Gardening at Night

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“Gardening at Night”
Song by R.E.M.
Album Chronic Town EP
Released August 24, 1982
Recorded 1982
Genre College rock
Length 3:29
Label I.R.S. Records
Producer Mitch Easter and R.E.M.
Chronic Town EP track listing
"Wolves, Lower"
(1)
Gardening at Night
(2)
"Carnival of Sorts (Box Cars)"
(3)


"Gardening at Night" is a song by R.E.M. It was recorded in 1982 for the band's EP Chronic Town.

The song is said to have been written on a mattress in the front yard of the Oconee Street church in Athens, Georgia. At that point in the band's career, Peter Buck has stated that their musical modus operandi at that point was "three chords and a six-pack of beer."[1] It could seem that the song refers to the simple truth that gardening at night could indeed be a good idea in Athens, where by day the temperature is too hot.

In the booklet of the 2006 And I Feel Fine: The Best of the I.R.S. Years 1982-1987 Bill Berry wrote the following of "Gardening at Night":

"We were driving at night after a show (I don't remember where), and I was at the wheel of our old car, with a rental trailer in tow. One of my three passengers aimed a directive at me. Rather than inform me of his desire to evacuate his bladder, he instead suggested that I pull over so that he might engage in the task of roadside 'night gardening.' To four guys in their early twenties this was a glaring catalyst for a new song."

Four different studio recordings of the song have been officially released. The original Chronic Town version can be found on the CD edition of Dead Letter Office and on the 2006 R.E.M. compilation And I Feel Fine: The Best of the I.R.S. Years 1982-1987. A version featuring an earlier vocal take appears on the 1988 compilation Eponymous. An acoustic version of the song appears as a bonus track on the Dutch "I.R.S. Years" reissue of Dead Letter Office. Finally, a substantially slower electric version of the song appears on the bonus disc accompanying the special collector's edition of And I Feel Fine.

Three live versions have been officially released — the first, recorded on July 13, 1983, appeared on the Dutch "I.R.S. Years" reissue of the band's debut album, Murmur. The second appeared as a B-side of the 12-inch "(Don't Go Back To) Rockville" single in 1984. The third appeared on a promotional CD called The Alternative Radio Sampler.

R.E.M. performed the song at their 2007 induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Singer Michael Stipe dedicated the song to his father. Stipe also mentioned that the band considered this to their first "real" composition, after twenty or thirty presumably failed efforts.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Black, Johnny (2004). Reveal: The Story of R.E.M. Backbeat Books. ISBN 0-87930-776-5.