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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
68 of 72 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
American Gothic,
By Garbageman (the other side of California) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Fables Of The Reconstruction 25th Anniversary (Audio CD)
The mid-80s, as the cool documentary "American Hardcore" points out, was a weird time of hopeless "what now?" attitude in American underground music. Punk had died, heck even some were nostalgic for it, and "alternative rock" was its replacement, mass acceptance and MTV buzz-bin hipness on the horizon. Minor Threat spoke of "Salad Days". The stuff you prided yourself in "discovering" was showing up a month later in John Hughes flicks. To be labeled a "sellout" was the ultimate insult, meaning the most extreme loss of integrity, something that you just always knew a band like REM wasn't interested in. When REM released their 3rd, there were word-of-mouth stories of how the album almost broke them, about how they recorded it in London yet it turned out to be as Southern as Georgia clay, and how it was still strange enough that you needn't worry about their pictures being plastered on your younger sister's bedroom wall alongside Wham! and Duran Duran. We were safe in their weird eccentricity - despite a hit single.In many ways, "Fables Of The Reconstruction" is not just the quintessential REM album, it's the last REM album. Their final weird, spooky take on Southern Americana before big drums and global fist-clenching, they move thoughtfully here, even when the songs are frantic. Michael Stipe is at his lyrical and stylistic peak: he became a cryptic storyteller, bending his harmonies, screaming, whispering - he's all over the place. Buck takes charge, making noises and sounds that legions of college-aged kids would replicate in years to come. The band itself plays with clear precision, interesting for an album that has a rep as a jangly mess. A good word is "immersed": you feel, at any time, that these songs are beneath, or that you are beneath them. It is Southern, then: stifling, immovable, and earthy, the minor chords throughout mirroring a dark place where the pastoral South meets the fear and violence at its core. At the time, I recall trying to decipher lyrics in "Kohoutek" and "Auctioneer" and just giving up; in an age when all other music seemed validated by clarity, this album, even compared to their first two, was troubling and anxious, ambiguous and manic. But it wasn't so remote that it was off-putting, which is its charm. Consider "Old Man Kensey", the album's centerpiece: a sweltering dirge whose verses gain enough steam, only to have the chorus seemingly SLOW DOWN and drain all the song's momentum, exploding into a chromatic mess of a bridge whose lyrics, chords, and chimey ambience become a singular mass, almost bringing relief from the tensions built up in the verses - pure REM and unlike anything anyone dared try back then. Dare I say it, it's kinda punk rock. In epic remastered and boxed form, the album becomes even easier to like. Traditionally, I have always sided with the criticism of Bill Berry's drums as way too buried, too plastic; here, they aren't necessarily in the front, but you can at least hear what he's doing. I used to suspect that the mix was always after some sort of fake mono, as though the sounds were all deliberately coming from one small place. The remastering turns the album inside out, giving a unique weariness that accentuates the forlorn folksy quality of stuff like "Maps and Legends" and "Good Advices", two of their very best songs. The album of demos is even more raw and energetic, sounding like a late-night church-hall broadcast of the standard new set with the band doing its best to stay alive amid a creeping sensual lethargy. There's no album out there in American music like "Fables", creepy and five-dimensional, but completely friendly all the same. Listening to this in a new package brings a comfortable closure, like something finally got its due. It's enough to make you buy one for your younger sister.
