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45 of 46 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Swan Song Adventures
For R.E.M, the group we grew up with, "New Adventures in Hi-Fi," is really their coda. After "New Adventures," with the loss of drummer Bill Berry, the band morphed into something different. So this is the last chance we have to capture the R.E.M. of old, but be warned this just isn't a group comfortable with their lofty position of pop and rock...
Published on January 25, 2003 by M. Swinney

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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars I almost didn't listen to this one. . .
When I first heard "How the West was Won....," I nearly took the CD out of the player and used it as a Frisbee. After deciding to give it a chance (and avoid punishment) I found that it was actually pretty good. New Test Leper is one of the best songs I'd heard in a long time. This one isn't my favourite, but it's not bad by any means.
Published on November 30, 1998 by Rachel (remmorph@aol.com)


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45 of 46 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Swan Song Adventures, January 25, 2003
This review is from: New Adventures in Hi Fi (Audio CD)
For R.E.M, the group we grew up with, "New Adventures in Hi-Fi," is really their coda. After "New Adventures," with the loss of drummer Bill Berry, the band morphed into something different. So this is the last chance we have to capture the R.E.M. of old, but be warned this just isn't a group comfortable with their lofty position of pop and rock icons and churning out the same old stuff (not that the same old stuff was anything to ignore). This is R.E.M at their experimental and expanding best. As they made their last album with Berry, they were still growing. Now they still make good music, but come across more as the Michael Stipe Group with, "Up" and "Reveal."

This album was made on the road during the "Monster" tour in which untold tragedies, infirmities and maladies befell the band. Instead of coming off like sound checks and a semi-live album though, it really does reach the listener as coming from the studio, sound-wise. But maybe there is an immediacy behind the songs, a one take, no overlays sound that belies its live origins. Whatever it is, this is one great, energetic, mysterious and beautiful record.

"Undertow" does for water what "Fall on Me" did for the sky. "Go down to the water, get down in the water, walk up off the water...I'm drowning." E-bow The Letter lets Stipe get to duet with one of R.E.M.'s big influences Patti Smith as she drones a mother in the background, "I'll take you over," Stipe answers, "aluminum it tastes like fear" and in the cold bite of aluminum on your teeth the fear analogy works deep and real.

One of R.E.M's best songs is on this album, but hardly noticed to the world at large, "Leave." This loopback wailing of a sonic guitar out of control kicks in after an acoustic lullaby. At first it seems to break the melancholy darkness of the song, but then subtly blends in leaving an other-worldness to the drone of drawn out chords. Stipe croons, "that's what keeps me down, to leave it all behind," as Mills intones beautiful harmony in the background in all the right places (something he has given up on these days with Reveal). The song is beautiful and intense, one of the Athens Five's best.

"Binky the Doormat," though quite strange lyrically is classic R.E.M. Even more classic and hearkening back to the days of "Life's Rich Pageant," is "So Fast, So Numb." It's a rave-up with Stipe's voice cutting a darkened growl, "this is now, this is here, this is me, this is what I wanted you to see."

And "New Adventures in Hi-Fi" I think is exactly what the band wanted to put out, not trying to guess what the public wanted to hear or what would sell. At this point they already reached the public and sold tons of records..."New Adventures" allowed them to make the music that felt right at the time. And what music it is, my second all time R.E.M favorite behind "Life's Rich Pageant," an overlooked gem, a diamond in the rough.

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24 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Genius, pure and simple, September 18, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: New Adventures in Hi Fi (Audio CD)
I have an extremely difficult time choosing between this one and "Automatic for the People" as the best R.E.M. album, so I don't bother anymore. "Automatic" was more intrinsically moving and gorgeous, but "New Adventures in Hi-Fi" is much more varied. It runs the gamut from soothing ballads ("How the West Was Won and Where It Got Us") to hard rockers ("So Fast So Numb"). Another thing in this album's favor is that its instrumental, "Zither," is better.

