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  • 7/30/2019 Digital Booklet - Reckoning - Deluxe Edition

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    R

    L IV E A T T H E A R A G O N

    B A L L R O O M

    C H IC A G O ,IL ,J U L Y

    7 ,1 9 8 4

    P R E V IO U S L Y U N R E L E A S E D

    LTHEALBUM

    I.R.S.SP-70044RELEASEDAPRIL14,1984

    Femme FataleRadio Free EuropeGardening at Night

    9-9Windout

    Letter Never SentSitting Still

    Driver 8

    So. Central Rain7 Chinese Bros.

    HarborcoatHyena

    Pretty PersuasionLittle America

    Second Guessing(Don't Go Back To) Rockville

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    Conventional wisdomhas it that secondalbums pose a problem,

    especially for those acts whose debut releases have enjoyed unanticipatedsuccess. But R.E.M. were never much concerned with following conven-

    tion,and Reckoning, their 1984 follow-up to Murmur, served both to rein-force that record's remarkable sense of promise and to confound expecta-tions. For where Murmurhad downplayed itself with acoustic instrumenta-

    tion and purposefully complex arrangements, Reckoning revealed itselfinstead,for the most part,as a gloriouslyrambunctious representation of thelive set at a time that the group could be found playing, on average, everyother night. At the same time, by including the group's first true ballads,

    Reckoning captured a deeply expressive melancholia that hinted at theact's artistic depth. Its variety but one of its many virtues, Reckoningwashailed upon release as another - but markedly different - instant

    class ic, and confirmed R.E.M. as the most exciting new band of theirAmerican generation.

    Certainly, had they stopped long enough to think about it, the stakes werehigh for Bill Berry, Peter Buck, Mike Mills and Michael Stipe as they

    approached their second album in late 1983. Only thirty months had passedsince the quartet had gathered in the back of a small, dilapidated church in

    their college hometown of Athens, Georgia, to play a set of assorted coverversions and derivative originals before a crowd of equally drunken friendsfor a birthday party. Something had clicked that night - not just something

    musical, but a fortuitous balancing of personalities,an equal distribution ofdistinct talents - and it propelled R.E.M. to overnight status as the biggestband in a musically thriving town. From there, thanks to the committedefforts of a loose network of college radio stations,print fanzines, and a slew

    of self-sufficient groups who saw poverty-stricken backwoods touring not asa duty but a privilege,R.E.M. had enjoyed rapid recording progress,from theindependent single Radio Free Europe, to a deal with I.R.S. and the ChronicTownEP of 1982. The following spring delivered Murmur, a debut of almostunconditional beauty, and one that, to the profound surprise of the groupitself,sold in the six figures on its way to the Top 40 of the American albumcharts.

    The stakes would have been higher stillhad R.E.M. waited until the New Yearto start work on Reckoning, for in the interim, the American music media

    hailed Murmuras the best, or damn-near-to-it, album of 1983. Rightly so,

    one could argue (especially from the benefit of 25 years' hindsight), but acrown laced with potential thorns nonetheless. Fortunately for all concerned,

    by the time such honors were bestowed,R.E.M. had Reckoningall but mixedand mastered. We were writing tons of songs, said Peter Buck, lookingback on this period of excessive activity just a few years later and lookingforward, unwittingly perhaps, as he acknowledged that everyone I know,

    the longer they write,the less songs they write.In other words, the R.E.M.of 1983 barely gave expectations a second thought. I knew when wewalked in on the first day,said Bill Berry, that the songs were better than

    the ones on the first album, so I wasn't worried at all.

    That R.E.M. were spoiled for choice was evident by the demos recorded inearly November in San Francisco with Neil Young's producer Elliot Mazer:

    twenty-four songs - a double album's worth - in just one day. A week laterthey were in Europe for the first time, where British audiences, generallycynical at the time about American new wave acts of the era, were

    quickly set straight by a live TV appearance and two London club shows ofunbridled energy, not to mention rare length (by British club band stan-dards) and the inclusion of five as yet-unrecorded songs.

    Despite the session with Mazer,there was rarely any doubt that R.E.M. wouldreturn to the source of Murmur'ssuccess when it came time to committhose songs to vinyl. And so, in early December,they drove the two hundred

    miles up Route 85 to Charlotte, North Carolina, where co-producers MitchEaster and Don Dixon were waiting for them at Reflection Sound Studio.Much of Murmur's famed murkiness had been the result of that duo's

    painstakingly deliberate studio techniques, but Reckoningwas intended allalong as something of an antithesis,a chance to turn up the volume, tear upthe rule book, and capture instead R.E.M.'s on-stage mojo as instinctivelydeveloped over the course of so much touring.

