@@chrisbergmanniii59 Indeed. I remember playing this for my girlfriend-- Wolves was the first song. She said it wasn't intense enough, and, on cue, it got intense.
Still one of the greatest albums ever❤!! Listening to this, I feel like being in love with this unique band again...and nowadays, it sounds even better than it already did back then. This is the best alternative/punky album ever.
I had just gotten out of the Navy and started college 1984. My roommate was from Athens, Ga. He played this album constantly along with R.E.M. and all the Alt. College radio stuff coming out. A lot of it went over my head but this right here, like a first childhood memory, is wired in my brain forever.
EP!! This music was young when I was young. I'm overcome by nostalgia. It was Spring. The trees were in bloom. I was studying at K.U. (I missed my Logic final, but was able to retake it later.) Everything was possible. Hearing this now is like opening the drawer of an antique dresser filled with gloriously scented handkerchiefs. xxxooo
I was just getting into clubs in Kansas City when CHRONIC TOWN, and then MURMUR hit me like a ton of bricks. Some tremendous memories come back to me when I hear early REM. 'FABLES' was also an important REM album to me. I saw them live several times, but my first REM show was at HOCH Auditorium (at KU!) In 1984, and then three years in a row (85-87) at Memorial Hall in Kansas City, Kansas. Great shows all. I also loved that REM championed other bands in interviews. I became obsessed with The Replacements (and many other indie bands) after hearing Stipe or Buck rave about them. But yeah, the early REM records have been in my heart, soul, and mind since I heard them back in those Halcyon days. Hard to believe CHRONIC TOWN is 40 years old...
Great comment...I was a college kid trying to figure out how to negotiate through everything and anything - R.E.M. was in their early phase and hadn't quite hit it so big that they became oversold...what a wonderful time...
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Chronic Town EP by R.E.M. Released August 24, 1982 Recorded October 1981 and June 1982 Length 20:26
Chronic Town is the debut EP by American alternative rock band R.E.M., released on August 24, 1982, on I.R.S. Records. Containing five tracks, the EP was recorded at the Drive-In Studio in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, in October 1981, eighteen months after the formation of the band. Its co-producer was Mitch Easter, who produced the band's "Radio Free Europe" single earlier in 1981. Chronic Town's opening track, "Wolves, Lower", was re-recorded in June 1982, two months before the EP's release. Regarding the title of the EP, the band's drummer, Bill Berry, said: "A 'chronic town' is a city in the state of mind." It is also part of the lyric to "Carnival of Sorts (Boxcars)", the third track on the release,[3] and the name of the first side of the EP. "Poster Torn", also a lyric in "Carnival of Sorts (Boxcars)", is the name of side two. I.R.S.'s Jay Boberg said of Chronic Town: "The thing that made me play the cassette again and again was that it kept getting better. It was not the kind of thing you listened to once or twice, casually, and said, 'Oh my God! This is tremendous!' It had a depth to it." NME reviewer Richard Grabel wrote, "Chronic Town is five songs that spring to life full of immediacy and action and healthy impatience. Songs that won't be denied." Grabel praised the songs' auras of mystery, and concluded, "R.E.M. ring true, and it's great to hear something as unforced and cunning as this."[18] Creem writer Robot A. Hull began his review saying, "This EP is so arcane that I had to play it six times in a row to get a handle on it - and even now, I'm still not sure." Hull praised the EP for "[evoking] the music of the late-'60s without any pretensions, mingling past and present to shape both into concurrent moments." Hull concluded, "Despite its eccentricity, R.E.M.'s record is undoubtedly the sleeper EP of the year." Chronic Town ranked second in the EP category of the Village Voice Pazz & Jop critics' poll in 1982. For Record Store Day 2010, held on April 17 of that year, participating independent record stores sold a limited-edition and individually-numbered blue vinyl 12" reissue of the long-out of print EP. Track listing All songs written by Bill Berry, Peter Buck, Mike Mills and Michael Stipe. Side one - "Chronic Town" "Wolves, Lower" - 4:10 "Gardening at Night" - 3:29 "Carnival of Sorts (Boxcars)" - 3:54 Side two - "Poster Torn" "1,000,000" - 3:06 "Stumble" - 5:40 Personnel R.E.M. Bill Berry - drums, vocals Peter Buck - guitar Mike Mills - bass guitar, vocals Michael Stipe - vocals
R.E.M. were one of the first bands I ever got into, even as a toddler. Late 80s baby; my parents gave me a kickass background to build upon and I'm grateful for awesome stuff like this. The original "alternative" band.