But, on its own merits, this album is harrowing in its disillusionment, yet it's not depressing. It's great that you can understand Michael Stipe in most of the songs. The lyrics tell of disillusionment of posturing ("The Wake-Up Bomb") and religion ("New Test Leper").

I simply love most of the music, too. "E-Bow the Letter" has one of the most haunting melodies in any R.E.M. song, and Patty Smith's backing vocals only add to that effect. "Bittersweet Me" has probably the best mix of mellow sensibility and guitar work of any R.E.M. song. I've always adored Stipe's vocals over piano, so it shouldn't surprise that "Electrolite" is one of my favorite songs. Everything: piano, vocal, strings, percussion, guitar blend so well in it, and what better way to end an album than with "I'm outta here"? Of course, it's a bit eerie now since Bill Berry left, but it's still very apropos. Another great song in terms of sonic effect is "Leave," with its awesome guitar/bass/drum lines and Stipe's soaring vocals in the refrain. "Undertow" is exceptional in the way it builds throughout the verses, and the music and harmonies here are superb in execution. This song also features one of the more odd R.E.M. songs in "Binky the Doormat" then again, "Automatic" had "The Sidewinder Sleeps Tonite," so maybe the guys have to get quirky at least once in their masterpieces. This whole album is excellent in its variety and complexity, in both lyrics and music.

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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Dark and beautiful, May 25, 2003
By 
Vikram Joseph (Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK) - See all my reviews
This review is from: New Adventures in Hi Fi (Audio CD)
After the globe-conquering high of Automatic For The People, REM looked in danger of burning out, with the not-quite-properly-realised Monster and the stress of the tour which followed. But out of that tour's ashes rose this astonishing collection. It became perhaps inevitably their darkest album yet, but, crucially, that never makes it hard to listen to.

It's pretty long at 66 minutes, but it hardly ever drains the listener. It's a collection of studio takes, live performances and soundchecks, and a lot of the energy filters through onto the CD.

The album opens in characteristically uncharacteristic fashion, with the distorted beats and edgy piano line of How The West Was Won And Where It Got Us, a stark and twisted country-rock piece with a unnervingly off-kilter piano solo in the middle. The Wake-Up Bomb could hardly be more different, a blazing glam-rock storm which carries the listener along on a tide of acidic sentiment. "I had to write the great American novel," sneers Michael Stipe sarcastically, "I had a neutron bomb." The interesting thing about New Adventures is that, whereas on Monster they tried desperately to rock out and always sounded a bit contrived, here they do it with great natural ease.

New Test Leper has a wonderfully pretty, lilting melody. It tells of a AIDS sufferer's awful experience on a TV chat show, and Stipe does it brilliantly, making his character totally sympathetic without ever being patronising. The lyrics are actually essential reading. "When I tried to tell my story, they cut me off to take a break. I sat silent five commercials - I had nothing left to say."

Undertow is one of the album's most intriguing tracks. Based around just two chords, it feels oppressive and claustrophobic, but in a positive way. It intrigues most because it sounds not unlike Nirvana. The verses in particular sound a lot like the verses on the 'new' song, You Know You're Right, and Stipe's vocals are every bit as dark as Kurt Cobain's tended to be; "I am breathing water, I am breathing water; you know a body's got to breathe."

After Undertow comes the single E-Bow The Letter. It is a pleasant surprise that in our bloated, airbrushed charts this became as big a hit as it did, because it's DARK. Really dark, and not a little scary. Stipe's delivery is pitch-perfect, and contrasts perfectly with Patti Smith's vampiric promise, "I'll take you over." In my opinion it's REM's best single ever, and one of the best singles of the 90s.

Leave, which follows, opens with a haunting, delicate acoustic guitar riff for a minute, before an unhinged car alarm kicks in. It doesn't go away for six minutes. It could have been immensely irritating, but in fact it's a stroke of sonic genius. Beneath that racket, the song is up to its eyes in its own undiluted misery, "I lost myself in sorrow, I lost myself in pain, I lost myself in clarity," before finally drowning in a sea of feedback.

