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101 Best Songs of 1988:#1 – Guns n’ Roses – Sweet Child o’ Mine (1 Viewer)

scorchy said:
#32 - Queensryche - I Don't Believe in Love

Alright all you Queensryche fanboys, here you go.  Freshman year, I must have had five different dorm-mates try to convert me.  I liked  it, but not in the way they liked it.  These were the guys that would write an English 101 term paper on the genius of Operation: Mindcrime.  I was more on "sure, it has some good songs" but then changed the CD to Pretty Hate Machine. A few weeks ago, I gave it a spin for the first time in forever while walking the dogs - I have to admit, it probably sounds better to me now than back then. 

I Don't Believe in Love was the second single of Mindcrime.  Neither it nor previous single Eyes of a Stranger made it onto the Hot 100, with both capping out in the 30s on the Mainstream Rock chart.  When I post two pop songs at #31 and #32 tomorrow, looking forward to hearing how they suck in comparison.😀

I Don't Believe in Love
Favorite album by my favorite band.  I still love listening to this album from beginning to end. 

 Queensryche was a force until Empire which felt like a sell out.   I don’t hate Empire but you must avoid a few songs.  

 
#30 - Paula Abdul - Straight Up

trigger warning for @rockaction: horn alert

I know people consider Paula Abdul to be a bit of a punchline now, but her new-jack-adjacent single Straight Up was straight up fire in 1988.  In the early/mid aughts, I got to be a fill-in DJ at a hipster bar in Philly on several occasions.  I loved to see how far I could veer into pop before the DFA-loving doofuses would vacate the floor.  It was like a musical version of six degrees of Kevin Bacon: can I get from Franz Ferdinand to Mariah Carey and then back out to LCD Soundsystem over a half-dozen songs?  When it came to Straight Up, I never had to worry - it brought the joy to even the most dismissive.

Straight Up was actually the third single from Abdul's 1988 debut but the first to chart, eventually making it all the way to #1 in January of 1989.  Three more #1s followed (who can forget the sheer awfulness of MC Skat Kat or the hotness of the Cold Hearted video?).  

Only three more Billboard #1s to go among my top 30.

Straight Up
See, THIS is where I thought fer-sure you would leave this on the table but nope.  

No need to justify this tune, its straight-up killa.

Of all the American Idol whores Paula was my fav, lol.

 
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So, there's a particular sound that I think is associated with "80's"...and Straight Up helped mark the beginning of the end of it (whereas Smells Like Team Spirit is the end of the end). 

Having said that, if you don't sing along to this, you probably don't like ANY 80's music:
You are so hard to read.
You play hide-and-seek
With your true intentions.
If you're only playing games,
I'll just have to say

A-b-b-b-bbb-bbb-bye!

 
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#29 - Traveling Wilburys - Handle with Care

To a 16 year-old in late 1988, the members of the Traveling Wilburys seemed positively ancient.*  Which means that their record must have been crazy good for me and many of my friends to buy it.  

It got me thinking whether a similar supergroup could form today and a have a hit, but (1) despite my memories of hearing the song everywhere, it didn't crack the Billboard Top 40, though it did make it to #2 on the AOR chart, and (2) I have no idea who today's analogues would be for Bob Dylan, George Harrison, Roy Orbison, Tom Petty, and Jeff Lynne would be.

Handle with Care was originally recorded as a B-side to a new George Harrison single.  Legend  has it that the record company wisely thought it was too good for a one-off, and Harrison and Lynne convinced the rest of the guys to get together and record a full album.  Roy Orbison's sweet, sweet voice crooning "I'm so tired of being lonely, I still have some love to give..." can still give me goosebumps.  Such an amazing song.

Handle with Care

* They actually were all between 38 and 52 - yikes.  Dave Grohl doesn't seem as old as Roy Orbison, right?

 
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#29 - Traveling Wilburys - Handle with Care


If I might crib my own work in my solo Beatles thread, here's some more about the genesis of this song and the Wilburys overall, if anyone is interested in more about how all of this came together.   This was an incredible project of pure joy for the participants, and I hope more Wilburys songs might arise in the supplemental countdowns for 1988.