This makes me very nostalgic and happy! Growing up 25 mins from Athens as a teen in the 80's, this band opened music up to my friends and I in a good good way!
not me nowhere near Athens however in Lawrence Kansas these guys were gods I saw them at the KU Student Union maybe 100 people and couldn't understand a single word M Stipe said even afterwards talking with the band
Those jangling guitar arpeggios, that soft but crunchy voice, that steady beat. I'm in love again (honestly, never been out of it, but forgot what chills you gave me in my youth)❤
I was in Athens in the '80s. I remember the first times you would see these guys wandering around on the street, and then after a while, it was like, oh, there's Buck again. Special times.
Brilliant music and lyrics REM kept me going when alone and I was on their philomath mailing list for fanzines and posters they sent, one day a reunion 🎶💛🇺🇸🏴
Same here I only started listening to REM a month ago, and got into this EP recently, then I see on social media the same day that its this EP's 40th anniversary... 😄
Thanks for uploading this wonderful EP. and for no ads! Saw REM 4x in the very early 80s. Shared a beer with Michael after the 1982 show at The Pier in Raleigh NC. Great memories, indeed❤
Being hardwired to their first three full length LP’s by 1985 this EP got the press it deserved by then. Memories of being stationed in the UK at a cruise missile base permeate my thoughts. REM had just finished ‘Fables’ when I arrived in the spring that year. They were sick of the weather and food. I stuck around for two glorious years but never caught them in Hammersmith or anywhere. When I saw Television in ‘92 it atoned for all the great acts I missed. REM habitually covered ‘See No Evil’ live. I wish the first three LP’s for Warner Bros. sank in like the three records after this one, but they had matured and moved on. A timeless first 5-7 years. Still hardwired after nearly four decades.
Words cannot describe how much better those days were than now. Young people you just cannot understand so please stop criticizing us for being nostalgic. they were the greatest of times and these are the worst of times. By the way, this is my vote for probably the greatest pre-debut album of all time.
I haven't listened to REM in a long time. I wore out their albums in the 80s and 90s and then lost interest. It's very nice to listen to this again. Brings back great memories!
as an avid music fan, i always sought out what was new and innovative, rarely being content with what was popular on the mainstream media. When REM first came out, they were highly touted , but, i was not engaged at first, they were so "outside of the box", i had no receptors for them. These receptors grew to love and cherish this new music they made. Music is funny that way, some new directions become the norm, and it is hard to remember, impossible for late comes to know, how radical it all once was.
The first thing i heard from REM was this album. I recorded it on a cassete so i could hear it in the car and my walkman. It was in Athens Hellas 1986 and i was fifteen years old. Still have the cassete, still listen this album. Loud!
