R.E.M.
Murmur
Play Murmur
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MOG Editorial Review
With R.E.M. calling it quits 28 years after the release of their debut album, now is the perfect time to remember their place in alt-rock history by listening to Murmur with a set of fresh eats. With just the faintest traces of post-punk (especially in the bass lines of Mike Lines), the band managed to breathe new life into what was a garage pop sound at its core. Opener "Radio Free Europe" captured this perfectly, full of jangly guitars and energy despite the brooding vocals of Michael Stipe. Elsewhere, tracks like "Perfect Circle" showed the band crafting a more eerie breed of ballad, and moments like that left more of an impression on every band to come since whether they'd like to admit or not. R.E.M. have finally called it a day, but Murmur alone shows that their career was more successful than most bands can ever imagine.
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AMG Review of Murmur
Stephen Thomas Erlewine
All Music GuideLeaving behind the garagey jangle pop of their first recordings, R.E.M. developed a strangely subdued variation of their trademark sound for their full-length debut album, Murmur. Heightening the enigmatic tendencies of Chronic Town by de-emphasizing the backbeat and accentuating the ambience of the ringing guitar, R.E.M. created a distinctive sound for the album -- one that sounds eerily timeless. Even though it is firmly in the tradition of American folk-rock, post-punk, and garage rock, Murmur sounds as if it appeared out of nowhere, without any ties to the past, present, or future. Part of the distinctiveness lies in the atmospheric production, which exudes a detached sense of mystery, but it also comes from the remarkably accomplished songwriting. The songs on Murmur sound as if they've existed forever, yet they subvert folk and pop conventions by taking unpredictable twists and turns into melodic, evocative territory, whether it's the measured riffs of "Pilgrimage," the melancholic "Talk About the Passion," or the winding guitars and pianos of "Perfect Circle." R.E.M. may have made albums as good as Murmur in the years following its release, but they never again made anything that sounded quite like it.


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