TS: R.E.M.'s "Life's Rich Pageant" vs "Document"

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I'm as bored of REM thread as the rest of you, but I just threw these two albums on for the first time in aeons and, whaddya know, Life's Rich Pageant was the winner, as expected.

In retrospect it augurs a rather uneven period from which they didn't emerge until the release of Out of Time, but it's one of the very, very few albums where a band writes songs chronicling a nascent political consciousness without choking on its own farts. "I Believe," "These Days," and "What If We Give It Away" seem even more hopeless today than they did in 1986. The lyrics can be ghastly, but the playing is consistently superb, like in "The Flowers of Guatamala," which is one of the best Velvets imitations ever written (Bill does Moe Tucker pitter-patter, Peter does his best Sterling 12-string glisten). And the throwaway cover ("Superman") would be the career highpoint of many a band.

As for Docment...the second side is pretty damn weak. Only "Finest Worksong" and "Exhuming McCarthy" on the A rock/swing as much as, say, "Just A Touch."

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 01:24 (twenty years ago)

Pretty OTM. Lifes Rich Pageant (they didn't use an apostrophe, right?) is also a better sounding record. What was the story w/ Gehman again? Did that want to use him for the album after this, too, but he decided not to do it?

They were a little short of material going into both of these albums, weren't they? Resorting to using two of their old songs on LRP and, as you say, the weakness of side two of Document.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 01:30 (twenty years ago)

Never liked Document. And fuck "It's the End of the World As We Know it".

And Life's Rich Pageant has "Just a Touch" on it, which rules (despite the Patti Smith homage), so it wins.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 01:54 (twenty years ago)

As for Docment...the second side is pretty damn weak

Dude, "King of Birds"!!

Mr. Snrub, Tuesday, 6 December 2005 02:04 (twenty years ago)

Really no contest. Lifes Rich Pageant was arguably the most complete LP they'd ever put together. Shifting from buzz-saw grind ("Begin The Begin") to rousing anthem ("These Days") to Chronic Town post-punk skitter ("Hyena") to minor-key leadbellied elegy ("Swan Swan H") should never look so easy, and never would again, though they'd explore all of those modes at greater length.

The proof: I didn't even have to repeat any of the tracks Alfred namechecked. Plus, is that a triangle on "Cuyahoga"?

Document doesn't suck though. I'll big-up "Disturbance At The Heron House" for badassitude, lyrical silliness, a solo that burns bright and brief, great vocal overdubs, and "Fireplace" for spinning millenial menace from Shaker simplicity.

rogermexico (rogermexico), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 02:07 (twenty years ago)

minor-key leadbellied elegy ("Swan Swan H")

I'd say minor-key leadfooted elegy. Until "So Fast, So Numb," their worst song.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 02:10 (twenty years ago)

Hmmm. This is hard.

LRP has my all-time favorite REM track - "Fall On Me." Document has my second favorite - "Welcome To The Occupation."

I viscerally hate two songs on LRP - "Hyena" and "These Days." I also hate two songs on Document - "Fireplace" and "Oddfellows Local 151."

But I like the LRP drum sound more, so LRP wins on a technicality.

joseph cotten (joseph cotten), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 02:11 (twenty years ago)

I personally consider "I Believe" and "Superman" to be two of the greatest, most rockin' songs this band EVER did, so I vote for Pageant.

Mr. Snrub, Tuesday, 6 December 2005 02:12 (twenty years ago)

I'm gonna go put it on now.

Mr. Snrub, Tuesday, 6 December 2005 02:12 (twenty years ago)

The inaugural post is otm. All I would add is that "Fall On Me" is still my favorite song of theirs.

gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 02:13 (twenty years ago)

Tight race, I think I'd have to give it to Document. LFR has more tracks I don't need to ever hear again - the bombast gets a little echoey (the organ!).

'Twan (miccio), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 02:14 (twenty years ago)

Were people bothered at the time that REM had arena'd up their sound with LFR or did the progression seem natural? I'd guess that compared to Michelob ads they still sounded less than crass.

'Twan (miccio), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 02:18 (twenty years ago)

LRP i mean

'Twan (miccio), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 02:19 (twenty years ago)


LRP is my favorite REM album, hands down.

PeopleFunnyBoy (PeopleFunnyBoy), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 02:25 (twenty years ago)

x-post

there is some mythical construction wherein this album is the breaking point for early fans. but i'm not sure if it's true.

Jeanne (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 02:28 (twenty years ago)

Were people bothered at the time that REM had arena'd up their sound with LFR or did the progression seem natural?

No, because Fables was so damn slow and boring. It was good that they started rocking again.

Mr. Snrub, Tuesday, 6 December 2005 02:29 (twenty years ago)

At this stage in their career Don Gehman gelled with the rest of the band with less fuss than Scott Litt (although I'll admit the theory isn't fair to Gehman since he only worked on them for one album).

TS: "Rain On The Scarecrow" vs "I Believe"

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 02:32 (twenty years ago)

I went through the same thing this summer, remembering why I liked them after a dozen or so years of utter tripe. For years my line was always that Document was my favorite. So maybe it's reflex that I'm still not convinced that there's not more going on there than Lifes, which is just a bit too straight-ahead for me. (Although it was only with Green that I felt like they'd sold out.)

All that said, it was Lifes that I listened to over and over this year. Although "King of Birds" is awful compelling.

Mitya (mitya), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 02:36 (twenty years ago)

but fables is the best album. it's mainly subtle and dark, especially on the almost too perfect 'kahoutek' which they never seemed able to duplicate wiht it's softness and sly ghostly appeal whereas latter albums found them big and obvious. i suppose there is appeal in that but i don't see it any more. of the two i would choose life's rich pageant although i think 'exhuming mccarthy' is the best song on either album.

green is the record that broke the spirit of a lot of "older" fans, but it's actually fantastic and they are crazy.

keyth (keyth), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 02:39 (twenty years ago)

I remember a little predictable grousing in some places about "selling out" in re: LRP. As someone who bought it the week it came out -- if not the day, it depends on whether I was able to convince a parent to drive me to the record store -- I thought the grousing was nerts. I loved the record, played it nonstop for weeks. And I was happily shocked when "Fall on Me" got a little play on the local rock station.

gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 02:40 (twenty years ago)

(But then I like pretty much everything through Automatic to varying degrees, so I'm too much of a fanboy to be a good gauge.)

gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 02:42 (twenty years ago)

REM sold out when they started releasing LPs.

rogermexico (rogermexico), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 02:43 (twenty years ago)

These are two of my favorite REM records, but I think I'm going to have to go with LRP as well, but only by a hair.

Mitya, Green is my favorite! (xxxpost, ;)

Also, I will fight for "End of the World as We Know It" any day of the week!

regular roundups (Dave M), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 02:44 (twenty years ago)

I understand why keyth was disappointed, but I can imagine (with "imagine" being the key word; I was 9 when Fables was released) being mighty bored with REM around 1985. Mellencamp's ownr I-was-born-in-a-small-town album (Scarecrow) was better than Fables.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 02:44 (twenty years ago)

LRP has been my favorite REM record since the day it came out - although I rarely listen to it (or any REM) anymore.. But I think it's an almost perfect alt-pop record, except for Superman, which I can just barely stand.

I've always loved 'Disturbance At The Heron House' .. and yes.. Oddfellows - something perverse about it.. The album has held up better than I might have expected.. I only have patience for about 12 REM songs anymore, and two or three of them are from Document, which is a pretty good record.


