Title: Fables of the Reconstruction
Released on: June 10, 1985
Favorite tracks: âFeeling Gravitys Pull,â âOld Man Kensey,â âCanât Get There From Hereâ
Supposedly Fables of the Reconstruction (or would that be Reconstruction of the Fables?) is about the American South. The term âReconstructionâ harks back to Dixie following the Civil War, and there are little references to Southern geography in the songs. Rumor has it that âMaps and Legendsâ is allegedly dedicated to outsider artist Howard Finster of Summerville, Ga., who did the Reckoning cover. Stipeâs lyrics always pepper in bits of Southern vernacular, although Iâm not sure that âCanât Get There From Hereâ counts as a âSouthernâ expression. The song does refer to Philomath, Georgia, though. And the soft banjo in the album-closing âWendell Geeâ delicately evokes bluegrass.
I have a hard time interpreting Fables as some kind of alt-rock equivalent to a William Faulkner novel, though. (âSwan Swan Hâ on R.E.M.âs subsequent album, Lifes Rich Pageant, does have more of a Southern âliteraryâ theme, however.) To me, its âSouthernâ mostly in the ways that Chronic Town feels Southern, and generally seems like a continuation of some of Chronic Townâs ideas. Someone could probably make a case that R.E.M., who helped turn Athens, Ga., into an alt-rock mecca, influenced Southern rock and roll more than Southern music influenced it.
Many of the songs have that ânight flightâ sensation of urgent motion that I detect in Chronic Town. Fables has two âtrain songs,â âDriver 8â and âAuctioneer (Another Engine),â which to me sound like elaborations of lyrical and musical notions from âCarnival of Sorts (Box Cars).â (Do trains count as exclusively âSouthern?â I would not assume so.) I can imagine the songs on Fables shaped not by conscious meditations about the South, but about the experience of touring around the South (and elsewhere), watching the scenery passing by. On long car-trips I can feel both energized by driving and hypnotized by the road; âenergetic hypnotismâ could be an R.E.M. effect.
My favorite song on Fables â and one of my all-time favorite R.E.M. songs â is the album-opener, âFeeling Gravitys Pullâ (creating a precedent for awesome album openers that, for me, continued through 1991). It starts with Peter Buckâs piercing, eerie guitar licks â DEE-Di-DOOO â and then lurches into slow, powerful drumbeats. Supposedly itâs about falling asleep while reading, and I get that from the first lines, but itâs also apocalyptic: âPeel back the mountains, peel back the sky,â âOceans fall and mountains drift.â If you start listening to Fables expecting more âPretty Persuasion,â âFeeling Gravitys Pullâ could put you off. Apparently the guitar work is different (a âchromaticâ style rather than Buckâs trademark âarpeggioâ style). To me, it sounds like a great soundtrack for a a giant monster movie â the opening chords show a still body of water, with portentous ripples moving across it; the thudding rhythm section later accompanies a Cloverfield-like creature galumphing over a landscape. But maybe thatâs just me.
I can see why people call the song and the album âmurky,â but here itâs also a big sound, a tall sound â it anticipates the booming, roof-rattling songs of Document. When Fables came out, we talked about how we didnât like it as much as the predecessors, and apparently the band members have mixed feelings about it. Our friend Clark said at the time that he thought of their other albums as being in black and white, and Fables as being in color. I donât really know what that means, but it sounds good, and nods at details like the horn section and Stipeâs lower, growlier singing on âCanât Get There From Here.â
My rediscovery this time around is âOld Man Kensey,â which I think I just found weird 20 years ago, but now I find deliciously weird. The slow, snaky, insistent beat draws me in, and Stipeâs vaguely threatening delivery adds an edge to the deranged words: âOld Man Kensey wants to be a sign painter / First he's got to learn to read / He's gonna be a clown on TV.â Itâs the kind of song that initially sounds like a character study of an eccentric, but may be more of an exercise in surrealism, along the lines of âCome Together.â
Early listening conditions: Fables may not have been the first R.E.M. album I ever bought, but it was definitely the first one I bought new. Fables also marked a kind of tradition among my music-reviewing friends: whenever theyâd write about the latest REM album during this period, theyâd inevitably say something like, â⦠and this time, you can almost understand every word Michael Stipe says!â I believe this ritual continued through every R.E.M. album through Green. I saw R.E.M. for the first time (on the Vanderbilt campus) when they were touring for Fables.
In the early 1980s, R.E.M. seemed to really HATE music videos and the very idea of them (I think they said as much when they introduced their first collection of music videos). The video for âCanât Get There From Hereâ is pretty fun, though (and I wonder if it partially inspired the credits for Natural Born Killers?
[kml_flashembed movie="http://www.youtube.com/v/eXscBQ9HHKE" width="425" height="350" wmode="transparent" /]
For Reckoning, click here.
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