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Out of Time

Out of Time

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Artist: R.e.m.
Label: Warner Bros / Wea
Category: Music

List Price: $13.98
Buy New: $9.97
You Save: $4.01 (29%)



New (53) Used (249) Collectible (15) from $0.01

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 164 reviews
Sales Rank: 1792

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 26496
UPC: 075992649629
EAN: 0075992649629
ASIN: B000002LOE

Release Date: March 12, 1991
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 6-10 of 164
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3 out of 5 stars New territory   May 20, 2007
The reviews seem to either slam this for being too far of a deviation from the norm and too blatantly poppy and saccharine to hailing it for those same reasons. I just like it for what it is. There are some pieces I wonder about, but that is the same with nearly every REM album, even the brilliant Document has songs that don't seem to fit, and so it is on Out of Time.
There are plenty of songs I like and amazingly, after repeated plays on radio, Losing My Religion is still that unique hit that doesn't tire out. Maybe it's because it is so lyrically intriguing, I don't know. The only questionable songs I have are Endgame, which sounds like an excessively long intro to Shiny Happy People and, well, Shiny Happy People. I don't mind the song, but it grates on you after a while and seems a bit too much. I'm not analyzing the sarcasm or lack thereof, I just know that it doesn't sound good to me. Speaking of Endgame, I wonder why Peter Buck, a limited albeit melodic guitarist, is so fond of instrumentals on REM recordings. What's the point? Jeff Beck he ain't and even Hendrix eschewed instrumentals for the most part, so why so many from such a modestly talented guitarist? Just a thought.
This album is a bit dated and not as in your face as its two preceding brothers nor as jangly and narrow as the band's first three. It is not the sonic overload of Monster. If anything, it is a singular moment in their history where they tried a lot of new ideas and thus loosened the constraints they'd placed on themselves and allowed for the band's future forays. It is a good but not vital part of their catalog.



2 out of 5 stars Remember when these guys were good?   May 18, 2007
 3 out of 5 found this review helpful

So R.E.M.'s breakthrough turns out to be completely inconsequential after all, with a couple exceptions: the massively catchy "Radio Song", folk-rocker "Me in Honey" (though I don't like the droning backup vocals), "Near Wild Heaven", sung by Mike Mills, and especially the inescapable hit "Losing My Religion", with an infinite number of hooks. But this album is equally inclined to wallow in miserable lite folk-rock like "Half a World Away", "Low" or "Belong". And this is the one with the detestable, brain-dead "Shiny Happy People", a truly sickening example of what commercial R.E.M. could become. It's hard for me to believe that this is the album most associate with the group...


5 out of 5 stars Pop-oriented, but great advances of R.E.M. styles   April 21, 2007
Fantastic collection. Losing My Religion is just the surface. great listen especially the last 3 tracks.
Get it!!



3 out of 5 stars Nothing special, but not too bad either   February 24, 2007
 0 out of 2 found this review helpful

This isn't a bad album, but nothing too special. "Losing My Religion" was a mega-hit, and probably the only song on this album that I can play more than once. The other tracks didn't really catch my fancy, but if you're into their type of music, it isn't all that bad. This was an album that I decided to buy mainly for that one track ("Losing My Religion"), so there isn't much else to celebrate.


2 out of 5 stars Shiny Happy Garbage   January 25, 2007
 2 out of 11 found this review helpful

For someone like me who had been onboard the REM Express since the early days, "Out of Time" served as my cue to now exit the train. As if enlisting the help of KRS-One on "Radio Song" wasn't bad enough (no disrespect to KRS, BDP were fantastic in their own right and you were simply helping REM put lipstick on a pig), Stipe and the boys dragged a B-52 onboard for "Shiny Happy People". What resulted was the band's most pathetic recording to date. If this album represents your first exposure to REM and you liked what you heard, then pay no attention to this review or any REM records prior to "Green". However if you cut your teeth on "Radio Free Europe" and "Seven Chinese Brothers", then don't be alarmed when blood pours out of your ears after listening to this album...the very definition of a "Traveshamockery".

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