the People
(1992) and the guitar-heavy return-to-
rock
Monster
(1994). Then, midway through the decade, the road got a little bumpy. The
Monster
tour was plagued with problems, the most noteworthy being drummer
Bill Berry
's on-stage aneurysm in 1995. He left the band the next year, not long after the band parted ways with
Jefferson Holt
, their longtime manager who was immortalized in their 1984 song
"Little America."
Singer
Michael Stipe
, guitarist
Peter Buck
, and
Mike Mills
struggled to find their footing as a trio as they tackled more ambitious projects that found an ever more selective audience. Truth be told, this transition started on the final
Berry
album, 1996's
New Adventures in Hi-Fi
, which found
R.E.M.
expanding their sonic template to acclaim from critics and hardcore fans, even if they started to see the audience they won over the previous decade start to shrink.
All this means the
Warner
era for
R.E.M.
doesn't represent one particular phase of their career -- during their time at
Warner
, they went through two phases, with the first half being the culmination of their rise and the second being their awkward return to cult status. This divide is clear and fairly easy to pinpoint. In his track-by-track liner notes (neatly mirroring his notes for the 1987 rarities comp
Dead Letter Office
),
Buck
claims that dividing line is pre- and post-
"Losing My Religion,"
which is true at least as far as stardom goes, but it could be argued that the classic period ended with
Automatic
, since that follow-up to
Out of Time
showed that
R.E.M.
could not only live with the fame, but flourish within it. Everything that followed
Automatic
came from a different narrative and derived from a different starting point, one that was removed from the
jangle pop
that lay at the heart of their first ten years as recording artists. Related, yes, but quite different -- more self-conscious, heavily produced, and deliberate, occasionally reaping great results but just as often sounding labored. It was a great contrast to early
R.E.M.
, where the music seemed to flow naturally and easily. Though it has no early
IRS
material,
In Time
paints this contrast effectively, not only through the
Green
and
Automatic
material, but even through more recent material -- the new song
"Bad Day"
and the 2001 revamp of
"All the Right Friends"
(contrary to
Buck
's claim in the liners that the band
did
cut this for
IRS
; it even appeared as a bonus track to a European reissue of
Dead Letter Office
). Both are built on a swirling, jangling
folk-rock
guitar line, propulsive rhythms, intertwined vocal harmonies, and urgent vocals from
Stipe
. In other words, they sound like classic
R.E.M.
, and they should -- they date from the '80s and bear co-writing credits with
Berry
.
$14.55
List Price:
$18.98
Save: $4.43 (23%)
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