Well well well.... This little gem is finally coming out on a stand alone CD.😘 I guess I'm a lil" bummed that they're not adding any bonus tracks or alternate versions of any of these songs here. I'll admit that I bought the cassette soley based on the cover of the gargoyle on a blue background. I'm not sure what section of the dinky little music store it was in. Being into heavy metal and early electronic music like Popol Vuh, Brian Eno and the likes along with Sonic Youth, Bad Brains ect..... I mean I collect (ed) all forms as long as it was good. I don't even think there WAS an alternative section yet so...?? I can tell you that this was my first example of "college rock" that I had ever purchased and I fell for it in a huge way. Even though at the time I was in a Metal band I absolutely loved the jingle jangly sound of it all. So much that I bought the first 4 or 5 releases unheard because I couldn't go wrong with these guys and their oh so pleasant sound that evolved with each release.I hafta be careful tho cuz I find myself getting a lil' melancholic and the next thing u kno I'll be buying all the aforementioned releases AGAIN and I'm running outta places to put my collection. I think I bought this and Screaming for Vengeance at the same time. Totally opposite ends of the musical spectrum but like I said... Good Music !!!👍🙏❤️
Just discovered this EP last December and absolutely love it! 😍Later on in the Winter I finished a game of A Song of Ice & Fire Miniatures with a friend at the gaming bar and went to the local book and record store. They somehow had the picture disc of this EP. Had to grab it immediately! 💜 Carnival of Sorts is my favorite.
Lol. Got a massive poster of rem and u2 boy from a catalog for my baltimore studio apt sophomore year in art school... yeah $435 rent in 1990 seemed so high😂
Such a brilliant EP. Considering this is amongst the first tracks the band wrote.Brilliant. Amongst them 'Gardening At Night' which they say was the first proper song they ever wrote together. Over 40 years old and still regularly listen to it.
Without question. Think of the year...absolutely a unique sound. I flipped my wig when I first heard it. And for you kids out there, you know it's GREAT when you've flipped your wig over it.😅
Ah the hours and hours spent trying to figure out the chord progressions on the guitar, and searching, searching for some deeper meaning in the lyrics...
I was a student in Atlanta in 1983 when these guys played the local scene - 688, Moon Shadow Saloon, Georgia Tech, the 40 Watt Club. We knew we were hearing novel, genius, shit, but damn, we couldn't fathom the meaning at the time. We used to talk about how Michael Stipe's voice was an instrument by itself. I have to read the lyrics to understand what the hell was really going on. These guys played their own instruments, interacted in a way that is lost in the modern music market. I mean, you can't spell CRAP without RAP.
Omg, 688!? I remember that place it was a dive. But we used to drive all the way from Birmingham Alabama where I studied to see punk bands there and just thought it was the coolest thing. Thanks for jogging, my memory, buddy (or buddette). :)
Man... it has been at least fifteen years since I have listened to this. There is just something special about it. Debut or not, it feels so different, and yet still very much REM. Kind of post-punk, almost new-wave at times. The first two songs-- there is this frenetic drive behind them that almost gives off this feeling of paranoia, even-- and then Gardening at Night begins and it sounds like jangle pop. It also has always reminded me of other bands on IRS from that period, which is kind of interesting... at least it sounds like that to my ears. A bit of The Police (Carnival of Sorts sounds like Message in a Bottle to me), even The English Beat, but much darker and moodier. And for as dark & raw as this is compared to the later REM of the '90s, it's still vibrant and feels pretty modern to me... I guess I kind of forgot all about this one until tonight. I don't even know where my old CD copy is, so this was a nice hit for my algorithm when I've grown tired of almost everything lately. Every song on this one is good... not one skip.
Do it this way. Listen to just the guitar. Then just listen to the drums. Then just the lyrics. Then listen to just the back up vocals. I pity those of you who didn't live through the 1980s. You will never, genuinely -- GROK -- this album. You'll come close, but you'll never truly "speak it" without an accent.
@@kevinrogers326 Pretty sure The Pups, Husker Du, The Pixies and The Replacements (all better bands imho) would wholeheartedly disagree with this dude. Hyperbole indeed!
Caue,, smith, Nirvana, Radiohead, hole. This era is origin in finding and becoming the beautyful Sound of the rem-monster. A very softly sarcastic lovely monster, from which you only can be afraid of, if you are truly scared of Baby Tiger-lily kittens
1. Carnival of Sorts 0:00
2. Wolves Lower 3:53
3. Gardening At Night 8:02
4. Stumble 11:36
5. 1,000,000 17:12
How come the songs are out of order?
