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Chronic Town

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Chronic Town
A blue gargoyle with its tongue stuck out
EPby
ReleasedAugust 24, 1982(1982-08-24)
RecordedOctober 1981 and June 1982
StudioDrive-In Studio,Winston-Salem,North Carolina,United States
Genre
Length20:26
LanguageEnglish
LabelI.R.S.
Producer
R.E.M.chronology
Chronic Town
(1982)
Murmur
(1983)

Chronic Townis the debutEPby Americanalternative rockbandR.E.M.,released on August 24, 1982, onI.R.S. Records.Containing five tracks, the EP was recorded at theDrive-In StudioinWinston-Salem,North Carolina,in October 1981, eighteen months after the formation of the band. Its co-producer wasMitch Easter,who produced the band's "Radio Free Europe"single earlier in 1981.

Chronic Town's opening track, "Wolves, Lower", was re-recorded in June 1982, two months before the EP's release.

The title of the EP is part of the lyric to "Carnival of Sorts (Boxcars)", the third track on the release,[3]and the name of the first side of the EP. "Poster Torn", also a lyric in "Carnival of Sorts (Boxcars)", is the name of side two.

Background and recording

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After the minor success of the group's debut single "Radio Free Europe"in 1981, R.E.M. managerJefferson Holtfelt the band was ready to record a longer release. While he felt they were not ready to record a full album, Holt thought an EP would be satisfactory.[4]The band was uncertain at first if they would record with producerMitch Easter(who had produced "Radio Free Europe" ), but Easter managed to convince Holt and the band to let him produce it.

In October 1981, R.E.M. spent a weekend at Easter's Drive-In Studios recording the EP.[5]Easter was a fan of theelectronicbandKraftwerk,which inspired him to try various sonic experiments while recording. Easter incorporated tape loops and recorded singerMichael Stipesinging outdoors.[6]"There were a lot of bugs out there," remembered Easter. "Whenever that 'house in order' part comes up, I think you can hear tons ofcrickets."[3]

The band was open to such experimentation and used the sessions as an opportunity to learn how to use a studio.[7]At the time of R.E.M.'s stint at the Drive-In, "the set-up was really simple," Easter said in 1994. "I had almost nothing in the studio back then, except a tape machine and a console and two compressors and one delay device. We couldn't do any fancy stuff."[3]

Easter continued: "I rememberChronic Towncompletely fondly because it was so relaxed, and so open to cutting the tape up and putting pieces in backwards and stuff. There were some fireworks one night, so we went and sat on the roof for four hours and watched the fireworks instead of working on the record—because wecould,you know? "[3]

R.E.M. intended to release the EP on a proposedindependent record labelnamed Dasht Hopes run by Holt and his business partner David Healy, who funded three days of recording at the Drive-In.[5][8]However, the band's demo had caught the attention ofI.R.S. Records.[9]The label signed the group to a record deal, working it out of its contracts with Healy andHib-Tone,the indie label which released "Radio Free Europe".[10]I.R.S. headsJay BobergandMiles Copeland IIIfelt the proposed track listing was weakened by the song "Ages of You"and" Jazz Lips ",[3]and felt "Wolves, Lower" was a better choice. However, the pair felt the original take of the song was too fast. The band re-recorded "Wolves, Lower" with Easter in June 1982 in a quick recording session.[11]

During his time in Athens,Michael Lachowski,ofPylon,ran an answerphone service known as the Athens Party Telephone. Its initialism, A.P.T., was used in the lyric to "Stumble".[12]

Packaging

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The album's front cover features an image of the StrygegargoylefromNotre-Dame Cathedral.[13]

Release

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I.R.S. releasedChronic Townin August 1982 as its first American release.[14]Reaction to the EP varied; one I.R.S. radio promoter said that many of his contacts atcampus radiodid not know what to make of the record, but added, "The Georgia stations and some of the more together college stations across the country jumped on it." The band filmed its firstmusic videofor "Wolves, Lower" to promote the record. The EP sold 20,000 copies in its first year.[15]

Reception

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Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]
Robert ChristgauA−[16]
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music[17]

I.R.S.'s Jay Boberg said ofChronic Town:"The thing that made me play the cassette again and again was that it kept getting better. It was not the kind of thing you listened to once or twice, casually, and said, 'Oh my God! This is tremendous!' It had a depth to it."[3]

NMEreviewer Richard Grabel wrote, "Chronic Townis five songs that spring to life full of immediacy and action and healthy impatience. Songs that won't be denied. "Grabel praised the songs' auras of mystery, and concluded," R.E.M. ring true, and it's great to hear something as unforced and cunning as this. "[18]Creemwriter Robot A. Hull began his review saying, "This EP is so arcane that I had to play it six times in a row to get a handle on it – and even now, I'm still not sure." Hull praised the EP for "[evoking] the music of the late-'60s without any pretensions, mingling past and present to shape both into concurrent moments." Hull concluded, "Despite its eccentricity, R.E.M.'s record is undoubtedly the sleeper EP of the year."[19]

Chronic Townranked second in the EP category of theVillage VoicePazz & Jopcritics' poll in 1982.[20]

For Record Store Day 2010, held on April 17 of that year, participating independent record stores sold a limited-edition and individually-numbered blue vinyl 12 "reissue of the long-out of print EP.[21]

Track listing

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All songs written byBill Berry,Peter Buck,Mike MillsandMichael Stipe.