(xposts .. Fables .. I'll save that for another thread...)

R.E.M. U.N.K.L.E. (dave225.3), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 02:44 (twenty years ago)

I like pretty much everything through Automatic to varying degrees, so I'm too much of a fanboy to be a good gauge.

No, no, this is totally OTM. It would be even more OTM if you could swap Monster for Out of Time.

rogermexico (rogermexico), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 02:45 (twenty years ago)

Begin the Begin > Finest Worksong (close)
These Days > Welcome To The Occupation
Fall On Me < Exhuming McCarthy
Cuyahoga > Disturbance at the Heron House
Hyena > Strange
Underneath the Bunker (too short to match, but kind of great)
The Flowers of Guatemala < It's the End of the World...
I Believe > The One I Love
What if we give it away < Fireplace
Just a touch >>>> Lightnin' Hopkins
Swan Swan H < King of Birds (close)
Superman > Oddfellows Local 151

And it's LRP 6-4 + whatever credit attaches to Underneath the Bunker. Very gratified to see so much love here for "Just a Touch" -- the one song I'd really have liked to see them play.

LRP and Document were probably my two favorite R.E.M. records in 1991, but "The One I Love" and "End of the World" haven't aged as well as some of the other hitzzzz (though the great ending of EotW sneaks it past Amanita still.) I think Murmur beats both of these.

Guayaquil (eephus!), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 02:58 (twenty years ago)

LRP is odd for me. Not bad odd - I totally love it. Green was the first tape I bought, and my brother had Document, so that was my basis. As I explored R.E.M., I got LRP, and it took me a while - the punkiness of it was off-putting to my young ears.

But with time, I came to see it as what it is: a - may I say this? - tour de force of R.E.M.'s strengths. It's like a showcase of their considerable powers. "Fall on Me" (Michael's favorite, as you may know) is essence of R.E.M., with Mike Mills harmonies and jangling (I'm a rock critic!) guitars. And the rest of the songs already cited showed how R.E.M. could swing from folk to rock and back again.

So yeah, it's an odd little album. It's weird, because its perfection somehow, oddly, makes it forgotten. It seems like it's universally acclaimed, yet rarely discussed. Almost taken for granted.

But that may just be me.

Justin, Tuesday, 6 December 2005 03:22 (twenty years ago)

As a matter of fact, those are two of my least favourite R.E.M. albums. "Life's Rich Pageant" has "Fall On Me" though, which is enough to put it ahead of "Document".

Geir Hongro (GeirHong), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 03:26 (twenty years ago)

LRP wins this by a large margin, though i loved document more at the time of release. and "king of birds" is one of their most beautiful songs.

it augurs a rather uneven period from which they didn't emerge until the release of Out of Time

green is better than both of these and out of time.

TS: "Rain On The Scarecrow" vs "I Believe"

"Rain on the Scarecrow" kicks just about any song's ass up, down and sideways.

my name is john. i reside in chicago. (frankE), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 03:34 (twenty years ago)

"but fables is the best album. it's mainly subtle and dark, especially on the almost too perfect 'kahoutek' which they never seemed able to duplicate wiht it's softness and sly ghostly appeal whereas latter albums found them big and obvious."

I might agree with this. Actually, I think Fables WOULD HAVE been their best album if it had been produced better.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 03:46 (twenty years ago)

"I Believe" is a great vocal performance.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 03:52 (twenty years ago)

It's a great song with an almost-great vocal -- a vocal which isn't as articulate as the surrounding guitar/accordian effects (when Stipe says, "I believe in time as an abstract mumble mumble," you think he's implicitly apologizing for Gehman's black-and-white production by alluding to his earlier mannerisms).

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 03:57 (twenty years ago)

Lifes Rich Pageant pisses over Document from a great height.

Vinegar and Artichoke Hearts (Bimble...), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 03:59 (twenty years ago)

Do you really hear "mumble mumble" in that line? It always sounded pretty clear...

rogermexico (rogermexico), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 04:07 (twenty years ago)

The only word that seems unclear to me is "I believe the holes are ... " Shifting? Slipping?

So Alfred are you saying it's only almost-great because some of the lyrics are opaque? Might have been full-on great if he'd been saying something more explicit?

I saw them do it live a couple of years ago and he was talking about how he never gets to catch his breath in the song and (goofing) fell down when it was over.

Do it sound to anyone like a different take punched in when he gets to the line "Trust in your calling?"

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 04:14 (twenty years ago)

Haha "do it sound." *Does* it sound.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 04:15 (twenty years ago)

I loved, loved, loved Document when I first got it on cassette from a yard sale in around '96 or '97. As it stands, though, it's probably the REM record I pull out the LEAST often now, except maybe Green. (I'm including Reveal here; I never got the last one...) There are some great songs in there - McCarthy, Disturbance, ITEOTWAWKI - in fact, throw in Lightnin' Hopkins, Fireplace, and Oddfellows and it seems like can't-miss material...really The One I Love is the only One I Hate. It all goes south in the listening, though, and I'm going to say it's the production. There's a general tinniness, especially in the outsize drums, that I suppose is typical for the period but REALLY doesn't serve REM's sound at all. They can do big, crisp production (Out of Time) or big, lush production (Automatic) just fine but just giant-sizing everything in the rock quartet doesn't work for them at all.

Lifes Rich Pageant, though I've burned out on bits of it a little, and NEVER liked What If We Give It Away, is just packed with great songs that SOUND great. No contest.

Doctor Casino, Tuesday, 6 December 2005 04:38 (twenty years ago)

The only word that seems unclear to me is "I believe the holes are ... " Shifting? Slipping?

always thought it was "i believe the poles are shifting"

hstencil (hstencil), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 04:39 (twenty years ago)

LRP, definitely. It was my first REM album, acquired on tape at Goodwill for $1. "The Flowers of Guatemala" is so lovely, as is "Fall On Me." I even like "Underneath the Bunker." Document just sounds worse, and is too damn repetitive, in a bad way. "Disturbance at the Heron House" is really nice, though.

clotpoll, Tuesday, 6 December 2005 06:56 (twenty years ago)

Better than both, in my view, is Fables of the Reconstruction, their immediate predecessor, starting with the immortal Feeling Gravity's Pull.

Dr X O'Skeleton, Tuesday, 6 December 2005 10:26 (twenty years ago)

I'd give Lifes Rich Pageant my vote. It's probably my second or third favourite REM album.

Greig (treefell), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 10:35 (twenty years ago)

rogermexico and Tim OTM throughout. Dr. Casino OTM on the sound of Document - it does seem thin at times and the drums boom. I guess it *was* 1987 though.

But yes, LRP is pretty much perfect - great songs, lots of variety, stellar lead and backing vox and a really punchy, garagey sound. No duff tracks, in comparison with the wretched 'It's the End Of The World', and the dull Fireplace and Lightnin' Hopkins. I'm not sure about Exhuming McCarthy either. I hated it at first, but now I think it's a half-written curio, perhaps not bad, but sub-standard definitely. I've always loved Welcome To The Occupation - great vocals on that, especially near the end : 'Listen To Meee, LISTEN to MEEE'.

I also think that Fables might be the best of the lot though.

Dr.C, Tuesday, 6 December 2005 11:22 (twenty years ago)

dammit, i'm at work and now i just want to go home and play these albums. the sweet intoxication of Fall on Me, recalling how i used to sing along to the backing vocals in my car....