As mentioned in the interlude for Cloud Nine, the Traveling Wilburys were born out of the sessions for that record.  While recording, George and Jeff Lynne often talked about how they’d love to put together a full band together.  George dreamt of adding Bob Dylan, with whom he’d been close for years, drawing even closer after Dylan contributed songs to All Things Must Pass and performed at the Concert for Bangladesh.  Lynne named Roy Orbison, for whom he was then producing an album, as his dream participant, and George had known and been a fan of Orbison’s since the Beatles opened for him on tour in 1963.  Both Lynne and George were close to Tom Petty, with George having frequent ukulele jam sessions at Petty’s house, and Lynne in the midst of producing Petty’s first solo album.  George even mentioned his dream of a band of “me and some of my mates” called the Traveling Wilburys in an interview in February 1988, but the band’s formation ended up happening largely by accident. 

With very little notice, Warner Brothers had informed George in April 1988 that he needed a non-album b-side for his “This Is Love” single out of Cloud Nine.  While having dinner with Lynne and Orbison, George asked Lynne to help with the recording the next day, and Orbison decided to come along for it.  But they needed a place to record on short notice, so George arranged with Dylan to use his garage studio in Malibu.  On the way to record, George stopped by Tom Petty’s house to pick up a guitar, and Petty decided to come over for the recording, too. 

The five of them gathered with George’s half-finished song.  George wrote a little vocal part in it for Orbison, because IF YOU HAVE ROY ORBISON IN YOUR RECORDING STUDIO YOU DAMN WELL WRITE A VOCAL PART FOR HIM.  All of the group participated in finishing the song, then recorded it the same night, all of this accomplished in about five hours.

When he brought it to Warner Brothers, they predictably said it was too good to be a mere b-side.  In fact, they wondered, could they get a whole album of this?  Dylan was due back on his Never-Ending Tour in June, so the band gathered in early May and dedicated ten days to putting the album together.  They would sit around with their acoustic guitars, each member of the group throwing out musical ideas from which they’d lay down an initial track.  Then at dinner, they’d sit at a communal table and pass the lyrics around and work on those during the meal.  They’d draw straws to see who would sing the initial version, and then George would generally decide whose vocal fit which parts the best.  By the end of ten days, they had all of the songs written, with the basic parts and rough vocals recorded.  During the summer, George and Lynne then worked on the refining of the recordings, adding Jim Keltner on drums and Jim Horn on sax, and having Petty and Orbison come over for re-recordings where necessary.

This was a particularly joyous time for George, and indeed for all of the Wilburys.  George’s first and most important rule in putting the band together was that he would only admit as members people that he liked to hang out with.  By all accounts, the sessions were relaxed and free of ego, and the group laughed as much as recorded and shared a similar sense of humor (and a love for Monty Python).  While certain songs came from ideas from one or another Wilbury, the writing was truly collaborative, the vocal parts were equally shared, and each member was participating from a pure love of making music with people whom they respected and considered friends.  Preserving those friendships was most important to each of them; they were beyond a point where they needed to prove anything.

Despite this “community of equals,” it was clear that George was the driving force and ultimately in charge, and he set the tone for the sessions.  He had put the band together and organized all the sessions, he did by far the most promotion for the album, and he and Lynne co-produced the album together.  George is the one who had, two months before that first recording session occurred, mentioned “The Traveling Wilburys,” the name coming from the Cloud Nine sessions during which, upon numerous issues with faulty equipment, George had repeatedly joked to Lynne, “We’ll bury ‘em in the mix.”  He and Lynne started using the word “Wilbury” to refer to any mishaps in the recordings.  George had then suggested “The Trembling Wilburys” for their dream band, which Lynne adapted to “Traveling Wilburys.” 

