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- <text id=89TT0857>
- <title>
- Mar. 27, 1989: Dreaming At The Wheel
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Mar. 27, 1989 Is Anything Safe?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MUSIC, Page 94
- Dreaming at the Wheel
- </hdr><body>
- <p>R.E.M. hits the charts by jumping in place
- </p>
- <p>By Jay Cocks
- </p>
- <p> Of the eleven excellent tunes on R.E.M.'s new album Green,
- one of the most memorable is the last one, . Playful and
- unabashedly eccentric, R.E.M. has just crashed out from cult
- status to broad-based popular appeal, and a song like ,
- with its allusive lyrics and lulling, faintly ominous melody,
- is a bright beacon for the band's breakthrough. The fact that
- the song's full and complete title really is may make
- for a number of bookkeeping and bibliographic headaches, as well
- as considerable white space on record labels and magazine pages.
- But it demonstrates that this fierce four-man band out of
- Athens, Ga., is still teasing and challenging even as Green, its
- seventh record, bounds into the Top Ten.
- </p>
- <p> Fulfilling requests for the tune during their current world
- tour (which began in January and will end in June) may take a
- bit of doing. An audience chanting, "Hey, play "
- would be disconcerting. So much easier, even, to shout out,
- "Hey, play Untitled," but R.E.M. has not come this far doing
- things the easy way. In fact, there have been murmurs that
- Green, their most appealing record, is also the lightest in
- specific gravity. The implication is that a band this serious
- couldn't have a success without selling out, even just a little,
- and it is an implication that raises hackles among band members.
- Says guitarist Peter Buck: "There are some commercial songs on
- Green, but there is some stuff that isn't commercial at all.
- When you look at other songs in the Top Ten, it's a fairly odd
- record in comparison."
- </p>
- <p> The band began as a cult favorite around the University of
- Georgia about nine years ago. As its fame spread to other
- schools, record deals, and some predictability, followed. Green
- had to be a deliberate switcheroo. "We obviously went out of our
- way," Buck says, "not to sound like our past." R.E.M. trademarks
- have been radically modified. The vocals, which on previous
- records sounded much like mantras from deep inside a Midas
- muffler, have been spiffed up so they are nearly comprehensible.
- The concussive guitar has been reworked to something smoother
- and more melodic, and the lyrics of singer Michael Stipe ("I've
- a rich understanding of my finest defenses . . . I demand a
- rematch/ I decree a stalemate") are beginning to shimmer into
- a fine focus. "We just didn't want to make a safe record," says
- bass player Mike Mills. "We've got a bunch of mandolin and
- accordion on the record, and three songs with no drums."
- </p>
- <p> The writing process produced a few surprises. The usual
- procedure is for Stipe, Buck, Mills and drummer Bill Berry to
- get together in their Athens studio and play in the musical
- equivalent of free association. "Sometimes you come up with
- nothing," Mills admits. "But sometimes somebody comes up with
- something he likes, or someone hears something and somebody else
- falls in, and you have a song before you know it." When the band
- worked up its current single, Stand (number 19 and climbing on
- Billboard's chart), "we all just looked at each other and went,
- `God, where did that come from?' I mean, it is a dumb
- rock-'n'-roll song." Lyricist Stipe agrees with Buck's
- evaluation but consoles himself with the belief that "anything
- hugely popular is loaded with simplistic ideas. The irony with
- which we sing these songs is so thick that I can't imagine that
- anyone can't see it."
- </p>
- <p> Stipe, the band's front man and most prominent idiosyncrat,
- writes and performs as if he and irony were locked in a
- perpetual thumb wrassling match. Onstage, he will show up in an
- organza suit designed by Adelle Lutz, which, turning transparent
- under the stage lights, is obviously meant to summon visions of
- the oversize whites in which Lutz's husband David Byrne cavorted
- through Stop Making Sense. Stipe (the name rhymes with the
- slender-billed bird that good ole boys send gullible slickers
- out to hunt) devotes himself to his eccentricities, currycombing
- them until they gleam like attributes of genius. He has his own
- tour bus, separate from the rest of the band and crew, "because
- I need windows," and because he rarely listens to music, which
- is in heavy supply aboard the other R.E.M. vehicles. He keeps
- a bottle of Evian water mixed with herbal powder close at hand
- and claims he can, as some animals do, anticipate earthquakes
- days before they occur. His house in Athens has no TV and no
- phone. Says drummer Berry: "The three of us are just as average
- as you can get, but Michael is obviously an unusual person. He
- is different. I don't know if he has hot water in his house even
- now. We would all be kind of boring if it weren't for him."
- </p>
- <p> The band's history may be pedestrian: Buck and Stipe met in
- the Athens record store where Buck worked; Berry and Mills,
- high school friends from Macon, Ga., fell in with the other two
- when they started school in Athens. Stipe's personal particulars
- (son of a nonmusical military family that moved a lot) may be
- unremarkable enough, which could account for his strenuous
- efforts to keep them from public consumption. But no band that
- makes music as spooky and splendid as Orange Crush and Hairshirt
- (two of Green's outstanding cuts) could ever be considered
- boring, not even potentially. The band's considerable heft and
- impact reside where they properly belong: in the group's driven,
- likably demented music, with its passages of unexpected lyricism
- and its lyrics full of muted menace, in which a sidelong threat
- can turn, with a twist, into a punch line. The best R.E.M. songs
- have a kind of intellectual aftershock, and maybe that's what
- Stipe means when he says he can sense a quake. It's only another
- song coming on.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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