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Monster (R.E.M. album)

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Untitled

Monster is the ninth album by the American band R.E.M. It was their fourth major label release for Warner Bros., released in 1994. It is their most guitar-heavy album to date, with glam/70s rock and grunge influences. It is also very multi-layered, with references to projected images, both in the media and in personal identity, particularly in terms of sexuality.

Details

Monster became a multi-platinum seller, and received critical acclaim by most critics, reaching #1 worldwide. There were several hits from the album, particularly "What's the Frequency, Kenneth?," "Strange Currencies," and "Bang and Blame."

The song "Let Me In" was written for Kurt Cobain, who died shortly after the sessions for Monster started. Michael Stipe said that the lyrics of the song were basically what he would tell Kurt over the phone.[1] The song was recorded on Kurt Cobain's Jag-Stang.

"King of Comedy" is a heavily processed, electronic-sounding track; Peter Buck called it a "Leonard Cohen rip-off."[1] It had started out as a song called "Yes I Am Fucking With You".

The caption in the liner notes reading "For River" is a dedication to late actor River Phoenix, a friend of Michael Stipe's, who died of a drug overdose of cocaine and heroin on October 31, 1993.

In 2005, Warner Bros. Records issued an expanded two-disc edition of Monster which includes a CD, a DVD-Audio disc containing a 5.1-channel surround sound mix of the album done by Elliot Scheiner, and the original CD booklet with expanded liner notes. The CD (as with all in this series) is not remastered.

Track listing

All songs written by Bill Berry, Peter Buck, Mike Mills and Michael Stipe.

  1. "What's the Frequency, Kenneth?" – 4:00 (download sample here)
  2. "Crush with Eyeliner" – 4:39
  3. "King Of Comedy" – 3:40
  4. "I Don't Sleep, I Dream" – 3:27
  5. "Star 69" – 3:07
  6. "Strange Currencies" – 3:52
  7. "Tongue" – 4:13
  8. "Bang and Blame"1 – 5:30
  9. "I Took Your Name" – 4:02
  10. "Let Me In" – 3:28
  11. "Circus Envy" – 4:15
  12. "You" – 4:54

Notes

1 Track followed by a brief untitled instrumental.

Monster had several live B-sides. Instrumental versions of "What’s the Frequency, Kenneth", "Bang and Blame", "Crush with Eyeliner", "Strange Currencies" and "Tongue" were also issued on the Monster singles.

Personnel

Additional personnel

Charts

Album

Year Chart Position
1995 The Billboard 200 1 (54 weeks on chart)
1995 UK album chart 1 (56 weeks on chart)
Preceded by Billboard 200 number-one album
October 15 - October 28, 1994
Succeeded by
II by Boyz II Men

Single

Year Single Chart Position
1995 "Bang and Blame" Billboard Modern Rock Tracks 1
1995 "What's the Frequency, Kenneth?" Billboard Modern Rock Tracks 1
1995 "What's the Frequency, Kenneth?" Billboard Hot 100 21
1995 "Crush with Eyeliner" Billboard Modern Rock Tracks 33
1995 "Star 69" Billboard Modern Rock Tracks 8
1995 "Bang and Blame" Billboard Hot 100 19
1995 "Strange Currencies" Billboard Modern Rock Tracks 14
1995 "Strange Currencies" Billboard Hot 100 47

Certifications

Organization Level Date
RIAA – U.S. Gold December 6 1995
RIAA – U.S. Platinum December 6 1995
RIAA – U.S. Double Platinum December 6 1995
RIAA – U.S. Triple Platinum March 22 1996
RIAA – U.S. 4X Platinum August 10 1996
BPI – U.K. 3X Platinum July 1 1996

References

  1. ^ a b Black, Johnny (2004). Reveal: The Story of R.E.M.. Backbeat Books. ISBN 0-87930-776-5.