Traveling Wilburys Vol. 1 was released in October 1988 to huge critical acclaim and commercial success.  It went platinum quickly and eventually sold over five million copies, and it won the Grammy for Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group.  In the liner notes, each of the band members adopted a fictitious Wilbury first name, and Michael Palin (under a fake name) put together a whole history of how this group of half-brothers had traveled the land for many years.  That part was kinda dumb to me, but hey, they seemed to be enjoying themselves, and this “half-brother” notion had enhanced their camaraderie.

About six weeks after the release, however, tragedy struck when Orbison died suddenly of a heart attack at age 52.  All of the Wilburys were shocked, but Lynne remembers being devastated for years.  The video for their second single from the album, “End of the Line,” was shot to show the surviving Wilburys singing to a chair holding Orbison’s guitar.  Be forewarned if you watch this now:  it is not an easy viewing given that three of the Wilburys have now passed.

The other four Wilburys gathered two years later to record a second album, which George the little scamp insisted be called Traveling Wilburys Vol. 3.  They had considered adding a new member to the group to fill Orbison’s spot – both Del Shannon and Roger McGuinn had been mentioned – but in the end remained a quartet.  This second album features more vocals from Dylan and Petty, with George taking a backseat on vocals but featuring more prominently on lead guitar.  The songs for the album were more fully developed rather than being put together in the kitchen sitting around a table.  The songs sound good, but to me, this album is missing something.  I suspect that it’s not just Orbison’s unmatched vocal, but some of the magic that he naturally brought.  While there was mutual respect among all the Wilburys, Orbison was the one they all idolized the most, and I think the glee that they all evidenced in the first record was down a notch in the second one.  This album still did well, going platinum, but was not the enormous success of the first.

George over the course of the rest of his life would occasionally talk about recording another album, or going on tour as the Wilburys.  Lynne remembers that George would say, “We’re going to get an aircraft carrier and follow the sunshine” for their Wilbury tour.  Of course, it never happened, but it shows just how much pleasure this endeavor continued to give George, as he stated that from this time on he always considered himself “a Wilbury.”

 
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Just listened to The Traveling Wilburys song for a first time in a long time. My first impressions: I can hear Petty's guitar in the background, the cowbell in the song is straight ELO/Jeff Lynne (maybe), and Orbison just transcends the whole thing. 

Dylan is buried, aside from the harmonica. He just seems out of place there, but not in a bad way. He's not given enough to do, IMO. There's no signature sound of his in the song.

"End Of The Line," even though they might have missed Orbison deeply, is actually a better song, maybe because i like the substance of the lyrics better. A band named The Traveling Wilburys ought to be singing a song of wanderlust rather than a "I need you, baby, take care of me" song. 

End of the story is that Orbison just transcends all of those guys, even. Every part he's on sticks out in a good way. Holy mama. 

 
Just listened to The Traveling Wilburys song for a first time in a long time. My first impressions: I can hear Petty's guitar in the background, the cowbell in the song is straight ELO/Jeff Lynne (maybe), and Orbison just transcends the whole thing. 

Dylan is buried, aside from the harmonica. He just seems out of place there, but not in a bad way. He's not given enough to do, IMO. There's no signature sound of his in the song.

"End Of The Line," even though they might have missed Orbison deeply, is actually a better song, maybe because i like the substance of the lyrics better. A band named The Traveling Wilburys ought to be singing a song of wanderlust rather than a "I need you, baby, take care of me" song. 

End of the story is that Orbison just transcends all of those guys, even. Every part he's on sticks out in a good way. Holy mama. 


"End of the Line" has Orbison on it.  It's just the video that doesn't have him due to his death before they filmed/released it.  :heart: that song, and you make a great argument for how it "fits" better.

 
"End of the Line" has Orbison on it.  It's just the video that doesn't have him due to his death before they filmed/released it.  :heart: that song, and you make a great argument for how it "fits" better.


Yup. I actually watched the whole thing as the next video on YouTube. They're showing his picture while he sings. Sad. 

