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The list consists mostly of studio recordings. Remix and live recordings are not listed separately unless the song was only released in that form. [1] Album singles are listed as released on their respective album. Only one release is listed per song, except for a couple of re-recordings, like their first Hib-Tone single.
List of R.E.M. music videos, showing year released and directors Title Year Director(s) "Wolves, Lower" 1982 Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris [149] "Radio Free Europe" 1983 Arthur Pierson [149] "Pretty Persuasion" 1984 "So. Central Rain (I'm Sorry)" Howard Libov [149] Left of Reckoning [H] James Herbert [149] "Cant Get There from Here" 1985
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 .
"Radio Free Europe" is the debut single by American alternative rock band R.E.M., released in 1981 on the short-lived independent record label Hib-Tone. The song features "what were to become the trademark unintelligible lyrics which have distinguished R.E.M.'s work ever since."
Eponymous includes several alternative versions of songs, including the soundtrack contribution "Romance", which had not previously appeared on an R.E.M. record. Spanning from the initial single release of "Radio Free Europe" to the previous year's breakthrough hit album Document, Eponymous provides a fair overview of R.E.M.'s early work.
The song "Dream" was originally recorded as a demo by T-Pain on March 12, 2011, and ran for a duration of four minutes and 27 seconds. [4] It was then passed onto Beyoncé and recorded under the title "Wake Up" in 2013. [5] [6] Grande kept the chorus, but changed the song's lyrics. [7] She previewed "R.E.M" prior to the release of Sweetener. [8 ...
In 2003, Stipe saw that the song still had contemporary resonance due to the policies of George W. Bush, and the band finally recorded it for In Time, with only slightly updated lyrics and under the new title "Bad Day". [3] In the liner notes for In Time, Peter Buck wrote: "We started writing this song in 1986 [sic]. We finished writing it in 2003.
The song's lyrics were inspired by a conversation Stipe had with Patti Smith in which she encouraged him to be "fearless" in working on the album; Stipe made a point of making the lyrical themes broader, stating that "I wanted ["Walk Unafraid"] to be more universal than just me having to embark on the writing of an album. That's a little too ...