Dr XO'Skeleton, Tuesday, 6 December 2005 13:06 (twenty years ago)

So, LRP is the clear winner.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 13:36 (twenty years ago)

fall on me i sone my fave rem tracks. these albums are good but not great
both have 3 brilliant songs, 3 great songs , 3 good songs and not a track i don't / can't listen to . "green" is more consistent.

retrogurl, Tuesday, 6 December 2005 13:52 (twenty years ago)

o Alfred are you saying it's only almost-great because some of the lyrics are opaque? Might have been full-on great if he'd been saying something more explicit?

It's his enunciation that's imprecise.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 13:55 (twenty years ago)

Michael Stipe was much better when you couldn't understand a word he was singing, in my view. That's why Shaking Through from Murmur remains utterly gripping and mysterious, especially the wordless?? middle 8, while Andy Are You Goofin On Elvis is....not

Dr X O'Skeleton, Tuesday, 6 December 2005 14:29 (twenty years ago)

That was true until Fables of the Mumble-Mumble; then it became clear that Mr Stipe needed either speech lessons or emergency surgery to remove the giant kudzu stuck in his throat.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 14:33 (twenty years ago)

maybe these mmphhh and lannnnngennnmph may be misunderstood...

Dr X O'Skeleton, Tuesday, 6 December 2005 14:57 (twenty years ago)

Document, by a million miles.

kornrulez6969 (TCBeing), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 15:20 (twenty years ago)

Document surely. Lifes Rich Pageant is full of whimpy bombast and What if we Give it Away. On Document they finally showed they could be agressive and not sound like cartoons. Anyway, it's always the one I play louder, more often and pay attention to.

dan. (dan.), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 17:47 (twenty years ago)

Which LRP songs do you think sound annoyingly cartoonish?

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 17:56 (twenty years ago)

Heyena, Underneath the Bunker, Flowers of Guatemala and Begin the Begin to some extent. Also the lyrics to I Believe push it annoyingly in that direction.

dan. (dan.), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 18:05 (twenty years ago)

Are R.E.M. the only really significantly Patti Smith Group-inspired band ever? "These Days" is so fucking Patti Smith. And I've heard traces elsewhere.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 18:06 (twenty years ago)

"Disturbance at the Heron House" and "King of Birds" are cartoonish. I'd say "I Believe," "These Days," and even "The Finest Work Songs" are cartoons which transcend themselves, if that makes sense.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 18:09 (twenty years ago)

I think it's a lyric problem. Both albums deal with political themes but the agression and humor of Document just fits better. Pageant seems like a transition record where the lyrics are trying to catch up with the music and a couple of songs come off as silly.

dan. (dan.), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 18:10 (twenty years ago)

"Hyena" was an earlier song. I saw them do it in '84.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 18:21 (twenty years ago)

""Disturbance at the Heron House" and "King of Birds" are cartoonish."

If you really stretch the idea, "Disturbance at the Heron House" has a subtle political message, though, even if it is (I agree) child-like (but not childish). It's somewhat of a cry against mindlessly obeying authority. And it has a nice opening riff from Peter Buck to coat the messsage.

James, Tuesday, 6 December 2005 18:24 (twenty years ago)

I'm also a big R.E.M. fanboy--rogermexico is exactly OTM for me--but anyway I like LRP a lot more. It's my favorite record of theirs, tied with Fables, and between the two of them I think they capture all the best of what the band has to offer. I love Stipe's brawny singing on LRP (although I like the brawniness of his singing on Green more)--the wide-open sound of his voice was the best thing about the band, and ever since Automatic he hasn't done anything like that with his voice. And like many "Fall On Me" is my favorite R.E.M. song. LRP also has a lot of that distinctive R.E.M. goofy humor, like in "Underneath the Bunker"--that went a long way towards making alot of their records (even Green) pretty great.

mrjosh (mrjosh), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 19:07 (twenty years ago)

As for Document--I just can't deal with the lyrics at all. I liked the relatively mumbly indirection of LRP's lyrics way more than the lyrics in a song like "Exhuming McCarthy"--that's really 'cartoony' song, surely.

mrjosh (mrjosh), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 19:08 (twenty years ago)

Is "Exhuming McCarthy" any more clear than songs on LRP, though? "You've seen start and you've seen quit/I always thought of you as quick/Exhuming McCarthy/Meet me at the book burning" - ??

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 19:15 (twenty years ago)

"Exhuming McCarthy" does include the lines:

"You're sharpening stones, walking on coals
To improve your business acumen."

and

"Vested interest united ties, landed gentry rationalize
Look who bought the myth, buy jingo, buy America"

I don't know, I think that's much more clear (and less subtle) than anything on LRP, though I like the song enough, anyway (just the sharp horn-break with the "McCarthy hearings" sound-bite is enough for me to like it).

James, Tuesday, 6 December 2005 19:24 (twenty years ago)

I love "Exhuming McCarthy."

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 19:33 (twenty years ago)

I do like Life's Rich Pageant, but find the songs a bit to fuzzy, leaning towards cartoonism while the writing on Document is just a whole lot sharper and biting. The whole Green Grow the Rushes/Flowers of Guatemala/Welcome to the Occupation path illustrates this very nicely.

dan. (dan.), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 19:38 (twenty years ago)

This is why I love ILM. I get to have my opinions validated by fanboys and geeks. LRP whups Document, even if both are solid. The variety and depth of LRP just isn't matched by Document. (And I love Exhuming McCarthy, which was suggested to me on another forum as evidence that I have no critical credibility with regard to REM. Bollocks! It's a great tune!)

js (honestengine), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 19:56 (twenty years ago)

"The variety and depth of LRP just isn't matched by Document."

Put a gun to my head and demand I choose one over the other, I'd probably go with LRP. That being said, Document heads into some interesting sonic territory on side two, once you pass "The One I Love." I'm thinking of "Fireplace," "Lightning Hopkins" and "Oddfellows 151" in particular. The band cooked up some new studio ideas with percussion and guitar for those, leading to a new style for them, kind of a feeback laden, Mission of Burma/Gang of Four-ish style, with maybe even some Sonic Youth moves dropped in (I'm pretty sure Peter Buck was name dropping SY in the press by 1987).

James, Tuesday, 6 December 2005 20:04 (twenty years ago)

"Fireplace" - OK. The Steve Berlin sax solo on that is great. Not so fond of "Lightnin' Hopkins" and "Oddfellows."

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 20:12 (twenty years ago)

document

kyle (akmonday), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 20:24 (twenty years ago)

i hope this wasn't already mentioned (just scanned through the thread), but what's interesting about LRP is that REM didn't write it, supposedly. They burned out after the Fables touring and almost broke up and this guy (can't remember his name... Jamie Ayers or something...) wrote almost all of LRP with Peter Buck. I don't know if this is completely true, or if maybe he just wrote a couple of tunes. I was aquainted with the guy when I lived in Athens and it was fairly common knowledge that he lived off of LRP royalties.

But, recently a friend gave me a dvd of an rem concert on some german show (the same show that wire dvd is from) and it was in support of fables and they played hyena and fall on me (with improvised verses), so they definitely wrote those themselves.

josecanseco, Tuesday, 6 December 2005 20:59 (twenty years ago)

I have no idea if this story is true or not, but it is true that LRP is heavy with older songs from the band's history. "What if We Give It Away" and "Just a Touch" were songs the band was playing around 1981 or 1982 (possibly with different lyrics, though). "I Believe" was recorded for Fables first (a recording which was not used). "Fall On Me" and "Hyena" were played on the Fables tour (the former definitely with different lyrics). And of course, one song is a cover of a 60's tune.


