Focus on the same period. The Athens, Georgia four-piece R.E.M. had just released their musical masterpiece; a deft work of art that was at once pastoral and reflective yet anthemic and uplifting. And now. Now, as George Bush Jr looks to hold on to throne, R.E.M. attempt to regain their 'best band in the world' status with the release of an album that aesthetically at least, holds the same virtues as 'Automatic For The People'. Things appear to stay the same, but really it's all distressingly different.
A warped and simplified view perhaps, but equally one not without touchstones and relevant pointers. Both 'Automatic ' and 'Around The Sun', the band's thirteenth studio album are seemingly simple records, built around the strength of their songs and masterfully topped off by wowing production and sly, barely noticeable touches of the studio brush. Both are coyly politicised, but not enough to be off-putting or heavy handed. Both are tinged with a gentle melancholy that's hard to dissect but easy to sink comfortably into. These are the sweeping, easy similarities. Where the two records differ is in their qualities. While 'AFTP' is one of the finest rock records ever made, 'Around The Sun' certainly is not. R.E.M.'s new record is a displeasing melange of styles, wrapped in an unpleasant, shiny sheen. It sounds like the mainstream radio album that you feared they would one day write when the innovation and uniqueness dried up. Mills and Buck will never lose the ability to write a clever, catchy song; what has dried up, it seems, is the ability to write a great song; a timeless song.
Where their previous album 'Reveal' sounded like a homage to musical heroes, not least Brian Wilson, this LP is a tired collection of R.E.M.lite. Although it opens promisingly enough with the elegiac, touching 'Leaving New York' (Stipe has always had a great love and ability to convey the inherent depressive quality of travel), it soon after veers into insipid MORsville. 'Electron Blue' sounds like the worst moments off their patchy 'Up' record and 'The Outsiders' could be a modern day Sting song. The attempt to repeat the feat they achieved with 1990's 'Radio Song' by incorporating a rapper (this time it's Q-Tip instead of KRS-1) into said song is a horrible, embarrassing mistake. 'Wanderlust' sounds like a Menswear song with it's jaunty rhythms, and is devastatingly awful. The fact that they have a song called 'The Boy In The Well' is possibly the clearest sign that the trio have lost all touch with modern times - do they not remember the Simpsons' Band Aid style spoof song of the same name?
Where the two remaining musicians in the band appear to have gone astray, Michael Stipe sounds positively lost, never to be found again. There are two distressing aspects to his contribution to 'Around The Sun': The first is the final stages of his gradual metamorphosis from "one of the greatest living white rock n roll singers" (Mike Mills circa 1994) to a man with a deep, gargled, throaty croon that makes him sound like one of those old pros on the Vegas circuit who refuse to quit, merely altering his act to accommodate his gradual disintegration. Perhaps more unpleasant is his sudden decision to start singing about Love. Love in the First Person. Despite (I'm sure I recall) him swearing that he would never do something so bland and boring, here he is; chanting the unthinkable in the 'Leaving New York' - "I love you, I love you, I love you". Those words have never been such a bitter pill to swallow. The same lyrical stance continues throughout much of the album, and it's both unsettlingly un-R.E.M.like and annoyingly average.
But then, the band have always contradicted themselves. Despite swearing a
decade ago that they would never operate outside of the Bill Berry inclusive
foursome, they ignored that and carried on when the drummer and key songwriting
influence left. Hell, they caused enough of a furore when they gave up their
indie principals to sign to a major nearly twenty years ago. Previously though,
they've managed to climb their previous obstacles and thrive; this time however,
it doesn't seem like they're going to do it. It may be slightly too early too
sound the death knell for one of the greatest groups of all time, but in order
to climb out of the rut they're in, they have to negotiate the obstacle of themselves.
REM - Around The Sun
..
its not so bad.
i quite liked it.
REM - Around The Sun
Re: REM - Around The Sun
All together now:
"We're sending our love down the well - all the way down!"
Re: REM - Around The Sun
However this new album seems weak.
REM - Around The Sun
Re: REM - Around The Sun
Despite your last comment matching one made in the review?
Way to nail your flag to that mast.
Re: REM - Around The Sun
way to not read... good luck with your future jounalism!
Re: REM - Around The Sun
and if you really didn't care about this reviewer's opinion, why comment?
