 R.E.M. is an American rock band formed in Athens, Georgia, in 1980 by Michael Stipe (lead vocals), Peter Buck (guitar), Mike Mills (bass guitar), and Bill Berry (drums and percussion). R.E.M. was one of the first popular alternative rock bands, and gained early attention due to Buck's ringing, arpeggiated guitar style and Stipe's unclear vocals. R.E.M. released its first single, "Radio Free Europe", in 1981 on the independent record label Hib-Tone. The single was followed by the Chronic Town EP in 1982, the band's first release on I.R.S. Records. In 1983, the band released its critically acclaimed debut album Murmur, and built its reputation over the next few years through subsequent releases, constant touring,   and the support of college radio. Following years of underground success, R.E.M. achieved a mainstream hit in 1987 with the single "The One I Love". The group signed to Warner Bros. Records in 1988, and began to espouse political and environmental concerns while playing large arenas worldwide.
R.E.M. is an American rock band formed in Athens, Georgia, in 1980 by Michael Stipe (lead vocals), Peter Buck (guitar), Mike Mills (bass guitar), and Bill Berry (drums and percussion). R.E.M. was one of the first popular alternative rock bands, and gained early attention due to Buck's ringing, arpeggiated guitar style and Stipe's unclear vocals. R.E.M. released its first single, "Radio Free Europe", in 1981 on the independent record label Hib-Tone. The single was followed by the Chronic Town EP in 1982, the band's first release on I.R.S. Records. In 1983, the band released its critically acclaimed debut album Murmur, and built its reputation over the next few years through subsequent releases, constant touring,   and the support of college radio. Following years of underground success, R.E.M. achieved a mainstream hit in 1987 with the single "The One I Love". The group signed to Warner Bros. Records in 1988, and began to espouse political and environmental concerns while playing large arenas worldwide.By     the early 1990s, when alternative rock began to experience broad     mainstream success, R.E.M. was viewed as a pioneer of the genre and     released its two most commercially successful albums, Out of TimeAutomatic for the People (1992), which veered from the band's established sound. R.E.M.'s 1994 release Monster     was a return to a more rock-oriented sound. The band began its first     tour in six years to support the album; the tour was marred by  medical    emergencies suffered by three band members. In 1996, R.E.M.  re-signed    with Warner Bros. for a reported  (1991) and US$80     million, at the time the most expensive recording contract in   history.   The following year, Bill Berry left the band, while Buck,   Mills, and   Stipe continued the group as a three-piece. Through some   changes in   musical style, the band continued its career into the next   decade with   mixed critical and commercial success. In 2007, the band   was inducted   into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
History
Formation: 1980–1981
 In     January 1980, Michael Stipe met Peter Buck in the Athens record  store    where Buck worked. The pair discovered that they shared similar   tastes   in music, particularly punk rock and protopunk artists like Patti Smith, Television, and The Velvet Underground.     Stipe said, "It turns out that I was buying all the records that    [Buck]  was saving for himself." Stipe and Buck soon met fellow University of Georgia     students Mike Mills and Bill Berry, who had played music together    since  high school. The quartet agreed to collaborate on several songs;    Stipe  later commented that "there was never any grand plan behind any    of it".  Their still-unnamed band spent several months rehearsing and    played its  first show on April 5, 1980 at a friend's birthday party    held in a  converted Episcopal     church. After considering names like "Twisted Kites", "Cans of  Piss",    and "Negro Wives", the band settled on "R.E.M.", which Stipe  selected   at  random from a dictionary.
In     January 1980, Michael Stipe met Peter Buck in the Athens record  store    where Buck worked. The pair discovered that they shared similar   tastes   in music, particularly punk rock and protopunk artists like Patti Smith, Television, and The Velvet Underground.     Stipe said, "It turns out that I was buying all the records that    [Buck]  was saving for himself." Stipe and Buck soon met fellow University of Georgia     students Mike Mills and Bill Berry, who had played music together    since  high school. The quartet agreed to collaborate on several songs;    Stipe  later commented that "there was never any grand plan behind any    of it".  Their still-unnamed band spent several months rehearsing and    played its  first show on April 5, 1980 at a friend's birthday party    held in a  converted Episcopal     church. After considering names like "Twisted Kites", "Cans of  Piss",    and "Negro Wives", the band settled on "R.E.M.", which Stipe  selected   at  random from a dictionary. The band members eventually dropped out of school to focus on their developing group. They found a manager in Jefferson Holt, a record store clerk who was so impressed by an R.E.M. performance in his hometown of Chapel Hill, North Carolina,     that he moved to Athens. R.E.M.'s success was almost immediate in     Athens and surrounding areas; the band drew progressively larger crowds     for shows, which caused some resentment in the Athens music scene. Over the next year and a half, R.E.M. toured throughout the Southern United States.     Touring was arduous since a touring circuit for alternative rock   bands   did not then exist. The group had to tour in an old blue van   driven by   Holt, and the band members lived on a food allowance of $2 a   day. 
