I recently purchased the new R.E.M. album
Collapse Into Now, and I like it. The band's releases before this one have decent (
Accelerate) and mediocre at best (
Reveal) for fans like me who have been listening to their work since
Murmur.
My favorite R.E.M. album is
Life's Rich Pageant. I like the album so much that I smuggled the phrase "life's rich pageant" into the book I'm writing/revising. "I Believe" above comes from that album, a work that also features "Begin the Begin," "Fall on Me," "What If We Give It Away?," and "Superman." Other favorite albums are mine are
Fables of the Reconstruction,
Reckoning, and
Document. That era was a fine time to be a R.E.M. fan.
And I'm particularly fond of
Automatic for the People too although I despise "Everybody Hurts." On that album the final three songs are outstanding: "Man on the Moon," "Nightswimming," and "Find the River." It's hard to repeat that kind of trio to close an album.
An emerging band that reminds me of R.E.M. in some respects is Frontier Ruckus, whose second album I featured on my "
Top Ten/Twenty Albums of 2010" post. Check out the video for "Nerves of the Nightmind" from
Deadmalls and Nightfalls below.
Now Frontier Ruckus is more alt-country, folk-rock, Americana, or whatever the heck they want to describe themselves as, but Milia's lyrics remind of Stipe's in some respects although when you compare his lyrics to Stipe's lyrics from the early R.E.M albums, there's a lot more to go on when deciphering meaning. But they both have playful and literary steaks as writers.
Early R.E.M. lyrics, to my eyes at least, remind me of "language poetry," and some of Milia's lyrics work that way too even though "Nerves of the Nightmind" isn't that hard to figure out unless I'm really off base.
And speaking of lyrics, both are below.