Editorial Reviews This expanded edition offers a digitally remastered version of the original album as well as a newly produced bonus DVD. There you'll find a 5.1 surround mix that recreates the performances' live ambience with stunning clarity, as well as a previously unreleased, 1996 documentary featuring song clips and insightful interviews with the band members and an album of still photographs.
Music Review:
Music Review
Luys Venegas de Henestrosa: Libro de Cifra Nueva
Music: The Voice of the Wretched [Live] [Original recording
Mahler: Symphonies No. 1 & No. 2; Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen
Amazon.com
New Adventures, despite its studiocentric title, is a snapshots-from-the-road record in the tradition of Neil Young's Time Fades Away and Jackson Browne's Running on Empty. Like them, it captures a where-am-I-and-why ambience, even with its concert and sound-check material reworked in post-tour sessions. This is very much a transitional album, its feel somewhere between the chamber-folk sweep of Out of Time and Automatic for the People and the distortion-pedal party that raged on Monster. It's the work of a band pretty near its peak consolidating familiar sounds and styles while tinkering with the edges. --Rickey Wright
Album Description
After putting Athens, GA, on the musical map in the early '80s, R.E.M. went on to become one of the world's biggest bands. Fusing folk, garage rock, pop sensibilities, and insightful lyrics delivered with Michael Stipe's inimitable lead vocals, these alt-rock forefathers built a massive indie following, and in 1988 unleashed their major-label debut, Warner Bros.' Green. This roots rock tour de force was followed in '91 by the Grammy-winning #1 blockbuster Out of Time, which led to an ongoing stream of masterpieces. These two classics, along with five more albums from R.E.M.'s extraordinary catalog-plus their retrospective Best Of-now each feature a Bonus DVD with Surround Sound audio and video extras.