dr_strangemiester, on 25 April 2009 - 04:20 AM, said:
Your biggest R.E.M. disappointments
Started by madloop, Aug 13 2006 07:18 AM
530 replies to this topic
#501
Posted 02 June 2011 - 05:12 AM
Around The Sun will always be the weakest album, that was definatly a big big dissapointment for me. It just seemed very knocked together, not much thought or imagining put into it, even the album cover wasn't particularly creative.
#502
Posted 09 June 2011 - 12:00 PM
Wanderlust
#503
Posted 01 July 2011 - 01:49 AM
a DVD from the Up Tour
11 July 1999 Bologna, Italy / 22 July 2003 Padova, Italy / 1 January 2005 Milan, Italy / 19 February 2005 London, UK / 10 June 2005 Rome, Italy / 10 July 2005 Cardiff, Wales / 16 July 2005 London, UK / June/July 2007 4 nights Olympia Theatre, Dublin, Ireland / 18 March 2008 Milan, Italy / 23 March 2008 London, UK / 8 July 2008 Lyon, France / 20 July 2008 Perugia, Italy / 21 July 2008 Verona, Italy / 24 July 2008 Udine, Italy / 26 July 2008 Milan, Italy / 21 September 2008 Geneve, Switzerland / 26 September 2008 Bologna, Italy / 27 September 2008 Turin, Italy
#505
Posted 11 October 2011 - 08:54 AM
Disappointment implies expectations...I had no expectations about Reno, or Beachball...
ATS did fall below my, already fairly low, expectations.
But Accelerate really disappointed. And "Hollow Man" most of all...it just falls flat. "I'm Gonna DJ" couldn't disappoint: we'd already heard it live. The disappointment was finding out that it was going to be the last track on the album.
At the time, I was disappointed with Up--but since then, have come to love it.
ATS did fall below my, already fairly low, expectations.
But Accelerate really disappointed. And "Hollow Man" most of all...it just falls flat. "I'm Gonna DJ" couldn't disappoint: we'd already heard it live. The disappointment was finding out that it was going to be the last track on the album.
At the time, I was disappointed with Up--but since then, have come to love it.
#506
Posted 11 October 2011 - 09:06 AM
I can't imagine this not having been brought up 100 times, but Airportman, aside from being a poor song, if you can call it that, is hands down the worst album opener.
#507
Posted 11 October 2011 - 09:07 AM
To my ears, "Airportman" sets the mood for Up in a way no other track for that album could.
"We were listening to the UNC radio (station) there and they were playing an R.E.M. song. I like R.E.M. fine, but at the end of it, the DJ says, 'Ya that was R.E.M., the sound of the new South'. I looked at my roommate and we said, Gawd, if that's the sound of the new South, I preferred it when it was on the skids. That's how we got the name."
- Rick Miller of Southern Culture on the Skids
- Rick Miller of Southern Culture on the Skids
#508
Posted 11 October 2011 - 05:31 PM
Driver Nate, on 11 October 2011 - 09:07 AM, said:
To my ears, "Airportman" sets the mood for Up in a way no other track for that album could.
+1
(Except, perhaps, the intro of The Lifting)
In 1984 Orwell writes of a nation that constantly under attack with a undescribed enemy, as such causing permanent anxiousness in the population a constance of fear of the outside and a justification for both the suppression of people and increased governmetal control and military spending. The genius of the unidentified enemy is the need for this never to end.
-C
-C
#509
Posted 13 October 2011 - 06:30 AM
Re. Airportman, I thought it was the best opener possible for Up, setting that melancholy mood. Besides, how can anyone miss the obvious joke? It's their first album without Berry, and the first thing you hear is that cheesy drum machine. I laughed out loud when I heard it.
Re. this thread's topic: my biggest R.E.M. disappointment? That they split up, and that I couldn't take my 12-year-old son to see them live (he's been an R.E.M. fan by osmosis for some time now...). I thought the band was on a good roll lately, and after their WB contract expired, I could easily see the R.E.M. fivesome with Scott and Bill R. continue another couple of albums IMO.
Re. this thread's topic: my biggest R.E.M. disappointment? That they split up, and that I couldn't take my 12-year-old son to see them live (he's been an R.E.M. fan by osmosis for some time now...). I thought the band was on a good roll lately, and after their WB contract expired, I could easily see the R.E.M. fivesome with Scott and Bill R. continue another couple of albums IMO.
#510
Posted 16 October 2011 - 01:16 PM
Driver Nate, on 11 October 2011 - 09:07 AM, said:
To my ears, "Airportman" sets the mood for Up in a way no other track for that album could.
Agreed.
I may have posted about this years ago, but I would have loved to see the following songs released as singles:
"You Are the Everything"
"New Test Leper"
"Diminished"
"Beat a Drum"
I think "Everything," in lieu of "Pop Song 89" or in addition to it, could've been a top 10 hit in the US, and "Beat a Drum" is a much better song than "Reno," though I like "Reno" a lot. Leper and Diminished are great songs, not sure they would've translated as hits, but I'd've liked to have seen them tried.