Magistral
@@chrisbergmanniii59 Indeed. I remember playing this for my girlfriend-- Wolves was the first song. She said it wasn't intense enough, and, on cue, it got intense.
Still have my vinyl copy of this album that I bought new in 1987. Play it now and then.
i still have(and play), the e.p. i bought new in 1982. i also have the cd version for in the car.
I can easily say, this sounds better to me than it did 40 years ago, and it was great back then...anybody else?
oh hell yes!!!
Yea...funny how that happens huh?
I think my appreciation has increased and become more mature. I now hear the drum sequences and guitar melodies.
Still love it. Realized how much i miss this. 1st heard it as part if dead letter office cd
Still one of the greatest albums ever❤!! Listening to this, I feel like being in love with this unique band again...and nowadays, it sounds even better than it already did back then. This is the best alternative/punky album ever.
I had just gotten out of the Navy and started college 1984. My roommate was from Athens, Ga. He played this album constantly along with R.E.M. and all the Alt. College radio stuff coming out. A lot of it went over my head but this right here, like a first childhood memory, is wired in my brain forever.
That's an amazing memory. There was something about Athens that made greatness.
the drumming here is incredible
In my opinion, still the greatest EP ever released. Outstanding music and concept.
*reaping wheel diminish carnival or sorts*
totally agree! 😊
The EP Come on Pilgrim by The Pixies is not bad too...
As EP's go, yes. Of course, the majority of fans bought this after Murmur and Reckoning (at least I did).
Dire Straits, Extendedance Play ... in a tie with this one.
EP!! This music was young when I was young. I'm overcome by nostalgia. It was Spring. The trees were in bloom. I was studying at K.U. (I missed my Logic final, but was able to retake it later.) Everything was possible. Hearing this now is like opening the drawer of an antique dresser filled with gloriously scented handkerchiefs. xxxooo
Or ladies underwear. Lol. ?
I was just getting into clubs in Kansas City when CHRONIC TOWN, and then MURMUR hit me like a ton of bricks. Some tremendous memories come back to me when I hear early REM. 'FABLES' was also an important REM album to me. I saw them live several times, but my first REM show was at HOCH Auditorium (at KU!) In 1984, and then three years in a row (85-87) at Memorial Hall in Kansas City, Kansas.
Great shows all. I also loved that REM championed other bands in interviews. I became obsessed with The Replacements (and many other indie bands) after hearing Stipe or Buck rave about them. But yeah, the early REM records have been in my heart, soul, and mind since I heard them back in those Halcyon days. Hard to believe CHRONIC TOWN is 40 years old...
Great comment...I was a college kid trying to figure out how to negotiate through everything and anything - R.E.M. was in their early phase and hadn't quite hit it so big that they became oversold...what a wonderful time...
That's a glorious memory. All of these treasures of our precious youth ...
@@keithkoenig5320 Oh my goodness. I was at that show at Hoch. I too love "Fables" and "Murmur."
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chronic Town
EP by R.E.M.
Released August 24, 1982
Recorded October 1981 and June 1982
Length 20:26
Chronic Town is the debut EP by American alternative rock band R.E.M., released on August 24, 1982, on I.R.S. Records. Containing five tracks, the EP was recorded at the Drive-In Studio in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, in October 1981, eighteen months after the formation of the band. Its co-producer was Mitch Easter, who produced the band's "Radio Free Europe" single earlier in 1981.
Chronic Town's opening track, "Wolves, Lower", was re-recorded in June 1982, two months before the EP's release.
Regarding the title of the EP, the band's drummer, Bill Berry, said: "A 'chronic town' is a city in the state of mind." It is also part of the lyric to "Carnival of Sorts (Boxcars)", the third track on the release,[3] and the name of the first side of the EP. "Poster Torn", also a lyric in "Carnival of Sorts (Boxcars)", is the name of side two.
