Out of Time

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com essential recording
Though R.E.M. titled a later album Monster, this 1991 smash was the true monster, with the little Athens, Georgia, quartet graduating once and for all from its jangling independent-rock roots. The confusion Michael Stipe communicates in the catchy "Losing My Religion" and the dark-and-dreamy "Low" hit the mainstream-rock audience when it was most primed for uneasy angst. (Nirvana's Nevermind was released a few months later.) There are also odd but successful experiments, like ceding the opening "Radio Song" to rapper KRS-One (with Stipe playing the moaning straight man) and going peppy for the surprisingly nonsarcastic "Shiny Happy People." --Steve Knopper --This text refers to the Audio CD edition.

Amazon.com
Matching their ugliest album cover with some of their most sublime music, Out of Time inaugurates the finest phase of R.E.M.'s work. This meditative yet sometimes seething album offers not only their greatest single since "Radio Free Europe" ("Losing My Religion," about which critics and programmers agreed for once), but a moodscape that ties together that song's ambivalence, the sneer of "Radio Song," the doom of "Low" and the sprightliness of "Shiny... read more --This text refers to the Audio CD edition.

Out of Time

Music Review:

  1. Plastique Valentine
  2. Pretty Flowers
  3. Promise [Box set]
  4. Radio One Sessions
  5. Rare Oul' Stuff [Explicit Lyrics] [Import]
  6. Reality [DualDisc] [Enhanced]
  7. Reincarnate
  8. Rhode Island
  9. Simple Magic
  10. Sissyneck

Music Review

music review

Music Review

Essentials [Import]

Organ in Splendor & Majesty

Music & Cinema: Work for Solo Piano

Music: Hard Times

Need to Be Proud [CD-single]

Painting on Silence

Le Piu Belle Canzoni [Import]

Magnified

Mind Ride

Menotti: The Medium

Lushlife

New Age Music: 2 Versao [Import]

La Migra: 15 Exitos

You Know What's Up

If You Wanna Be Happy: The Very Best of Jimmy Soul