I looked for it,
And I found it,
Miles Standish proud,
Congratulate me. ...
Answer me a question,
I can't itemize, I can't think clearly,
To me for reason it's not there,
I can't even rhyme ...
-The song which welcomed me to the world of REM, 23 years ago, September 1988
And I found it,
Miles Standish proud,
Congratulate me. ...
Answer me a question,
I can't itemize, I can't think clearly,
To me for reason it's not there,
I can't even rhyme ...
-The song which welcomed me to the world of REM, 23 years ago, September 1988
#511
Posted 20 October 2011 - 07:47 AM
I won't get the last fan club package, due to my eternal procrastination.
Other than that, the next biggest disappointment would be not getting to see them play live again. I got to see them 3 times. Monster, Up and AtS tours.
Other than that, the next biggest disappointment would be not getting to see them play live again. I got to see them 3 times. Monster, Up and AtS tours.
#512
Posted 21 October 2011 - 02:12 AM
bluemookie, on 11 October 2011 - 09:06 AM, said:
I can't imagine this not having been brought up 100 times, but Airportman, aside from being a poor song, if you can call it that, is hands down the worst album opener.
great song and the best album opener.
I'm disappointed they didn't follow the trajectory of that song/album for later releases.
I'm disappointed that we wont get an indication of what REM would sound like, as an independent band. I would have liked to have seen where Stipe could have gone from the ideas he was pursuing with the CiN film project. while listening to Patti Smith's version of "so you want to be a rock n roll star" as I was out driving the other day and was struck by the line...'this is the era where everybody creates'.....and it seems to me that has a resonance all over again.....smaller, more personal projects that speak to and of community are emerging in the arts around here, it's kinda exciting and it would have been really interesting to see whether Michael coulda found a way to take the band somewhere different and away from populist marketing/networking blah.
#513
Posted 13 November 2011 - 10:11 PM
I never saw them sing Superman. I know it was not the most meaningful song, but when I first heard it, it really hit me. It was the first R.E.M. song I ever heard.
#514
Posted 26 November 2011 - 08:42 PM
The way they "called it a day." That's it, really.
-- 7 chineSe robs., swallowing the ocean.
#515
Posted 26 November 2011 - 11:54 PM
wagtail, on 21 October 2011 - 02:12 AM, said:
I'm disappointed that we wont get an indication of what REM would sound like, as an independent band. I would have liked to have seen where Stipe could have gone from the ideas he was pursuing with the CiN film project. while listening to Patti Smith's version of "so you want to be a rock n roll star" as I was out driving the other day and was struck by the line...'this is the era where everybody creates'.....and it seems to me that has a resonance all over again.....smaller, more personal projects that speak to and of community are emerging in the arts around here, it's kinda exciting and it would have been really interesting to see whether Michael coulda found a way to take the band somewhere different and away from populist marketing/networking blah.
Agree. There's nothing preventing them, individually or as a group, from doing this as they see fit. Would like to see it, too.
I looked for it,
And I found it,
Miles Standish proud,
Congratulate me. ...
Answer me a question,
I can't itemize, I can't think clearly,
To me for reason it's not there,
I can't even rhyme ...
-The song which welcomed me to the world of REM, 23 years ago, September 1988
And I found it,
Miles Standish proud,
Congratulate me. ...
Answer me a question,
I can't itemize, I can't think clearly,
To me for reason it's not there,
I can't even rhyme ...
-The song which welcomed me to the world of REM, 23 years ago, September 1988
#516
Posted 05 December 2011 - 03:39 AM
Too many b sides from the mid 90's onwards were just live or inst. versions of old songs instead of new studio out-takes that didn't fit on the albums. It seems like they just went in to make enough songs for an album then said 'right.Let's hit the road...or not'.
#517
Posted 01 May 2012 - 12:19 PM
Disapointed only I never got to say goodbye. Disapointed in not seeing ALL of my fave songs performed. Even at their worst they were still great.
I fell asleep and read just about every paragraph...........
#518
Posted 02 May 2012 - 06:54 AM
The biggest failure to me, anyway was everything that was done after Bill left. I was such a fan, and everything ended after that. I know there were some great songs in that era, but nothing ever caught my fancy again.
#519
Posted 22 June 2012 - 03:10 AM
The fact that they retired when they did. They'd more in em.
#520
Posted 22 June 2012 - 09:20 AM
Collapse2012, on 22 June 2012 - 03:10 AM, said:
The fact that they retired when they did. They'd more in em.
I believe that's one of the reasons why they disbanded when they did. As the old show biz adage goes, you always leave 'em wanting more. If they had gone out while on a downward spiral the circumstances would have been much different.
"We were listening to the UNC radio (station) there and they were playing an R.E.M. song. I like R.E.M. fine, but at the end of it, the DJ says, 'Ya that was R.E.M., the sound of the new South'. I looked at my roommate and we said, Gawd, if that's the sound of the new South, I preferred it when it was on the skids. That's how we got the name."
- Rick Miller of Southern Culture on the Skids
- Rick Miller of Southern Culture on the Skids