    The process proved almost embarrassingly painless. Basic tracks wererecorded during a week's worth of on-off work prior to Christmas, overdubs

    and mixing completed during another week in early January. The band tooktime out to play a farewell show in neighboring Greensboro at Friday's, oneof the ad-hoc venues (in this case, a pizza bar) at which they'd built their rep-

    utation; spent a day in the studio filming the video for So. Central Rain,Michael Stipe singing live to tape in (short-lived) protest at the MTV-driventrend for lip-synching; and devoted a full evening and night-time to therecording of various covers and novelties direct to two-track, many of which

    would show up on subsequent b-sides and compilations. As Mitch Easterlater observed, it was much like he imagined the Rolling Stones maderecords in the early days; you either got it right or you didn't.

    R.E.M. got it right. Mike Mills' and Bill Berry's rhythm parts typicallymade it onto tape in just two or three takes, a result of the former marching

    band partners' increasingly innate understanding of each other. PeterBuck's Rickenbacker guitar overdubs - and there were usually several of

    them - followed with equal ease, his arpeggiated riffs weaving aroundMills' contrapuntal melodies in a manner that soon became an R.E.M.

    trademark (and later, something of a burden). The comfortably loose livefeel could be heard in such diverse tracks as the off-kilter openerHarborcoat, the enervating three-year old rocker Pretty Persuasion,

    and the cautiously melodic Letter Never Sent. At a time when clicktracks, gated drums and booming snares were the norm,it was especial-ly refreshing to hear every component of Berry's acoustic kit being playedin unison.

    As for Michael Stipe, Reckoningfound him not only trying to balance his

    extreme shynesswith the glare of public recognition, but simultaneously

    forced to defend his reputation for vocal obfuscation. Pop lyrics, declared the

    same conventional wisdom that expected R.E.M. to falter in the studio sec-

    ond album around,should be clearly enunciated,and preferably to reference

    familiar, obvious subject matter. Stipe, whose distinctly yearning delivery -

    and the initial mystery of his mumbles - had contributed so much to R.E.M.'s

    popularity, felt otherwise. You write words to a song unlike you would speak

    a sentence and unlike you would speak a sentence off a page,he told one

    interviewer at the time.

    Ironically, if there was a single theme running through Reckoning, it was that

    of communication. The title to So. Central Rainwas taken from a headline

    on television: the group had been in California earlier in 1983 when parts of

    Georgia became flooded, bringing down phone lines and preventing mem-

    bers from checking in on their families. And the finale Little Americawas

    what Buck called their year in review,a look at their world from the van-

    tage point of the road - replete with close-ups of generic Magic Marts,

    wide-angle references to the country's empty wagon, and the immediate-

    ly infamous shout-out to then manager, Jefferson,I think we're lost.

    But then with Camera, Reckoning'sstand-out ballad,the lyrics were more

    a matter of metaphor: the group had recently lost a close friend,their pho-

    tographer Carol Levy,in a car crash, and the pain showed - even if the details

    remained hidden - in Stipe's evocative imagery. Elsewhere, Harborcoat,

    Pretty Persuasion and Time After Time (Annelise) would forever be

    shrouded in mystery,and that was fine by the vocalist. To give away every-

    thing is never good,at any time,he said at the time of Reckoning'srelease.

    Like his playing partners, Stipe captured several of his vocal performancesclose to the first take, but on both Camera and 7 Chinese Bros., heengaged in some light combat with the producers. Perhaps recognizing theintimacy of the former song,Easter and Dixon kept pushing for a definitivedelivery, until Stipe pushed back and insisted that they had it already.

    (That's the one you hear,said Easter,and I think it's the best one too.) Thelatter song's vocal only came together after Dixon handed Stipe a gospelalbum off the shelf,and suggested he loosen up by reading the sleeve notes;

    a recording of that unlikely take,Voice of Harold, later showed up on thecompilation Dead Letter Office.

    Against all this, one song stood out as an anomaly. (Don't Go Back To)Rockvillehad first appeared in the live set in 1980 as something of a pop-

    punk thrash, but had subsequently been dropped and never seen the insideof a studio. This may have been because the words - written by Mike Mills(who also composed the melody) as a straight-faced plea to Athens friend

    Ingrid Schorr not to return to her Maryland hometown - jarred alongside singerStipe's increasing poeticism. Yet when the group slowed it down to a countrypace at Reflection, as a favor for their legal advisor (and later manager) BertisDowns, they inadvertently created an anthem. It mattered not that the

    Rockville in question was a specific place,or that the song's subject was aparticular person; listeners took the generic town name to signify Anyplace,U.S.A., and frequently saw a part of themselves in the lyrics. The title itself

    could even be read as a musical metaphor, and as a result of all these inter-pretations, along with its easy melody,rousing chorus,and heartfelt arrange-ment - never,despite some nave media accusations, a parody - (Don't Go

    Back To) Rockville became a rallying call for the new, fiercely independentAmerican music scene.