During the summer of 1981, R.E.M. recorded its first single, "Radio Free Europe", at producer Mitch Easter's Drive-In Studios in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. The single was released on the local independent record label Hib-Tone     with an initial pressing of one thousand copies, which quickly sold     out. Despite its limited pressing, the single garnered critical   acclaim,   and was listed as one of the ten best singles of the year by The New York Times. 
I.R.S. Records and cult success: 1982–1986
 R.E.M. recorded the Chronic Town EP with Mitch Easter in October 1981, and planned to release it on a new indie label named Dasht Hopes. However, I.R.S. Records     acquired a demo of the band's first recording session with Easter   that   had been circulating for months. The band turned down the   advances of   major label RCA Records in favor of I.R.S., with whom they signed a contract in May 1982. I.R.S. released Chronic Town that August as its first American release. A positive review of the EP by NME     praised the songs' auras of mystery, and concluded, "R.E.M. ring   true,   and it's great to hear something as unforced and cunning as   this."
R.E.M. recorded the Chronic Town EP with Mitch Easter in October 1981, and planned to release it on a new indie label named Dasht Hopes. However, I.R.S. Records     acquired a demo of the band's first recording session with Easter   that   had been circulating for months. The band turned down the   advances of   major label RCA Records in favor of I.R.S., with whom they signed a contract in May 1982. I.R.S. released Chronic Town that August as its first American release. A positive review of the EP by NME     praised the songs' auras of mystery, and concluded, "R.E.M. ring   true,   and it's great to hear something as unforced and cunning as   this." I.R.S. first paired R.E.M. with producer Stephen Hague     to record its debut album. Hague's emphasis on technical perfection     left the band unsatisfied, and the band members asked the label to  let    them record with Easter. I.R.S. agreed to a "tryout" session,  allowing    the band to return to North Carolina and record the song "Pilgrimage" with Easter and producing partner Don Dixon.     After hearing the track, I.R.S. permitted the group to record the    album  with Dixon and Easter. Because of its bad experience with Hague,    the  band recorded the album via a process of negation, refusing to     incorporate rock music clichés such as guitar solos or then-popular synthesizers, in order to give its music a timeless feel. The completed album, Murmur, was greeted with critical acclaim upon its release in 1983, with Rolling Stone listing the album as its record of the year. The album reached number 36 on the Billboard album chart. A re-recorded version of "Radio Free Europe" was the album's lead single and reached number 78 on the Billboard singles chart in 1983. Despite the acclaim awarded the album, Murmur sold only about 200,000 copies, which I.R.S.'s Jay Boberg felt was below expectations. 
R.E.M. made its first national television appearance on Late Night with David Letterman in October 1983, during which the group performed a new, unnamed song. The piece, eventually titled "So. Central Rain (I'm Sorry)", became the first single from the band's second album, Reckoning (1984), which was also recorded with Easter and Dixon. The album met with critical acclaim; NME's Mat Snow wrote that ReckoningReckoning     peaked at number 27 on the US album charts—an unusually high chart     placing for a  "confirms R.E.M. as one of the most beautifully  exciting    groups on the planet". While college rock band at the time—scant airplay and poor distribution overseas resulted in it charting no higher than number 91 in Britain. 
The band's third album, Fables of the Reconstruction (1985), demonstrated a change in direction. Instead of Dixon and Easter, R.E.M. chose producer Joe Boyd, who had worked with Fairport Convention and Nick Drake,     to record the album in England. The band members found the sessions     unexpectedly difficult, and were miserable due to the cold winter     weather and poor food; the situation brought the band to the verge of     break-up. The gloominess surrounding the sessions ended up providing  the    context for the album itself. Lyrically, Stipe began to create     storylines in the mode of Southern mythology,     noting in a 1985 interview that he was inspired by "the whole idea  of    the old men sitting around the fire, passing on ... legends and   fables   to the grandchildren". Fables of the Reconstruction   became the   highest-selling record released by I.R.S. in America at   that point.   However, the album performed poorly in Europe and its   critical reception   was mixed, with some critics regarding it as dreary   and poorly   recorded. As with the previous records, the singles from Fables of the Reconstruction     were mostly ignored by mainstream radio. Meanwhile, I.R.S. was    becoming  frustrated with the band's reluctance to achieve mainstream    success. 