23 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
REM's Lost Americana,
By
This review is from: Fables Of The Reconstruction 25th Anniversary (Audio CD)
It seems so long ago, but in the early 1980s, REM was such a breath of musical fresh air. The punk era had morphed into new wave, new wave had morphed into the new romantics, but what of American rock n' roll? These four college kids from Athens, Georgia toured the U.S. extensively, playing small clubs, lodging at the homes of college disc jockeys, and playing what was, for that time, unique sounding folk influenced rock music featuring Peter Buck's "jangly" guitar lines, Michael Stipe's deep voiced but mostly incomprehensible lyrics, Mike Mills' melodic bass playing and harmony vocals and Bill Berry's solid drums. REM inspired countless college bands and came to be synonymous with the concepts "alternative" and "indie" rock. During their "early" period they recorded a terrific EP, Chronic Town, an incredible debut album, Murmur (Rolling Stone's 1983 album of the year), an equally strong sophomore effort, Reckoning, and this dark, atmospheric third album, Fables of The Reconstruction. It was their last album before they began altering their sound on the way to superstardom.When it was released, Fables was an absolute knock-out album, and with two MTV/radio friendly singles, "Can't Get There From Here" and "Driver 8," was for many, including this reviewer, their first real introduction to REM. I fondly remember traveling up and down the California coast in the summer of 1985 listening to this album over and over on the car stereo. Over the years, however, Fables has been viewed as a lesser REM album. There is a general perception that the band members do not like it, and I do recall reading one interview with the band that supported this perception. In the very brief, but fine, liner notes for this reissue, Peter Buck acknowledges, but disputes, this perception, and gives some insight into the difficult circumstances under which the album was made. If I was asked to name REM's finest album, I'd probably say either Automatic For The People or Murmur. Reckoning and Out Of Time would also be up there. But as for my favorite REM album, it's Fables -- hands down. Why is Fables so special? Fables has a special feel, it transports you to the rural south, at least the rural south of an era ago as conjured by the band, tells tales of the characters that live there (to the extent one can decipher the lyrics), and conveys a murky, dark, gothic feel, one that pervades the album. Moreover, the band experiments here with all sorts of instruments and sounds, including horns, strings and banjo. Peter Buck's playing may be simple, but it is simply majestic. Most importantly, the songwriting is absolutely first rate. You might not hear them on any greatest hits compilations, but "Maps and Legends," "Good Advices" and "Wendell Gee" are amongst the finest tunes the band has written. "Green Grow The Rushes," "Life and How To Live It" and "Kohoutek" are also terrific. Contrary to what has been written elsewhere, this is one REM album that is great to listen to from start to finish. So what about this reissue? It's a two disc set, one disc featuring a remastered version of the original album and a second disc containing demos of album tracks and three bonus tracks recorded in Athens before the band left for England to record the album with producer Joe Boyd. The disc containing the original album is housed in a solid cardboard replica of the original album jacket and the second disc is housed in a similar, but black and white, sleeve. Also included is an actual full-sized (not kidding) poster for the album, several postcard type pictures of the band members from the original album and a somewhat sparse booklet that includes the original album sleeve text, pictures and the aforementioned liner notes authored by Peter Buck. The whole package is housed in a very, very solid box (good tactile feel), the top and bottom of which feature the front and back, respectively, of the original album. Although more extensive liner notes would have been welcome, cosmetically this is one damn nice deluxe edition. Of course, packaging is nice, but what about the sound? I'm happy to report that with this remaster, Fables has never sounded better, however, it is much louder than the initial release of Fables on CD, likely the product of sound compression. Having said that, the music seems to just burst from the speakers. The sound has been cleaned up and you can actually decipher many of the lyrics now. While some of the murkiness has been lifted, the mood of the album is still there. Just throw this CD on, crank it up and you will be transported. The second disc of demos is primarily of interest for fans only. It offers an interesting glimpse of the band's rough final run through of the album's tunes. Without the layers of sound later added, the lyrics and instrumentation are much clearer. Many of the performances are terrific. The three bonus tracks, "Bandwagon" (a very good tune), "Hyena" (later to appear on the band's fourth album, Life's Rich Pageant) and "Throw Those Trolls Away" (not available elsewhere), are a nice addition. While some might have preferred a concert recording, as was included in the Murmur and Reckoning deluxe reissues, I can report that the one 1985 show I attended was not a strong one, and perhaps these studio recordings made for a better option. In sum -- price aside -- this is one of my favorite reissues, and is by far my favorite REM CD release. Musically, sonically (subject, however, to the above caveat about loudness) and cosmetically, this is terrific.
28 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Unremarkably remastered. I've returned mine for a refund,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Fables Of The Reconstruction 25th Anniversary (Audio CD)
Fables of the Reconstruction is my favorite R.E.M. album. I can listen to every track straight through, but this reissue is a disappointment. Other than the volume of the music following the modern trend of being turned very loud, causing audio compression, there's nothing special about the sound quality. The album has always lacked bass, and there's been no attempt to enhance that. But since the new remaster already shows some signs of distortion, boosting the bass would have caused more. I already have the remasters of Murmur and Reckoning, and have my reservations on the loud volume and sound quality on those as well. But after this recent disappointment, I will not pursue any further R.E.M remasters. If your idea of "sparkling" or "improved" sound means much louder, then this remaster is for you.The packaging is nice, but I have no interest in these demos. The poster is nice but it would have never left the box anyway. So at this price, it's going back and I am sticking to the original CD I bought back in 1989. If you want to hear the results of a very satisfying remaster, check out the brand new deluxe edition of the classic debut album by A-ha. Though the volume is louder, the compression is minimal and the sound is very improved over the previous CD. This type of result is certaily a rarity these days. Louder does not constitute "remastered".
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