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I spent the last two weeks locked in my office (with bad coffee) listening to their entire studio catalog—from Murmur (1983) to Collapse into Now (2011). Here is the honest truth about their discography. If you only listen to the hits, you’re missing the poetry. Murmur is still the definitive "driving alone at 2 AM" album. It sounds like a secret. But the real unsung hero here is Fables of the Reconstruction (1985). People sleep on this one because it’s dark and folksy, but "Driver 8" is a top-five R.E.M. track.

80s music, Alternative Rock, R.E.M., College Rock, Michael Stipe, Album Review, Discography [Header Image Description: A moody, blurry photo of a torn "Green" album cover or a vintage ticket stub from the Monster tour] r.e.m. discography blogspot

Out of Time (1991) is a weird record, guys. It has a mandolin hit, a spoken word track, and a children’s choir. It shouldn't work, but it feels like a warm blanket. However, Green (1988) is the real turning point. "Orange Crush" signaled that these Athens boys were ready for the arenas. What can I say that hasn't been said? If you don't like Automatic for the People , you don't have a pulse. "Nightswimming" is arguably the most beautiful song ever written about nostalgia and getting undressed in a pool. It’s melancholy, but it’s rich . The Weird Beard Era (Monster & New Adventures) Here is where fans split. Monster (1994) is deliberately distorted and glammy. They wanted to be a "fake" loud rock band. It gave us "What's the Frequency, Kenneth?" but also gave us a lot of songs that sound terrible at low volume. Crank it or skip it. New Adventures in Hi-Fi (1996) is the secret best album of the 90s. Recorded mostly on soundchecks during the Monster tour, it has a road-weary, dusty energy. "E-Bow the Letter" is haunting. The Bill Berry Goodbye (Up to Reveal) When the drummer left, they became a different band. Up (1998) is ambient and electronic. It’s a tough listen if you want rock, but "At My Most Beautiful" is a love letter to The Beach Boys. Reveal (2001) is sunshine pop. Very "Imitation of Life." Very good, but feels like a vacation postcard rather than a home. The Final Chapter (Accelerate & Collapse into Now) After the sleepy Around the Sun (we don't talk about that one), Accelerate (2008) is them trying to prove they can still be angry. It’s short, loud, and aggressive. "Supernatural Superserious" is a blast. Their swan song, Collapse into Now (2011), is the perfect ending. It’s a summary of everything they ever did: a little folk, a little punk, a little Patti Smith. "Uberlin" is a goodbye wave. Final Verdict R.E.M. was smart. They quit before they became a heritage act. If you are new to the band, start with Eponymous (the greatest hits comp), then immediately go buy Automatic for the People and Life’s Rich Pageant . I spent the last two weeks locked in

If you grew up in the late 80s or 90s, R.E.M. wasn't just a band; they were a rite of passage. They started as the cryptic kings of college radio and ended as the biggest alternative rock band on the planet. But does the "Big 90s" stuff hold a candle to the murky, mumble-core IRS years? Murmur is still the definitive "driving alone at 2 AM" album

Digging Through the IRS Years vs. The Warner Bros. Era: A Complete R.E.M. Discography Breakdown

Life’s Rich Pageant . This is the bridge. It’s where Stipe decided to actually enunciate his words. "Begin the Begin" hits like a truck. The Mainstream Implosion (Green & Out of Time) Let’s address the elephant in the room: "Losing My Religion." Is it overplayed? Yes. Is it a perfect song? Also yes.

It’s time to talk about the band that taught jangle-pop how to growl.