James, Tuesday, 6 December 2005 21:16 (twenty years ago)

i hope this wasn't already mentioned (just scanned through the thread), but what's interesting about LRP is that REM didn't write it, supposedly. They burned out after the Fables touring and almost broke up and this guy (can't remember his name... Jamie Ayers or something...) wrote almost all of LRP with Peter Buck. I don't know if this is completely true, or if maybe he just wrote a couple of tunes. I was aquainted with the guy when I lived in Athens and it was fairly common knowledge that he lived off of LRP royalties.

whoa! can anyone else substantiate this?

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 21:26 (twenty years ago)

Woah! What a great thread idea! I think I have thought of it before and never started it.

It's tough.

the bellefox, Tuesday, 6 December 2005 21:29 (twenty years ago)

i won't be surprised if everyone thinks i'm full of shit.

it was a secret supposedly to the public, but in athens people were like "oh yeah that guy just lives off of rem royalties because he wrote most of lifes rich pageant". and these were mutual friends saying this. i never knew him well enough to hear it from his mouth, but that's what his friends said. i remember thinking at the time it was weird that someone could just live off of songwriting royalties but now that i know more about bizzzzzzzzzzz it makes sense.

josecanseco, Tuesday, 6 December 2005 21:53 (twenty years ago)

It sounds like an urban legend.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 22:39 (twenty years ago)

There's a J. Ayers credited on Old Man Kensey and Windout. Nothing for LRP though.

dan. (dan.), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 22:42 (twenty years ago)

When Document came out, there was an interview with Mills in the Houston Post. He talked a bit about recording LRP in Indiana. Mills didn't make any accusations, but he said suggested that it was strange that R.E.M. used accordian on LRP, and next year Mellencamp's Lonesome Jubilee has accordian busting out all over the place. I think he mentioned Mellencamp stopping by the studio while they were there. Can't remember if a Houston Chronicle writer did the interview or not.

el maury, Tuesday, 6 December 2005 22:50 (twenty years ago)

It was a pump organ.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 22:52 (twenty years ago)

(on LRP, anyway)

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 22:52 (twenty years ago)

Well, at the time Don Gehman was Mellencamp's producer. And Bill Berry is mixed to sound an awful lot like Kenny Aronof on LRP, which might be why I love the album so much.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 22:54 (twenty years ago)

and mellencamp owned the studio, i believe.

i had a friend who went to iu at the time, she told a funny story about stipe showing up at hoosier parties.

hstencil (hstencil), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 22:56 (twenty years ago)

xpost re: j ayers credited to two songs from fables.

interesting. i wonder if that's all it was then.

josecanseco, Tuesday, 6 December 2005 22:58 (twenty years ago)

Were people bothered at the time that REM had arena'd up their sound with LFR or did the progression seem natural?

No, because Fables was so damn slow and boring. It was good that they started rocking again.

LRP, no contest. I remember thinking at the time that, if not as mumbly as Murmur-but how could it be?- it was a bigger and better return to form.

k/l (Ken L), Wednesday, 7 December 2005 14:48 (twenty years ago)

xpost: Aww, Lightnin' Hopkins is a solid track, and I like Oddfellows a lot. At least give it credit for being another direction for REM.

js (honestengine), Wednesday, 7 December 2005 14:51 (twenty years ago)

three months pass...
Today's the day when we revive old R.E.M. threads (is it Mike Mills' b-day or something??)

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 14 March 2006 17:40 (twenty years ago)

Nah, I'm bored at work (incoming calls) and in a bit of an REM mood, so it's all my fault.

LRP for me. Begin The Begin and These Days make politically conscious arena rock sound like a good idea. Cuyahoga was magnificent when they played it on the Up tour. I Believe is ace and Fall On Me possibly my fave REM song. The goofy stuff is great too. Anyone who doesn't like Superman is a humourless curmudgeon. I remember getting the reissue of Horses with the My Generation cover and had one of those euraka moments with the "I'm so young, I'm so goddam young" bit.

Document's a good album, but the production dates it. Still, some interesting G04 moves on there, as mentioned xpost. I'm a bit bored with The One I Love to be honest, but End Of The World is great fun (again, what sort of humourless curmudgeon do you have to be to hate this?).

LRP has infinitely better cover art too. Bill Berry's monobrow in a lo-fi collage!

stew!, Tuesday, 14 March 2006 19:26 (twenty years ago)

" I'm a bit bored with The One I Love"

So was I, for a long time, until I first listened to the live acoustic version, which was the b-side of the ITEOTWAWKI single. (You can find it on one of the "IRS Vintage Years" reissues as a bonus track - that's where I heard it). It's not radically different, but it has a strong folk-country sound which gives the song a new flavor. In a couple of interviews I've read over the years, Peter Buck as described the song as an Appalachian folk ballad, or something similar. I had no idea what he meant until I heard the b-side version.

James, Tuesday, 14 March 2006 19:32 (twenty years ago)

That's the edition I've got. You're right, it's a good version. It's a fine song, but I think I've just heard it a bit too often.

stew!, Tuesday, 14 March 2006 19:46 (twenty years ago)

LRP is where they rock out, man! Preemo.

Document had "King of Birds" and a really grand set of acoustic B-sides, but not near the record that LRP is.

christoff (christoff), Wednesday, 15 March 2006 15:48 (twenty years ago)

There really is something subpar about Document, and it just doesn't sound good... but it contains "The One I Love" so TEH WINNRE

Aaron A, Wednesday, 15 March 2006 16:20 (twenty years ago)

I'm with the Fables supporters, it's my favorite album. Maybe I lean towards the underdog, but I felt it was the last time R.E.M. seemed remotely interesting and enigmatic. It was a dark record that took some gnawing before you could sink your teeth into it. Whereas LRP bursts out of the gate like a showpony, all glossy and booming with that annoying 80s arena sound. It's the first time I could discern most of Stipes' lyrics, and they were painfully awkward. The sound was just too bright and ordinary. They sounded less like R.E.M. and more like, say, The Call. Remember them? A few great songs for sure, but that's when R.E.M. lost their allure for me. I was still excited when Document came out. An interview at the time had Buck saying he really hoped to be able to pop out an all-time classic on the level of Horses or VU & Nico. Or if not a "classic," at least a great rock record. It sounded like Document was their bid for immortality. It seemed promising at first, full of piss and wit and vinegar and anger. But it just drags way too much by the end. I'm always relieved when it's over, not amazed and left wanting more. Who knew at the time that their artistic failure/decline would lead them to become one of the most massively popular MOR bands of the 90s? More power to 'em.

Fastnbulbous (Fastnbulbous), Thursday, 16 March 2006 07:04 (twenty years ago)

count me with the old-timers who lost interest in rem with these 2 albums (did pay a little attention around out of time/automatic before completely writing them off). i liked the murk and mystery of the first 3, even the difficult Fables. once they went for a more "friendly"? sound they were just another run-of-the mill 80s rock band (i had moved on to here TS: Double Nickels on the Dime vs. Zen Arcade)

timmy tannin (pompous), Thursday, 16 March 2006 07:26 (twenty years ago)

xpost I like how they lose their allure and then the next year you're still excited for their next record. On one level it sounds like you just can't get your REM fan saga story straight, but on another level, I feel like I've felt this way about REM for the last like three albums.