    R.E.M.'s refusal to be sucked in by the mainstream at this time revealed itself

    in several other ways, not least the album artwork. In America at least,

    Reckoningeschewed use of that title on the sleeve and placed as much

    importance on the spinal note File Under Water, a wry reference both to the

    band's lack of easy categorization as well as one of the album's recurring

    lyrical themes. LP sides were labeled L and R rather than 1and 2,

    and the back cover featured black and white photos of the band members,

    placed askew as if laid out for a fanzine, not a potential chart album. The

    front cover itself was a distinct (and distinctly non-commercial) painting by

    Georgia folk artist Howard Finster of a two-headed serpent engrained with

    the song titles. In a further commitment to local artists, R.E.M. then recruit-

    ed Athens painter James Herbert to film them walking through the nearby

    whirly-gig gardens of sculptor Bill Miller,to which Herbert then applied his

    rephotography method for the unlikely, twenty-minute promo clip entitled

    Left of Reckoning. Given all this, it was impossible for reviewers not to focus

    their own word cameras on R.E.M.'s southern accent - but then groups

    always should evoke a sense of place, of coming from somewhere other than

    just a recording studio. R.E.M. were from Athens,Georgia, and proud of it.

    Not that they saw much of their home town in 1984, instead spending almostthe entire year traversing the States (twice), Europe (twice), Mexico and

    Japan. On July 7, the Little America tour stopped in at Chicago's Aragon

    Ballroom, for a concert broadcast at the time by WXRT Radio and included

    here as a bonus disc that shows the depth and breadth of a live set that

    changed, literally, every night. The group not only touted its two hit albums

    but included songs that had yet to make it into the studio (Hyenawould not

    show up on record until 1986). But that was the nature of a group determined

    to rewrite America's rock rule book. Not only did R.E.M. hand-pick its sup-

    port acts, but the sets sometimes featured songs by contemporaries The

    Replacements and Jason and the Scorchers. We like to think of ourselves

    as the tip of the iceberg,Buck told European journalists initially bemused by

    news of a burgeoning American scene,before going a step further and pen-

    ning articles for leading music magazines on the subject while simultane-

    ously decrying what, on an MTV special painfully entitled The Cutting Edge,

    he famously described as the cheese whiz that passed for typical video

    fodder at the time.

    All of which resonated with the group's increasingly committed following.

    Released in April 1984 to unanimously glowing reviews, Reckoningquicklymade the American Top 30,on its way to highly impressive Stateside sales

    of a quarter-million. It has remained a fans' favorite ever since, capturing for

    many the moment when R.E.M. rode highest their youthful crest of self-con-

    fidence. Reckoningcan be viewed,in the big picture,as but the second of six

    annual album releases,a remarkably prolific period of musical and commer-

    cial growth that would continue all the way through to 1988's Green. But it

    can also be seen, in close-up,as a freeze-frame of a year otherwise spent in

    constant motion, best summed up in the simple but stridently self-assured

    chorus line to the exuberant Second Guessing:Here we are.And emphat-

    ically so.

    -- Tony FletcherTony Fletcher is the author of Remarks Remade:

    The Story Of R.E.M. and All Hopped Up and Ready

    To Go: Music from the Streets of New York 1927-77.He has also written biographies on Keith Moon,

    and Echo & The Bunnymen. British born, he now

    lives in New York's Catskill Mountains.

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    femme fatale

    radio free europe

    gardening at night

    9-9

    windout

    letter never sent

    sitting still

    driver 8

    so. central rain

    7 chinese bros.

    harborcoat

    hyena

    pretty persuasion

    little america

    second guessing

    (don't go back to) rockville

    all songs by berry/buck/mills/stipe

    except femme fatale by lou reed, Oakfield Avenue Music (BMI)

    recorded by timothy powell

    courtesy of 93.1 fm wxrt / chicago

    harborcoat

    7 chinese bros.

    so. central rain

    pretty persuasion

    time after time (annelise)

    second guessing

    letter never sentcamera

    (don't go back to) rockville

    little america

    R LIVE AT THE ARAGON BALLROOMCHICAGO, IL, JULY 7, 1984 PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED

    BROADCAST ON WXRT-FM, CHICAGO

    L THE ALBUMI.R.S. SP-70044 RELEASED APRIL 14, 1984

    2009 I.R.S. Inc.Manufactured by A&M Records.

    B0013032-02

    Deluxe Edition Supervised by Dana G. Smart

    Deluxe Edition Compiled by Sig Sigworth

    Mastered by Greg Calbi at Sterling Sound, New York

    Archive engineer: Pete Doell at Universal Mastering Studios West

    Project Assistance: Michael Plen, Norm Winer & Barry Korkin

    Design: Chris Bilheimer & Michael Stipe

    Band Photos: Ed Colver

    Coordinated for release by Monique McGuffin Newman

    UMe thanks Bertis Downs, Kevin O'Neil, Randy Aronson, Beth

    Lopez-Barron, Kristen Bensch, Andy Skurow, Bill Waddell, and the

    staffs of the Universal Music Tape Library and Universal Mastering Studios.