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In the wake of the news that REM have called it quits, DiS reviews editor Andrzej Lukowski shares his thoughts on the band he fell in love with at the age of 15 and charts their glorious decline...
When DiS' editor asked me to write a ‘tribute’ to REM, I felt a touch daft: as I write this there are two tribute threads to the band pootling away, and I’m acutely aware that some of our older readers have been into the band considerably longer than I have.
In fact, from a certain point of view, I probably hopped on board the REM wagon just as they started their ‘decline’: after years of meteoric, effortless rise, the band’s sales started to slip with 1996’s New Adventures in Hi-fi. Aged 15, this was the first record of theirs I bought, slowly lured in by the sheer strangeness of the single ‘E-bow the Letter’. It’s a song that would surely never have received a peep of airplay were it not for REM’s then massiveness, and it sounded like nothing else on the radio; I spent weeks sizing it up and listening in bafflement whenever it came on, before coming to the conclusion that yeah, it was pretty rad. Around its release, REM had signed some sort of stupidly large contract with Warner Bros for five more albums; I didn’t see it, but I heard there was some episode of The Culture Show where a bunch of douchebag cultural critics sputtered apoplectically over whether NAIHF was ‘worth’ $80m. This seems like an even more abstract discussion now than it was then, but the fact is that NAIHF and 1998 successor Up were exemplary examples of how to be signed to a major label for megabucks and not be a dick about it: the former was a set of wired, ravaged , genre-spanning art rock, largely recorded on the road; the latter was a sprawlingly beautiful, emotionally frail character studies wrought on antique synths and drum machines after drummer Bill Berry went off to become a farmer. They were both born out of a certain necessity, but there wasn’t a jot of compromise in either record.
The next decade is the one where I guess the ‘rot’ began to set in; I have written tediously and frequently on these boards about my theory that this had little to do with Berry’s leaving, more to do with the band becoming a self-conscious, part time affair, overly concerned about their diminishing fanbase and what type of record might bring them all back. But this certainly didn’t mean they ever attempted an Automatic for the People 2, and for all their faults, there is plenty of superb music on their final four albums (even Around the Sun, a poorly-produced record with some decent songs, which the band later rounded upon with a vehemence that always struck me as being mostly to do with its disastrous US sales). And their live shows of the Noughties, of which there were a lot – a short Reveal promotional tour, a world tour apiece for In Time and Accelerate and two for Around the Sun - were sublime. I wish I’d known it was the last time I’d ever see them, but I am super glad that I sacked off the Sunday of Leeds 2008 in order to see REM in Manchester.
The raw power, energy, emotion and humour of those live shows was astonishing and one did wonder how long Stipe, in particular, could possibly keep it up for… that question seems to have been answered. Fuck knows why they really called it a day now; there are a lot of strange things about the way final album Collapse Into Now was promoted (or wasn’t, as the case may be). Certainly it’d seem a bit awry if this really was the end and there wasn’t at least a symbolic farewell. But these things happen. REM haven’t been my favourite current band for the best part of a decade; the fact they remain my favourite band of all time is largely to do with the immaculate body of pre-NAIHF work that I’ve not discussed. I am definitely not the best person to write this tribute. I only got into REM after the glory years. There are probably other people more upset that this is the first days of their lives without REM. I was only there for the decline – and how glorious it was.
Pay tribute to REM below by posting your favourite songs, playlists and memories... and what was your gateway REM song/album?
REM VIDEOS
- R.E.M. - Document (25th anniversary edition)
- Spotifriday #119: Lykke Li, Drake, Factory Floor, Tim Hecker, R.E.M...
- R.E.M. - Part Lies, Part Heart, Part Truth, Part Garbage 1982-2011
- Spotifriday #109 - This week on DiS as a playlist ft. REM, The Antlers, Nicola Roberts
- REM's Glorious Decline - DiS pays tribute
- R.E.M. - Lifes Rich Pageant: Deluxe Edition
- Death Cab for Bass: Mixtape of Songs That Inspired Nick to Play Bass
- Spotifriday #81 - This Week on DiS as a playlist
My gateway song was Bang and blame
Ot it on tape in Asda for a quid. Listened to it and it's instrumental b-side for about 6 months solid, and I went from buying Janet Jackson records to an indie nerd. It's why I probably still love 'Monster' a bit more than I should.
The word great is used too often about music; but it's entirely justified in REMs case.
Monster
was my 2nd gateway into REM. Bought it in Idar Oberstein, Germany on cassette on a German Exchange with school. First gateway was 'Sidewinder...'
Lovely band, genuinely don't think they made a bad album until Around The Sun, I can't really fault anything on any record up until Out of Time.
I'll miss 'em, but I'll continue to enjoy them.
Monster was my entry point when I was 14/15
I adored it and played it to death whilst trying desperately (and failing) to work out the lyrics to each song.
Then I started at the beginning and slowly worked through in chronological order realising that they were very different band to what I first thought.
True, the newer records lost the way a fair bit but what a back catalogue and legacy they leave behind. They still remain one of my most regularly played artists (according to last.fm) and one that helped me uncover alot of other great music.
Only caught them live once - Glasto '03. That was enough for me.
RIP REM.
The best American band of all time
I wrote a tribute for another site
http://louderthanwar.com/blogs/a-tribute-to-rem-by-dan-lucas
I guess I'm one of those older fans you mention
I bought Document when it came out, then instantly went back through all the stuff that preceded it. They were may favourite band for maybe a decade, and possibly the first truly great band I saw live (on the Green tour - I loved it so much I went back and saw it again).
To be honest I think there was a steady decline after 'Automatic for the People' (although there is much to be said for NIHF and good songs on later albums). They'd had such a long sustained period of creativity and growth that it's not surprising that they ran out of things to say. They never became an embarrassment though, and for that we should be grateful.
I hope the excellent reissue programme continues, I've enjoyed re-discovering all of the early records one by one.
Monster was v. underrated at the time but....
I never really listened after NIHF. It wasn't bad, but it was very forgettable. Somehow being bland is worst than being rubbish in some cases. I preferred them trying to sound like Nirvana on Monster than sounding like bloody Coldplay.
Saying that...
Its a bit sad how most comments about them breaking up come from the "didn't they get rubbish" angle rather than the "they were once one of the greatest bands in the world, and so much modern music wouldn't have happened without them".
Gateway? Green & Out of Time
Bought both on cassette in Powerplay in Eastbourne in 1991 - reckon Automatic was imminent or current. Orange Crush was the one - and the weirdness of REM began for me as I found that whatever 'hook' drew me to one of their records was swiftly rendered obsolete by the sheer fazed attraction of the rest - Losing My Religion slayed by Texarkana and Me In Honey; Orange Crush less played next to the enduring stridency of World Leader Pretend...did the retrospective and fell in love with Murmur-thru-Document, even enjoyed Monster - been less enthralled thru the 'decline' as postulated by our gracious host, but have engaged with that last few records retrospectively again, and found much to love in NAIHF - Leave? Christ don't get me started!! - and the rest, Daysleeper, The Great Beyond, Imitation of Life all signs that these guys could write killer pop songs in their sleep. Accelerate and Collapse Into Now were no exception, and coupled with the double Live in Dublin, R.E.M. have exited at a time when their energy seemed boundless and I find myself cynical about the inevitable reunion tour.

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