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Accelerate

Accelerate


Other Views:
Artist: R.e.m.
Label: Warner Bros / Wea

List Price: $18.98
Buy Used: $4.24
You Save: $14.74 (78%)



New (71) Used (38) from $4.24

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 207 reviews
Sales Rank: 252

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.1
Dimensions (in): 5.4 x 4.9 x 0.3

MPN: 418620
UPC: 093624988588
EAN: 0093624988588
ASIN: B0013BNY2Q

Release Date: April 1, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: JEWEL BOX SEALED AND CD NEVER PLAYED. small mark on upc code. no apo/fpo.

Tracks:

  • Living Well Is The Best Revenge
  • Man-Sized Wreath
  • Supernatural Superserious
  • Hollow Man
  • Houston
  • Accelerate
  • Until The Day Is Done
  • Mr. Richards
  • Sing For The Submarine
  • Horse To Water
  • I'm Gonna DJ

Similar Items:

  • Saturday Nights & Sunday Mornings
  • Funplex
  • Consolers Of The Lonely
  • Narrow Stairs
  • Last Night

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
In the decade since the departure of drummer Bill Berry, R.E.M. could seem at times schizophrenic. Their albums of the era, which veered from the experimentalism of Up and reaffirmation of Reveal to 2004's more diffuse, reflective Around the Sun, often stood in stark contrast to the vibrancy of their live act. But here the alt-rock godfathers have resolved that dichotomy with their most focused and satisfying album in over a decade; a collection that doesn't so much revisit the bracing ethos of the band's '80s coming-of-age, as boil it down to its essence and supercharge it with the energy of their contemporary stage shows. That sensibility is evident from the opening track, "Living Well's the Best Revenge," where Peter Buck's aggressive, distortion-drenched riffs and Michael Stipe's gruff snarl set the tone for "Mansized Wreath," "Horse to Water," and "Supernatural Serious"; rockers that bristle with the abandonment and aggressive energy of a band half their tenure. Yet it's no mere blast-from-the-past. The inclusion of the band's recent touring musicians (Scott McCaughey on second guitar and drummer Bill Rieflin) into the session mix, as well as working out much of the material live onstage in Dublin, has yielded something more sonically akin to R.E.M. 2.2. Stipe's penchant for the lyrically opaque has been largely supplanted by an edgy, articulate passion that variously explores "Houston'"s displaced Katrina refugees, the bluegrass-tinged "Until the Day is Done," and the more typical, quiet self-examination of "Hollow Man," before exploding in the album's unlikely, upbeat elegy "I'm Gonna DJ," where singer and band find renewed hope in not only music, but themselves. --Jerry McCulley


Customer Reviews:   Read 202 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars The improbable but triumphant return of REM   April 1, 2008
Paul Allaer (Cincinnati)
135 out of 161 found this review helpful

After the last album, 2004's "Around the Sun", I have to admit I had given up on REM as that album marked the lowest and most disappointing point yet in their rich and illustrious career yet. When word came out last year that REM was yet again prepping a new album to be released in 2008, I kinda rolled my eyes. Then a funny thing happened: I heard the first single "Supernatural Superserious" and boy that song just rocked! Now comes the new album.

On "Accelerate" (11 tracks; 35 min.) REM attacks with a vigor not heard since "Monster" and "New Adventures in Hi-Fi" (the last album with original drummer Bill Berry). From the opening sounds of "Living Well's the Best Revenge", REM sounds completely reinvigorated and rejuvenated, and what a joy it is to hear. The album goes from one highlight to the next. The songs are short and to the point, they make their point and move on. Track 4 "Hollow Man" is when you think you'll catch your breath, and you do for about 15 seconds, before that songs also crashes in to your speakers. "Houston" follows and is the only weak track on the album, in my opinion. The second half kicks off with the rousing title track, and we're off to the races again: "Until the Day Is Done" and "Mr Richards" are superb. "Horse to Water" is one of my favorites with an irresistible sing-along chorus of "I'm not that easy/I am not your horse to water/I hold my breath I come around") sing-along, and "I'm Gonna DJ" is a killer track to close this set (with such choice lines of "Death is pretty final/I'm collecting vinyl/I'm gonna DJ at the end of the world"). It truly is remarkable that some how REM has rediscovered its musical focus and muse. Peter Buck's guitar work is among the best he's ever done, Stipe sounds like he's actually enjoying the songs, and Mills' harmonizing back vocals are really great (check out "Living Well", for example, but surely some credit of this resurgence must go to producer Jacknife Lee.

