R.E.M. collapsed the boundaries of alt-rock on Out of Time
35 years ago, the one-time college radio sweethearts from Athens, Georgia, took a leap of faith that a folkish, baroque album with hip-hop, mandolins, and shiny, happy bubblegum pop wouldn’t effectively end their careers as a mainstream rock band.
Photo by Frank Ockenfels III
R.E.M. already had five albums under their belt before major labels came calling. In their eight years together prior to signing with Warner Bros. and recording 1988’s Green, the Athens, Georgia, outfit had gradually evolved while climbing the ranks as college radio stalwarts with a DIY ethos. In a sense, a major-label deal changed very little about the band’s attitude toward songwriting and recording. While a younger act might’ve focused on nailing down the sound that got them signed in the first place, bandmates Michael Stipe, Peter Buck, Mike Mills, Bill Berry, and longtime producer Scott Litt were only concerned with where R.E.M.’s creative compass would point them next.
Green, in many ways, had been an extremely experimental album. “Anything that sounded too much like R.E.M. was out,” recalled bassist Mike Mills about the band’s determination to not repeat themselves. Among the differences, songs had been written in major keys, new instruments were brought in, and band roles had switched, not to mention Stipe, the group’s frontman and lyricist, had begun a departure from overtly political fare. The record had also solidified the band as highly bankable pop stars, even as they had begun dismantling R.E.M. as we knew them. Their newfound commercial clout gave them the freedom to take 1990 off after an exhausting year of touring Green to rethink the band’s future and begin work on their next release. “There was change in the air,” Stipe remembered. “As artists, we were instinctually responding to that change in the way we approached making our next record.” That album, 1991’s Out of Time, not only would catapult the band to international superstardom but continue to challenge the boundaries of what alternative rock could be.
The first voice heard on Out of Time doesn’t belong to Stipe or even Mills, the band’s main backing vocalist. That distinction goes to seminal rapper KRS-One of Boogie Down Productions. It wasn’t the first time the rock and hip-hop genres collided on a major release. In 1986, Run-D.M.C. rummaged through the toys in rock band Aerosmith’s attic and scored a major hit with their cover of “Walk This Way.” While kudos goes to Run-D.M.C. for recognizing that certain rock songs lend themselves to rapping, “Radio Song” sparked synergy between genres in a far less obvious manner. After KRS-One bemoans not finding anything worth listening to across the radio dial, Buck’s flickering guitar enters—like stars emerging and darting from sight—and Stipe laments that the world is collapsing around his ears. The rest of the song finds the singer in limbo between the melancholy fare at song’s opening and a playful, funk-driven counter that includes a KRS-One verse and the rapper acting as the band’s hypeman. The latter wins out, of course, as modern radio’s stale formatting goes down for the count.
Part of what made an unconventional opener like “Radio Song” possible was that R.E.M. had already decided they weren’t going to tour behind what would become Out of Time. This choice to stay home freed up the band to write songs on different instruments and record an album without needing to worry about recreating it onstage. For instance, it allowed Mills to play both funky basslines and double-agent organ on “Radio Song,” with The dB’s Peter Holsapple adding more bass and Kidd Jordan puffing three types of saxophone. Similarly, Berry drums, plays piano, and sings backup to help create the richly woven textures of “Near Wild Heaven” a few tracks later. Many of the intricacies and the creative interplay so crucial to these songs might have been lost if the band had limited themselves to elements that traveled easiest.