| "REM are one of the few contemporary manifestations of a classically 
        straightforward songwriting rock group that, while adhering to the genre's 
        basic tenets, have created a body of work that both affirms and extends 
        rock's potential to be both articulate and gut-punchingly powerful. They're 
        also one of the few contemporary groups where every album can be read 
        like the next installment in some slow-spooling epic psychodrama, as vocalist 
        and lyricist Michael Stipe works through his obsessions.They're arguably best when they're at their most hermetic, when Stipe's 
        lyrics combine with the hypnotic shapes of Peter Buck's guitar to form 
        radiant little puzzles that you can tussle with for months. But I still 
        find myself coming back to 1988's Green, undoubtedly one of their most 
        open and inclusive sets to date.
 It rocks. Between this and the preceding Document, REM had beefed themselves 
        up, channelling all the transcendental energy of the likes of The Byrds 
        and Moby Grape into a series of crushing, inspired compositions. Lyrically, 
        Stipe was really coming out of himself, wrestling with the need to communicate 
        versus the urge to just curl up into a ball.
 The resultant confusion spawned a schizophrenic mix of tracks, from the 
        airy bubblegum of Pop Song 89 and Get Up, through to the venomous drive 
        of Turn You Inside Out and the starkly beautiful World Leader Pretend. 
        And just as it all starts to seem a little too pat, they go out on I Remember 
        California, like a nagging doubt or a blurred photograph."
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