Promotion:Give More. Get More. Buy MP3s and help fund a band’s tour!

New Releases

Top Sellers

Pre-Orders

Downloads

Vinyl

TShirts

Posters

Gifts

Lists

Help

Shopping Cart

View Cart
 

Items

0
VIEW CART

Total

$0.00
CHECK OUT
 

Ipod Boombox??!!

Ipod Boombox??!!

Syndicate Us

Read About RSS
 

Reveal (CD)

R.E.M.

[Cover]

Label:
Released: 2001 List Price: 11.98
Price: $11.38  
 
 
add to cart

The second LP of R.E.M. Mach II (post-Bill Berry) finds the 21-year vets exploring more of Up's sensual cosmos, only via their directly-melodic, early '90s writing. Like a warmer, more rainy version of their 1991 breakthrough smash LP Out of Time, the trio with hand-picked permanent guests seems totally inspired by the chamber-spiritual, subconscious elements they now favor. The opening "The Lifting" is a perfect example. Michael Stipe's epicurean, beguiling vocal comes out of swatches of looping, icy keyboards and strident, chiming pianos, encircling you like little planets revolving around your head, as feedbacky background touches bubble and burst like rocket flares to a delicious two/three-and beat. It's like some magic world beyond our grasp, one he's finally found the door to-totally irresistible. It's also the best pop single the band's given us since "The Sidewinder Sleeps Tonight," and further evidence of their ceaseless vitality. As Stipe trills, "If you hear these voices calling you," he seems to be foreshadowing an LP where one nearly is guided by them, via creative overdub-layering that would make one of R.E.M.'s recent mentors, the 1966-'67 Brian Wilson, smile. (See the sweet, scrumptious, Pet Sounds-ish "Summer Turns to High" and "Beachball.") Beautifully and luxuriously recorded by the returning Pat McCarthy, the lush organs, pianos, strings, flitting guitar, and lavish beds of bass and drums quietly glitter in the gloaming. It comes in different flavors, too: Western movie rustic-tones pervade "All the Way to Reno (You're Gonna Be A Star)," complete with tasteful xylophone, while the strings wash over "She Just Wants to Be." The waltz-time "Disappear" feels like an Automatic For the People track reflected through a funhouse mirror room of the spinning guitars. And the "Electrolite"/"Find the River" entry, "I'll Take the Rain," is unspeakably rainforest-lush and beautiful, a must. Peter Buck and Mike Mills have rarely been more creative, unobtrusively creating successive inventive parts that jump out over successive listens. And Stipe, whether rising with magnificent resignation from the subliminal piano weave (nearly Chills-like!) of the sparse "Saturn Return" or seducing so thoroughly on "The Lifting," has rarely seemed more softly stirring, the twilight of the music reflected perfectly in his restrained singing. Rock stars can mature, and make fine music for decades. R.E.M.'s luscious pop is a rare exception to the usual sickly pattern, the down-the-drain of predictable mediocrity to feeble efforts. It's a long way from "Carnival of Sorts" to "Imitation of Life," but today's R.E.M. is not only a fair inheritor of its own long and fine legacy; they're doing some of their best work in the here and now. Reveal is a small revelation, a delightful but ever-challenging headphones record to revel in. ~ Jack Rabid, The Big Takeover, All Music Guide

Tracklisting
Disk  | 1 
1Lifting
2I've Been High
3All the Way to Reno (You're Gonna Be a Star)
4She Just Wants to Be
5Disappear
6Saturn Return
7Beat a Drum
8Imitation of Life
9Summer Turns to High
10Chorus and the Ring
11I'll Take the Rain
12Beachball

 

User Reviews

   Gabe Vodicka - Americus, GA, USA
Listening to this famed Athens-based band’s new album, one feels a sense of vague familiarity, as if these songs were lying dormant in all our minds and REM finally found the means to let them out. This amazing album opens out with a track called “The Lifting” which is exactly that. It is a synth-laced electro-pop song that could not be further from the confining standards of radio and MTV, yet still has a strange addictive quality to it that will undoubtedly bring listeners flocking. The rest of the album basically follows the same formula, as if REM, as Radiohead did with Kid A, are saying “fuck off, we can do what we want” to mainstream radio and sales charts, but in a (get this!) much friendlier and less self-absorbed way. The only true radio-friendly track on the album is the first single, “Imitation of Life”, which is a great song, but completely contradictory and antonymic of the rest of the album. As always, Michael Stipe’s voice is powerful and beautiful, and the rest of the band complements the sound terrifically. Even with the absence of their original drummer, they still manage to sound great with fill-in replacement Joey Waronker and others. On their past records, REM has seemed to follow a specific type of formula, delivering what they thought their fans wanted at the time. Now, as the band matures and the music scene evolves, they have beautifully crafted a collage of all their past sounds while still undoubtedly experimenting with uncharted territory. Ambitious? Yes. Amazing? Yes. Still REM? Definitely.


Do you already own this product and want to submit a review? Click here to submit your own review!

Weekly Newsletter

Sign Up
 

Radio Player

 
Submarines
"You, Me & The Bourgeoisie"
5/20 Annihilation Time
Tales of The Ancient Age
5/20 Blackstrap
Steal My Horses and Run
5/20 Bonnie 'Prince' Billy
Lie Down in Light
5/20 Cheap Time
Cheap Time
5/20 Collections of Colonies of Bees
Six Guitars