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Around the Sun [VINYL]
 
 

Around the Sun [VINYL] [Import]

R.E.M. Vinyl
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (92 customer reviews)

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Biography

R.E.M. was an American rock band formed in Athens, Georgia, USA, in 1980 by Michael Stipe (lead vocals), Peter Buck (guitar), Mike Mills (bass guitar and backing vocals), and Bill Berry (drums and percussion). R.E.M. was one of the first popular alternative rock bands, and gained early attention due to Buck's ringing, arpeggiated guitar style and Stipe's unclear vocals. R.E.M. released its first… Read more in Amazon's R.E.M. Store

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Product details

  • Vinyl
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Import
  • Label: Wea
  • ASIN: B0002XV2K2
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (92 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,118,112 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Product Description

BBC Review

Remember that favourite uncle who used to keep you entertained as a kid? Then one day you met up again and you realised he wasn't half as cool as you thought he was. With their latest offering, Around The Sun, REM have become that uncle.

Listening to Michael Stipe's soothing rhetoric is rather like popping on a pair of your favourite slippers. But as the last track of this, their thirteenth album, fades out, you can't help feeling disappointed, not to mention depressed. Stipe has made no secret about his opposition to George Bush and the war in Iraq and Around The Sun reflects his sombre mood.

Getting away from it all is a recurring theme. New single "Leaving New York" finds REM at their blissful, jangly best as Stipe considers escaping his beloved city after seeing "the light fading out", while "High Speed Train" takes him to a place where there's "No war. No hate. No past."

Lyrically they can't be faulted, but the departure of drummer Bill Berry has hit the band hard over the last two albums. This is the man, after all, who wrote the melody to "Everybody Hurts". You won't find a "Losing My Religion" or a "Orange Crush" here. But there a few great songs, enough to pour scorn on suggestions the band are a spent force.

The excellent "Wanderlust", one of the few upbeat numbers, sees REM do Britpop - albeit 10 years too late - and once you've heard "Electron Blue", the chorus will be spinnng around your head for days. There's even another dabble in hip hop, 13 years after KRS-One's appearance on "Radio Song", as Q-Tip collaborates on "The Outsiders", reminding you just how good A Tribe Called Quest were.

The trouble is, there's too many songs that float around without actually going anywhere. By the time you've thought about what you're going to have for dinner, three tracks have flown by without you realising. If Peter Buck listened to this on an aeroplane, he'd drift off to sleep. --Chris Charles

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Album Description

Around the Sun is REM's first studio album since the acclaimed platinum Reveal in 2001. This eagerly anticipated album follows the success of last year's multi-platinum greatest hits collection, In Time: The Best of REM 1988-2003.

Around the Sun, REM's 13th album, was written by REM and produced by REM and Pat McCarthy. It features the evocative new single "Leaving New York" and 12 other new songs including the enigmatic, "The Outsiders", "Wanderlust" with its infectious chorus, and the epic tale of "Boy in the Well".


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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
20 of 21 people found the following review helpful
REM - Around The Sun 17 Oct 2004
Format:Audio CD
I find the reviews of this album very revealing about the sort of people that listen to REM. Most people seem to have very two-dimensional, linear expectations of this band. And so they miss the point completely.

People seem compelled to make comparisons "It`s not as good as Automatic for the People!" or even "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 actually sounds a lot like the one before (Again, apart from Monster. Monster was a deliberate attempt to sound different to Automatic.. That album was a reaction to what had gone before rather than an evolution.), and yet despite each other album being sonically similar to the one before - they have somehow got from the startled lo-fi of Murmur to to the celestial glimmer of 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. Michael Stipe`s voice - one of the most haunting and beautiful sounds we`re lucky enough to have in popular music today - has never sounded richer or more assured, the musicianship is consummate - as we would expect. The song-writing is some of the most personal and emotional they have ever released.

REM have done precisely as they always have - they`ve provided us with the REM album we need today. Not the albums we needed ten or fifteen years ago - they already made them.

The most striking thing I recall about every REM album I`ve ever heard is that they are definitively "growers". The tunes, lyrics and moods of the songs cunningly sneak into your subconscious and then, after a while - and quite out of the blue - you realize you`re utterly smitten.

I really like this album today, in a year I`m gonna love it.

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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful
By Penfold
Format:Audio CD
R.E.M. have never been conventional by any means. You know that whenever they release an album, it's going to delight, frustrate, confuse, and embrace in equal measures. I consider this to be the magic of R.E.M., as they never quite release what you're expecting of them.

The 13th studio album, Around The Sun is such an album. Upon first buying it back in October 2004, I found it difficult to listen to the first time I played it. Then the second time. Then the third time, and so on. I consider this to be a good thing, as the listener is ultimately rewarded with repeated listens and the songs become more cohesive when given the patience and time they deserve.