Side one – "Chronic Town"

  1. "Wolves, Lower" – 4:10
  2. "Gardening at Night"– 3:29
  3. "Carnival of Sorts (Boxcars)" – 3:54

Side two – "Poster Torn"

  1. "1,000,000" – 3:06
  2. "Stumble" – 5:40

Personnel

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R.E.M.

Production

Release history

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The EP was added to the CD edition of the band's rarities compilation albumDead Letter Office(1987), and again in 1993 in the I.R.S. Vintage Years edition of the compilation. In 2014, it was digitally remastered solely for online purchase from select high-resolution digital music stores. It is also available on analog formats such asLPand cassette.

It was bundled together withMurmurandReckoningin the United Kingdom asThe Originalsin 1995. The album also saw a standalone CD reissue on August 19, 2022, featuring liner notes written by producerMitch Easter,marking the first CD release of the EP not tied to a compilation.[23]

Chronic Town

Region Date Label Format Catalog
United States August 24, 1982 I.R.S. EP 44797-0502-1
Cassette tape SP-70502
Greece 1982 Illegal EP ILP 26097
Worldwide 1990 A&M LP 70502
Worldwide 1990 I.R.S. EP 44797-0502-4
United States, Canada, United Kingdom 2022 I.R.S. CD B0035613-02
Europe 2022 I.R.S. CD 00602445736416

Dead Letter Office

Region Date Label Format Catalog
United Kingdom April 27, 1987 I.R.S. LP 44797-0054-1
CD 44797-0054-2
United States April 28, 1987 I.R.S. CD 70054
Worldwide 1990 A&M CD 70054
Worldwide 1990 I.R.S. Cassette 44797-0054-4
The Netherlands 1993 EMI CD 0777 7 13199 2 1†
Worldwide 1994 A&M CD 195

Note †I.R.S. Vintage Years edition, with bonus tracks

The Originals

Region Date Label Format Catalog
United Kingdom 1995 I.R.S./EMI CDbox set 7243 8 35088 2 2

References

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  1. ^abErlewine, Stephen Thomas."Chronic Town - R.E.M."AllMusic.RetrievedFebruary 9,2012.
  2. ^abErlewine, Stephen Thomas."R.E.M. | Biography & History".AllMusic.RetrievedDecember 22,2020.
  3. ^abcdefHogan, Peter (1995).The Complete Guide to the Music of R.E.M.Omnibus Press.p. 40.ISBN0-7119-4901-8.
  4. ^Buckey, p. 58
  5. ^abBuckley, p. 59
  6. ^abBuckley, p. 60
  7. ^Platt, John. "R.E.M."Bucketfull of Brains.December 1984.
  8. ^Hogan, Peter (1995).The Complete Guide to the Music of R.E.M.Omnibus Press.p. 3.ISBN0-7119-4901-8.
  9. ^Buckley, p. 61–62
  10. ^Buckley, p. 65
  11. ^Black, p. 64
  12. ^Hogan, Peter (1995).The Complete Guide to the Music of R.E.M.Omnibus Press.p. 43.ISBN0-7119-4901-8.
  13. ^Camille, Michael (2008)."The Gargoyles of Notre-Dame: Medievalism and the Monsters of Modernity 9780226092461".dokumen.pub.Retrieved2023-11-19.
  14. ^Buckley, p. 66–67
  15. ^Black, p. 65
  16. ^"Cg: R.E.M".Robert Christgau.RetrievedFebruary 9,2012.
  17. ^Larkin, Colin(2007).The Encyclopedia of Popular Music(4th ed.).Oxford University Press.ISBN978-0195313734.
  18. ^Grabel, Richard. "Nightmare Town".NME.December 11, 1982.
  19. ^Hull, Robot A. "R.E.M.:Chronic Town."Creem.January 1983.
  20. ^Christgau, Robert. "The 1982 Pazz & Jop Critics Poll".Village Voice.February 22, 1983. Retrieved on March 18, 2008.
  21. ^"R.E.M.Hq: News".REMhq.com. November 27, 2010. Archived fromthe originalon November 27, 2010.RetrievedJune 20,2012.
  22. ^Part Lies, Part Heart, Part Truth, Part Garbage 1982-2011(Media notes).R.E.M.Warner Records.2011.{{cite AV media notes}}:CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  23. ^Sinclair, Paul (2 July 2022)."R.E.M. / Chronic Town reissue".SuperDeluxeEdition.Archivedfrom the original on 2 July 2022.Retrieved2 July2022.

Works cited

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