Re: REM - Around The Sun
alternatively, god save me from the sensitive critic.
Re: REM - Around The Sun
If Mr Charles Darwin had the gall to ask, then Mr Gareth Dobson had the balls to point out that this album is more of a final nail than a final straw.
Re: REM - Around The Sun
Apart from Imitation of Life of course.
REM - Around The Sun
*shields face with hands*
REM - Around The Sun
Forgiveness please...
*shields face with hands, then ducks, then waves white flag*
REM - Around The Sun
Fuck it, they've gone crap. At least they've left a mass of wodnerful records before the plug came out and the ship finally sank.
REM - Around The Sun
Reveal was a big pile of commercial donkey turd.
plus forget most of anything else they have written, they are best when they are not trying to live up to their rep.
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Reveal is poor except for the brilliant I've been high
REM - Around The Sun
My first purchase ever!!
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Re: REM - Around The Sun
REM - Around The Sun
That is the coolest ever, first purchase ever!!
Except for my mate who bought "This Ole House" by Shakey with his paper round cash!
Beat that!!
Re: REM - Around The Sun
REM - Around The Sun
I remember John Menzies and Woolworths being major players in the industry!!
They supplied me with Heart of Gold by Jonny hates Jazz, Leave me Alone by Michael Jackson and I got My mind Set on You by Georgey H.
Oh the days when shit music turned me on...............
REM - Around The Sun
It's gonna take time, a whole lot of patience and time
to do it to do it to do it to do it to do it to do it right now
REM - Around The Sun
Also every dog has his day and REM's day has lasted for over 20 years as one of the best and most popular alternative bands around so they are fresh out of ideas now it happens to every group.Hopefully they will retire now or come back with a pete buck inspired rock record who knows what the furture holds.
REM - Around The Sun
Re: REM - Around The Sun
Haven't really got into the title track yet though.
Re: REM - Around The Sun
Ascent of man is my favourite too.
REM - Around The Sun
Ascent of man is my favourite too.
REM - Around The Sun
People seem compelled to make comparisons "It's not as good as Automatic for the People!" or "It's their best since Automatic for the People!". If I want to hear Automatic for the People, I go put it on. People complain that REM have lost the punky, college-radio folksy alt.rock edge of the IRS years. If I want to hear that - I go put on Lifes Rich Pageant or Document.
REM down the years have provided us with an embarrassment of riches, and the widest variety of sounds of any major band I can think of. The point that a lot of people seem to miss is that REM have been on a journey since day one, since Chronic Town, since that gig in that church in Athens. Each new album is a further step along their way - but each album follows on logically from the one before.
They have never tried to forcibly change themselves (Apart from maybe with Monster), yet they have never allowed themselves to stand still. If you listen to the albums consecutively – each album doesn’t sound all that different than the one before, and yet despite each album being sonically similar to the one before (Again, apart from Monster – that album was a deliberate attempt to sound different to Automatic.. It was a reaction rather than an evolution.) – they have somehow got from Murmur to Around the Sun. It’s been a true journey of evolution.
Each album has been a unique and distinct snapshot of where the band were at the time. Around The Sun is a great album, and an essential addition to the REM canon. Stipe's voice has never sounded richer or more assured, the musicianship is consummate as we would expect.
REM have done precisely as they always have - they've provided us with the REM album we need today. Not the one we needed ten or fifteen years ago - they already made them.
I really like this album today, in a year I'm gonna love it.
It is average though.
Reveal shines like a beacon in comparison.
REM used...
to be my favourite band ever. Of course I knew the singles from Out of Time and Automatic (who didn't?!), but what got me into them was a copy of the IRS best of lent to me by a school mate.
Their early sound was what hooked me, and in my snobby youth I was rather proud to have bought out of time and automatic last out of all the albums up til New Adventures.
Up blew me away, I thought REM were gonna just fold after Bill left, but I would rate that album as possibly top three material.
BUT, Reveal and Around the Sun are frankly shit. I have sub-conciously blocked them from my mind. I don't think I've listened to either of them since the handful of times when I got them.
Maybe I should go back and listen to 'em with a sympathetic ear, but I just can't bring myself to listen to the once mighty and urgent sound of REM reduced to MOR nice-shite.