journolud
Well-Known Member
For what it’s worth U2 I’ve never really liked. I can see where they might attract the same sort of audience and you can throw Coldplay into that mix for me but they are another band that leave me cold.I don’t think late REM isn’t real; I just don’t think it’s as good or interesting as early REM. EVERY early REM fan thinks this. All of us. It’s unique to the band. I mean, what the fuck do you expect when a band ditches IRS to go to Warner Brothers because no one in the UK has heard of them? It isn’t even that early REM fans dislike the later stuff. I like OOT a lot for example. It’s just that the band changed their sound radically. Stipe started enunciating; instrumentation moved away from the three piece; tempos shifted; subject matters changed. Green was their first record on the Big Label and not uncoincidentally, their first uneven record. Was this better than what they were? I don’t think so, but before they weren’t trying to be U2, so are they better because they were able to somehow become more like U2? Lots of people adore U2 and REM 2.0, so I guess congratulations on the evolution, fellas.
It’s a funny thing with bands and at what point their fans think they’ve “sold out”. The documentary about Scottish music that @Coatigan posted about on here was big on the artistic integrity of bands and made quite a bit about how Wet Wet Wet embraced popularity.
Big moment for me in the dim and distant past was when the Fall appeared on Top of the Pops. I’m sure they only did it in an ironic sort of way.