It was late 1986 when my older sister, a cool college student, copied a cassette her friend had put together. It was a collection of R.E.M. songs, creatively titled “R.E.M of Sorts.” It had the Chronic Town EP, B-sides and bootlegs. It essentially was “Dead Letter Office” years before that compilation came out.
At the time, I was a big retro rocker. Beatles, Zep, CCR, etc. I often dissed New Wave. But something about the melodic jangle pop of R.E.M. hooked me. I bought previous R.E.M. records on vinyl. I tracked down a record store that stocked “Document” on the day it came out. Then I persuaded my brother to see R.E.M. at Roy Wilkins Auditorium in St. Paul.
I even joined the R.E.M. fan club, a funny thing to think about in this era of social media.
Here are some relics from my fan boy days:
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My R.E.M. records. Check out that picture disc. (NOTE: My version of "Life's Rich Pageant" was a newfangled "compact disc.")