Doctor Casino (Doctor Casino), Thursday, 16 March 2006 07:43 (twenty years ago)

I couldn't help but root for them to not be boring.

Fastnbulbous (Fastnbulbous), Thursday, 16 March 2006 18:18 (twenty years ago)

Fables was when I first realized how boring they could be. Then Up and Reveal showed how really boring they could be.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn (Alfred Soto), Thursday, 16 March 2006 18:21 (twenty years ago)

six months pass...
"Begin the Begin" opens the new comp. Vindication!

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn (Alfred Soto), Wednesday, 4 October 2006 17:21 (nineteen years ago)

I still love this thread, but I'm puzzled by what needed vindicatin' given that it's been LRP by landslide since post 1.

Nonetheless...

rogermexico (rogermexico), Wednesday, 4 October 2006 19:09 (nineteen years ago)

http://www.jccomics.com/Vindicator.jpg

YOU HAVE BEEN VINDICATED

rogermexico (rogermexico), Wednesday, 4 October 2006 19:10 (nineteen years ago)

one year passes...

LET'S BEGIN AGAIN

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 03:29 (eighteen years ago)

birdie in the hand

kamerad, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 03:45 (eighteen years ago)

As for Docment...the second side is pretty damn weak. Only "Finest Worksong" and "Exhuming McCarthy" on the A rock/swing as much as, say, "Just A Touch."

Oh, that's too harsh. I like Side Two of Document. Fireplace and King Of Birds especially have a weird, hypnotic vibe. And, from Side One, Welcome To The Occupation, Exhuming McCarthy, and Disturbance At The Heron House are pretty powerful political screeds, for a rock band.

Worst thing about Document to me is that it's the first R.E.M. disc that really abandons their Southern Gothic rock sound. That sound wasn't too prominent on Life's Rich Pageant, but it's there. Frankly, to the extent that even small elements of that sound make it onto Document, they do so on Side Two (which is probably why it's the side I prefer on the disc).

Daniel, Esq., Tuesday, 5 February 2008 03:54 (eighteen years ago)

I've embarrassed myself elsewhere on ILM repping for side 2 of Document and won't reprise that here. But I'll take side 2 over side 1 of it, and even over side 2 of LRP. The songs on side 2 of Document are still so mysterious to me, and I think their lack of straightforwardness confounds the standard account that REM was "selling out" at that time. Those songs are just as murky as those on Murmur.

Euler, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 03:58 (eighteen years ago)

billboard's preview of the new album mentions '...pageant' as a reference point. it's less than 35 minutes long too!

pisces, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 04:05 (eighteen years ago)

I've been let down by those comparisons before ("New Adventures in Hi-Fi is a throwback to the early R.E.M. sound!"). I ain't hopeful.

Daniel, Esq., Tuesday, 5 February 2008 04:14 (eighteen years ago)

(And mind you, I like New Adventures a lot, but there's no comparison to their early stuff. . . .).

Daniel, Esq., Tuesday, 5 February 2008 04:15 (eighteen years ago)

shorter, faster and louder is all well and good, but I dunno if recent songs would suddenly become great if they were shorter faster and louder.

da croupier, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 04:16 (eighteen years ago)

i have both these albums on one CD-R now! I used to own them on cassette. Still probably would go with Document.

da croupier, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 04:17 (eighteen years ago)

The second side of Document really feels "of a piece" to me in a way that no other sections of these records do (unless you count "Begin the Begin" and "These Days" as a section.)

"The insurgency began and we missed it" EERILY PROPHETIC SHOCKAH.

Guayaquil (eephus!), Tuesday, 5 February 2008 04:18 (eighteen years ago)

Have any of the songs from the new record been heard, e.g. live or leaked?

Guayaquil (eephus!), Tuesday, 5 February 2008 04:19 (eighteen years ago)

I think one is streaming on R.E.M.'s Home Page.

Daniel, Esq., Tuesday, 5 February 2008 04:20 (eighteen years ago)

there was some song that someone put the youtube link on ilx it had a riff worthy of side two of New Adventures and Michael was standing sideways, reading the lyrics from a laptop. I stopped the video when I saw him visibly scrolling down.

Does he have a memory disorder? Is there a reason he's incapable of memorizing songs he's written?

da croupier, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 04:21 (eighteen years ago)

He's distracted.

Daniel, Esq., Tuesday, 5 February 2008 04:24 (eighteen years ago)

I began listening to live versions of a couple of the new songs on Hype Machine. Couldn't even get through them. Again, I'm not hopeful for the new disc.

Daniel, Esq., Tuesday, 5 February 2008 04:25 (eighteen years ago)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cRVxOmu87MA

pisces, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 04:26 (eighteen years ago)

THERE it is, that desperate thing.

da croupier, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 04:28 (eighteen years ago)

It's been a bad decade, please don't take a youtube.

da croupier, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 04:29 (eighteen years ago)

there was a better one shot close-up where stipey looks very very clearly like he'd just got off the old white train before taking the stage but it appears to have been taken down wouldn't ya know it.

pisces, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 04:34 (eighteen years ago)

I think "Superman" is their absolute high-water mark. So Life's Rich Pageant it is.

Myonga Vön Bontee, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 07:21 (eighteen years ago)

I've been let down by those comparisons before ("New Adventures in Hi-Fi is a throwback to the early R.E.M. sound!").

Congratulations to REM on reaching the Best Album Since Blood On The Tracks stage of their career (aka winning at rock'n'roll).

rogermexico., Tuesday, 5 February 2008 18:23 (eighteen years ago)

Yes! Let their Dylan-esqe late stage career revival begin now.

Daniel, Esq., Tuesday, 5 February 2008 18:28 (eighteen years ago)

YIKES, that new song is truly awful.

Z S, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 18:31 (eighteen years ago)

Congratulations to REM on reaching the Best Album Since Blood On The Tracks stage of their career (aka winning at rock'n'roll).

I say they've reached their "Shaquelle O'Neal 2008" stage of their career (aka anything decent we get from them at this point is a bonus).

Daniel, Esq., Tuesday, 5 February 2008 18:46 (eighteen years ago)

That was true until Fables of the Mumble-Mumble; then it became clear that Mr Stipe needed either speech lessons or emergency surgery to remove the giant kudzu stuck in his throat.

It was the label. IRS figured the only thing keeping R.E.M. from mainstream success was Stipe's mumbling, so they insisted he start enunciating.

Sara Sara Sara, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 20:43 (eighteen years ago)

major label correct non-shockah

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 20:57 (eighteen years ago)

S'gotta be LRP - classic mid-early-late vintage material! The one thing i can add about the Document-era releases is that they finally starting putting out those live acoustic versions of tunes like "The One I Love" that exposes the seething underbellied truth of an otherwise sing-songy Top 40 hit. These proto-Unplugged tracks might reference the Dylan-esque penchant for reinterpretation, but my hindsight sees a crew running out of spunk.

Daniel Esq notes the loss of the "Southern Gothic rock sound" and while i don't necessarily identify with the terminology, the Farmer's Almanac brand of black magic that they wielded became only a waning influence after they began mainlining their sound & image. Moving to the city (if only in sprit) was certainly a measure of it's time and maybe even a fashionable construct - nonetheless, it was most certainly a world away from the backwoods shacks and headlight-lit two-tracks that inspired their inception. Too bad, tracks like "King of Birds" packs the full weight of their skill and hints at something that could have been a truly foreboding and ominous (if not completely inaccessible) force.

christoff, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 21:14 (eighteen years ago)

For whatever reason, Document is the one I listened to least of everything through Monster. I mostly know it from it just playing in the background at parties in college (I wish I had gone to better parties), even though I've had it for a long time. So Lifes Rich by a long ways.

