Thursday, January 14, 2021

R.E.M. - The IRS Years


Last night for the first time in years I listened to the fist five R.E.M. albums, the ones before they signed to a major. I had forgotten how bloody good all five of them are. Unlike many bands I listen to I was in at the start with R.E.M. I bought Murmur when it was released based upon a review I saw in Melody Maker. I had heard a couple of tracks before buying, but had no idea what delights were in store. Every track is top rate, an album to listen to from start to finish without skipping any tracks. I had found the band for me, I couldn't wait for the next album to arrive. Five albums in four years and each one was further proof, if any was needed, that this was one very special band. 

The early Warner Bros albums are great albums too, but there is something really special about those early albums. From Murmur to Life's Rich Pageant they could do know wrong. It was a golden time for music generally with the likes of The Smiths, The Mary Chain, The Bunnymen and New Order (amongst many others) releasing top quality releases and those IRS albums more than stand up to their peers. 

Five albums in four years with this level of creativity is quite something and cemented Athens, Georgia on the world music map. Many of my favourite REM songs come from the likes of Green, Out Of Time and Automatic For The People but those early, enigmatic IRS releases are the ones for me. 




4 comments:

  1. Yes Scott, agreed. So much contained within the grooves of those records. The story of REM through those albums and the songs on them is wonderful.

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    1. Few bands have released five great albums consecutively SA, those IRS albums are essential to any record collection.

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  2. Basically with you, Scott... especially on the first two. The next two were great, but I put them just a hair below the perfection of Murmur and Reckoning. My interest waned pretty quickly after that, and my nose raised way up in the air by the time they went major. I have never purchased anything by them post IRS. I'm snobby like that.

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    1. The first three post IRS albums are worth revisiting Brian, some great tracks on all of them. Especially Green, one of my fave REM albums.

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