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Music : Out of Time

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by: R.E.M.

 : Out of Time

List Price: $13.98
Amazon.com's Price: $9.97
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Binding: Audio CD
EAN: 0075992649629
Label: Warner Bros / Wea
Manufacturer: Warner Bros / Wea
Number Of Discs: 1
Publisher: Warner Bros / Wea
Release Date: March 12, 1991
Studio: Warner Bros / Wea
Sales Rank: 1918
MPN: 26496




Disc 1:
  1. Radio Song
  2. Losing My Religion
  3. Low
  4. Near Wild Heaven
  5. Endgame
  6. Shiny Happy People
  7. Belong
  8. Half A World Away
  9. Texarkana
  10. Country Feedback
  11. Me In Honey
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Editorial Review:

Amazon.com essential recording:
Though R.E.M. titled a later album Monster, this 1991 smash was the true monster, with the little Athens, Georgia, quartet graduating once and for all from its jangling independent-rock roots. The confusion Michael Stipe communicates in the catchy "Losing My Religion" and the dark-and-dreamy "Low" hit the mainstream-rock audience when it was most primed for uneasy angst. (Nirvana's Nevermind was released a few months later.) There are also odd but successful experiments, like ceding the opening "Radio Song" to rapper KRS-One (with Stipe playing the moaning straight man) and going peppy for the surprisingly nonsarcastic "Shiny Happy People." --Steve Knopper

Amazon.com:
Matching their ugliest album cover with some of their most sublime music, Out of Time inaugurates the finest phase of R.E.M.'s work. This meditative yet sometimes seething album offers not only their greatest single since "Radio Free Europe" ("Losing My Religion," about which critics and programmers agreed for once), but a moodscape that ties together that song's ambivalence, the sneer of "Radio Song," the doom of "Low" and the sprightliness of "Shiny Happy People" and "Me in Honey." Their bestseller, and deservedly so. --Rickey Wright



Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - A Classic
Here it is 17 years later, and I'm still listening to this CD. Every song on here is awesome. A timeless classic.



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - Out of Patience...
am I with tirades against this CD! Okay, it's not nearly as good as Automatic for the People or their first three, but it's not unremittingly awful either. Sure, the standout by far is Losing My Religion, but the unheralded other classic here is "Country Feedback," a brillaint, disjointed precursor to the genius of "Drive" and E-bow the Letter." "Texarkana" and "Low" are quite good as well. And I'll defend "Near Wild Heaven," a sweet Beach Boys confection and, really going out on a limb, "Shiny ... Read More



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - REM - A Slight Step Down
The two previous albums by REM brought the band to the notice of radio, making them headliners in large venues throughout the country. The momentum would continue with "Out Of Time" the album that would push them over the top into superstar status. The singles "Loosing My Religion" and "Shiny Happy People" were all over MTV getting played dozens of times nationally every single day. Although vastly overplayed "Loosing My Religion" is still a great pop tune and one of the best singles the band ever ... Read More



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Stipe sings! WHOOHOO!
Man, it's a good thing I gave this a listen. Automatic For The People bites, and if I would have walked away from R.E.M, I bever would have liked them. This is refreshing to hear, and to be honest, I don't think Michael Stipe dosen't mumble and moan like he did on the next album. Out Of Time is very great for the first eight songs, with the the album really taking a dip after Texarkana.

Personally, the songs Country Feedback and Me In Honey are the low points. Country Feedback has a nice ... Read More



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - award winning cd
This is REM at their earliest emergence of sheer brilliance. Losing My Religion is simply one of the best songs ever made in the history of music - it alone is worth the price of the cd. The other songs are quite good too, such as Radio Song and Shiny Happy People. While this cd is overshadowed by it's successor, Automatic For The People, it really delivers. It has a folksy feel to it and defines REM as probably their most significant cd ever released. They really reached prominence with this cd. Losing ... Read More

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