I.R.S.'s Jay Boberg said of Chronic Town: "The thing that made me play the cassette again and again was that it kept getting better. It was not the kind of thing you listened to once or twice, casually, and said, 'Oh my God! This is tremendous!' It had a depth to it."
NME reviewer Richard Grabel wrote, "Chronic Town is five songs that spring to life full of immediacy and action and healthy impatience. Songs that won't be denied." Grabel praised the songs' auras of mystery, and concluded, "R.E.M. ring true, and it's great to hear something as unforced and cunning as this."[18] Creem writer Robot A. Hull began his review saying, "This EP is so arcane that I had to play it six times in a row to get a handle on it - and even now, I'm still not sure." Hull praised the EP for "[evoking] the music of the late-'60s without any pretensions, mingling past and present to shape both into concurrent moments." Hull concluded, "Despite its eccentricity, R.E.M.'s record is undoubtedly the sleeper EP of the year."
Chronic Town ranked second in the EP category of the Village Voice Pazz & Jop critics' poll in 1982.
For Record Store Day 2010, held on April 17 of that year, participating independent record stores sold a limited-edition and individually-numbered blue vinyl 12" reissue of the long-out of print EP.
Track listing
All songs written by Bill Berry, Peter Buck, Mike Mills and Michael Stipe.
Side one - "Chronic Town"
"Wolves, Lower" - 4:10
"Gardening at Night" - 3:29
"Carnival of Sorts (Boxcars)" - 3:54
Side two - "Poster Torn"
"1,000,000" - 3:06
"Stumble" - 5:40
Personnel
R.E.M.
Bill Berry - drums, vocals
Peter Buck - guitar
Mike Mills - bass guitar, vocals
Michael Stipe - vocals
My favorite R.E.M.
Really Energetic Music! ^_^
@@pewpewdie1630 when I first heard it, in 1982 when it came out, my friend and I got up and danced and didn't sit down til it was over ✌🎶
Stumble is incredibly underrated!
Agreed. Police , Stewart Copeland drum vibes…
@@chalesgolding5314 Yeah but the Police Suk
@@juicerversion1236"You know what? YOU SUCK!"
@@v-town1980 Thanks :) much love
This is twenty of my favorite minutes in music.
It’s pure genius. T’was fresh then. Still sounds sweet and alive. One of my favorite spins. Comes out often.
*try*
*this*
*trick*
*at*
*hand*
I love the CD version of Dead Letter Office that includes as a bonus Chronic Town.
Hearing those first notes of Carnival of Sorts (Boxcars) instantly makes me happy, no matter what's going on.
Perfect jangle pop rock. ❤
It's now my favorite R.E.M. song! 💜
One of my favorite EP's and the best record REM ever put out. If only i could back...... Still gives me chills-- so pure and fresh.
don't forget the production by Mitch Easter at Drive-in these 5 guys created a genre
We all wish we could go back. who's working on the time machine?!
Chronic Town has nothing on Murmur. Murmur (LP) cover to cover is an absolute masterpiece.
chronic town is just better. sorry.
R.E.M. were one of the first bands I ever got into, even as a toddler. Late 80s baby; my parents gave me a kickass background to build upon and I'm grateful for awesome stuff like this. The original "alternative" band.
It's been years, but it's so refreshing to hear REM's earliest and purist music again. Thanks!
killed eh ?
gat dam... early R.E.M. was so eerily perfect.
This music was very significant to my teen years. It kind of defined me,and my friends. Some of the greatest music ever!!! Love these guys GENIUS!!!
*cages*
*under*
Agreeance
Pretty cool that R.E.M performed 4 of the 5 songs several times during their last tour together. What comes around goes around!
no Bill Berry , no R.E.M
I never listened to this ep until today ... well, I think it'is absolutely wonderful!
*tis*
Lol. Never? Damn!
Better late than never.
Happy 40th Anniversary Chronic Town 🎶🎶💙💙💙✌
I saw REM once only. 1985 Memphis, TN and 10,000 Maniacs opened. Natalie merchant wore a grey dress. It was SO intimate and amazing.
