Music Review: R.E.M. - Accelerate
Published March 26, 2008
There’s been a lot of what could best be described as apprehensive anticipation surrounding the release of R.E.M.’s fourteenth studio album. First, a confession to make: I’m going into this relatively cold. I haven’t heard much of R.E.M.'s recent work since I’ve taken myself away from the rock music scene and headed toward a jazzier side of life. Nevertheless, R.E.M. always stood out in my memory as being one of the “good ones.”
A perusal of various message boards and a sampling of various songs led me to the discovery that I haven’t actually missed too much after my last go-around with the Georgian band. New Adventures in Hi Fi was the album I had last spun, so I had missed the “opulence” that was 1998’s fan-alienating Up (although I had heard “Daysleeper” and found it to be an passable song), slept through Reveal from 2001 (despite the decent “Imitation of Life”), and totally ignored Around the Sun from 2004, which I’m told included an appearance by Q-Tip. I may actually have to track that down.
Long story short, the first sounds of any full R.E.M. record to grace my speakers in a long time is 2008’s Accelerate. The single, “Supernatural Superserious,” was released in February and charted rather well. R.E.M. used Jackknife Lee to produce this time, going with the Snow Patrol/U2/Bloc Party/The Hives producer over the producer of their last three albums (phew!) Patrick McCarthy.
Part of the reason Accelerate might sound so good is because it was made quickly and organically. The album was recorded in about nine weeks at Grouse Lodge in Ireland and was mixed in ten days. "We spent less time making this record than we have in 20 years", Michael Stipe told the Guardian in January of 2008. "I feel like there's a confidence in the material and a communication between the three of us which hasn't been there for some time.”
- Music Review: R.E.M. - Accelerate
- Published: March 26, 2008
- Type: Review
- Section: Music
- Filed Under: Music: Rock
- Writer: Jordan Richardson
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Comments
Nope you didn't miss anything and yet picked the perfect time to return. Accelerate is undoubtedly REM's best album since New Adventures in Hi-Fi and probably Automatic for the People. Mr. Richards, Hollow Man, Horse to Water...the REM I know and love.







Around The Sun wasn't that bad. People keep calling it dullsville, but the truth is "The Worst Joke Ever" was their worst song ever. It tainted the album, at least for me. Accelerate ends all the needless experimenting for a band that has already proven that it can subvert its formulas, and takes die-hard fans like myself back to the exhilarating flush of jagged '80s gems like Lifes Rich Pageant, and Document. While Up and Reveal were interesting in their own rights, I can't help but think that life would have been so much better if Accelerate had followed directly on the heels of New Adventures in Hi-Fi, sparing all of us the mediocrity that actually ensued. I haven't loved an R.E.M. album this much since 1996, my freshman year of high school. I feel twelve years younger, yet so much prouder for having weathered R.E.M.'s low tide. The key to all of R.E.M.'s greatest albums is that they are products of a band that isn't trying too hard, but trying hard enough to retain relevance. Accelerate doesn't try too hard, and accomplishes much more than all the trials of the band's last three albums combined.