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Adutopia - Dead Letter Office

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List Price: $11.98
Our Price: $5.32
Your Save: $ 6.66 ( 56% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: A&M
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0044797005428 Label: A&M Manufacturer: A&M Number Of Discs: 1 Publisher: A&M Release Date: 1990-10-25 Studio: A&M
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: just what I needed to hear lately Comment: Voice of Harold: it's real, they mean it.
I remember lines like that, it much more comes creeping over me when I listen to my old stuff. I wanted to like something new and different back when I started listening to R.E.M. and now I think this was their good stuff. The music was phenomenal, even if a point seemed like interpreting some pain.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Hitting the Flea Market with R.E.M. Comment: The main reason to get this CD was to pick up the long out-of-print "Chronic Town" EP. It was the first time R.E.M. found focus and made a studio album (released on the old IRS label in 1982). Their signature sound had already taken root, with Michael Stipe's mumbled vocals and Peter Buck's jangley guitars in full swing for "Gardening at Night" and "Wolves Lower." Within a year, they had caught the ears of college radio types with Murmur.
After that, you get a yard sale's pickings for B-Sides and previously unreleased songs. Some are ideas that eventually become other songs ("Burning Down"), free-wheeling covers (Aerosmith's Toys in the Attic) and a few drunken accidents (a babbling take on Roger Miller's "King of The Road"). Their love of The Velvet Underground is exposed by three covers, and a tribute to their buddies in Pylon leads the CD.
While hardly a requirement for REM fans, it does give folks a decent sense of back-story. Listeners who didn't discover REM until they jumped (two albums later) to Warners for Green may not get the old marble-mouth Stipe, but for those of us into the band early on (I actually had the "Chronic Town" Ep on vinyl), "Dead Letter Office" is alive on delivery.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Humble beginnings and the choice leftovers Comment: I had nearly forgotten about this record when I started re-perusing R.E.M.'s catalog the other day, but this was one of my favorites by the band from Athens. Not only does it collect a large number of covers and b-sides that wound up on the cutting room floor of IRS, it also contains the hard to find Chronic Town, the band's debut Ep that never enjoyed formal release on Cd.
Chronologically speaking, that EP was a glorious beginning for a group whose vocalist was otherwise incomprehensible to his listeners. We wondered at length what Stipe was actually saying (even coining the term "Michael Stipe diisease" for any singer who mumbles too much), but in the end we had to content ourselves with great music, even if the vocals were little more than a melody of their own.
As for the rest of the disc... well, you're in for a pleasant surprise. Unlike other catch-all compilations that seem to cash in on the loyalty of fans while delivering little in the process, the b-sides and covers are infinitely listenable. When taking in these tracks it becomes quickly evident the affection REM has for such bands as the Velvet Underground and Aerosmtih. Other homages such as Roger Miller's 'King of the Road' communicate a deep connection to the south (and country music in general) and leave one wondering what other influences REM might be hiding.
Dead Letter Office may be the kind of Cd you would prefer to cut, paste, and burn onto a couple blank discs, but it stands on its own as a document of REM's early development and the bands they owe so much to. Well worth your time.
Customer Rating:      Summary: A Must for longtime R.E.M. fans Comment: I admit that I was an REM fan from the release of Murmer. And yes, I am quite partial to the early stuff. I believe there are two REMs. the one before Green and the one after. I like them both, but I prefer the earlier more. This CD is especially great because of the covers, not just because of the Chronic Town re-release. "Crazy" is one of the best songs I have ever heard REM sing. Moreover, they do some fantastic covers of a few Velvet Underground songs. This is not a record company "cash in" complilation, the songs are very strong and worthy of a big release.
Customer Rating:      Summary: I.R.S. leftovers and the band's first EP Comment: I can't honestly rank this among their finest works and I'm sure the band would say as much: this was never meant to be an "album". Their first record label gathered up the CHRONIC TOWN E.P. and 15 other assorted B-sides and other rare tracks and outtakes to compile this. For this reason, definitely do NOT start here as a novice to the band.(Automatic for the People is that album)
But if you've already found yourself enjoying several of their early days albums, this is a nice one to have for the standout tracks.
HIGHLIGHTS:
The Velvet Underground covers for me are the highlights of this collection ("Femme Fatale","There She Goes Again") particularly a twanged-up "Pale Blue Eyes". 50s surf rock throwback "White Tornado" sounds like a long-lost Ventures track. CHRONIC TOWN track "1,000,000" is also nice.
LOWS:
Several of the instrumentals ("Walter's Theme") don't really do anything for me. I also found "Burning Hell" to be an annoyance. A phony drawl from Michael Stipe on "King of the Road" (yes, he's southern but this sounds deliberately cornpone to my ears..) cheapens the tune. Despite what rock snobs may believe, Miller is a GREAT lyricist and deserves better.
BOTTOM LINE:
Don't pay a fortune for it but if you can get it for a 5 spot or less it's probably worth it.
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Editorial Reviews:
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While purists will insist on an undiluted copy of the band's 1982 Chronic Town EP, R.E.M. completists (and those who just like a lot of tracks for their money) will be grateful for the inclusion of 15 additional B-sides and curios on this 1987 compilation. Not surprisingly, the non-Chronic material is a mixed blessing: while R.E.M. were much beloved for being notorious cover-whores during those early Athens live shows, their reverent takes on Velvet Underground classics stand the test of time far better than their odes to Roger Miller and Aerosmith. But all that will be forgotten by the time Chronic Town's "Wolves, Lower" kicks in, signaling the official arrival of a band that forever changed the face of Southern rock. --Bill Forman
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