I saw them only once, also.. 1983. NYC, What was then Shea Stadium.. they opened for The Police (Synchronicity tour). Awesome memory.
Love the brilliant vocal interplay & dark melodies. R.E.M. will forever be with me.🖤
*nightswimming*
Dark, and yet also bright -- almost simultaneously. No one else but R.E.M could pull that off.
This makes me very nostalgic and happy! Growing up 25 mins from Athens as a teen in the 80's, this band opened music up to my friends and I in a good good way!
Same here. It was great music on its own merit. But to live so close to the source made it life-defining.
not me nowhere near Athens however in Lawrence Kansas these guys were gods I saw them at the KU Student Union maybe 100 people and couldn't understand a single word M Stipe said even afterwards talking with the band
Those jangling guitar arpeggios, that soft but crunchy voice, that steady beat. I'm in love again (honestly, never been out of it, but forgot what chills you gave me in my youth)❤
Had this record way back when and wore it out...
They didn't know how much we needed r.e.m.
I was in Athens in the '80s. I remember the first times you would see these guys wandering around on the street, and then after a while, it was like, oh, there's Buck again. Special times.
I saw them in concert in Mansfield Ma. in 1999 They did Wolves Lower . Was such a great night!!!
Whos here still in 2024?🙌
r stevie moore
Meeee!
I knew all these songs already, but never heard this EP...I love it. All of the best sounds of R.E.M.
REM is my band. They can do no wrong. I’m hardwired.
Brilliant music and lyrics REM kept me going when alone and I was on their philomath mailing list for fanzines and posters they sent, one day a reunion 🎶💛🇺🇸🏴
This music makes life worth living...
Sounds as great today as it did when I got it in 1984.
Love this EP! So raw yet put together purposefully!
Boxcars!
This EP could live a million, this EP coulod live a million years !!! :-)
I just happened to be listening this on the 40th anniversary of its release date. I can't believe it's now that old.
Same here I only started listening to REM a month ago, and got into this EP recently, then I see on social media the same day that its this EP's 40th anniversary...
😄
Classic and Beautiful ❤️
Love this EP! Activated regions of my brain that have not been touched in 35 years. Harry J.K. I think you deserve the credit.
Thanks for uploading this wonderful EP. and for no ads! Saw REM 4x in the very early 80s. Shared a beer with Michael after the 1982 show at The Pier in Raleigh NC. Great memories, indeed❤
Wow!
First time Hearing this REM EP and this is soo good!!! This is Alternative Rock before being known as Alternative Rock!
Heck, this is almost before there was "college" rock.
21 minutes of excellence. Was the precursor of things to come....
The production was incredible, Mitch Easter and Don Dixon. Recorded in Charlotte
Recorded in Winston Salem...Don Dixon wasn't involved until Murmur.
Being hardwired to their first three full length LP’s by 1985 this EP got the press it deserved by then. Memories of being stationed in the UK at a cruise missile base permeate my thoughts. REM had just finished ‘Fables’ when I arrived in the spring that year. They were sick of the weather and food. I stuck around for two glorious years but never caught them in Hammersmith or anywhere. When I saw Television in ‘92 it atoned for all the great acts I missed. REM habitually covered ‘See No Evil’ live. I wish the first three LP’s for Warner Bros. sank in like the three records after this one, but they had matured and moved on. A timeless first 5-7 years. Still hardwired after nearly four decades.
Words cannot describe how much better those days were than now. Young people you just cannot understand so please stop criticizing us for being nostalgic. they were the greatest of times and these are the worst of times.
By the way, this is my vote for probably the greatest pre-debut album of all time.
It's a bit of an R.E.M. Renaissance lately -- the sound of this EP was epic -- chronic town the anchor to all to come. 😮
I haven't listened to REM in a long time. I wore out their albums in the 80s and 90s and then lost interest. It's very nice to listen to this again. Brings back great memories!
this song makes me feel like I'm in love again.
