Rock Bands & Pop Stars
R.E.M. Fotos
Grupo:
R.E.M.
Origen:
Estados Unidos, Athens - GeorgiaEstados Unidos
Miembros:
Michael Stipe (vocals), Peter Buck (guitar), Michael Mills (bass guitar) and Bill Berry (drums)
Disco de R.E.M.: «Succumbs [VHS]»
Disco de R.E.M.: «Succumbs [VHS]» (Anverso)
    Información del disco
  • Valoración de usuarios: (4.4 de 5)
  • Título:Succumbs [VHS]
  • Fecha de publicación:
  • Tipo:VHS Tape
  • Sello discográfico:
  • UPC:
Valoración de usuarios
Análisis - Product Description
Succumbs was R.E.M.'s first commercially available full-length movie. Released in October 1987 by UNI/A&M, it contains video footage shot by R.E.M.'s lead singer Michael Stipe dating back to the mid-1980s, while the band was still recording under the I.R.S. Records label. Stipe collaborated with local Athens, Georgia artist James Herbert for some tracks. For fans who came to know R.E.M. after they signed on with Warner, Succumbs offers a glimpse at the unique feel of the band before their commercial success. It is available only on VHS and Laserdisc, and it is likely only available second-hand. However, all the videos contained in this package now feature on the When the Light Is Mine DVD, released in September 2006. An introductory clip at the beginning of the collection features guitarist Peter Buck and the band's manager at the time, Jefferson Holt, introducing "citizens of the future" to an "outmoded artform" called the "video", predicting it would have a staying power similar to that of Nehru jackets and other forgotten fads.
Análisis de usuario
7 personas de un total de 7 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- music video at its best

Fans of REM from the IRS Records days will love this, just everything music videos should be. My personal favorite would have to be "So. Central Rain" (with a live vocal from Stipe) and "Can't Get There From Here." "Radio Free Europe," "Fall On Me," "Left of Reckoning," "Driver 8," all great ones.... you get the point

Análisis de usuario
2 personas de un total de 2 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- A grab-bag of oldies but goodies.

Most of the videos contained in this compilation are ones that never made it into heavy rotation on the major music networks, probably because much of it is abstract and a little lengthy. However, R.E.M. fans expect a little abstract, and so they'll probably enjoy the grainy footage of the band's earlier days. "Can't Get There From Here" is a gem, and "Radio Free Europe" is interesting to watch, too.

Análisis de usuario
- R.E.M. at their most left-field

This is a compilation of most of the early R.E.M. videos, and it captures the weird, ghostly ambience of the band perfectly. Some of the videos are more polished than others, but none are unwatchable. "Radio Free Europe" and "Fall on Me" are worth the price of the tape alone. END

Análisis de usuario
1 personas de un total de 2 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- The best R.E.M. video collection

This is the best R.E.M. video collection for two reasons:

1. The early R.E.M. music is still the best.

2. I hate music videos, and this is an anti-video. The band makes sarcastic reference to this at the beginning of the video, smirking that the music video is an art form that will surely stand the test of time. (*Heh. Chuckle.*) Even the title of the video is "R.E.M. Succumbs" (to the pressures to create music videos to their songs).

The individual videos themselves also draw the focus to where it should be: the music. "Left of Reckoning" is nothing more than a speed-tweaked, jerky, blurry movie of the band wandering around a yard full of whirligigs -- for 20 whole minutes, the length of the "Left" side of the Reckoning album (the vinyl album had Left and Right sides). Then there are videos that show the band performing the song -- again, the focus is on the musical performance only. Even the most fully-developed of the videos, Fall On Me, draws your attention to the music and lyrics, by flashing them in big letters across the screen over an upside-down background.

I hate the way music videos draw the focus away from the music and instead concentrate on the visual (think Britney Spears or Christina Aguilera as the worst examples of this -- all visuals, no musical substance). My favorite music video of all time is the Replacements' "Bastards Of Young." The entire video is of a speaker blasting out the song, while a guy sits on a couch listening, and plaster falls from the ceiling. This video GETS IT. It's an anti-video video. The way things should be. The music should be enough to keep your interest on its own. Videos really only detract and distract from this -- not add to it.

And so it is with this R.E.M. video. Unlike most of R.E.M's later videos, the videos in this collection are nothing much. You'll watch "Left Of Reckoning" maybe a couple of times and then just go back to playing the CD of Reckoning instead. And if it doess that, then my friends, that is the true mark of a successful video.

Análisis de usuario
0 personas de un total de 1 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- The best R.E.M. video collection

This is the best R.E.M. video collection for two reasons:

1. The early R.E.M. music is still the best.

2. I hate music videos, and this is an anti-video. The band makes sarcastic reference to this at the beginning of the video, smirking that the music video is an art form that will surely stand the test of time. (*Heh. Chuckle.*) Even the title of the video is "R.E.M. Succumbs" (to the pressures to create music videos to their songs).

The individual videos themselves also draw the focus to where it should be: the music. "Left of Reckoning" is nothing more than a speed-tweaked, jerky, blurry movie of the band wandering around a yard full of whirligigs -- for 20 whole minutes, the length of the "Left" side of the Reckoning album (the vinyl album had Left and Right sides). Then there are videos that show nothing but the band performing the song -- again, the focus is on the musical performance only. Even the most fully-developed of the videos, Fall On Me, draws your attention to the music and lyrics, by flashing the lyrics in big letters across the screen over an upside-down background.

I hate the way music videos draw the focus away from the music and instead concentrate on the visual (think Britney Spears or Christina Aguilera as the worst examples of this -- all visuals, no musical substance). My favorite music video of all time is the Replacements' "Bastards Of Young." The entire video is of a speaker blasting out the song, while a guy sits on a couch listening, and plaster falls from the ceiling. This video GETS IT. It's an anti-video video. The way things should be. The music should be enough to keep your interest on its own. Videos really only detract and distract from this -- not add to it.

And so it is with this R.E.M. video. Unlike most of R.E.M's later videos, the videos in this collection are nothing much. You'll watch "Left Of Reckoning" maybe a couple of times and then just go back to playing the CD of Reckoning instead. And if it doess that, then my friends, that is the true mark of a successful video.