Mark Rich@rdson, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 21:59 (eighteen years ago)

They played something from Document on the radio today and I just kinda rolled my eyes "oh man they were so past their prime by then". Lifes Rich Pageant is still a fantastic album, but I admit the production hasn't aged very well.

I'm sure there's a couple of decent tunes on Document, at least that's the way I recall it, but I really feel like to sit through that entire record again would be a waste of my time.

Bimble, Wednesday, 6 February 2008 04:51 (eighteen years ago)

I say they've reached their "Shaquelle O'Neal 2008" stage of their career (aka anything decent we get from them at this point is a bonus).

AND WE'RE TRADING O'NEAL! If only R.E.M. could be traded for something more vital, as well.

Daniel, Esq., Wednesday, 6 February 2008 06:57 (eighteen years ago)

ten years pass...

Document was always my least favorite of the classik R.E.M. albums -- it's the only one I never even bothered to buy on CD, even at the height of my high-school fandom (I just made do with the cassette) -- but I've found myself compelled to listen to it lately. It sounds oddly good to me now, fsr. (I still think there are some whiffs on side 2; I'm not into R.E.M. gettin' funk-ay, etc.)

i’m still stanning (morrisp), Wednesday, 25 July 2018 17:25 (seven years ago)

I like it better now than I did at the peak of my R.E.M. fandom. Sure, it's frontloaded and drops in quality a bit after 'The One I Love', but I'll take things like 'Fireplace' over lesser tracks from the post-Berry albums.

Le Baton Rose (Turrican), Wednesday, 25 July 2018 17:33 (seven years ago)

I'd take any other 80s R.E.M. album over Life's Rich Pageant. Easily the "worst" of their classic run.

(V) (°,,,,°) (V) (Austin), Wednesday, 25 July 2018 17:35 (seven years ago)

Yeah I don't think "LRP" has aged particularly well... Neither has "Fables," IMO (though it has a few key trax).

i’m still stanning (morrisp), Wednesday, 25 July 2018 17:37 (seven years ago)

Fables is my go-to R.E.M. album. Far and away the best thing they ever did.

(V) (°,,,,°) (V) (Austin), Wednesday, 25 July 2018 17:43 (seven years ago)

!

i’m still stanning (morrisp), Wednesday, 25 July 2018 17:44 (seven years ago)

I've went in the other direction with Lifes Rich Pageant in that I don't feel the need to listen to it these days, but that's because I've played the shit out of it. Lifes Rich Pageant is frontloaded too, but manages to not make the drop-off as obvious. The only track that I don't have much time for on it is 'What If We Give It Away?' ('Underneath the Bunker' doesn't count!) ...

Le Baton Rose (Turrican), Wednesday, 25 July 2018 17:46 (seven years ago)

New Adventures in Hi-Fi is the best album they ever made!

Le Baton Rose (Turrican), Wednesday, 25 July 2018 17:46 (seven years ago)

While it is a very good album, no.

(V) (°,,,,°) (V) (Austin), Wednesday, 25 July 2018 17:49 (seven years ago)

Yes.

Le Baton Rose (Turrican), Wednesday, 25 July 2018 17:53 (seven years ago)

IRS run

"chronic town"
fables
murmur
pageant
reckoning
document

reggie (qualmsley), Wednesday, 25 July 2018 17:54 (seven years ago)

Reckoning near the bottom? Interesting - that's probably my favourite of all the IRS albums. Chronic Town still sounds incredibly fresh to my ears too.

Le Baton Rose (Turrican), Wednesday, 25 July 2018 17:59 (seven years ago)

Surprised you guys rate Fables so highly... It sounds really uneven to me now.

i’m still stanning (morrisp), Wednesday, 25 July 2018 18:02 (seven years ago)

30+ years later I suppose it doesn't matter so much, but I distinctly remember there being a half-baked feel at the time with 2 key tracks (Hyena and Just a Touch) regularly appearing in setlists, an instrumental, cover, etc.
doesn't really matter much now, the album coheres in a way that didn't seem as evident upon release.

probably worth noting to the comment above about how much LRP gave way to the sellout chorus: Dead Letter Office was widely loved at the time and I think part of that may have been the self-deprecating tone.

still, I'm in the vocal minority of fans that thinks Side 2 of Document is one of the weirdest, best and most pure (last?) distillations of the IRS-era band.

campreverb, Wednesday, 25 July 2018 18:05 (seven years ago)

xp (I do think "Life and How to Live" it is one of their greatest/underappreciated tracks)

i’m still stanning (morrisp), Wednesday, 25 July 2018 18:06 (seven years ago)

Surprised you guys rate Fables so highly... It sounds really uneven to me now.

― i’m still stanning (morrisp)

Their worst of the first decade, i.e. mushiest and least distinguished

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 25 July 2018 18:06 (seven years ago)

I like Fables... a lot, but it's nowhere near my Top 5 R.E.M. albums overall.

Le Baton Rose (Turrican), Wednesday, 25 July 2018 18:08 (seven years ago)

No album that leads off with 'Feeling Gravity's Pull' can justifiably be classified as the "least distinguished" of a band's output.

(V) (°,,,,°) (V) (Austin), Wednesday, 25 July 2018 18:14 (seven years ago)

still, I'm in the vocal minority of fans that thinks Side 2 of Document is one of the weirdest, best and most pure (last?) distillations of the IRS-era band

i respect what you're saying but to me green (major label debut notwithstanding) is the last stand of that band, with callbacks and everything ("i can turn you inside out" <-- "finest worksong"), and "strange" is one of my least favorite of their covers (except for the "michael's nervous and the lights are bright" update)

reggie (qualmsley), Wednesday, 25 July 2018 18:17 (seven years ago)

No album that leads off with 'Feeling Gravity's Pull' can justifiably be classified as the "least distinguished" of a band's output.

― (V) (°,,,,°) (V) (Austin)

Depends what you think of a man who sings "It's a Man Ray kind of sky" srsly

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 25 July 2018 18:21 (seven years ago)

The opening line of that song is v good, tho

i’m still stanning (morrisp), Wednesday, 25 July 2018 18:25 (seven years ago)

Depends what you think of a man who sings "It's a Man Ray kind of sky" srsly

And yet, you remembered it.

I can't remember any of the lyrics from Life's Rich Pageant.

(V) (°,,,,°) (V) (Austin), Wednesday, 25 July 2018 18:43 (seven years ago)

but I'll take things like 'Fireplace' over lesser tracks

lol i will definitely be belting out "fireplace!" from here on out when listening to this album in the car.

andrew m., Wednesday, 25 July 2018 18:49 (seven years ago)

And yet, you remembered it.

So? I remember Dubya speeches and the names of old boyfriends too.

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 25 July 2018 18:58 (seven years ago)

but I'll take things like 'Fireplace' over lesser tracks

lol i will definitely be belting out "fireplace!" from here on out when listening to this album in the car.

my memory failed me and turns out i'm not funny at all and am totally wrong. i'm turning in my True Distiple card and bowing out.

andrew m., Wednesday, 25 July 2018 19:10 (seven years ago)

Austin, gah. Fall on Me, Swan Swan Hummingbird, Superman... and nothing memorable in there, lyrically speaking? Okay.

