Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Stipe said, "It turns out that I was buying all the records that [Buck] was saving for himself." [4] Through mutual friend Kathleen O'Brien, [5] Stipe and Buck then met fellow University of Georgia students Bill Berry and Mike Mills, [6] who had played music together since high school [7]: 30 and had lived together in Macon, Georgia. [8]
This is a comprehensive list of songs recorded by the American alternative rock band R.E.M. that were officially released. The list includes songs performed by the entire band only (Berry, Buck, Mills and Stipe 1980 to 1997; Buck, Mills and Stipe 1998 to 2011).
[citation needed] Stipe has also said the track is "all about cunnilingus". [ 4 ] The single's music video, directed by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris and shot during the soundcheck prior to the band's June 20, 1995, performance at the Knickerbocker Arena in Albany , New York , [ 5 ] shows a group of teenagers in a living room watching the ...
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".
Stipe was born on January 4, 1960, in Decatur, Georgia, [7] to Marianne and John Stipe. [8] He was a military brat; his father was a serviceman in the United States Army, having served in Korea as a helicopter pilot.
Live from Austin, TX is a 2010 video album by R.E.M. recorded on March 13, 2008 for the television series Austin City Limits.The television broadcast aired on PBS starting March 24, 2008.
Chuck Campbell from Knoxville News Sentinel noted that on the "swaggering" "Crush with Eyeliner", Michael Stipe's "come-on is more self-assured and humorous." [7] Andrew Mueller from Melody Maker wrote, "Thurston Moore makes a few ludicrous mutterings, but, not for the last time, Stipe's vocal is the revelation. He's never sounded so wasted ...
[8] Barbara Ellen from NME said, "Like Morrissey, Michael Stipe is an expert on the agonies of obsessive, unrequited love. The lyrics of "Strange Currencies" are among his most deceptively simple and potent yet, encapsulating all the need, hope and dread of a painful, secret crush". [ 9 ]