I can't emphasize enough how pleasantly surprised I am by this album, even shocked. I truly didn't think that REM had another great album in them, but I am more than happy to say that I was flat wrong and in my book "Accelerate" brings REM back to relevance, after so many disappointing years. I had the opportunity to see REM headline the Langerado Music Festival in early March in South Florida, and they play a bunch of songs from "Accelerate", and it all sounded fantastic. Welcome back REM, we've missed ya! "Accelerate" is one of the early favorites for top album of the year. Highly recommended!



5 out of 5 stars "I've got to fall in another direction..."   April 1, 2008
Steven Reynolds (Sydney, Australia)
110 out of 122 found this review helpful

This is it. This really is the one: the killer comeback R.E.M.'s long-suffering original fans have been hoping for since the band detoured into electronic introspection in 1998. Peter Buck's guitars are front and centre, driving the tracks rather than decorating their edges. Mike Mills can finally be heard again on bass and backups. Stipe's vocals are as rich and complex and scathing as ever, but for the first time in a decade he sounds like he believes every word. And finally, at long last, it feels like a human being is manning the drums again. It's exuberant, angry, joyous, wild - everything the last three albums, for all their deep and subtle rewards, were not. Superficially, this feels like the true successor to "New Adventures in Hi-Fi", or what that album itself might have been had the band bunkered down in the studio for a month rather than putting down tracks on the road. But in reality it's better. Ten years of studio-based experimentation and tweaking a new line-up have paid off. Tight, rich and consummately professional, the immediate loose-and-live feel of "Accelerate" is deceptive. This really is an exquisitely crafted album that repays close listening, just as the last three did for those of us who bothered. The crucial difference is that it ultimately feels less studied, less worried-over, less cautious - because it doesn't need to be. The band sound present, engaged, completely confident in their direction and abilities. Best of all, they sound like they're enjoying themselves again. And that joy is irresistible. No matter what your view of the last three albums (I liked them all), you've got nothing to complain about here. This kind of music really is what R.E.M. do best, and they deliver it in spades.

(P.S. Make sure you grab the non-album track "Redhead Walking" from iTunes: a great novelty song and surely destined for a Tarantino film soundtrack.)



1 out of 5 stars An Audiophile's Nightmare   April 8, 2008
Lost in the Vast Wasteland (New York, NY USA)
51 out of 105 found this review helpful

I'm not going to comment on the music, save to say that I like it, but I like almost everything that REM performs.

What I DON'T like is the absolutely horrible recording quality of this CD.

Are the people who run the record companies stone deaf ?? Can't they hear the horribly shrill highs ? The distortion ? The CLIPPING ?? Why have they allowed themselves to be sold a bogus bill of goods in order to participate in "The Loudness Wars" ?.

While Springsteen's Magic set the new standard for HORRIBLE audio, ACCELLERATE lags by only a nose.

You're better off taking your ten bucks and flush it straight down the toilet. You might find the gurgling noise much more enjoyable.

I wish I could tell this to Messrs. Buck, Stipe and Mills personally. I know that they've paid much more attention to the sonics in the past. I can't understand how a group of artistic geniuses can release a work that is so obviously sonically inferior.



5 out of 5 stars Pedal to the Metal! R.E.M. Returns to Form   April 2, 2008
JP's Picks (Boise, ID)
45 out of 68 found this review helpful

(4.5 *'s) `Accelerate' is R.E.M.'s best effort in ages. Surely meant to put them back in the limelight, the C.D. puts the pedal to the metal and seldom stops to look back. Reminiscent of some of the evocative folk of 'Automatic for the People,' the new songs, draw more from the power of 'Monster (CD + DVD+ A) (Dig)' and the most progressive songs from 'New Adventures in Hi-Fi'. Especially in comparison to 'Monster,' these selections are more fluid and fast-forward than their aforementioned predecessors. The best comparison is to say these songs are their most engaging power pop since `Life's Rich Pageant'.