I think it's only fair that R.E.M. are accurately represented here, because if you believe some circles, Around The Sun is a disappointing album. These 'untruths' are usually associated with record sales in America. If Around The Sun would've shifted 3 million copies in the United States, they'd be the media darlings of the press and certain British music magazines would be fawning over them again, like they did when it was 'cool' to like R.E.M. As it is, Around The Sun sold approximately 75 copies in the U.S. and because of the lukewarm reception, some of the U.K. music press gave the album a kicking, offering up meagre ratings, or average reviews at best.

Where are all the R.E.M. sycophants now? Having leeched the band for every available inch of column space during 1991-1992, they've long since switched their fawnings to the 'next big things'. Good riddance to them. It'll be interesting to read this review again in 10 years, when Coldplay's star has long since faded and the music press are giving Chris Martin a kicking for being an over the hill angst ridden thirty-something who hasn't released a decent album since 2002.

It's fair to say R.E.M. can't win. After two 'difficult' albums in media terms, Michael Stipe writes an honest set of lyrics that becomes Around The Sun, with the classic R.E.M. sound evident in every song. Ironic then the press dismiss the album as sounding 'jaded', when several of the tracks wouldn't have looked out of place on Automatic For The People.

Forget the music press! Since when were a bunch of freeloaders who receive free cds from record companies ever credible?!
I would recommend Around The Sun as a fine album, based solely on the 13 songs presented, not by how credible they may be in 2005.

For anyone who has seen R.E.M. in concert during the current world tour, several of the tracks from Around The Sun come to the fore and sound great live, particularly The Outsiders, I Wanted To Be Wrong and Leaving New York.

As of July 2005, this album is only seven quid on Amazon.co.uk! Chump change for such a great album. Patient listening rewards even the most casual R.E.M. fan with an enjoyable experience.

I give this album four stars - that's four stars for competence, not for 'attitude', which is seemingly how the music press grade things.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
R.E.M. move in yet another new direction with this, their 13th studio album to date. And, as per usual, I'm happy to follow them. As much as I miss Bill Berry, I can't help but feel that their last 3 albums have contained some of their best material ever.

Around The Sun has Michael's voice mixed high up, and while the synthesisers of Up and Reveal remain, many traditional instruments are used as well. Mike's piano features a great deal, especially on the brilliant Boy In The Well.

The record is lush and emotional, full of the band's political outrage after the recent American elections, and the lyrics reflect the band's political stance; Final Straw and I Wanted To Be Wrong are their most overtly political songs to date.

The band also explore some new musical territory, with The Outsiders' trip-hop drum beat heralding the first rap on an R.E.M. album since Out Of Time in 1991, as Q Tip guests.

Many of the songs are growers, and I must admit that I was slightly disappointed with the album after the first listen. Just give it a chance, it gets more beautiful every time it passed through you. Buy this album, you won't regret it.

Long love R.E.M.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
delete half the tracks and get a decent album shock
I have to agree with the negative press for this album, in particular the guitars are missing making quite a few of these tracks dull, boring and overworked. Read more
Published 26 days ago by Mr. C. J. Crockford
A good Michael Stipe album
R.E.M. have often suffered from being widely listened to but rarely heard, and never more so than with this record. Read more
Published 2 months ago by MideastMC
One of their best
I know a lot of people disagree, but I think Around the Sun is one of the best album's from REM's time at Warner Bros. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Crossy1975
This album grew on me - I think it is one of the best
I was given this album as a present last year (2010) and I have been kicking myself ever since. How could I have missed it when it was released in 2004? Read more
Published 12 months ago by Andy E
Oh dear.
Adrift in a mediocre wilderness since the departure of founding member Bill Berry, REM had already churned out the fussy, experimental but underrated Up and the even more... Read more
Published 19 months ago by dynamitekid156
Underrated for too long!
I really must stand up and defend this record. I have all of R.E.M's albums and like all of them, and I can honestly say that not only is this representative of their quality work,... Read more
Published on 18 Sep 2008 by Mr. Peter T. Hardy
Their worst album (dead letter office is better)
I waited for this album to grow on me... and waited... and waited...

I am a huge REM fan and I agree whole heartedly with the Around the Sun apologists who have written... Read more
Published on 26 Mar 2008 by M. Sexton
You can't tread water holding a guitar
If you've enjoyed the rest of REM's largely fine work, you'll find this record is distinctly vin ordinaire compared to the grand cru vintages like Monster, Murmur and Reveal. Read more
Published on 15 Dec 2006 by R. Herriott
Poor old REM....
What is it we want from them? If this album was put out by a new band we'd never heard of it it would be lauded and applauded.

Instead it gets a lukewarm reception. Read more
Published on 6 Sep 2006 by Merry Terry
Great album, bad cover art
After having read many bad and mediocre reviews of this record, I was expecting (stupidly) a bad or mediocre album. Read more
Published on 4 Nov 2005 by "glueface"
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