 
"End of the Line" has Orbison on it.  It's just the video that doesn't have him due to his death before they filmed/released it.  :heart: that song, and you make a great argument for how it "fits" better.
 Not to blow too much smoke, but that's an A+ write-up on the Wilburys for a beginner like me. Felt like an author had written it. I think I'd read your write-up before and might have said something similar, but I forget, actually. 

But yeah, good thing you're saving those in Word. 

 
Yup. I actually watched the whole thing as the next video on YouTube. They're showing his picture while he sings. Sad. 


Yeah, his picture in the empty chair.  I don't think I've watched that video without tearing up a bit, given that he, George and Tom Petty aren't around anymore.  They had so much love and joy in that group.  Not a typical "supergroup" in that regard, I expect.

 
 Not to blow too much smoke, but that's an A+ write-up on the Wilburys for a beginner like me. Felt like an author had written it. I think I'd read your write-up before and might have said something similar, but I forget, actually. 

But yeah, good thing you're saving those in Word. 


Thank you - I'll happily accept the compliment!  You (and most people) understandably didn't participate in that thread as much as the original Beatles one, so I'm not sure if you had said anything before.  I didn't save my write-ups from the Beatles thread and wish I had (yes, I could go back and do it now, but I'm busy watching videos about gerunds), but on the second thread I kept a file along the way.

 
#30 - Paula Abdul - Straight Up

trigger warning for @rockaction: horn alert

I know people consider Paula Abdul to be a bit of a punchline now, but her new-jack-adjacent single Straight Up was straight up fire in 1988.  In the early/mid aughts, I got to be a fill-in DJ at a hipster bar in Philly on several occasions.  I loved to see how far I could veer into pop before the DFA-loving doofuses would vacate the floor.  It was like a musical version of six degrees of Kevin Bacon: can I get from Franz Ferdinand to Mariah Carey and then back out to LCD Soundsystem over a half-dozen songs?  When it came to Straight Up, I never had to worry - it brought the joy to even the most dismissive.

Straight Up was actually the third single from Abdul's 1988 debut but the first to chart, eventually making it all the way to #1 in January of 1989.  Three more #1s followed (who can forget the sheer awfulness of MC Skat Kat or the hotness of the Cold Hearted video?).  

Only three more Billboard #1s to go among my top 30.

Straight Up
I’m a bit younger , I would have been 8/9 in 88, but Paula Abdul was probably my first celebrity crush, at least for an older chick.  I guess Alyssa Milano would be up there and closer in age

 
#28 - Pixies - Gigantic

Speak of Steve Albini and he doth appear!  Pixies debut full-length was something I had to buy sight unseen, or in this case, unheard.  Every week on 120 Minutes in early 1988, Dave Kendall would do the alternative countdown and Surfer Rosa was always in it.  But Pixies didn't make any damn videos, so I had to take my hard-earned $10 (equivalent to 3+ hours of dough rolling at the pizza shop where I made $3.35/hour) and hope for the best.

And man, Surfer Rosa was indeed pretty much the best.  When someone would ask me what Pixies sounded like though, I couldn't even begin to describe it.  So I dubbed it a half-a-dozen times and turned at least a few friends into closet alternaguys and alternagals.  Gigantic was the only single from Surfer Rosa.  It never charted, but along with the rest of the album, wormed its way into the brains of a lot of artists that would make the soft-loud dynamic blow up a few years later.

Gigantic

 
What an incredible album! I wouldn't get into the Pixies until '92 and after the release of Trompe Le Monde, so going back through their back catalog then was a delight for my friends and I. 

"Gigantic" is probably the song that hit the sweetest upon first listen. Great choice. Brings back a lot of early college nostalgia for me. I still remember who lent me Trompe Le Monde and my old single dorm room freshman year, the Lady Trap (much like RHE, it saw no ladies). But what an album, which we discovered around '93. "Where Is My Mind?" and "Oh My Golly!" probably stand out as my favorites these days. 

Albini, though, didn't really care for 'em and just completed his job as an engineer on the record. Called them typical college rock and was unmoved. 

Steve, wait! 

 
Raise your hand if the Pixies remind you of college. 

