Product Details
Accelerate (digipack)

Accelerate (digipack)
REM

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Product Description

This fourteenth studio album from the veteran indie rockersis the follow-up to 2004's 'Around The Sun' and comes just six months after their 'Live' CD/DVD stopgap. The brusquest,most amped-up and aggressive album they have made in decades, the eleven songs on 'Accelerate' flash by in a scant 34 minutes and mark a return to the harder post-punk sounds of their pre-major label days, whilst not disregarding the infectious melodies that have made their name. Includes the single 'Supernatural Superserious'.

Track Listing

  1. Living Well Is The Best Revenge
  2. Man Sized Wreath
  3. Supernatural Superserious
  4. Hollow Man
  5. Houston
  6. Accelerate
  7. Until The Day Is Done
  8. Mr Richards
  9. Sing For The Submarine
  10. Horse To Water
  11. I'm Gonna DJ

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #202 in Music
  • Released on: 2008-03-31
  • Number of discs: 1

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
At this stage in a band's career a Mojo front cover would seem more likely than actually getting their old mojo back. And at 14 albums young, REM's longevity had been taken as a byword for pale compliance--in spite of a melodic obedience, last album Around the Sun lacked the emotional vigour of their key works and was presumed by many to be no more than a footnote in their decline. Here then is where they break all the rules. Accelerate is exceptionally loyal to its title and marks a hefty return to their Document-era heyday, when their Byrdsian post-punk was beefed up to suit the arenas they were then beginning to fill. There's even a new "end of the world" song to back up that assertion--the excitable Stooges/B52s love-in "I'm Gonna DJ" ("Death is pretty final/I'm collecting vinyl/I'm gonna DJ at the end of the world!"). Michael Stipe's voice splinters scattered emotional punctuation, Mike Mills is as ever REM's secret weapon, drilling out bass-lines like rapid CPR and achieving more with a single backing vocal than many lead singers manage over a whole album, while Peter Buck deals out memorable guitar twists a-go-go evoking amongst others The Who, The Small Faces and Neil Young. To summon a cliché, this really does sound like a band--and a band half their age at that--playing live in a room, packed full of all the fire and nuances needed to feel at home in a club or the stadiums they now more regularly inhabit. --James Berry


Customer Reviews

Excellent!!! Up there with their best! 5
Absolutely brilliant! In my opinion, the best REM album since Automatic For The People. Highly recommended.

It starts with a mighty blast - the first three tracks are on a par with REM's best work. The middle section slows down but the standard barely diminishes, before the album concludes with the rocking Horse to Water and I'm Gonna DJ. Not a dud amongst the 11 tracks.

Buy without reservations - this really is a return to form!

Not their best by a long way2
There are a few tracks on this album I'd rate highly.. but the quality of the recording is awfull. The dynamics are so compressed that the meters on my McIntosh amp just don't move with the beat.

I'd enjoy this album much more if the sound quality was better.

don't believe the hype2
I have never written a review of an REM album before even though I have loved them for years and am even in the fan club. Like a lot of others I was misled by all the reviews that said this was a return to form. It is not. This is the worst album REM have ever made. It has two decent songs on it. Horse to water and Living well. All the other's are rubbish and would not have even made a b side a few years ago. Listening to this made me realise just how good New Adventures in Hi Fi was. The last great REM album.