For its fourth album, R.E.M. enlisted John Mellencamp producer Don Gehman. The result, Lifes Rich Pageant (1986) featured Stipe's vocals closer to the forefront of the music. In a 1986 interview with the Chicago Tribune,     Peter Buck related, "Michael is getting better at what he's doing,   and   he's getting more confident at it. And I think that shows up in   the   projection of his voice." The album improved markedly upon the   sales of Fables of the Reconstruction and eventually peaked at number 21 on the Billboard album chart. The single "Fall on Me"     also picked up support on commercial radio. The album was the band's     first to be certified gold for selling 500,000 copies. While  American    college radio remained R.E.M.'s core support, the band was  beginning  to   chart hits on mainstream rock formats; however, the  music still    encountered resistance from Top 40 radio. Following the success of Lifes Rich Pageant, I.R.S. issued Dead Letter Office, a compilation of tracks recorded by the band during their album sessions, many of which had either been issued as B-sides     or left unreleased altogether. Shortly thereafter, I.R.S. compiled     R.E.M.'s music video catalog (except "Wolves, Lower") as the band's     first video release, Succumbs.
Breakthrough success: 1987–1993
 Don Gehman was unable to produce R.E.M.'s fifth album, so he suggested the group work with Scott Litt. Litt would be the producer for the band's next five albums. Document     (1987) featured some of Stipe's most openly political lyrics,     particularly on "Welcome To the Occupation" and "Exhuming McCarthy",     which were reactions to the conservative political environment of the 1980s under American President Ronald Reagan. Jon Pareles of The New York Times     wrote in his review of the album, "'Document' is both confident and     defiant; if R.E.M. is about to move from cult-band status to mass     popularity, the album decrees that the band will get there on its own     terms." Document was R.E.M.'s breakthrough album, and the first single "The One I Love" charted in the Top 20 in the US, UK, and Canada. By January 1988, Document had become the group's first album to sell a million copies. In light of the band's breakthrough, the December 1987 cover of Rolling Stone declared R.E.M. "America's Best Rock & Roll Band".
Don Gehman was unable to produce R.E.M.'s fifth album, so he suggested the group work with Scott Litt. Litt would be the producer for the band's next five albums. Document     (1987) featured some of Stipe's most openly political lyrics,     particularly on "Welcome To the Occupation" and "Exhuming McCarthy",     which were reactions to the conservative political environment of the 1980s under American President Ronald Reagan. Jon Pareles of The New York Times     wrote in his review of the album, "'Document' is both confident and     defiant; if R.E.M. is about to move from cult-band status to mass     popularity, the album decrees that the band will get there on its own     terms." Document was R.E.M.'s breakthrough album, and the first single "The One I Love" charted in the Top 20 in the US, UK, and Canada. By January 1988, Document had become the group's first album to sell a million copies. In light of the band's breakthrough, the December 1987 cover of Rolling Stone declared R.E.M. "America's Best Rock & Roll Band".Frustrated     that its records did not see satisfactory overseas distribution,    R.E.M.  left I.R.S. when its contract expired and signed with the major    label Warner Bros. Records. In 1988, I.R.S. released the compilation Eponymous, which included most of the band's singles and a number of rarities. The band's 1988 Warner Bros. debut, Green, was recorded in Nashville, Tennessee, and showcased the group experimenting with its sound. The record's tracks ranged from the upbeat first single "Stand" (a hit in the United States), to more political material, like the rock-oriented "Orange Crush" and "World Leader Pretend", which address the Vietnam War and the Cold War, respectively. Green     has gone on to sell four million copies worldwide. The band  supported    the album with its biggest and most visually developed tour  to date,    featuring back-projections and art films playing on the stage. After the Green tour, the band members unofficially decided to take the following year off, the first extended break in the band's career. 
R.E.M. reconvened in mid-1990 to record its seventh album, Out of Time.     In a departure from previous albums, the band members often wrote  the    music with non-traditional rock instrumentation including mandolin, organ, and acoustic guitar. Released in March 1991, Out of Time     was the band's first album to top both the US and UK charts. The    record  eventually sold 4.2 million copies in the US alone, and about 12     million copies worldwide by 1996. The album's lead single "Losing My Religion" was a worldwide hit that received heavy rotation on radio, as did the music video on MTV. "Losing My Religion" was R.E.M.'s highest-charting single in the US, reaching number four on the Billboard     charts. "There've been very few life-changing events in our career     because our career has been so gradual," Mills said years later. "If  you    want to talk about life changing, I think 'Losing My Religion' is  the    closest it gets". The album's second single. "Shiny Happy People" (one of three songs on the record to feature vocals from Kate Pierson of fellow Athens band The B-52's), was also a major hit, reaching number 10 in the US and number six in the UK. Out of Time garnered R.E.M. seven nominations at the 1992 Grammy Awards, the most nominations of any artist that year. The band won three awards: one for Best Alternative Music Album and two for "Losing My Religion", Best Short Form Music Video and Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal. R.E.M. did not tour to promote Out of Time; instead the group played a series of one-off shows, including an appearance taped for an episode of MTV Unplugged. 
