Reveal

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com's Best of 2001
R.E.M. have no right at this advanced stage in their career to be making such a spirited and beautiful album as Reveal. Twenty years after "Radio Free Europe," they're still jiggy as year-old pups. Reveal is the sound of a band that's beyond feeling the need to change or to prove themselves to each new generation, but retains its passion. Michael Stipe's voice is at its most evocatively beautiful on "I've Been High," and Peter Buck's eclectic tunes continue along the highly accessible vein mined on 1998's Up. Stipe continues his emergence as an up-front vocalist whose lyrics, if never entirely self-explanatory, now make ingenious use of more readily identifiable phrases, images, and vignettes. Hovering over much of the album is the spirit of Brian Wilson, whose genius is echoed in "Beachball" and almost transcended in the astonishingly plangent "Summer Turns to High." With so much to live up to, it's not far short of astonishing that R.E.M. can still come up with a song such as the gorgeously chiming and shimmering "Imitation of Life," which, on its own, is worth the price of admission. But, from the first synthesizer swirls of the opener "The Lifting" onward, there's nary a dud to be heard on Reveal. --Johnny Black

Music Review:

  1. Rio
  2. Root Down [EP]
  3. Slap-Happy
  4. Solitary EP
  5. Sound of Lies
  6. State Songs
  7. Steady Diet of Nothing
  8. Stereo (w/ Grandpaboy Bonus Disc)
  9. Strawberries
  10. Sugar Ray

Music Review

music review

Music Review

Songs Of The Alchemist

Chants l'amour divin

Famous Piano Works 3 & 4

Music: 40 Hits of 1975-1979 [Import]

Essential Elements

Geisterfaust

Il Gatto a Nove Code [Soundtrack]

Greatest Love Songs 666 [Import]

Frat Rock: The '80s

Five Live Yardbirds [Import]

For The Masses: An Album of Depeche Mode Songs

Duke [Import]

Electric Boogies: The Early Days of Rap & Hip-Hop

Spanish Concertos

Deep Focus