Personally I love all these records like children; I'm not gonna be tempted to take any sides any time soon. Document, Fables, Pageant, Murmur, Reckoning: all of a piece for me and all necessary. Then a transitional mid-period. not sure whether Green or Out of Time is the correct hinge point, but Automatic is definitely mid. Then what I would classify as their late career (Up and beyond) when I lose the plot and mostly stop caring.

nonsensei (Ye Mad Puffin), Wednesday, 25 July 2018 19:12 (seven years ago)

Yeah they're all quite rad in their own ways though I think the sonic chemistry of the Easter/Dixon records they did at Reflection (Murmur and Reckoning) was stratospheric.

timellison, Wednesday, 25 July 2018 19:39 (seven years ago)

I like Man Ray kind of sky Alfred...

timellison, Wednesday, 25 July 2018 19:40 (seven years ago)

That song was one of the ones where you knew that even if the production on their records was changing, they were still growing and getting better. They were like completely different on that tour!

timellison, Wednesday, 25 July 2018 19:41 (seven years ago)

turning in my True Distiple card

lol Andrew

timellison, Wednesday, 25 July 2018 19:43 (seven years ago)

Document" is my least fsvorite and "Pageant" my most favorite of the IRS years. But in reality my most played REM over the last decade or so is "Dead Letter Office"! Such fun, that one...

Gerald McBoing-Boing, Thursday, 26 July 2018 00:15 (seven years ago)

Fables is my favorite REM LP too.

"Man Ray kind of sky" may be corny, but it just sounds good and Stipe seemed to value that over anything

antisocal (rip van wanko), Thursday, 26 July 2018 00:34 (seven years ago)

still, I'm in the vocal minority of fans that thinks Side 2 of Document is one of the weirdest, best and most pure (last?) distillations of the IRS-era band

idk about best/pure, but i like it a lot and it is indeed pretty weird

mookieproof, Thursday, 26 July 2018 00:38 (seven years ago)

With hindsight I dont really understand why they needed to release an album every year?

Capitalising on momentum is one thing but not quite the same when you're short of original material

Master of Treacle, Thursday, 26 July 2018 00:47 (seven years ago)

the custody battle over these albums is going to be complicated. a lot of claims out there.

i love LRP. there are plenty of lyrical moments that grab me on it, and plenty to beguile, as well. within the first few seconds of the album, he's already referencing the apostrophe-less title of the album, sort of, and cole porter's 'begin the beguine'

Karl Malone, Thursday, 26 July 2018 00:51 (seven years ago)

Austin, gah. Fall on Me, Swan Swan Hummingbird, Superman... and nothing memorable in there, lyrically speaking? Okay.

fuckin "cuyahoga" and "these days" too

princess of hell (BradNelson), Thursday, 26 July 2018 01:05 (seven years ago)

when you're short of original material

not seeing it

mookieproof, Thursday, 26 July 2018 01:07 (seven years ago)

It is remarkable how they released all those classic albums, one per year, from ‘83 – ‘88.

i’m still stanning (morrisp), Thursday, 26 July 2018 01:14 (seven years ago)

Sax solo on “Fireplace” is so good.

timellison, Thursday, 26 July 2018 01:35 (seven years ago)

Document is a slight dip on the preceding 4 for me, and Fables is probly still my default favourite, but on the whole i think they're all great records that have a couple of duff tracks each maybe but people can't agree on which tracks those are

the Joao looked at Jonny (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 26 July 2018 01:58 (seven years ago)

Murmur will always be my favourite R.E.M. album, hearing it after only knowing Automatic + Monster + various hits was such a revelation to me but LRP is a close second and probably the one I listen to the most. Lyric-wise it's definitely one of their most memorable for me (caveat: I'm not a huge lyrics person), lines like "I believe in coyotes and time as an abstract" pop into my head a lot. But yeah really none of the IRS records are less than great.

Gavin, Leeds, Thursday, 26 July 2018 10:09 (seven years ago)

one year passes...

a mean idea to call my own
a hundred million birds fly away

reggie (qualmsley), Tuesday, 5 November 2019 21:41 (six years ago)

a meager thing, recognition

reggie (qualmsley), Tuesday, 5 November 2019 22:10 (six years ago)

I miss the days when there were so many R.E.M. threads we were bored of them.

Guayaquil (eephus!), Tuesday, 5 November 2019 22:10 (six years ago)

eight months pass...

fly to carry each his burden

reggie (qualmsley), Tuesday, 14 July 2020 23:03 (five years ago)

that's great, it starts with

FAC 179 (morrisp), Tuesday, 14 July 2020 23:05 (five years ago)

happy throngs, take this joy wherever
wherever the tax returns are

mookieproof, Tuesday, 14 July 2020 23:07 (five years ago)

Offering the educated
Primitive and loyal

Mule, Wednesday, 15 July 2020 04:58 (five years ago)

Our father's father's father tried
Erased the parts he didn't like

the body of a spider... (scampering alpaca), Wednesday, 15 July 2020 13:10 (five years ago)

four months pass...

What the heck is going on at the beginning of “Superman”?

Robert Gotopieces (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 5 December 2020 21:02 (five years ago)

The scratchy spoken intro is attributed to a Japanese pull-string Godzilla doll.[3] Translated loosely from the Japanese, it says, "This is a special news report. Godzilla has been sighted in Tokyo Bay. The attack on it by the Self-Defense Force has been useless. He is heading towards the city. Aaaaaaaaagh...."

wet tip hen ax (egg drop mix) (morrisp), Saturday, 5 December 2020 21:15 (five years ago)

Oh yeah, I do hear the word “Gojira” now

Robert Gotopieces (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 5 December 2020 22:18 (five years ago)

I think 'Disturbance At The Heron House' might be one of his finest vocal melodies, I often wonder if it was difficult to replicate in a live setting because he always used a slightly lower, less vaulting melody.

Maresn3st, Sunday, 6 December 2020 09:26 (five years ago)

Not my favourite R.E.M. era. Picking "Life's Right Pageant" because "Fall On Me".

The GeirBot (Geir Hongro), Sunday, 6 December 2020 22:58 (five years ago)

Life's Rich Pageant is gorgeous, but I dunno it was a more vulnerable time for me and I can't listen to it. At the time I liked it more, but now that I'm a mean crusty old fart, I prefer Document 'cos it's louder and darker.

Totally Insane Police State, 90210 (I M Losted), Monday, 7 December 2020 12:15 (five years ago)

Fables > LRP > Document

I think. I love it all but Document seems a little... icy?

that is how it crumbles cookiewise (Ye Mad Puffin), Monday, 7 December 2020 15:34 (five years ago)

Icy? It's literally the one they told you to "File Under Fire"!

Guayaquil (eephus!), Monday, 7 December 2020 16:40 (five years ago)

document has a hell of a side two cf. "fireplace". i prob prefer it to both fables and lrp at this point, it's so endearingly odd and transitional

mellon collie and the infinite bradness (BradNelson), Monday, 7 December 2020 16:42 (five years ago)

I was actually just listening to Document straight through for the first time in a couple of years and "fire" is the right word for it. "Finest Worksong" sounds to me like a band that's just absolutely GOING for it, straining to throw every possible sound at the problem.

