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This is a comprehensive list of songs recorded by the American alternative rock band R.E.M. that were officially released. The list includes songs performed by the entire band only (Berry, Buck, Mills and Stipe 1980 to 1997; Buck, Mills and Stipe 1998 to 2011).
American alternative rock band R.E.M. has released fifteen studio albums, five live albums, fourteen compilation albums, one remix album, one soundtrack album, twelve video albums, seven extended plays, sixty-three singles, and seventy-seven music videos.
It should only contain pages that are R.E.M. songs or lists of R.E.M. songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about R.E.M. songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
The album is the first to collect songs from R.E.M.'s I.R.S. and Warner Bros. tenures, as well as three songs from the group's final studio recordings from post-Collapse into Now sessions. [68] In November, Mills and Stipe did a brief span of promotional appearances in British media, ruling out the option of the group ever reuniting. [69]
In Time: The Best of R.E.M. 1988–2003 is the second official compilation album released by R.E.M. Issued in 2003, it includes tracks from their Warner Bros. Records era, from 1988's Green to 2001's Reveal, as well as two new recordings and two songs from movie soundtracks.
Warner Bros. Records executive Jeff Gold, alongside Rock the Vote campaign co-founder and Virgin Records executive Jeff Ayeroff, approached R.E.M. in regards to printing a petition on the back of Out of Time's CD longbox packaging in the United States, where buyers were encouraged to sign their name in support for Rock the Vote, who were in support of the Motor Voter Act to ease voter ...
Two songs were recorded at the 1st of 2 sessions: “Song 1” (I Remember California) & “Song 2” (Eleventh Untitled Song). In April 1988 the band recorded more demos at John Keane Studios, also in Athens; some of these demos, including "Title," "Great Big," "Larry Graham" and "The Last R.E.M. Song," have never been commercially released.
The song's drums are performed by Buck, [25] who has also cited the song as having his favorite of Mills' basslines. [24] Seth Troyer of PopMatters compares the guitar work on "The Apologist" to that of the band's 1994 album Monster , while referring to its lyrics as a "character study" echoing the chorus of an earlier R.E.M. song, " So.