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Graham's avatar

That was quite the ride Dan. Head of the queue Gen Xer, so REM was a big part of my life too. I saw them only once in Aotearoa, on the Green tour in early '89. A high school mate had tuned me into them, which lead to using the hard-earned on Life's Rich Pageant and Document on LP - long since lost to me. My buddy moved on to big-fanning Husker Du, but I could never quite get my head around them however.

A few things stick in my mind about that show, jammed into the Logan Campbell centre in Auckland.

* How the hell did Buck and Stipe spend so much time slewing and gyrating around the stage, but still make such amazing sound?

* We were seated next to a huge bunch of teenagers, who were all there as comp winners for a pop-hit radio station (ZM I think). As someone in my near-mid 20s, I thought what could they possibly see in a cool-alt band straight out of Georgia? But I think the programmers had hit the transition well, and REM would provide radio fodder for a few more years at least, while still keeping them on their toes.

* As we shuffled out, reflecting on a good all-round show, I did wonder why they hadn't played The One I Love. So we sang it for them, doing our best slurred lyrics impersonation "A simple frah, to occupy my time".

Brad Weekly's avatar

Holy shite mate, you've written perhaps the best Substack entry of all time (so far, I know its early days, but still...). Please allow me some stream of stream of consciousness observations.

1. I am conflicted about Live Nation. Yeah they bought all the HOB venues, the Gorge Amphitheater and God knows what else, and I hate that but also love it too, because, I guess, good venues are nice and the market dictates. Still uncomfortable, man. And the 40 Watt? I have a bootleg recording of Drive By Truckers playing there circa Southern Rock Opera. Surely there are more lights there now than a single 40 watt bulb dangled from the ceiling? (that would describe an Ethiopian bar in Portland I used to go to called the Red Sea and sold Red Stripe stubbies out of an ice chest).

2. While not a classic REM fan, I do appreciate their place in history - which I'd say puts them in Top 10 all time, maybe higher depending on your criteria. I took interest for real with Fables of the Reconstruction, partly for the music but also for the atmospheric feel the title and cover art (remember them?) evoked. They pulled off an incredible feat by always staying cool and relevant while achieving global success at scale over decades. Ain't many bands can say that. A good cover band who looks and sounds like the original, who is perhaps known to and condoned by the original - and their fans - reeks credibility.

3. Not sure how to process Bobcat Goldthwait's place here - but I remember him from back in the day. Does he still talk that way? And I dig the VHS in a Tik Tok world line. I feel the same way sometimes. I'd call myself analog in digital, or something like that.

4. I cannot resist sharing a memory from 20 August 1999, weeks before we moved (back) to New Zealand, me and my son were in Emerald City Guitars (Seattle) and my boy was trying out one of the guitars that cost more than most peoples car, displaying his ability on a few Zeppelin tunes. Unbeknownst to us, Peter Buck was in the store and took note, walked over and told my son, "its always good to hear young people playing Zeppelin". He was such a nice guy, chatting us for a about 5 mins, said he was in town to see his kids and at Emerald City Guitars to find "one of those bases like Paul McCartney plays". He also wowed at my son's King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard shirt from the show we saw the previous night, said he loved that band and wished he could have gone to the show (they not really a t-shirt band either but try telling that to a 17 year old).

5. I will die one day (not today, tho) but Rock n Roll never will.

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