More than any other band, if you ask me what was playing in the dorm, it l it was them.

 
Raise your hand if the Pixies remind you of college. 

More than any other band, if you ask me what was playing in the dorm, it l it was them.
Watching ep 3 of Yellowjackets right now. Juliette Lewis is wearing a Death to Pixies shirt. Doesn't get much more early 90s than that.

 
Watching ep 3 of Yellowjackets right now. Juliette Lewis is wearing a Death to Pixies shirt. Doesn't get much more early 90s than that.
Since I'm now interested in all things this thread, I checked the trailer. That looks...very interesting. How exactly does one reintegrate with the rest of society after that?

But in all seriousness, I just read something about Lord Of The Flies and children vis a vis human nature and all that. Seems like the real-life instances of stories like that almost always (almost) wind up with people forming cooperatives and the like, suggesting that our real nature is fairly altruistic compared to the depictions of fiction. 

On the other hand, there's also that guy that can't just shut up and has to interject real-life seriousness into escapism and thus Cliff Clayburn every conversation and can't we just eat that guy and ####, because even God won't care. 

 
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For the record, there will be one AOR hitmaker who was huge in 1988 that won't be on here.  I didn't know anyone under the age of 30 that listened to the guy back then despite the songs being everywhere.  As my wife said, "When one of his songs came on the radio, my dad would turn it up and I would just wait impatiently for it to end."
I was right here waiting for that guy. 

 
On the other hand, there's also that guy that can't just shut up and has to interject real-life seriousness into escapism and thus Cliff Clayburn every conversation and can't we just eat that guy and ####, because even God won't care. 
Eh, life is a series of digressions.  Your's are like a footnote inside a footnote in Infinite Jest. Mine are more poor man's Fargo Rock City.

Mrs. Scorchy and I are digging yellowjackets so far, and not just because the first ep featured Liz Phair, Hole, and PJ Harvey. It's intense, gory, ####ed up, funny, and doesn't pull any punches. The young actors are doing a great job too.

 
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#29 - Traveling Wilburys - Handle with Care
Krista nailed the commentary.  

THIS documentary is fun.  I just caught it the other day knowing that you would take the top  Wilbury tunes in your list.

As a DJ in the late 80s knowing this album was coming out, the anticipation for a Beatlemaniac and huge ELO/Petty and one of the 'rare' young Roy Obison fans I was really excited when we got the CD and loved the album.  I remember how sad I was when I heard Orbison passed away right on the cusp of what 'could' have been a big comeback.

What is cool about this documentary is seeing how easy these guys came together and wishing how you could have one of  the guys hanging out and making musical history.  

 
#27 - Big Daddy Kane - Ain't No Half Steppin'

I'm just gon sit here laid back to this nice mellow beat, ya know
And drop some smooth lyrics 'cause it's '88
Time to set it straight, know what I'm saying
And ain't no half stepping, word, I'm ready


Reppin' Queens as part of the Juice Crew with Marley Marl and Biz Markie, Big Daddy Kane's is known far-and-wide as one of the GOATs among MCs.  The second single off of his debut record Long Live the Kane, was another casualty of rap's lack of airplay - barely registering on even the R&B charts (#53).  Most current lists, however, rank it among the top 50 rap songs in history. Along with Big Daddy's rhymes,, the gold chains in the video are epic.

Ain't No Half Steppin'

 
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If I might crib my own work in my solo Beatles thread, here's some more about the genesis of this song and the Wilburys overall, if anyone is interested in more about how all of this came together.   This was an incredible project of pure joy for the participants, and I hope more Wilburys songs might arise in the supplemental countdowns for 1988.
Great post! Loved reading that, thanks, k4! I’m gonna fire up some Wilbury’s now. 