Departure rocks with a visceral, burning energy that makes you wonder how amazing it must sound live, with Michael Stipe screaming, "GO, GO, GO, YEAH!!" halfway through. The disillusion and pain return, however, with Bittersweet Me. Its chord changes are refreshingly intelligent, while Stipe admits, "I'm tired and naked, I don't know what I'm hungry for, I don't know what I want anymore."

What follows defies all expectations. After all that misery, pain and darkness, REM do a 180-degree turn and produce quite possibly one of the sweetest, most affecting love songs ever. Its verses display rich, lush imagery ("I'll by the sky above the Ganges, I'll be the vast and stormy sea, I'll be the lights that guide you inwards"), while its chorus simply proclaims, "You and me." The extraordinary sweeping guitar phrases at the end just round off a perfect song.

Binky The Doormat is most notable for the stunning interaction between Stipe and Mike Mills in the chorus. "Have you lost your place?" asks Stipe, to which Mills counters, "No way, no way." As demonstrated time and time again on this album, particularly on Departure and Undertow, Mills' vocals are the perfect complement for Stipe's, especially when used contrapuntally.

Zither is a fragile two-minute instrumental, one of only two inessential tracks on the album, along with Low Desert, which strives a little too hard to be bluesy and 'widescreen' and sacrifices the memorable tunes of the other songs. But sandwiched between the two is an absolute gem, So Fast So Numb, a full-on, turbocharged interpretation of a drug-fuelled affair. It opens with a drum line reminiscent of that which opened Orange Crush, and the tension and pace never lets up. "Listen," cries Stipe to his troubled subject. "This is now, this is here, this is me, this is what I wanted you to see." It carries an urgency rarely heard before in an REM song.

The closer, Electrolite, is perfect. REM know how to close out an album, as Find The River on Automatic demonstrated, and this is every bit as good. A beautiful, twilit piano ballad, it rejects the pain of the rest of the album and offers instead optimism and hope. "Twentieth century, go to sleep," purrs Stipe. "I'm not scared." It's a happy ending to a long, tumultous journey. Will REM ever produce an album as intense, beautiful or satisfying as this again? If not - well, this is some peak.

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars It's simple really..., August 31, 2004
By 
This review is from: New Adventures in Hi Fi (Audio CD)
One of the strongest and most frequent opinions you will hear (and read) of this album is how the listener didn't initially like it. So often I have heard "Well, when I first listened it wasn't one of my favorties, but now it has to be one of their best!" I agree with that opinion that NAIHF has to the be the strongest and most cohesive of all of their albums, and as much has to be appreciated in whole, not picked apart in singles. Why does everyone share the same opinon of belated appreciation? Simple. This album was WAY ahead of its time. If it weren't for REM striking their own alt-rock/country notes in this album, I feel that further masters such as Wilco and Ryan Adams (among others)would of sounded merely broodish. This wasn't an album, it was a premonition.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Discarded then resurrected..., January 21, 2001
By 
Tony (Wales, UK) - See all my reviews
This review is from: New Adventures in Hi Fi (Audio CD)
My first introduction to REM was quite late. I though 'Everybody Hurts' was a superb piece of music; I then purchased 'Automatic for the People' - and was overwhelmed. Superlatives are pointless describing this album. It was also at this time I realised that a number of hit records I had liked in the past were by REM (Shiny Happy People, Orange Crush, Losing My Religion etc...) and I bought 'Out of Time'. So far so good. I then bought 'Monster'... I was so horrified after the first playing of Monster it found itself left in my CD rack for three years. It was hideous. - such a diversity from previous works. Last year 'New Adventured in Hi-Fi' found itself amongst my Xmas presents. I played it once, and when 'Leave' started I ejected it and placed it alongside Monster in both the never to be played section of the CD rack and my total contempt... A year later, I had a long car journey, and selected a few CDs to take with me. Old favourites by Talking Heads, Steeley Dan and REM were included; I also bravely put NAIHF amongst them. With great effort I played the CD through... and heard 'Electrolite' for the first time. It was brilliant - I couldn't get it out of my head, playing it over and over. Then came 'You and Me' - 'E-Bow the Letter' - 'How the West was Won'. Slowly, one by one, the album opened itself up to me for what it truly is - a masterpiece. After countless plays, one track was to emerge as one of the most deceptively simplistic - yet awesomely brilliant - I have ever heard. Like most people on first hearing 'Leave' the background alarm-like wailing was an instant reach-for-the-skip-button. I would by-pass it every play... It is now my absolute REM favourite track of all time. I personally rate NAIHF as the greatest ground-breaking piece of musical creativity in recent times - when just about everything that can been done in music has been done. This acceptance of the unacceptable turned me back to Monster, which I gave a second chance. Although not as creative as NAIHF, it has proven to be another album which slowly presents itself to the listener as the work of genius.