As usual some of their lyrics are as elusive as their band name suggests, but you don't have to have to go through the printed words with a fine-toothed come, either. For the finger-wagers, they jump-start the album with the worthy "Living Well Is the Best Revenge". Turning the tables on the judgers, Michael Stipe sonorously sings:

"Don't turn your talking points on me./ History will set me free./ The future is ours/ And you don't even rate a footnote."

On "Man-Sized Wreath"* Peter Buck continues his admirable guitar snarl for a song about the tug-of-war between repression and attainment of "carpe diem". (At least that's what I think it means.) Unless the song resonates about believing what is true beyond popular deception--in which case there are plenty of images recalling "Begin the Begin," a theme that resonates often for their post 9/11 R.E.M. observations on the entire C.D.

The best song is the one that debuted early, "Supernatural Superserious," where they find their best groove (and probably their best single) in at least a decade. It is an infectious tune that invites teens (and everyone else) to have the courage to be oneself despite the temptation to be on stage and perform for others. (And speaking of stages, their drummer seems to fit the bill, giving the songs the thrust they've been lacking since the departure of Bill Berry.)

In the slower gears, they still have perfectionist layers with the Tex-Mex folkie-flavored "Houston," a call to hope, and the truly beautiful "Until the Day Is Done," which scotches the pensive beauty of "I Wanted to Be Wrong" from their middle-of-the-road predecessor, 'Around the Sun'.

Not content to simply commiserate about today's crisis, they look to hope in "Sing for the Submarine," probably their most idiosyncratic cut. Using the R.E.M. trademark of dreaming, they resolve to "pick it all up and start again" after fighting against despair ("...This is where you give into the machine/ Lift up your voice, feel gravity's pull,/ And drown out the sirens' ring.) Echoing this theme of enlightened nonconformity is "Mr. Richards," a portrait of populist leader (and a flashback to "World Leader Pretend" from 'Green') who is all bluster and no substance ("Mr. Richard you're forgiven/ For a narrow lack of vision/ But the fires are still raging on.")

R.E.M. has never shied away from social and political commentary, but in a few short songs, they find recourse in love and music. In one of their best propulsive songs since "Departure," "Horse to Water" expresses regrets when desire is tainted by harm. ("You lead a horse to water, and you watch him drown.") No less revealing is "Hollow Man," a confessional about those "loose lips" situations that flatten the spirits in lovers' lives.

Ending the album ably, "I'm Gonna DJ" is another progressive gem that jubilantly speaks of music laying down heaven on earth. Taking some of the vintage ideas and musical motifs in their past, R.E.M. goes "back to the future" and fast-forwards with some of their most accessible music in years. Indeed if 'Accelerate' doesn't take this band back to the top, it is hard to imagine anything else will.

(*At the Sasquatch Festival in George, WA, Michael Stipe introduced the song, telling the audience that the lyric was about his indignation toward President Bush during a recent tribute to the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King where he lay a wreath at the grave site of the late civil rights leader. "Begin the Begin" states "tiger run around the tree/Run, turn, and then follow," a line in reference to blind followers of authority (allegedly the late Jerry Falwell), a closer interpretation of "Man-sized Wreath" than "carpe diem".)



1 out of 5 stars Sample Tracks First   April 6, 2008
RichBoston (Boston)
42 out of 95 found this review helpful

I realize that the reviews for this are mostly quite favorable. Being a big REM fan for many years and seeing the reviews, I purchased Accelerate without hearing a single note. Big mistake. Sample the tracks first. Maybe you'll like it, maybe not - but I may save a few people from the same mistake I made.

Maybe on a big old stereo system (if anyone still has one) this might sound better but on an iPod, where I presume most of you will listen to it, it's just a lot of noise. The sound quality is not good, the songs (if you can call them that) are forgettable. If I could get my money back, I would. One good thing - listening to the CD turned me off from buying concert tickets to REM's current tour. So the $10 I 'wasted' on the CD saved me many times that in the price of the tickets that I didn't buy.

An anxiously awaited CD and one very disappointed fan. FINAL WARNING: SAMPLE THE TRACKS ONLINE BEFORE BUYING THIS CD!





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