d House Writers Series The weekly meeting for writers at the Guild House welcomes Ann Pal. Poet Ann Pai discusses her works and life as a writer. An open mic and discussion will follow for her readings. The meeting begins at 8:30 p.m., and admission is free. The Guild House is located at 802 Monroe. Ufie Lt ion a&u Tomorrow in Daily Arts: It's an R.E.M. Breaking Records day when Breaking Records features R.E.M.'s latest release '"Up." Monday October 26,1998 DIFFERENT AND STRANGE R.E.M. alters musical perspectives Courtsy of(.S.Reords i-period R.E.M.: Buck, Stipe, Mills and Berry circa "Reckoning,"1983, K Y.I: R.E.M.Trivia By Andors Smitlyindall JFor the Daily R.E.M.'s career, now nearly two decades old, is fodder for a wealth of via and fun facts. If you know all' Ifthis already, get help: You are a drooling groupie with a sick obses- sion. Where are they now? R.E.M. was formed in Athens, GA in 1980. At the time, the University? of Georgia, Athens college town was host to a thriving underground music scene. R.E.M.'s early peers included the Method Actors, Pylon and the B- $2s. ' R.E.M. by any other name Before choosing their moniker at random from a dictionary, the mem- bers of R.E.M. considered such names as Cans of Piss and Twisted Kites. Fake names under which IE.M. has performed include Bingo Hand Job and the Georgia Peaches. At the first Tibetan Freedom Concert, Michael Stipe and Mike Mills ed with members of U2 under e name Automatic Baby. Break on through R.E.M.'s first release was a seven- inch single version of "Radio Free Europe," issued by ib-Tone in 1981. The single was followed by a cas- sette-only EP, "Chronic Town" on '.R.S. (1982). The first full-length R.E.M. album, also on I.R.S., was 1983s "Murmur." The band's first Np-0 hit on the pop charts was "One Love" from 1987's "Document" (IRS). "Green" (Warner Bros., 1989) was R.E.M.'s first major-label release. You and Your Sister Michael isn't the only musical Stipe. His sister, Lynda, has been a" mnember of such bands as OHOK, ;etch Hetchy and Jakarta Mix. Maps and Legends Everyone knows that the Byrds,, the Velvet Underground and the Patti rith Group influenced R.EM's rund. But if you've never heard Big Star, the Soft Boys, the 13th Floor Elevators or Wire, you don't have the whole picture. Mystery to Me With the exception of "Murmur" .E.M. has always named each side . oftheir albums. The A side of "Chronic Town" was "Chronic Town;" the B side was "Poster Torn." ife's Rich Pageant" was comprised tv"Dinner" and "Supper." Others include: "Page"/"Leaf" ("Green"), "Time"/"Memory" ("Out of Time"), and "Drive"/"Ride" ("Automatic for the People"). Cover story Throughout their career, R.E.M. ras recorded and officially released cover versions of more than 40 songs written by others. The most frequent- covered band is the Velvet Uderground - R.E.M. has record- d 'The After Hours;'"Femme itae," "Pale Blue Eyes," and There She Goes Again."Others among the eclectic group are the Everly Brothers, Pink Floyd, Leonard Cohen, The Troggs, Henry Mancini, Lieber & Stoller, Tchaikovsky, the Ohio Players, Aerosmith and Richard Thompson. A little help from my friends Since the departure of Bill Berry, R.E.M. has used the drummers Barrett Martin (Screaming Trees) and Joey Waronker (Beck) to round out the quartet. But these aren't the first musicians to have had the dis- tinction of being "unofficial" mem- bers of R.E.M. Chris Stamey and Peter Holsapple were early regulars; Scott McCaughey and Nathan December more recently. Guests on R.E.M. albums have included rapper KRS-One ("Radio Song" on "Green") and Patti Smith (the back- ground vocal on "E-Bow the Letter" from "New Adventures In Hi-Fi"). Side orders R.E.M. members have always ' busied themselves with extracurric- ular side projects: Berry, Buck and Mills backed Warren Zevon as the Hindu Love Gods, Stipe recorded with the revolving-door supergroup the Golden Palominos and Buck has dabbled lately with the faux-jazzy Tuatara and the Minus-5. Lights, camera, action Ever the Renaissance Man, Michael Stipe has collaborated on a book of poetry and published a book of photographs. And soon, his film company, C-100, will celebrate the opening of its first nationwide the- atrical release, "Velvet Goldmine." Daysleeper, indeed Peter Buck is credited with pro- ducing the Feelies' 1986 album, "The Good Earth." But according to an account of