And I Feel Fine...: The Best of the I.R.S. Years 1982-1987 [Bonus CD] R.E.M.

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CD - Bonus CD

  • Release Date: 09/12/2006
  • 2 Disc Set
  • Sales Rank: 50,738
  • Label: CAPITOL
  • UPC: 094636994222
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CD$7.79

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  • Overview
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  • Editorial Reviews
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Track List
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And I Feel Fine...: The Best of the I.R.S. Years 1982-1987 [Bonus CD]

Disc 1
1LISTENBegin the Begin 3:29
2LISTENRadio Free Europe 4:06
3LISTENPretty Persuasion 3:51
4LISTENTalk About the Passion 3:22
5LISTEN(Don't Go Back To) Rockville 4:33
6LISTENSitting Still 3:18
7LISTENGardening at Night 3:29
8LISTEN7 Chinese Bros. 4:15
9LISTENSo. Central Rain (I'm Sorry) 3:15
10LISTENDriver 8 3:23
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Disc 2
1LISTENPilgrimage Bonus Track 4:30
2LISTENThese Days Bonus Track 3:25
3LISTENGardening at Night previously unreleased / Bonus Track / Slower Electric Demo 4:44
4LISTENRadio Free Europe Bonus Track / Original Hib-Tone Version 3:48
5LISTENSitting Still Bonus Track / Original Hib-Tone Version 3:16
6LISTENLife and How to Live It Live / previously unreleased / Bonus Track 6:36
7LISTENAges of You Live / previously unreleased / Bonus Track 3:48
8LISTENWe Walk Live / previously unreleased / Bonus Track 3:17
9LISTEN1,000,000 Live / previously unreleased / Bonus Track 3:25
10LISTENFinest Worksong / Uptown Horns Bonus Track / Other Mix 3:47
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About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

It's hardly as if R.E.M.'s glory days of the '80s haven't been compiled before -- just after they left I.R.S. for Warner, the Eponymous collection appeared in 1988, and over the years more collections have appeared in both domestic and foreign markets -- but 2006's And I Feel Fine...: The Best of the I.R.S. Years 1982-1987 is the first collection since Eponymous to be assembled with a purpose. At 21 tracks, it's nearly twice as long as the 1988 effort (and it's also five tracks longer than the good EMI Europe 1998 disc The Best of R.E.M.) and the extra space is used well, helping to sketch a complete picture of the band through singles, album tracks, and concert standards. Which isn't to say everything great that R.E.M. recorded in the '80s -- it's a rich body of work, so there will naturally be great songs left behind when it's being condensed down to a 21-track collection -- but this has all the major songs ("Radio Free Europe," "[Don't Go Back to] Rockville," "Gardening at Night," "Pretty Persuasion," "Driver 8," "The One I Love," "Fall on Me," "It's the End of the World as We Know It [And I Feel Fine]"), making it about as a good single-disc overview and introduction to R.E.M.'s peak years as could be imagined. Only two things would make it better: chronological sequencing, since the group's growth truly was impressive, and the inclusion of their cover of the Clique's "Superman," which was a college radio standard throughout the late '80s.

"Superman" does turn up on the second disc of the deluxe edition of And I Feel Fine... That second disc is a hodgepodge of rarities, demos, alternate takes, live versions, single mixes and remixes, album tracks, and favorite songs of Bill Berry, Peter Buck, Mike Mills, and Michael Stipe. Although most of these rarities have appeared somewhere else before, there's a healthy selection of previously unreleased cuts that makes this more than worthwhile for hardcore fans. Of these, the highlight is the original version of "Bad Day," which was scrapped during the Lifes Rich Pageant sessions, then rewritten into "It's the End of the World" and finally revived as a new song for the 2003 compilation In Time: The Best of R.E.M. 1988-2003. It's rough and ragged, certainly incomplete, but it's exciting and proof that at their peak R.E.M. was a terrific rock band. Also of note are previously unreleased demos of "Mystery to Me" and "Theme from Two Steps Onward," also outtakes from the Lifes Rich Pageant sessions that are rough but a lot of fun. Then there are the rarities that aren't that rare but still worth having: the original Hib-Tone versions of "Radio Free Europe" and "Sitting Still," the original version of "All the Right Friends" (another early song later revived by the Berry-less version of the band), an acoustic "Swan Swan H," and a live-in-the-studio version of "Just a Touch." Although there are other rarities that could have shown up on this collection -- they've been heard not only on bootleg, but on the expanded European reissues of the I.R.S. albums that appeared in the '90s -- this is the cream of the crop, and help make And I Feel Fine... the finest R.E.M. compilation yet. Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

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And I Feel Fine...: The Best of the I.R.S. Years 1982-1987 [Bonus CD]by Anonymous

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September 28, 2006: I'm not old enough to remember Automatic For The People coming out, so REM were always an old band to me, and like I know some of my friends did, I bought In Time, the best of REM 88-00, and left it at that. Was I wrong. When I had finally got round to buying the classics Out Of Time and Automatic For The People, I began to find the secrets hitherto witheld from my neglected generation. Riches like Find The River, Belong, Sweetness Follows and others. In Time was just a bad compilation album- it's quite simply a mess, it did nothing to further my interest in this classic band. This compilation of their early years, however, does. This is a fantastic place to start if you have just realised there is life before Green. I hope that it will make my generation realise what a band we've forgotten. Tracks like The End of The World As We Know It will be forever relevant, along with stuff like Welcome To The Occupation, Radio Free Europe, Driver 8, I Beleive and 7 Chinese Brothers (personal highlights)this has got to be the strongest compilation for ages. It also rocks like the Warner Bros. stuff never could.