 See Larger Image | Murmur Artist : R.E.M. List Price : $9.98 USD Your Price : $7.97 USD ProductGroup: Music Release Date : 1990-10-25 Studio : A&M Label : A&M Avg. Customer Rating : (167 reviews)
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Reviews Customer Reviews for Murmur Southern Zietgiest Rating: Along with The B-52's, Athens Georgia had a second classic debut to foist onto the world in the 80's. "Murmur" delivered a fully formed R.E.M. sound to an unsuspecting public, heard by musical cossnoti and launching thousands of new bands in their wake. Propelled by the jangle-pop of "Radio Free Europe" and undeniable band chemistry, this is one of the top albums of that decade.
The qualities that defined the first half of R.E.M.'s career are already in full bloom on "Murmur." Peter Buck's jangley but muscular guitar propelled the sometimes bucolic sounds of the atmospheric songs. The rhythm section of Mike Mills and Bill Berry managed the odd variety of songs with the appropriate style. And on top if it all were Michael Stipe's mumbling, incoherent vocals muttering vague lyrics (with Berry adding flawless harmony). Often snatches of words would break free to your ears, but they were just as often indecipherable (like "Tape erase us" during "We Walk" or the plaintive chorus in "Talk About The Passion").
That willful obtuse/mysterious quality extended outside the grooves. The album art was almost folk-gothic; there were no printed lyrics and no band pictures. The complete atmosphere gives "Murmur" a timeless quality, rooted in folk but coming from art-punk like Stipe's idols Patti Smith and Television. It was a musical vocabulary that they'd continue refining through Reckoning and Fables of the Reconstruction, yet "Murmur" had the magic quality of sounding both perfect and unlike anything else around. As such, R.E.M. both captured and defined a moment of music.
Customer Reviews for Murmur Cd Where no Songs had Gone Before Rating: R.E.M.'s Murmur marked the beginning of something new. A merging of 60s jangle pop with the '80s modern rock sensibilities of the time, these songs moved us because of their mysterious and evocative lyrics. A sense of hope permeates this album--and nearly all those that follow it--such that no one listening to this music would ever quite be the same.
"Radio Free Europe" begins it with a spirited, driving beat, "calling out, in transit...calling out, in transit...radio free Europe, radio free Europe." And "Pilgrimage" follows it with a stirring call to "take our turn, take our turn...take our fortune, take our fortune" before proclaiming the "pilgrim-ah-aaahge...has gained mo-ment-uuuuuuuuhm!" Soon follow moments of poignant beauty in "Talk about the Passion" and "Perfect Circle." The lyrics are often drawn out, so that at times they're hard to decipher, while other times they're indecipherable except for occasional words or phrases ("IIII...I can heeear" in "Sitting Still" or "conversation fear" in "9-9"); yet this gives the album its mysterious feel, plus a certain pull toward repeated listening. The frequent background choruses of "aaaah...aaaah" in different variations, along with the ghostly sounds throughout, give the album a cohesive and incredible sound--in a word: Ethereal.
Do not miss it.
Editorial Reviews for Murmur Audio Cd Amazon.com essential recording Though critics swamped R.E.M.'s 1983 full-length debut with country-rock comparisons to the Byrds, Murmur sounds like no one else. The title is an apt description of Michael Stipe's singing style, although his smooth pop vocal mannerisms sweeten the enigmatic poetry. Like all great bands, R.E.M.'s individual parts (Peter Buck's ringing guitar, drummer Bill Berry's persistent thumping, and Mike Mills's unifying bass) are as interesting as the collective sound. The album-opening "Radio Free Europe" and "Talk About the Passion" endure as its radio singles, but the rest of the songs hang together well taken as a whole. --Steve Knopper
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