 
#26 - REM - Finest Worksong

This seems like a cheat given how much I listened to Document in 1987, but Finest Worksong was indeed released as the third single from the album in March of 1988.  Lucky for me, because it was one of my favorite songs on the record (along with King of Birds and the Wire cover (Strange) that I didn't know was a Wire cover at the time).  I've sung along with  Finest Worksong a zillion times and still don't have an inkling of what Michael Stipe is talking about.  He claims it's an attack on the protestant work ethic and I guess he himself would know best.  "Another chance has been engaged, to throw Thoreau and rearrange."  Makes perfect sense...

Finest Worksong

 
I love much of their stuff before and after, but Document and Green never clicked for me. King of Birds is the only one from either that I care to listen to much.

 
I love much of their stuff before and after, but Document and Green never clicked for me. King of Birds is the only one from either that I care to listen to much.
Document was the first REM record I heard, and it seems kind of natural that your first is usually your favorite.  I traveled backwards through their catalog before Green was released and really liked most of it.  Green was somewhat behind the rest for me (but still really good) and I managed to stick with them through New Adventures... despite a few egregious missteps.

 
#26 - REM - Finest Worksong

  I've sung along with  Finest Worksong a zillion times and still don't have an inkling of what Michael Stipe is talking about.  He claims it's an attack on the protestant work ethic and I guess he himself would know best.  "Another chance has been engaged, to throw Thoreau and rearrange."  Makes perfect sense...

Finest Worksong


Yeah, dunno, but it's one of my top five REM songs.   Is it political?  Can't say.  I like it equally whether it is or not.

 
I finally got into R.E.M. in a big way a few years back, but I find both Document and (especially) Green to be pretty spotty.  Both have their great moments, though, and Finest Worksong is definitely one of the standouts on Document.   I think Document is the better of the two, but the best song from either is on Green, IMO, and I will be curious to see if it gets featured here  Looks like it was not a single, but it is near the end of Side 1 (but not at the very end).  Throwing out the hint so as not to say it in case it is featured, as I do not like name-checking songs that will still be featured. 

Handle with Care is such a great song.   For as much crap as the 80s gets, it still featured plenty of hits like this that were just good ole rock and roll. 

 
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I was fortunate so see the Pixies open for Love and Rockets in the Fall of 89 for their Doolittle album. They were awesome and I’ve been a fan ever since. Saw them a couple years ago (sans Kim) with Weezer and they did not disappoint. 
 

I’ve also been lucky enough to see Frank Black and The Breeders over the years. 
 

Also saw REM for the Green Tour back in the day at Alpine Valley (WI). To date, it’s the only concert I’ve ever had lawn seats for. Anyone remember NRBQ? They opened for them. 

 
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I was fortunate so see the Pixies open for Love and Rockets in the Fall of 89 for their Doolittle album. They were awesome and I’ve been a fan ever since. Saw them a couple years ago (sans Kim) with Weezer and they did not disappoint. 
 

I’ve also been lucky enough to see Frank Black and The Breeders over the years. 
 

Also saw REM for the Green Tour back in the day at Alpine Valley (WI). To date, it’s the only concert I’ve ever had lawn seats for. Anyone remember NRBQ? They opened for them. 
I do. They were a band out of time. The industry tried to shoehorn them into the "alternative" aisle of the record store, but they never really fit there (they weren't ironic enough, I guess). They were one on the spearheads, along with Los Lobos and some others, of the 90s roots revival. Really good band and one of those that other musicians really liked.

 
I never dug REM all that much. I really like a few of their songs - "Losing My Religion" & "The One I Love" foremost among them, which probably makes me the most unhip person posting here. I don't really care for the way Stipe sings (that goes for a lot of the classic alt singers, too), but I understand why people think he's great. "Stand" and "Shiny Happy People" can burn in musical Hell, however, along with "Seasons In The Sun", "Sugar Shack", "If" by Bread, and Billy Joel's entire recorded output.