After spending some months off, R.E.M. returned to the studio in 1991 to record its next album. Late in 1992, the band released Automatic for the People. Though the group had intended to make a harder-rocking album after the softer textures of Out of Time, the somber Automatic for the People "[seemed] to move at an even more agonized crawl", according to Melody Maker.     The album dealt with themes of loss and mourning inspired by "that     sense of ... turning thirty", according to Buck. Several songs  featured    string arrangements by former Led Zeppelin bassist John Paul Jones. Considered by a number of critics (as well as by Buck and Mills) to be the band's best album, Automatic for the People reached numbers one and two on UK and US charts, respectively, and generated the American Top 40 hit singles "Drive", "Man on the Moon", and "Everybody Hurts".The album would sell about ten million copies worldwide. As with Out of Time,     there was no tour in support of the album. The decision to forgo a     tour, in conjunction with Stipe's physical appearance, generated  rumors    that the singer was dying, which were vehemently denied by the  band. 
Monster and New Adventures in Hi-Fi: 1994–1996
After the band released two slow-paced albums in a row, R.E.M.'s 1994 album Monster     was, as Buck said, "a 'rock' record, with the rock in quotation    marks."  In contrast to the sound of its predecessors, the music of Monster consisted of distorted guitar tones, minimal overdubs, and touches of 1970s glam rock. Like Out of Time, Monster topped the charts in both the US and UK. The record sold about nine million copies worldwide. The singles "What's the Frequency, Kenneth?" and "Bang and Blame" were the band's last American Top 40 hits, although all the singles from Monster reached the Top 30 on the British charts. 
In     January 1995 R.E.M. set out on its first tour in six years. The tour     was a huge commercial success, but the period was difficult for the     group. On March 1, Berry collapsed on stage during a performance in Lausanne, Switzerland, having suffered a brain aneurysm.     He had surgery immediately and recovered fully within a month.   Berry's   aneurysm was only the beginning of a series of health problems   that   plagued the Monster Tour. Mills had to undergo abdominal  surgery  to   remove an intestinal adhesion in July; a month later,  Stipe had to  have   an emergency surgery to repair a hernia.     Despite all the problems, the group had recorded the bulk of a new     album while on the road. The band brought along eight-track recorders  to    capture its shows, and used the recordings as the base elements  for   the  album.
R.E.M.     re-signed with Warner Bros. Records in 1996 for a reported $80    million,  the largest recording contract in history at that point. The    group's  1996 album New Adventures in Hi-Fi     debuted at number two in the US and number one in the UK. The five     million copies of the album sold were a reversal of the group's     commercial fortunes of the previous five years. Time     writer Christopher John Farley argued that the lesser sales of the     album were due to the declining commercial power of alternative rock  as a    whole. That same year, R.E.M. parted ways with manager Jefferson   Holt,   allegedly due to sexual harassment charges levied against him by a member of the band's home office in Athens. The group's lawyer, Bertis Downs, assumed managerial duties.
Berry's departure and Up: 1997–2000
Stipe at the 1999 Glastonbury Festival.
 In April 1997, the band convened at Buck's Kauai     holiday home to record demos of material intended for the next  album.    The band sought to reinvent its sound and intended to  incorporate  drum   loops and percussion experiments. Just as the  sessions were due  to  begin  in October, Berry decided, after months of  contemplation and    discussions with Downs and Mills, to tell the rest  of the band that he    was quitting. Berry told his band mates that he  would not quit if  they   would break up as a result, so Stipe, Mills,  and Buck agreed to  carry on   as a three-piece with his blessing. Berry  publicly announced  his   departure three weeks later in October 1997.  Berry told the press,  "I'm   just not as enthusiastic as I have been in  the past about doing  this   anymore . . . I have the best job in the  world. But I'm kind of  ready to   sit back and reflect and maybe not be  a pop star anymore."  Stipe   admitted that the band would be different  without a major  contributor:   "For me, Mike, and Peter, as R.E.M.,  are we still R.E.M.?  I guess a   three-legged dog is still a dog. It  just has to learn to  run   differently."