Man, what an E.P.!
as an avid music fan, i always sought out what was new and innovative, rarely being content with what was popular on the mainstream media. When REM first came out, they were highly touted , but, i was not engaged at first, they were so "outside of the box", i had no receptors for them. These receptors grew to love and cherish this new music they made.
Music is funny that way, some new directions become the norm, and it is hard to remember, impossible for late comes to know, how radical it all once was.
I have an autographed cassette from all 1985 fables tour. They were the best before mtv
Saw them at this early point...genius from first....
GREAT RECORD!
The cure for autotune. Started with lifes rich pageant and worked my way backward in 1986. This, reckoning, pageant are my favorites.
The first thing i heard from REM was this album. I recorded it on a cassete so i could hear it in the car and my walkman. It was in Athens Hellas 1986 and i was fifteen years old. Still have the cassete, still listen this album. Loud!
Well well well.... This little gem is finally coming out on a stand alone CD.😘 I guess I'm a lil" bummed that they're not adding any bonus tracks or alternate versions of any of these songs here.
I'll admit that I bought the cassette
soley based on the cover of the gargoyle on a blue background.
I'm not sure what section of the dinky little music store it was in.
Being into heavy metal and early electronic music like Popol Vuh, Brian Eno and the likes along with Sonic Youth, Bad Brains ect.....
I mean I collect (ed) all forms as long as it was good. I don't even think there WAS an alternative section yet so...?? I can tell you that this was my first example of "college rock" that I had ever purchased and I fell for it in a huge way. Even though at the time I was in a Metal band I absolutely loved the jingle jangly sound of it all. So much that I bought the first 4 or 5 releases unheard because I couldn't go wrong with these guys and their oh so pleasant
sound that evolved with each release.I hafta be careful tho cuz I find myself getting a lil' melancholic and the next thing u kno I'll be buying all the aforementioned releases AGAIN and I'm running outta places to put my collection. I think I bought this and Screaming for Vengeance at the same time. Totally opposite ends of the musical spectrum but like I said...
Good Music !!!👍🙏❤️
I also like Gardening at Night version on Dead Letter Office.
Thank you for uploading.
Carnival of Sorts is my all time REM tune. 🍻☮️
This is Sooo good ❤
Man, how cool would it have been to have been in athens, georgia when they and the B52s were just coming up through the local club scene?
Just discovered this EP last December and absolutely love it! 😍Later on in the Winter I finished a game of A Song of Ice & Fire Miniatures with a friend at the gaming bar and went to the local book and record store. They somehow had the picture disc of this EP. Had to grab it immediately! 💜 Carnival of Sorts is my favorite.
Had this poster (huge) in my tiny, tiny apartment in Venice, CA.
Nearly took up the whole wall. Way baaaaaack in the day. Rent was $440/month. Epic.
Lol. Got a massive poster of rem and u2 boy from a catalog for my baltimore studio apt sophomore year in art school... yeah $435 rent in 1990 seemed so high😂
@@williamscavone722 Funny you mentioned 1990, that was the exact year I moved to Venice and bought the poster. April 1990. :)
Such a brilliant EP. Considering this is amongst the first tracks the band wrote.Brilliant.
Amongst them 'Gardening At Night' which they say was the first proper song they ever wrote together. Over 40 years old and still regularly listen to it.
Every part in every song is so tasty with very tight musicisnship. It does sound better 40 years later.
Great and gardening at night ATL 99 made me cry
The greatest first recording of any band ever.
Without question. Think of the year...absolutely a unique sound. I flipped my wig when I first heard it. And for you kids out there, you know it's GREAT when you've flipped your wig over it.😅
Masterpiece! 🙌
Ah the hours and hours spent trying to figure out the chord progressions on the guitar, and searching, searching for some deeper meaning in the lyrics...
I could cry the a.c. is back on.
Should be album of the year!
'...I was so much older then, I'm younger than that now...'
