Up (R.E.M. album)

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Up
Up cover
Studio album by R.E.M.
Released 26 October 1998 (UK)
27 October 1998 (U.S.)
Recorded January – July 1998
Genre Alternative rock
Length 64:31
Label Warner Brothers Records
Producer(s) Pat McCarthy and R.E.M.
Professional reviews
R.E.M. chronology
New Adventures in Hi-Fi
(1996)
Up
(1998)
Reveal
(2001)


Up is a 1998 album by R.E.M.. It was their first album without drummer Bill Berry, who amicably left the group in October 1997 to pursue his own interests. In his place, R.E.M. would use session drummers or drum machines to fill the void.

Moving into electronica-influenced territory after delivering the challenging New Adventures in Hi-Fi in 1996, Up alienated – to some extent – both critics and fans of the band's 1980's work and casual listeners who were used to their more commercial early 1990s output. However, some saw it as one of their bravest and most sonically daring records to date, and the record was even cited by Radiohead as a key influence on their own highly acclaimed experimental effort Kid A in 2000. Ending a ten year relationship with co-producer Scott Litt, R.E.M. engaged the production assistance of Pat McCarthy.

With Berry's departure, the sessions for Up were indeed strained, with R.E.M. subsequently admitting that they came close to breaking up during its recording. Not surprisingly, the album is considered to have a laboured and melancholic feel to it. In spite of the tension, "Daysleeper", which recalled Automatic for the People's "Try Not To Breathe" somewhat, became a Top 10 UK hit, and was followed by "Lotus", The Beach Boys-influenced "At My Most Beautiful" and "Suspicion".

Breaking with a tradition that stretched back to their 1983 debut Murmur, Michael Stipe elected to have his complete lyrics included in Up's CD booklet, a practice Stipe has maintained on all subsequent R.E.M. releases.

Up reached #3 in the U.S. (with 16 weeks on the Billboard 200) and #2 in the UK, but didn't have the staying power of their previous decade's albums, giving them their lowest sales in years. Although they initially intended on not supporting the album live, following many successful promotional concerts upon the album's release R.E.M. quickly arranaged a four-month arena tour of Europe and America during the summer of 1999.

In 2005, Warner Brothers Records issued an expanded two-disc edition of Up which includes a CD, a DVD-Audio disc containing a 5.1-channel surround sound mix of the album done by Elliot Scheiner, and the original CD booklet with expanded liner notes. The CD (as with all in this series) was not remastered.

Contents

[edit] Track listing

All songs by Peter Buck, Mike Mills and Michael Stipe unless otherwise stated.

  1. "Airportman" – 4:12
  2. "Lotus" – 4:30
  3. "Suspicion" – 5:36
  4. "Hope" (Leonard Cohen, Buck, Mills, Stipe)1 – 5:02
  5. "At My Most Beautiful" – 3:35
  6. "The Apologist" – 4:30
  7. "Sad Professor" – 4:01
  8. "You're in the Air" – 5:22
  9. "Walk Unafraid" – 4:31
  10. "Why Not Smile" – 4:03
  11. "Daysleeper" – 3:40
  12. "Diminished"2 – 6:01
  13. "Parakeet" – 4:09
  14. "Falls To Climb" – 5:06
  • Published in 1998 by Temporary Music and administered in this quote-unquote world by Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp.

[edit] Notes

1 Cohen was not directly involved in the writing of "Hope" but was given a writing credit by the band due to similarities in melody and lyrical pattern to his "Suzanne".
2 Includes a brief piece entitled "I'm Not over You", with Stipe soloing on acoustic guitar, after the song's conclusion.

[edit] Studio B-Sides

Two non-album tracks from the Up sessions appeared as single-only released, as well as two alternate versions of album tracks.

"Emphysema" (instrumental)

"Surfing the Ganges" - 2:25

"Why Not Smile" - alternate version

"Suspicion" (live in the studio)1 - 5:39

[edit] Credits

[edit] Charts

Album

Year Chart Position
1998 The Billboard 200 3 (16 weeks on chart)
1998 UK album chart 2 (29 weeks on chart)
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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