MTV Unplugged: R.E.M. (1991)

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R.E.M.’s first appearance on MTV Unplugged took place on April 10, 1991, the year the band came to worldwide attention, at Chelsea Studios in New York City. The band, along with hired hand Peter Holsapple, lined up on stools in front of an invited audience. Michael Stipe defied the studio lights by wearing the black fisherman’s hat he favoured that year and a three-quarter-length mustard-coloured coat (over a yellow shirt, no less), although for the latter part of the set he did resort to rolling the legs of his jeans up over his knees.

Of the less predictable selections, ‘It’s The End of the World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)’ was the strangest candidate for an acoustic revamp, and it certainly didn’t occur to the band themselves initially, as Stipe announced that it was a last-minute request from MTV. Indeed, they had to have the lyric faxed through from Athens. The vocals, for its part, received more care and attention than it had on the Green tour, and the attempt amused both the band and the audience alike.

The cover of the Troggs’ ‘Love is all Around’ was subsequently included on the longform video This Film Is On. A photograph taken during the performance by Retna’s Frank Micelotta can be found in the image section in the middle of Adventures in Hi-Fi: The Complete R.E.M., a book written by Rob Jovanovic and Tim Abbott, issued in 2001.

Contents

[edit] Setlists

[edit] Unedited

  1. ‘World Leader Pretend’
  2. ‘Half a World Away’
  3. ‘Disturbance at the Heron House’
  4. ‘Spooky’ (Classics IV)
  5. ‘Fretless’
  6. ‘Swan Swan H’
  7. ‘Smiling Faces Sometimes’ (Undisputed Truth)
  8. ‘Radio Song’
  9. ‘Low’
  10. ‘But it’s Alright’ (J.J. Jackson)
  11. ‘Perfect Circle’
  12. ‘Fall on Me’
  13. ‘Belong’
  14. ‘Egyptian Reggae’
  15. ‘Love is All Around’
  16. ‘It’s The End of the World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)’
  17. ‘Losing My Religion’
  18. ‘Pop Song ’89’
  19. ‘Get Up’
  20. ‘World Leader Pretend’ (re-take)
  21. ‘Disturbance at the Heron House’ (re-take)
  22. ‘Endgame’

[edit] Edited

Although the edited broadcast programme was structured like a non-stop concert, recording actually took two hours. In addition to breaks while the band members exchanged instruments and Berry went to the men’s room, there were delays while technical adjustments were made. During these moments, the band entertained themselves and the audience by playing a quartet of cover versions: Classics IV’s ‘Spooky’, the Undisputed Truth’s ‘Smiling Faces Sometimes’, ‘Egyptian Reggae’, and J.J. Jackson’s ‘But it’s Alright’. They also recorded second takes of ‘Disturbance at the Heron House’ (Buck having broken a string during the first attempt) and ‘World Leader Pretend’. The latter song, ‘Fretless’, ‘Swan Swan H’, and ‘Get Up’ were subsequently dropped from the final running order, which aired on April 24, 1991:

  1. ‘Half a World Away’
  2. ‘Disturbance at the Heron House’
  3. ‘Radio Song’
  4. ‘Low’
  5. ‘Perfect Circle’
  6. ‘Fall on Me’
  7. ‘Belong’
  8. ‘Love is All Around’
  9. ‘It’s The End of the World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)’
  10. ‘Losing My Religion’ (“We’ve got one more,” announced Stipe. [The audience audibly showed their disappointment.] “Oh, you want us to quit now?” quipped Mills.)
  11. ‘Pop Song ’89’

[edit] Personnel

R.E.M.

  • Bill Berry – congas, tambourine, maracas, vocals
  • Peter Buck – acoustic guitar, mandolin
  • Mike Mills – acoustic bass, acoustic guitar, Hammond organ, vocals
  • Michael Stipe – vocals

Auxiliary musician

  • Peter Holsapple – acoustic guitar, Hammond organ, accordion

[edit] Trivia

  • Confirming Peter Holsapple's status as "unofficially the fifth member of R.E.M.", Stipe put the former dB before himself in the introductions after the opening song.


R.E.M.
Peter Buck | Mike Mills | Michael Stipe | Bill Berry
Other musicians: Scott McCaughey | Bill Rieflin | Ken Stringfellow | Nathan December | Buren Fowler | Peter Holsapple | Barrett Martin | Joey Waronker
Management and producers: Bertis Downs, IV | Pat McCarthy | Joe Boyd | Don Dixon | Mitch Easter | Don Gehman | Jefferson Holt | Scott Litt
Discography
EPs: Chronic Town
Albums: Murmur | Reckoning | Fables of the Reconstruction | Lifes Rich Pageant | Document | Green | Out of Time | Automatic for the People | Monster | New Adventures in Hi-Fi | Up | Reveal | Around the Sun
Singles: Radio Free Europe | Talk About the Passion | So. Central Rain (I'm Sorry) | (Don't Go Back to) Rockville | Can't Get There From Here | Driver 8 | Wendell Gee | Fall On Me | Superman | The One I Love | It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine) | Finest Worksong | Stand | Orange Crush | Pop Song 89 | Get Up | Losing My Religion | Shiny Happy People | Near Wild Heaven | Radio Song | Drive | Man on the Moon | The Sidewinder Sleeps Tonite | Everybody Hurts | Nightswimming | Find the River | What's the Frequency, Kenneth? | Bang and Blame | Star 69 | Strange Currencies | Crush With Eyeliner | Tongue | E-Bow the Letter | Bittersweet Me | Electrolite | How the West Was Won and Where It Got Us | Daysleeper | Lotus | At My Most Beautiful | Suspicion | The Great Beyond | Imitation of Life | All the Way to Reno (You're Gonna Be a Star) | I'll Take the Rain | Bad Day | Animal | Leaving New York | Aftermath | Electron Blue | Wanderlust
Compilations: Dead Letter Office | Eponymous | In Time: The Best of R.E.M. 1988-2003 | And I Feel Fine... The Best of the I.R.S. Years 1982-1987
Remix Albums: R.E.M.IX
Soundtracks: Man on the Moon
Videos: Succumbs | Tourfilm | Pop Screen | This Film Is On | Parallel | Road Movie | In View: The Best of R.E.M. 1988-2003 | Perfect Square | When the Light Is Mine: The Best of the I.R.S. Years 1982-1987
Related articles
Alternative rock | Hindu Love Gods | I.R.S. Records | Warner Bros. Records
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