I was a student in Atlanta in 1983 when these guys played the local scene - 688, Moon Shadow Saloon, Georgia Tech, the 40 Watt Club. We knew we were hearing novel, genius, shit, but damn, we couldn't fathom the meaning at the time. We used to talk about how Michael Stipe's voice was an instrument by itself. I have to read the lyrics to understand what the hell was really going on.
These guys played their own instruments, interacted in a way that is lost in the modern music market. I mean, you can't spell CRAP without RAP.
The 40 Watt Club? Damn! Classic!
And I always say that (C)Rap bit.
Omg, 688!? I remember that place it was a dive. But we used to drive all the way from Birmingham Alabama where I studied to see punk bands there and just thought it was the coolest thing. Thanks for jogging, my memory, buddy (or buddette). :)
That moment when Michael Stipe sung: “Huhuhuh muh muh muh muh wuh-uh”, I felt that.
Got the Dutch import of this (in UK) when it came out. One of my better decisions.
Personal favorite of the eighties.
Bought Chronic Town in 1985 after the first few LPs had been out.
A maior banda do alternativo. Sem massagem!
Nostalgic and fun to listen to.
Grandpa was revered and admired at church... Will miss Him of course 😉 2:03
3:50 Thought it began with Wolves Lower. . . whatever tho, great upload. nice and loud and clear.
the best first album by any group e ver
Man... it has been at least fifteen years since I have listened to this. There is just something special about it. Debut or not, it feels so different, and yet still very much REM. Kind of post-punk, almost new-wave at times. The first two songs-- there is this frenetic drive behind them that almost gives off this feeling of paranoia, even-- and then Gardening at Night begins and it sounds like jangle pop. It also has always reminded me of other bands on IRS from that period, which is kind of interesting... at least it sounds like that to my ears. A bit of The Police (Carnival of Sorts sounds like Message in a Bottle to me), even The English Beat, but much darker and moodier. And for as dark & raw as this is compared to the later REM of the '90s, it's still vibrant and feels pretty modern to me... I guess I kind of forgot all about this one until tonight. I don't even know where my old CD copy is, so this was a nice hit for my algorithm when I've grown tired of almost everything lately. Every song on this one is good... not one skip.
Do it this way. Listen to just the guitar. Then just listen to the drums. Then just the lyrics. Then listen to just the back up vocals. I pity those of you who didn't live through the 1980s. You will never, genuinely -- GROK -- this album. You'll come close, but you'll never truly "speak it" without an accent.
With this ep R.E.M. at a minimum invented a genre. Sometimes I think then invented music...
Ridiculous hyperbola!!
@@kevinrogers326 Pretty sure The Pups, Husker Du, The Pixies and The Replacements (all better bands imho) would wholeheartedly disagree with this dude. Hyperbole indeed!
Muito massa essa banda
Stumble is so good - those drums
i got this vinyl thank god.
Oh come on. Too good.
I ueard🎉 heard this tape in jr. High during the mid- eighties.. it is very underrat😢
Fantastic debut. REM means more now than they every have. How about a reunion, boys?
My first time playing this and it quite good. Murmur picks up where this ends..
Saw them at The Old Waldorf with Lets Active opening. One of their amps blew up so they borrowed one from Lets Active.
Awesome
My record player isn't working, but at least I can listen here.
what's a record player? 😂 LOL
Great song boi
Whoever they are, I'd say they have a bright future...you know, musically.
i saw the opener's lyrics written on a rail car once
Caue,, smith, Nirvana, Radiohead, hole.
This era is origin in finding and becoming the beautyful Sound of the rem-monster.
A very softly sarcastic lovely monster, from which you only can be afraid of, if you are truly scared of Baby Tiger-lily kittens
Strangely, I get it. Bless your heart, honey. xxxooo
thx for good upload tho the changed song order doesnt seem as "right" as the original.
40th anniversary this year mi amigos
15:15 Is this the first-ever reference to "hipster" in alt. rock lyrics? ["Stumble" (1982)]