In April 1997, the band convened at Buck's Kauai     holiday home to record demos of material intended for the next  album.    The band sought to reinvent its sound and intended to  incorporate  drum   loops and percussion experiments. Just as the  sessions were due  to  begin  in October, Berry decided, after months of  contemplation and    discussions with Downs and Mills, to tell the rest  of the band that he    was quitting. Berry told his band mates that he  would not quit if  they   would break up as a result, so Stipe, Mills,  and Buck agreed to  carry on   as a three-piece with his blessing. Berry  publicly announced  his   departure three weeks later in October 1997.  Berry told the press,  "I'm   just not as enthusiastic as I have been in  the past about doing  this   anymore . . . I have the best job in the  world. But I'm kind of  ready to   sit back and reflect and maybe not be  a pop star anymore."  Stipe   admitted that the band would be different  without a major  contributor:   "For me, Mike, and Peter, as R.E.M.,  are we still R.E.M.?  I guess a   three-legged dog is still a dog. It  just has to learn to  run   differently." The     band canceled its scheduled recording sessions as a result of  Berry's    departure. "Without Bill it was different, confusing", Mills  later   said.  "We didn't know exactly what to do. We couldn't rehearse  without a    drummer." The remaining members of R.E.M. resumed work on  the album  in   February 1998 at Toast Studios in San Francisco. The band ended its decade-long collaboration with Scott Litt and hired Pat McCarthy to produce the record. Nigel Godrich was taken on as assistant producer, and drafted in ex-Screaming Trees member Barrett Martin and Beck's touring drummer Joey Waronker.     The recording process was plagued with tension, and the group came     close to disbanding. Bertis Downs called an emergency meeting where  the    band members sorted out their problems and agreed to continue as a     group. Led off by the single "Daysleeper", Up     (1998) debuted in the top ten in the US and UK. However, the album   was  a  relative failure, selling 900,000 copies in the US by mid-1999   and   eventually selling just over two million copies worldwide. While     R.E.M.'s American sales were declining, the group's commercial base  was    shifting to the UK, where more R.E.M. records were sold per  capita  than   any other country and the band's singles regularly  entered the  Top 20.  
A year after Up's release, R.E.M. wrote the instrumental score to the Andy Kaufman biopic Man on the Moon, a first for the group. The film took its title from the Automatic for the People song of the same name. The song "The Great Beyond" was released as a single from the Man on the Moon     soundtrack album. "The Great Beyond" only reached number 57 on the     American pop charts, but was the band's highest-charting single ever  in    the UK, reaching number three in 2000. 
Reveal and Around the Sun: 2001–2005
R.E.M. recorded the majority of its twelfth album Reveal (2001) in Canada and Ireland from May to October 2000. Reveal shared the "lugubrious pace" of Up, and featured drumming by Joey Waronker, as well as contributions by Scott McCaughey (a co-founder of the band The Minus 5 with Buck) and Posies founder Ken Stringfellow. Global sales of the album were over four million, but in the United States RevealUp. The album was led by the single " sold about the same number of copies as Imitation of Life," which reached number six in the UK. Writing for Rock's Backpages,     The Rev. Al Friston described the album as "loaded with golden     loveliness at every twist and turn", in comparison to the group's     "essentially unconvincing work on New Adventures in Hi-Fi and Up." Similarly, Rob Sheffield of Rolling Stone called Reveal "a spiritual renewal rooted in a musical one" and praised its "ceaselessly astonishing beauty." 
 In 2003, Warner Bros. released the compilation album In Time: The Best of R.E.M. 1988-2003, which featured two new songs, "Bad Day" and "Animal". That same year Berry made a surprise appearance during an R.E.M. concert in Raleigh, North Carolina,     performing backing vocals on "Radio Free Europe". He then sat behind     the drum kit for a performance of the early R.E.M. song "Permanent     Vacation", marking his first performance with the band since his     retirement.
In 2003, Warner Bros. released the compilation album In Time: The Best of R.E.M. 1988-2003, which featured two new songs, "Bad Day" and "Animal". That same year Berry made a surprise appearance during an R.E.M. concert in Raleigh, North Carolina,     performing backing vocals on "Radio Free Europe". He then sat behind     the drum kit for a performance of the early R.E.M. song "Permanent     Vacation", marking his first performance with the band since his     retirement. R.E.M. released Around the Sun     in 2004. During production of the album in 2002, Stipe said, "[The     album] sounds like it's taking off from the last couple of records  into    unchartered R.E.M. territory. Kind of primitive and howling".  After  the   album's release, Mills said, "I think, honestly, it turned  out a   little  slower than we intended for it to, just in terms of the  overall   speed of  songs." Around the Sun received a mixed critical reception, and peaked at number 13 on the Billboard charts. The first single from the album, "Leaving New York", was a Top 5 hit in the UK. For the record and subsequent tour, the band hired a new full-time touring drummer, Bill Rieflin, who had previously been a member of Ministry. In late 2004 R.E.M. toured with Bruce Springsteen, Jackson Browne, Pearl Jam, Bright Eyes and others on the Vote for Change     tour. Throughout 2005, the band embarked on its first full-length    world  tour since the Monster Tour ten years earlier. During the tour,    R.E.M.  participated in the London event of Live 8.
