Monster by R.E.M.

Monster

R.E.M.

1994

Monster is a Alt/Indie album by R.E.M., originally released in 1994. On Gatefold: 123 pressings tracked, owned by 61 collectors.

Sound DNA

  • Alt/Indie
  • Alternative Rock

About

In 1992—right around the time when grunge was exploding, and bringing soot, horror, and rage back to rock music—R.E.M. made the gorgeous, pastoral, and largely acoustic <i>Automatic For the People</i>. The band members hadn’t toured since 1989, and they wanted to get back on the road via a new album that rocked hard. The result: 1994’s aptly titled <i>Monster</i>. “This is the first record where we dared to be really dumb,” guitarist Peter Buck said shortly after it was released. <i>Monster</i> is largely built around Buck’s simple, pounding guitar riffs, which emulate 1970s glam rock acts like Slade and T. Rex, often with a pulsating tremolo effect. Michael Stipe sings through a windstorm of distortion, and with Buck playing more simply, most of the musical color comes from Mike Mills, whose bass and keyboard parts always add an expansive counterpoint to R.E.M. records. Stipe’s mood was as raw as the music. The band’s increasing fame made him feel like a “dancing monkey,” he said, and in the course of making the record, two close friends died: actor River Phoenix and Nirvana’s Kurt Cobain, who was a huge R.E.M. fan. Stipe wrote “Let Me In” after Cobain’s suicide, and it’s a pained, dissonant sound sculpture that seems to implicate needy audiences in celebrity deaths. “Here comes that awful feeling again,” Stipe sings in “Circus Envy,” which was inspired by David Lynch’s 1980 freak-show drama <i>The Elephant Man</i>. That phrase could function as <i>Monster</i>’s subtitle. With the exception of “Strange Currencies,” <i>Monster</i> is a harsh, cold, claustrophobic record without any balance or relief, with songs that take impassive looks at everything from tabloid TV to joyless sex to Gen-X alienation. Buck may have been reaching for the riffs of Slade and T. Rex, but the 1970s band that R.E.M. most closely resembles here is The Stooges, whose assaultive 1973 album <i>Raw Power</i> remains a classic punk-rocker bummer.

via Apple Music

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Tracklist

Side A

  1. A1What's The Frequency, Kenneth?3:59
  2. A2Crush With Eyeliner4:39
  3. A3King Of Comedy3:39
  4. A4I Don't Sleep, I Dream3:25
  5. A5Star 693:07
  6. A6Strange Currencies3:51

Side B

  1. B1Tongue4:08
  2. B2Bang And Blame4:48
  3. B3I Took Your Name4:07
  4. B4Let Me In3:27
  5. B5Circus Envy4:14
  6. B6You4:52

Credits

Performers

61 collectors on Gatefold own this · 123 pressings tracked on Gatefold