the sessions in "Kaleidoscope Eyes," critic Jim DeRogatis' Bible of psychedelic rock, "Buck spent most of his time sleeping with his feet up on the mix- ing console." One hopes he worked harder at other production jobs -he has presided over recordings by the likes of the Flat Duo Jets and Uncle Tupelo. Michael Stipe has done time behind the board as well, most notably as the producer of the first two Vic Chesnutt albums. Two voices are better than one Outside of R.E.M., Michael Stipe has recorded duets with the likes of Natalie Merchant ("Photograph,"on the "Born to Choose" benefit CD) and Vic Chesnutt ("Injured Bird," on the soundtrack to Wim Wenders' film "The End ofViolence"). He has also contributed vocals to albums by various other friends, including Billy Bragg ("Don't Try This At Home"),. Kristin Hersh ("Hips and Makers"), Vic Chesnutt ("Is the Actor Happy?") and some long-forgotten band named Hugo Largo ("Drums"). A duet with Tori Amos has yet to see the light of day, and the oft-rumored collaboration with Kurt Cobain never made it past the conceptual stage. By Brian Cohen Daily Music Editor It was different. It was strange. You couldn't understand the words, but you definitely got the message. It wasn't loud and clear - in fact it was ambiguous and murky - but it changed rock music forever. "Radio Free Europe" was the begin- ning of an intriguing and stimulating relationship between the music world and a quartet of college kids from Athens, Ga., called R.E.M. - a relation- ship that has endured for more than 18 years worth of trend-setting, rule-break- ing and genre-defying brilliance. The magic seeds that bloomed into R.E.M. were first planted in Athens in the early part of 1980, when a gawky bass player named Mike Mills and his high school drummer friend Bill Berry were introduced to a local record store clerk named Peter Buck and his new art school acquaintance: Michael Stipe. Within a month of their first encounter, the eclectic group realized they shared a wide variety of musical interests (Velvet Underground, Iggy Pop, The Sex Pistols) and quickly started learning a dizzying array of punk rock covers and jangly originals. Within the next year, the band started making a name for itself in Athens as an adrenaline-soaked live act, and after the Hib-Tone single of "Radio Free Europe" got the buzz officially starting, I.R.S. records signed the band and released R.E.M.'s first EP "Chronic Town" in August of 1982. Right away there was something all so very wrong about R.E.M.. The bass lines were too prominent in the mix, the gui- tarist didn't know enough chords, the drummer used (gasp!) tape loops for his studio parts and, of course, the singer's words made no sense whatsoever, if you could decipher them at all. It wasn't like anything else America had ever heard - it wasn't disco and it wasn't country; it wasn't pop and it wasn't jazz. It was an alternative. But it was not until the group record- ed its full-length debut "Murmur" with producer and Athens friend Mitch Easter that R.E.M. began to delve deeply into the exploration of the moody guitar riffs and dynamic melodies that have remained at the core of its songwriting for the past two decades. With elements of folk intertwined with art-rock influ- ences of bands like Gang of Four, mean- dering bass lines and passionate sound- scapes twisted their way in and out of songs like "Mortal Kiosk;" "Catapult" and "9-9," making it obvious to all that R.E.M. had stumbled onto something original and intoxicating. Despite peaking at No. 36 on the American charts, "Murmur" was herald- ed with a lion's share of critical acclaim, and the band seemed content to prove itself to the masses by embarking on extensive tours. The follow up to "Murmur" was recorded during a hazy 11-day vacation from the road, and the resulting 1983 classic "Reckoning" combined the raw energy of a live con- cert with the group's unique sense of increasingly diverse-yet-subtle musical nuances. R.E.M. maintained this vigorous pace for the better part of the next five years, enduring a frustrating and difficult peri- guitar and mandolin collection for solace. The result was 1992's "Out of Time," the shimmering epitome of the band's folk-based acoustical prowess, stripped down to the classic songwriting core for which the quartet had by now become famous. "Losing My Religion" became R.E.M.'s biggest hit