Accelerate: 2006–present
 EMI,     which owns the I.R.S. catalogue, released a compilation album   covering   R.E.M.'s work during its tenure on the label in 2006 called And I Feel Fine... The Best of the I.R.S. Years 1982-1987. The DVD When the Light Is Mine: The Best of the I.R.S. Years 1982-1987     was released simultaneously. That same month, all four original band     members performed during the ceremony for their induction into the     Georgia Music Hall of Fame. While rehearsing for the ceremony, the  band    recorded a cover of John Lennon's "#9 Dream" for Instant Karma: The Amnesty International Campaign to Save Darfur, a tribute album benefiting Amnesty International.     The song, released as a single for the album and the campaign,    featured  Bill Berry's first studio recording with the band since his    departure  almost a decade earlier. In October 2006, R.E.M. was    nominated for  induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in its    first year of  eligibility. The band was one of five nominees accepted    into the Hall  that year, and the induction ceremony took place in  March   2007 at New York's Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. The group, which was inducted by Pearl Jam lead singer Eddie Vedder, performed four songs with Bill Berry.
EMI,     which owns the I.R.S. catalogue, released a compilation album   covering   R.E.M.'s work during its tenure on the label in 2006 called And I Feel Fine... The Best of the I.R.S. Years 1982-1987. The DVD When the Light Is Mine: The Best of the I.R.S. Years 1982-1987     was released simultaneously. That same month, all four original band     members performed during the ceremony for their induction into the     Georgia Music Hall of Fame. While rehearsing for the ceremony, the  band    recorded a cover of John Lennon's "#9 Dream" for Instant Karma: The Amnesty International Campaign to Save Darfur, a tribute album benefiting Amnesty International.     The song, released as a single for the album and the campaign,    featured  Bill Berry's first studio recording with the band since his    departure  almost a decade earlier. In October 2006, R.E.M. was    nominated for  induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in its    first year of  eligibility. The band was one of five nominees accepted    into the Hall  that year, and the induction ceremony took place in  March   2007 at New York's Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. The group, which was inducted by Pearl Jam lead singer Eddie Vedder, performed four songs with Bill Berry. Work on the group's fourteenth album commenced in early 2007. The band recorded with producer Jacknife Lee in Vancouver and Dublin, where it played five nights in the Olympia Theatre between June 30 and July 5 as part of a "working rehearsal". R.E.M. Live,     the band's first live album (featuring songs from a 2005 Dublin   show),   was released in October 2007. The group followed this effort   with the   2009 live album Live at The Olympia. R.E.M. released Accelerate in early 2008. The album debuted at number two on the BillboardRolling Stone reviewer  charts, and became the band's eighth album to top the British album charts. David Fricke considered Accelerate     an improvement over the band's previous post-Berry albums, calling  it    "one of the best records R.E.M. have ever made." R.E.M. has since     announced that it has completed recording its forthcoming album,  which    will be mixed later this year and is due for release spring  2011. 
Musical style
In     a 1988 interview, Peter Buck described typical R.E.M. songs as,   "Minor   key, mid-tempo, enigmatic, semi-folk-rock-balladish things.   That's  what  everyone thinks and to a certain degree, that's true." All    songwriting  is credited to the entire band, even though individual    members are  sometimes responsible for writing the majority of a    particular song.  Each member is given an equal vote in the songwriting    process; however,  Buck has conceded that Stipe, as the band's   lyricist,  can rarely be  persuaded to follow an idea he does not favor.   Among the  original  line-up, there were divisions of labor in the   songwriting  process: Stipe  would write lyrics and devise melodies,   Buck would edge  the band in new  musical directions, and Mills and   Berry would fine-tune  the  compositions due to their greater musical   experience. 