So my advice: buy it, listen to it - you WILL grow to love it - I guarantee.

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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An underpraised masterpiece, January 13, 2004
This review is from: New Adventures in Hi Fi (Audio CD)
This album combines the gentle experimentation of 'Automatic for the People' with the feedback romance of 'Monster.' REM figured out a way to take the best of those two albums to create this, one of their most underrated albums.

When I first saw it, I was in a record store. I read a lot of music magazines and I thought I was keeping up with what's going on in the record industry, but I had no idea a new REM album was coming out. So I figured it had to be a collection of B-sides, or some kind of 'odds and sods' CD. The cover and the title are deceptive. The album looks so understated, with such a generic name, that you can almost miss it.

I'd glad I figured out what it is, because it became my favorite REM album. Michael Stipe's voice is somewhere between creepy and beautiful on every track. The moody songs have the kind of repetitive perfection of Brian Eno's best ambient albums. The rock songs drone and buzz with noise. It's also worth noting that this is one of the longest REM albums. At 65 minutes, it would be a double album back in the vinyl days. I highly recommend this CD, even if you aren't an REM fan.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars My New Favorite R.E.M. Album, August 16, 2004
This review is from: New Adventures in Hi Fi (Audio CD)
I'm a relatively new REM fan compared to most people. I bought the In Time Compilation of their hits (the 2 disc one), and realized that I really liked pretty much everything I was hearing. So, I went out and bought Document (still up there on my favorites list) and Automatic for the People (not bad in my opinion). In another spurt of purchases, I bought Monster, Eponymous (to get a hold of their early hits) and NAIHF. This album totally blows me away. Most of the songs are moody in a way, but it's a very good kind of moody. I can listen to it no matter how I feel.

The album's opening track took me awhile to get into, with sparse instrumentation consisting mostly of drums, bass, assorted noises and occasionally atonal piano. But let it get to the chorus, it's absolutely beautiful. Wake-Up Bomb is one of my favorite tracks, a classic distorted guitar / organ rocker. New Test Leper's verses sound like a modern-day emo tune, but the lyrics are very insightful (moreso than emo). EBow The Letter is, in one word, stunning. Leave is one of my favorite REM songs, with a heavy beat and this awesome siren effect throughout. Bittersweet Me is a good rocker as well, and Be Mine is nice pop especially if you know who you want to spend the rest of your life with (then the lyrics will mean something to you). Of the last 5 tracks, Zither (a nice quiet instrumental) and Electrolite (a really interesting, piano and banjo driven tune) are my favorites.

I feel like this album is often overlooked in REM's catalog for Automatic and the earlier hits. Sad to consider that this was their last album with Bill Berry on drums. I still think this record is their best in terms of variety and strength in lyrical and musical writing. Way to go, guys.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Overlooked Brilliance, June 15, 2003
This review is from: New Adventures in Hi Fi (Audio CD)
The "Monster" tour of 1995 was an astounding success for R.E.M. After two excellent albums, "Out of Time" and "Automatic for the People," music fans worldwide celebrated the boys from Athens, GA in concert. While the tour bearing its name was a smashing success, unfortunately the "Monster" album was a mishmash of experiments and half-baked ideas gone wrong. Even more unfortunate, the multitudes purchased the album, expecting the high quality of the band's two previous offerings. When R.E.M. followed up "Monster" with a dense, complicated album two years later, a paltry few purchased it, for fear of reliving the "Monster" disappointment. That is a shame. "New Adventures in Hi-Fi" is the album "Monster" should have been: the next step in the "Out of Time"/"Automatic for the People" progression, combining simple acoustic numbers with aggressive rockers and haunting lullabies. Intricate instrumentation and vibrant songwriting make "New Adventures in Hi-Fi" the most underrated album of the mid-late 90s.