ever, launching the band into the stratosphere of superstardom for once and for all. Stipe was speaking clearly now, and a generation was listening to every word. Now- one of the music industry's hottest commodities, R.E.M. had offi- cially gone from obscurity to ubiquity, all the while skewing the definitions of musical categories around it and down- playing the awards and nominations that had started to characterize its career. Refusing to tour in support of "Out of Time" it was clear that the band was not interested in becoming the music world's center of attention. Instead it seemed more concerned with where it was going to move musically for the next record. The band's decision was surprising yet effective. Even at the height of its popu- larity, R.E.M. continued to shug off the mainstream, and while Pearl Jam and Nirvana were saturating the charts with screaming guitars and screeching vocals, R.E.M. decided to record its most quiet and introspective album with virtually no help from the electric guitar. Nineteen-ninety three's "Automatic For The People" remains the people's favorite R.E.M. record, combining the sobering subject matter of life, death and solitude with chilling melodies and soft, hushed vocal and string arrangements. Flash forward again. Drummer Bill Berry's decision to part ways with the group this past year left the remaining three members unsure of how to pro- ceed. "We were just thrown into a com- plete state of chaos," Stipe recently admitted to Jam! Magazine. "And with that, every technique and process and rule book that we've ever had in the past 10 albums, really, the only way to kind of face the music, and I hate to say that, the only way to face the situation at hand, is to throw it out the window and just say fuck it. See R.E.M., Page 8A Courtesy or Warmer Bros. Mike Mills, Peter Buck and Michael Stipe continue to deliver genre-defying music. od during the making of 1984's "Fables of the Reconstruction," in which the band attempted to come to grips with the inexorable fame that it had started to gar- ner, courtesy of the overwhelming response from critics and its now mas- sive cult following. With each new release, the concerts got a little wilder, the crowds got a little larger and the buzz about R.E.M. got a little louder. Thanks in part to a remark- able willingness to stay on the road and an impressive ability to continuously evolve its seasoned songwriting style, R.E.M. had started knocking on the backdoor of success and seemed poised to break it down without compromising its creative integrity or artistic freedom. Flash forward to the summer of 1989. The proverbial door has been blown off its hinges and trampled thoroughly underfoot. In support of "Green," its sixth and most commercially successful album yet, R.E.M. reached the top of its musical peak by making the transition from small theaters to sold-out arenas, launching its largest tour to date that spanned 130 dates and 17 countries. The band's previous album "Document" had already given Berry, Buck, Mills and Stipe their first taste of mainstream accolades, as the blistering singles "Finest Worksong," "The One I Love" and "It's The End of the World As We Know It (And I feel Fine)" reached audi- ences well beyond the college radio mar- ket that had once pigeon-holed them in the music world's artistic underground. Thanks to "Green"'s instantaneously catchy single "Stand" and politically- tinged rave-up "Orange Crush," R.E.M. found itself assuming the unfamiliar role of an arena rock band, and struggled to cater its music to the tour's impersonal venues. While some of the songs during this period took on a more universally palatable aura, the band deliberately sidestepped all aspects of traditional arena rock, refusing to buy into the stale cliches that had ruined the credibility of many of the '80s biggest acts. Instead of fancy light shows, there were minimalis- tic scribbles projected onto a modest stage backdrop - completely bereft of the gaudy glitz and glamour that had characterized the decade. Stardom had taken its toll on the group. Exhausted from the grueling "another album/ another tour" pace that it had been maintaining since its forma- tion, R.E.M. decided it was time for a change. Peter Buck took a break from the amplifiers and turned to his acoustic (\I I.. w. .~l .. 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