Sunday, October 12, 2003

Do the Stipe shimmy
Victoria will have a much better wrap-up, but here are some quick thoughts from tonight's R.E.M. tour closer:
-- The sound system at Philips Arena leaves a lot to be desired, but our crappy seats (upper deck at an extreme angle to the stage) may have had something to do with it. Maybe it was my hearing, but I had problems picking out a lot of lyrics and a bunch of what Stipe had to say. The scary part is that the songs have become more intelligible as the years go by, but a lot of it seemed garbled from my perspective.
-- It's a much different crowd compared to the last time I saw them in 1995. It's definitely an older crowd, with the youngest group being in their early-mid 20s. You don't have the young crowd just picking them up off the most recent album. The greatest hits doesn't come out for a couple of weeks, and if you first picked up the band off Reveal, I'd be shocked.
-- Along those same lines, with a slightly older crowd who's had more time to digest a lot of the catalog, there was a greater appreciation for the "older" hits (i.e. stuff before Out of Time or Automatic for the People). I remember seeing them in '95 and hearing the whole crowd go nuts for stuff like Losing My Religion or What's the Frequency, Kenneth? But the ovation dying for things like Fall on Me. Not so this time. The biggest cheers came for the stuff that's played the most (Losing My Religion, Fall on Me, Radio Free Europe, Man on the Moon) regardless of year.
-- The Athens/Atlanta fan base from years back definitely were appeased as a bunch of the 28 songs on the list were from Chronic Town or Murmur. At times, we felt like they were just playing the track list from Eponymous.
-- I enjoyed myself, but a lack of cramming before the show got me a bit thrown off as to what was being played, and the sound system didn't help. There were a couple of tracks from Reveal and Up in the mix, but New Adventures in Hi-Fi got the most play of the recent albums. Automatic for the People also got a lot of play, but we couldn't find a single song from Monster on the set, which is a bit surprising, although that was the focus of the last big tour.
-- Still, the show seemed to appeal to all different levels of fans (minus those really wanting to hear Stand or Shiny Happy People): the big hits were mostly there, lots of underrated tracks for those who like things outside of the singles, plenty of older songs for the more hardcore fan. I'm not as much into the band as I was the last time I saw them, but it was still an entertaining show.
-- One last note: We see Mick Jagger continue to preen in his shows even though he's in his 60s. What will Stipe look like doing his goofy flailing dancing around if the band is still touring in like 10-15 years?

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