Discography Blogspot | R.e.m.
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?
It’s time to talk about the band that taught jangle-pop how to growl. r.e.m. discography blogspot
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. If you grew up in the late 80s or 90s, R
Digging Through the IRS Years vs. The Warner Bros. Era: A Complete R.E.M. Discography Breakdown But does the "Big 90s" stuff hold a