 Michael     Stipe sings in what R.E.M. biographer David Buckley described as     "wailing, keening, arching vocal figures". Stipe often harmonizes with     Mills in songs; in the chorus for "Stand," Mills and Stipe alternate     singing lyrics, creating a dialogue. Early articles about the band     focused on Stipe's singing style (described as "mumbling" by The Washington Post), which often rendered his lyrics indecipherable. CreemMurmur,     "I still have no idea what these songs are about, because neither me     nor anyone else I know has ever been able to discern R.E.M.'s  lyrics."    Stipe commented in 1984, "It's just the way I sing. If I  tried to    control it, it would be pretty false." Producer Joe Boyd  convinced Stipe    to begin singing more clearly during the recording of  Fables of the Reconstruction.  writer John Morthland wrote in his review of
Michael     Stipe sings in what R.E.M. biographer David Buckley described as     "wailing, keening, arching vocal figures". Stipe often harmonizes with     Mills in songs; in the chorus for "Stand," Mills and Stipe alternate     singing lyrics, creating a dialogue. Early articles about the band     focused on Stipe's singing style (described as "mumbling" by The Washington Post), which often rendered his lyrics indecipherable. CreemMurmur,     "I still have no idea what these songs are about, because neither me     nor anyone else I know has ever been able to discern R.E.M.'s  lyrics."    Stipe commented in 1984, "It's just the way I sing. If I  tried to    control it, it would be pretty false." Producer Joe Boyd  convinced Stipe    to begin singing more clearly during the recording of  Fables of the Reconstruction.  writer John Morthland wrote in his review of Stipe insisted that many of his early lyrics were "nonsense", saying in a 1994 online chat, "You all know there aren't words, per se,     to a lot of the early stuff. I can't even remember them." In truth,     Stipe carefully crafted the lyrics to many early R.E.M. songs. Stipe     explained in 1984 that when he started writing lyrics they were like     "simple pictures", but after a year he grew tired of the approach and     "started experimenting with lyrics that didn't make exact linear  sense,    and it's just gone from there." In the mid-1980s, as Stipe's     pronunciation while singing became clearer, the band decided that its     lyrics should convey ideas on a more literal level. Mills explained,     "After you've made three records and you've written several songs and     they've gotten better and better lyrically the next step would be to     have somebody question you and say, are you saying anything? And  Michael    had the confidence at that point to say yes . . ." Songs like     "Cuyahoga" and "Fall on Me" on Lifes Rich Pageant dealt with such concerns as pollution. Stipe incorporated more politically-oriented concerns into his lyrics on Document and Green.     "Our political activism and the content of the songs was just a     reaction to where we were, and what we were surrounded by, which was     just abject horror," Stipe said later. "In 1987 and '88 there was     nothing to do but be active." Stipe has since explored other lyrical     topics. Automatic for the People dealt with "mortality and dying. Pretty turgid stuff", according to Stipe, while Monster critiqued love and mass culture. 
Peter     Buck's style of playing guitar has been singled out by many as the    most  distinctive aspect of R.E.M.'s music. During the 1980s, Buck's     "economical, arpeggiated, poetic" style reminded British music     journalists of 1960s American folk rock band The Byrds. Buck has stated "[Byrds guitarist] Roger McGuinn was a big influence on me as a guitar player", but said it was Byrds-influenced bands, including Big Star and The Soft Boys, that inspired him more. Comparisons were also made with the guitar playing of Johnny Marr of alternative rock contemporaries The Smiths.     While Buck professed being a fan of the group, he admitted he    initially  criticized the band simply because he was tired of fans    asking him if  he was influenced by Marr, whose band had in fact made    their debut  several years after R.E.M. Buck generally eschews guitar    solos; he  explained in 2002, "I know that when guitarists rip into this    hot solo,  people go nuts, but I don't write songs that suit that,  and  I  am not  interested in that. I can do it if I have to, but I  don't  like  it." Mike  Mills' melodic approach to bass playing is  inspired by Paul McCartney of The Beatles and Chris Squire of Yes;     Mills has said, "I always played a melodic bass, like a piano bass  in    some ways . . . I never wanted to play the traditional locked into   the   kick drum, root note bass work." Mills has more musical training   than   his band mates, which he has said "made it easier to turn   abstract   musical ideas into reality." 
Legacy
R.E.M. was pivotal in the creation and development of the alternative rock genre. Allmusic states, "R.E.M. mark the point when post-punk turned into alternative rock." In the early 1980s, the alternative rock of R.E.M. stood in contrast to the post-punk and New Wave genres that had preceded it. Music journalist Simon Reynolds     noted that the post-punk movement of the late 1970s and early 1980s     "had taken whole swaths of music off the menu", particularly that of   the   1960s, and that "After postpunk's demystification and New Pop's     schematics, it felt liberating to listen to music rooted in mystical  awe    and blissed-out surrender." Reynolds declared R.E.M., a band that     recalled the music of the 1960s with its "plangent guitar chimes and     folk-styled vocals" and who "wistfully and abstractly conjured  visions    and new frontiers for America", one of "the two most  important alt-rock    bands of the day." With the release of Murmur,  R.E.M. had the    most impact musically and commercially of the  developing alternative    genre's early groups, leaving in its wake a  number of jangle pop followers. 