Some highlights from "New Adventures": With its driving Bill Berry intro, "So Fast, So Numb" may be the last REM rock song. Along with the rest of the album, this song is an overlooked gem. "E-Bow the Letter" is trippy, obscure, and would give Radiohead a run for their money. It probably shouldn't have been the first single since it gave people the impression the rest of the songs were like this, but it holds up after repeat listenings. "Leave" is not entirely successful with its repetitious synth percussion, yet may be the best song on the album. "Bittersweet Me" and "Be Mine" are affecting traditional REM songs. "New Adventures" is a great sendoff for departed drummer Berry and reminds us what the new albums without him are missing.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Peak for Rock, May 14, 2002
By 
Ludwig Trillo "ltaludwig" (AREQUIPA, AREQUIPA Peru) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: New Adventures in Hi Fi (Audio CD)
It is good that at least a portion of music fans have come to notice actually how poor, stupid and boring are most rap-rock collages and renewed hair metal bands passing as soulful music. And that they have turned their atention to 60's-70's proto-punk hard rock, (velvet underground, stooges, bowie, television among others) wich actually has been the fuel for all the intelectual or art rock (90's indie rock; college rock; 80's underground; 70's punk; and some of 90's alternative rock -as a portion of it really sucked-)wich has turned out to be the most rewarding form of popular music.
Now that the Strokes, and White Stripes have taken so much of our atention back to valuable music it is to spect that this marvelous LP will grow in more people hearts. For it seems that it has been created in the confluence of all what is great in art rock, loudness (for ex. Wake up bomb), indiference (New Test Lepper, E-bow the Letter), passion (Leave), intelligence (everything in the LP), never overstating (instead of ending Leave with a huge howl it ends with dissonance). Also it has a very 70's feel. And one would come to realise all of these just by listenning to the tracks, even if one knew nothing about music (not that I think of myself as an erudit, nor an ignorant). In fact every song is strong and appealing. I sure hope buyers come to love it as much as I do. This LP and R.E.M.'s previous -MONSTER- have been probably the 2 most underappreciated efforts by the band, it is curious that a very similar style would become 7 years after the release of Monster, the trend for indie-alt rock. Maybe New Adventures in Hi Fi lacked some wynning for the taste of those days. It is a hidden jewel and won't be worn out as it is so direct and challenging the songs will still be great after many hearings.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Songs From The Road, May 16, 2001
This review is from: New Adventures in Hi Fi (Audio CD)
New Adventures In Hi-Fi is made up of songs that had their germination on the road during R.E.M.'s tour in support of Monster. The songs, much like a tour, are all over the musical map. Unlike the sonic guitar sound of Monster, this album has numerous different musical styles. "The Wake Up Bomb" has a glam rock feel to it while "New Test Leper" has an acoustic basis. "E-Bow The Letter" has a droning guitar sound and has back up vocals from one of Michael Stipe's major influences and one of his idols, Patti Smith. She adds an eeriness to song and it contains one of the weirdest lines ever, "aluminum tastes like fear". "Bittersweet Me" is a great song and "Zither" follows their recent tradition of including an instrumental on the album. "Binky The Doorman" is one of the sillier songs the band has ever done. "Electrolite" provides a strong closing to the album. While this album isn't the best they've ever done, it still contains strong work and is worth a listen.
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New Adventures in Hi Fi
New Adventures in Hi Fi by R.E.M. (Audio CD - 1996)
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