 
I never dug REM all that much. I really like a few of their songs - "Losing My Religion" & "The One I Love" foremost among them, which probably makes me the most unhip person posting here. I don't really care for the way Stipe sings (that goes for a lot of the classic alt singers, too), but I understand why people think he's great. "Stand" and "Shiny Happy People" can burn in musical Hell, however, along with "Seasons In The Sun", "Sugar Shack", "If" by Bread, and Billy Joel's entire recorded output.
We had joy, we had fun…

 
I was fortunate so see the Pixies open for Love and Rockets in the Fall of 89 for their Doolittle album. They were awesome and I’ve been a fan ever since. Saw them a couple years ago (sans Kim) with Weezer and they did not disappoint. 
 

I’ve also been lucky enough to see Frank Black and The Breeders over the years. 
 

Also saw REM for the Green Tour back in the day at Alpine Valley (WI). To date, it’s the only concert I’ve ever had lawn seats for. Anyone remember NRBQ? They opened for them. 
NRBQ had a hugh cult following here in CT. I bet the people in WI. were not into that 

 
I never dug REM all that much. I really like a few of their songs - "Losing My Religion" & "The One I Love" foremost among them, which probably makes me the most unhip person posting here. I don't really care for the way Stipe sings (that goes for a lot of the classic alt singers, too), but I understand why people think he's great. "Stand" and "Shiny Happy People" can burn in musical Hell, however, along with "Seasons In The Sun", "Sugar Shack", "If" by Bread, and Billy Joel's entire recorded output.
Tread lightly, sir. 

 
We had joy, we had fun…
"Sugar Shack" might be worse. The lyrics, read on a page, are bad enough. Hearing it actually sung and played is excruciating. Check this #### out:

There's a crazy little shack beyond the tracks
And everybody calls it the sugar shack
Well, it's just a coffeehouse and it's made out of wood
Expresso coffee tastes mighty good
That's not the reason why I've got to get back
To that sugar shack, whoa baby
To that sugar shack

There's this cute little girlie, she's a'workin' there
A black leotard and her feet are bare
I'm gonna drink a lotta coffee, spend a little cash
Make that girl love me when I put on some trash
You can understand why I've got to get back
To that sugar shack, whoa baby
To that sugar shack, yeah honey

And now that sugar shack queen is a'married to me, yeah yeah
We just sit around and dream of those old memories
Ah, but one of these days I'm gonna lay down tracks
In the direction of that sugar shack
Just me and her yes we're gonna go back
To that sugar shack, whoa uh oh
To that sugar shack, yeah honey
To our sugar shack yeah, yeah, yeah, ah
Sugar shack, woah baby ah

If you're into self-punishment, here's the audio. Click at your own risk.

God help you

 
I never dug REM all that much. I really like a few of their songs - "Losing My Religion" & "The One I Love" foremost among them, which probably makes me the most unhip person posting here. I don't really care for the way Stipe sings (that goes for a lot of the classic alt singers, too), but I understand why people think he's great. "Stand" and "Shiny Happy People" can burn in musical Hell, however, along with "Seasons In The Sun", "Sugar Shack", "If" by Bread, and Billy Joel's entire recorded output.
I agree with the majority of this, especially the last sentence.

 
I was fortunate so see the Pixies open for Love and Rockets in the Fall of 89 for their Doolittle album. They were awesome and I’ve been a fan ever since. Saw them a couple years ago (sans Kim) with Weezer and they did not disappoint. 
 

I’ve also been lucky enough to see Frank Black and The Breeders over the years. 
 

Also saw REM for the Green Tour back in the day at Alpine Valley (WI). To date, it’s the only concert I’ve ever had lawn seats for. Anyone remember NRBQ? They opened for them. 
I miss Alpine Valley, good times.

 
Tread lightly, sir. 
:lol:

When have I ever done that?

I don't like him. Not one of his songs. Zero (well, maybe the one where he starts out whistling, but he screwed that one up, too). I don't like his faux-poetic pretentious lyrics, his singing, the way he treated the musicians he worked with. I can forgive #######ry if I like the music, because I'm a hypocrite and can bury my head in the sand with the best of them. Not with this dude. 

 
I know Sugar Shack all too well. My father and stepmother had a compilation called Real Rock that they played endlessly, and that was on it. We kids used to make fun of it; my stepsister could not get through it without cracking up.

 

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