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"It's a Free World, Baby" Coneheads soundtrack: Bill Berry, Peter Buck, Mike Mills, Michael Stipe: Scott Litt and R.E.M. 1993 "It's the End of the World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)" Document: Bill Berry, Peter Buck, Mike Mills, Michael Stipe: Scott Litt and R.E.M. 1987 "I've Been High" Reveal: Peter Buck, Mike Mills, Michael Stipe: Pat ...
"Half a World Away" (live) [140] 1994 The Unplugged Collection, Volume One "Wall of Death" [141] Beat the Retreat: Songs by Richard Thompson "Love Is All Around" 1996 I Shot Andy Warhol Soundtrack "Sponge" [142] Sweet Relief II: Gravity of the Situation "Star Me Kitten" Songs in the Key of X:Music from and Inspired by The X-Files "Revolution ...
Shortly thereafter, I.R.S. compiled R.E.M.'s music video catalog (except "Wolves, Lower") as the band's first video release, Succumbs. Scott Litt produced a number of R.E.M.'s albums from the late 1980s to the early to mid-1990s. Don Gehman was unable to produce R.E.M.'s fifth album, so he suggested the group work with Scott Litt.
Collapse into Now is the fifteenth and final studio album by American alternative rock band R.E.M., released on March 7, 2011, on Warner Bros. Produced by Jacknife Lee, who previously worked with the band on Accelerate (2008), the album was preceded by the singles "It Happened Today", "Mine Smell Like Honey", "Überlin" and "Oh My Heart".
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 is ranked number 389 in Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time. In 2009, it was added to the Library of Congress's National Recording Registry for setting "the pattern for later indie rock releases by breaking through on college radio in the face of mainstream radio's general indifference." [5]
"Pop Song 89" is the opening track and third single released from R.E.M.'s sixth studio album Green. It peaked at number 86 on the Hot 100 , and in the UK " Stand " was re-released instead. Cash Box called it a "cynical parody of pop" but said that "it turns out they’ve created a pop hit despite themselves."
"Sitting Still" was one of the first songs written by R.E.M., in late 1980, along with "Radio Free Europe" and "Shaking Through."[1] [3] Hib-Tone founder Jonny Hibbert agreed to release "Radio Free Europe" and "Sitting Still" as a single on his label in exchange for the publishing rights.