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R.E.M. 2004 Tour

BUY R.E.M. TICKETS
Though
R.E.M. formed in Athens, Georgia in 1980, Mike Mills (b.
December 17, 1958) and Bill Berry (b. July 31, 1958) were the only
Southerners in the group. Both had attended high school together in
Macon, playing in a
number of bands during their teens. Michael Stipe (b. January 4, 1960) was a
military brat, moving throughout the country during his childhood. By his
teens, he had discovered punk rock through Patti Smith, Television, and Wire,
and began playing in cover bands in St.
Louis. By 1978, he had begun studying art at the
University of Georgia
in Athens,
where he began frequenting the Wuxtry record store. Peter Buck (b. December
6, 1956), a native of California,
was a clerk at Wuxtry. Buck had been a fanatical record collector, consuming
everything from classic rock to punk and free jazz, and was just beginning to
learn how to play guitar. Discovering they had similar tastes, Buck and Stipe
began working together, eventually meeting Berry and Mills through a mutual friend.
In April of 1980, the band formed to play a party for their friend,
rehearsing a number of garage, psychedelic bubblegum and punk covers in an
converted Episcopalian church. At the time, the group was played under the
name the Twisted Kites. By the summer, the band had settled on the name
R.E.M. after flipping randomly through the dictionary, and had met Jefferson
Holt, who became their manager after witnessing the group's first
out-of-state concert in North
Carolina.
Over
the next year and a half, R.E.M. toured throughout the South, playing a
variety of garage rock covers and folk-rock originals. At the time, the band
was still learning how to play, as Buck began to develop his distinctive,
arpeggiated jangle and Stipe ironed out his cryptic lyrics. During the summer
of 1981, R.E.M. recorded its first single, "Radio Free Europe," at
Mitch Easter's Drive-In Studios. Released on the local indie label Hib-Tone,
"Radio Free Europe" was pressed in a run of only 1,000 copies, but
most of the those singles fell into the right hands. Due to strong
word-of-mouth, the single became a hit on college radio and topped the
Village Voice's year-end poll of Best Independent Singles. The single also
earned the attention of larger independent labels, and by the beginning of
1982, the band had signed to I.R.S. Records, releasing the EP Chronic Town in
the spring. Like the single, Chronic
Town was well-received,
paving the way for the group's full-length debut album, 1983's Murmur.
With
its subdued, haunting atmosphere and understated production, Murmur was
noticeably different than Chronic
Town and it was
welcomed with enthusiastic reviews upon its spring release; Rolling Stone
named it the best album of 1983, beating out Michael Jackson's Thriller and
the Police's Synchronicity. Murmur also expanded the group's cult
significantly, breaking into the American Top 40. R.E.M. returned to a
rougher-edged sound on 1984's Reckoning, which featured the college hit
"So. Central Rain (I'm Sorry)." By the time the band hit the road
to support Reckoning, they had become well-known in the American underground
for their constant touring, aversion to videos, support of college radio,
Stipe's mumbled vocals and detached stage presence, Buck's ringing guitar,
and their purposely enigmatic artwork. Bands that imitated these very things
ran rampant throughout the American underground, and R.E.M. threw their
support towards these bands, having them open at shows and mentioning them in
interviews. By 1985, the American underground was awash with R.E.M.
soundalikes and bands like Game Theory and the Rain Parade, which shared
similar aesthetics and sounds.
R.E.M.
mark the point when post-punk turned into alternative rock. When their first
single, "Radio Free Europe," was released in 1981 it sparked a
back-to-the-garage movement in the American underground. While there were a
number of hardcore and punk bands in the US during the early '80s, R.E.M.
brought guitar-pop back into the underground lexicon. Combining ringing
guitar hooks with mumbled, cryptic lyrics and a D.I.Y. aesthetic borrowed
from post-punk, the band simultaneously sounded traditional and modern.
Though there were no overt innovations in their music. R.E.M. had an identity
and sense of purpose that transformed the American underground. Throughout
the '80s, they worked relentlessly, releasing records every year and touring
constantly, playing both theaters and backwoods dives. Along the way, they
inspired countless bands, from the legions of jangle-pop groups in the
mid-'80s to scores of alternative-pop groups in the '90s, who admired their
slow climb to stardom. It did take R.E.M. several years to break into the top
of the charts, but they had a cult following from the release of their debut
EP, Chronic
Town, in 1982.
Chronic Town
established the haunting folk and garage rock that became the band's
signature sound, and over the next five years, they continued to expand their
music with a series of critically-acclaimed albums.
By
the late '80s, the group's fanbase had grown large enough to guarantee strong
sales, but the Top 10 success in 1987 of Document and "The One I
Love" was unexpected, especially since R.E.M. had only altered its sound
slightly. Following Document, R.E.M. slowly became one of the world's most
popular bands. After an exhaustive international tour supporting 1988's
Green, the band retired from touring for six years and retreated into the
studio to produce their most popular records, Out of Time (1991) and Automatic
for the People (1992). By the time they returned to performing with the
Monster tour in 1995, the band had been acknowledged by critics and musicians
as one of the forefathers of the thriving alternative rock movement, and they
were rewarded with the most lucrative tour of their career. Toward the late
'90s, R.E.M. was an institution, as its influence was felt in new generations
of bands. In October of 1997, R.E.M. shocked fans and the media with the
announcement that Berry was amicably exiting
the group to retire to life on his farm; the remaining members continued on
as a three-piece, soon convening in Hawaii
to begin preliminary work on their next LP. Replacing Berry with a drum machine, the sessions
resulted in 1998's Up, widely touted as R.E.M.'s most experimental recording
in years.
REM 2004 TOUR
AND TICKET INFORMATION
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