Guayaquil (eephus!), Monday, 7 December 2020 16:43 (five years ago)

also forever thankful to r.e.m. for introducing me to wire. great cover too

mellon collie and the infinite bradness (BradNelson), Monday, 7 December 2020 16:44 (five years ago)

That cover is probably the best representation in their official recorded output of the insanely great house party band they were in 1980-81

Guayaquil (eephus!), Monday, 7 December 2020 16:47 (five years ago)

good point! you can hear a twisted version of that party on "Lightnin' Hopkins" too.

side 2 of Document is brittle spooky forest music, like let's rub ourselves in mud and run through the jungle, way past the Heron House

All cars are bad (Euler), Monday, 7 December 2020 17:00 (five years ago)

OTM Brad. I think side 2 of Document is a career highlight. If LRP was a tentative exploration of how they could pursue a more direct sound and remain eccentric, Document is a band fully at home in it's new sound, finding out it's still a pretty weird place anyway.

campreverb, Monday, 7 December 2020 21:15 (five years ago)

I adore Document.

sctttnnnt (pgwp), Tuesday, 8 December 2020 00:51 (five years ago)

three years pass...

you're not yet young
there's time to teach

reggie (qualmsley), Wednesday, 28 February 2024 22:07 (two years ago)

Swan Swan H < King of Birds (close)

I no longer thing this is close, King of Birds by a wide margin (but both are great)

Guayaquil (eephus!), Wednesday, 28 February 2024 22:58 (two years ago)

one year passes...

I've always been and remain a Lifes Rich Pageant fan, I think it's their best album. But I also think I've undervalued Document, it's really pretty good. Listening to it now. It's another one of their murkier albums, like Fables. But was also their actual commercial breakout, their first platinum album and first top 10 album and single.

paper plans (tipsy mothra), Sunday, 25 January 2026 03:45 (four months ago)

Aside from the hits, Document is a pretty weird album. It's good, but LRP was the album that pulled me into REM. Swan Swan H and Superman being on the same tape blew me away.

Cow_Art, Sunday, 25 January 2026 03:54 (four months ago)

Document came out my freshman year of college, I'm sure I bought it the day it was released. That tour was the first time I saw them, which was great. I was at the time kind of disappointed in the album, it definitely didn't grab me like LRP had. But on its own merits, it has a lot of good songs and also yeah just a generally weird and kind of dark vibe.

paper plans (tipsy mothra), Sunday, 25 January 2026 04:06 (four months ago)

despite one or two shiny pop hits each most of their middle period albums have weird and dark vibes!

mookieproof, Sunday, 25 January 2026 04:09 (four months ago)

Speaking of weird dark vibes, I never understood the lack of enthusiasm for Fables. Sometimes it’s my favorite.

Cow_Art, Sunday, 25 January 2026 04:24 (four months ago)

I don’t like the mix or guitar parts on Fables, me. Murmur and Reckoning and Pageant are my big ones— but I never “got” Green or Out Of Time— then on Automatic and Hi-Fi, Stipe started REALLY singing and I love it. Special shout to the second half of Accelerate, a ray of light in their long sundown

ron zertnert (flamboyant goon tie included), Sunday, 25 January 2026 04:33 (four months ago)

LRP blows Document out of the water. I have tried so many times with Document but it never clicks. The songs are fine but I feel like it’s the first album where the production got so airy and clear that it demands a different style of songwriting, which doesn’t really start to kick in until parts of Green and then fully on OOT.

I do like King of Birds a lot though

Lavator Shemmelpennick, Sunday, 25 January 2026 04:47 (four months ago)

fgti i think we’re are similar REM fans, at least i agree with just about everything you just wrote although I rate Fables a bit more

Lavator Shemmelpennick, Sunday, 25 January 2026 04:47 (four months ago)

god I love Fireplace

Gentler Death Squads Please (Boring, Maryland), Sunday, 25 January 2026 04:59 (four months ago)

Great song, I’d probably love it if it were produced like either the era before or after this one

Lavator Shemmelpennick, Sunday, 25 January 2026 05:10 (four months ago)

fgti perfectly otm on this topic

assert (matttkkkk), Sunday, 25 January 2026 07:35 (four months ago)

Finest Worksong is a fucking jam

Heez, Sunday, 25 January 2026 09:30 (four months ago)

I was too young for the early stuff. My brother, who was seven years older, was obsessed with them, but all the singles from that era kind of annoyed me.

I started digging through the early recently and made an “early REM” playlist and “Country Geedback” was probably the biggest revelation.

AFTP came out when I was in middle school and I loved it. It was my only REM album. I later ate at Weaver D’s once a week for like 2 years straight and got to hear “automatic!” every time my food was ready.

Heez, Sunday, 25 January 2026 09:37 (four months ago)

Feedback

Heez, Sunday, 25 January 2026 09:37 (four months ago)

It's interesting how much my taste was affected by economics (my tape-buying budget) as well as happenstance.

In those days I could afford a collection (Eponymous for example) but jot necessarily every previous record that fed it. Owning every full album was out of the question; one had to choose.

In those instances you would miss out on album tracks that had not been chosen for the collection, giving a distorted lens.

(This is also shaped by what was available in stores and also what one could copy from friends.)

Long way of saying I had Fables, LRP, Greeen, and some other odds and ends* But a full listening of Document didn't reach my ears until later. And Murmur and DLO still later.

* "Losing my Religion" was a muthaflippin CASSINGLE, yo.

calmer chameleon (Ye Mad Puffin), Sunday, 25 January 2026 11:00 (four months ago)

oh yeah, that resonates. i had Out of Time on cassette, then Automatic as one of the first 20 or 30 CDs I ever bought. Somewhere around there I went back and got Eponymous but didn't actually hear the full IRS albums until years later.

Lavator Shemmelpennick, Sunday, 25 January 2026 11:21 (four months ago)

My cassette of Automatic had some kind of tape issue, and it had this soft thump every few seconds - although strangely it always kept in time with the songs. Obviously it wasn't meant to be there, but pre-interent I kept wondering "is this deliberate?!?"

Now when I hear it on streaming I miss the thump.

I like Document a lot, although it's very metallic and oppressive! Their most "indie" record? In my head it kind of slots into Warehouse: Songs and Stories and Candy Apple Grey.

Chuck_Tatum, Sunday, 25 January 2026 14:33 (four months ago)

*pre-internet

Chuck_Tatum, Sunday, 25 January 2026 14:33 (four months ago)

I love Document and think it’s one of their very best albums.

sctttnnnt (pgwp), Sunday, 25 January 2026 16:40 (four months ago)

Re: Document, I noticed a lot of later reissues really boost the upper frequencies which brings out a metallic (and I would add harsh, clangy and bright) sound, but I always preferred the original releases, including CD, which mastered it pretty well - you get that metallic quality without going too overboard with it, and it's more about muscle that the ear-bleeding highs.

I love both of these albums myself, though I love all of their I.R.S. albums. LRP I'm guessing was a surprising turn - getting John Mellencamp's producer was probably an unexpected choice, and it turned out brilliant.

birdistheword, Sunday, 25 January 2026 18:58 (four months ago)

(And IIRC Mills and/or Buck said they got Gehman specifically because they loved the sound he got on Mellencamp's records.)

birdistheword, Sunday, 25 January 2026 18:58 (four months ago)

I don’t like the mix or guitar parts on Fables

I love the PARTS, but they went from great guitar and amp sounds on the early records to who knows what in the London studio with Boyd.

timellison, Sunday, 25 January 2026 19:31 (four months ago)


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