R.E.M.'s early breakthrough success served as an inspiration for other alternative bands. Spin     referred to the "R.E.M. model"—career decisions that R.E.M. made   which   set guidelines for other underground artists to follow in their   own   careers. Spin's Charles Aaron wrote that by 1985, "They'd   shown   how far an underground, punk-inspired rock band could go within   the   industry without whoring out its artistic integrity in any  obvious  way.   They'd figured out how to buy in, not sellout-in other  words,  they'd   achieved the American Bohemian Dream." Steve Wynn of Dream Syndicate said, "They invented a whole new ballgame for all of the other bands to follow whether it was Sonic Youth or the Replacements or Nirvana or Butthole Surfers.     R.E.M. staked the claim. Musically, the bands did different things,    but  R.E.M. was first to show us you can be big and still be cool."     Biographer David Buckley stated that between 1991 and 1994, a period     that saw the band sell an estimated 30 million albums, R.E.M. "asserted     themselves as rivals to U2 for the title of biggest rock band in the world." 
Later alternative bands such as Nirvana, Pavement and Live have drawn inspiration from R.E.M.'s music. "When I was 15 years old in Richmond, Virginia, they were a very important part of my life," Pavement's Bob Nastanovich said, "as they were for all the members of our band." Pavement devoted the song "Unseen Power of the Picket Fence" from the No Alternative compilation (1993) to discussing R.E.M's first two albums at length. Kurt Cobain     of Nirvana was a vocal fan of R.E.M., and had plans to collaborate  on  a   musical project with Stipe before his death in April 1994.  Cobain  told  Rolling Stone  in an interview earlier that year,  "I don’t  know  how that band does  what they do. God, they’re the  greatest.  They’ve  dealt with their  success like saints, and they keep  delivering  great  music." 
Campaigning and activism
Throughout R.E.M.'s career, its members have sought to highlight social and political issues. According to the Los Angeles Times,     R.E.M. is considered to be one of the United States' "most liberal   and   politically correct rock groups." The band's members are "on the   same   page" politically, sharing a liberal and progressive     outlook. Mills has admitted that there is occasionally dissension     between band members on what causes they might support, but  acknowledged    "Out of respect for the people who disagree, those  discussions tend  to   stay in-house, just because we'd rather not let  people know where  the   divisions lie, so people can't exploit them for  their own  purposes." An   example is that in 1990 Buck noted that  Stipe was  involved with People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, but the rest of the band was not. 
R.E.M.     has helped raise funds for environmental, feminist and human rights     causes, and has been involved in campaigns to encourage voter registration. During the Green     tour, Stipe took time during sets to inform the audience about a     variety of pressing socio-political issues. Through the late 1980s and     1990s, the band (particularly Stipe) increasingly used its media     coverage on national television to mention a variety of causes it felt     were important. One example is when the band attended the 1991 MTV Video Music Awards,     during which Stipe wore a half-dozen white shirts emblazoned with     slogans including "rainforest", "love knows no colors", and "handgun     control now". R.E.M. helped raise awareness of Aung San Suu Kyi and human rights violations in Burma, when they worked with the Freedom Campaign and the US Campaign for Burma. Stipe himself ran ads for the 1988 supporting Democratic presidential candidate and Massachusetts governor Michael Dukakis over then-Vice President George H. W. Bush. In 2004, the band participated in the Vote for Change tour that sought to mobilize American voters to support Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry     R.E.M.'s political stance, particularly coming from a wealthy rock    band  under contract to a label owned by a multinational corporation,    has  received criticism from some quarters. Former Q     editor Paul Du Noyer criticized the band's "celebrity liberalism",     saying, "It's an entirely pain-free form of rebellion that they're     adopting. There's no risk involved in it whatsoever, but quite a bit of     shoring up of customer loyalty." 
Since the late 1980s, R.E.M. has been involved in the local politics of its hometown of Athens, Georgia. Buck explained to Sounds     in 1987, "Michael always says think local and act local—we have been     doing a lot of stuff in our town to try and make it a better place."   The   band has often donated funds to local charities and to help   renovate   and preserve historic buildings in the town. R.E.M.'s   political clout   was credited with the narrow election of Athens mayor   Gwen O'Looney   twice in the 1990s. 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment