Album Reviews
Dead Letter Office sets its sights far lower than any of the band's previous four LPs, but the first R.E.M. record wholly without pretension is something of an event. The self-deprecating, generous inner-sleeve notes, written by guitarist Peter Buck, prevent any stuffiness. For example, on his band's deconstruction of Roger Miller's fabled "King of the Road," Buck muses that Miller "should be able to sue for what we did to this song."
Dead Letter Office is R.E.M.'s loosest record. Singer Michael Stipe is as open as the best of Lifes Rich Pageant suggested he always could be, and on "Burning Hell" and "Ages of You," Buck's guitar work is his least studied and most unrestrained. Reverential covers of songs by the Velvet Underground, Aerosmith and Pylon nudge against the steady instrumental "White Tornado" and the wacky "Walters Theme," helping to define the sources of this wideranging band. Dead Letter Office isn't meant to be anything special. That's why it is.
(Posted: Jul 2, 1987)
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- Crazy
- There She Goes Again
- Burning Down
- Voice Of Harold
- Burning Hell
- White Tornado
- Toys In The Attic
- Windout
- Ages Of You
- Pale Blue Eyes
- Rotary Ten
- Bandwagon
- Femme Fatale
- Walters Theme
- King Of The Road
- Wolves, Lower
- Gardening At Night
- Carnival Of Sorts (Box Cars)
- 1,000,000
- Stumble
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- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.