Document (album)

Document is the fifth studio album by American rock band R.E.M., released on August 31, 1987,[3] by I.R.S. Records. It was the first album by the band to be produced by Scott Litt.

Document
Studio album by
ReleasedAugust 31, 1987 (1987-08-31)
RecordedMarch–May 1987
StudioSound Emporium, Nashville, Tennessee
Genre
Length39:51
LabelI.R.S.
Producer
R.E.M. chronology
Dead Letter Office
(1987)
Document
(1987)
Succumbs
(1987)
Singles from Document
  1. "The One I Love"
    Released: August 24, 1987
  2. "It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)"
    Released: November 16, 1987
  3. "Finest Worksong"
    Released: March 1988

Continuing in the vein of their previous album Lifes Rich Pageant, Document features more audible lyrics and a harder rock sound in comparison to the band's earlier releases. The album became R.E.M.'s greatest success at the time, giving the band their first top 10 hit ("The One I Love") and album, peaking at number 10 on the Billboard 200.[4]

Composition

Document was R.E.M.'s first album with producer Scott Litt, with whom they worked for the next decade.

Document was R.E.M.'s first album to be co-produced both by the band and Scott Litt; this was a collaboration that continued through the productions of Green, Out of Time, Automatic for the People, Monster, and New Adventures in Hi-Fi. The album's clear production and muscular rock riffs both helped to move the band toward mainstream success and built on the work done by Don Gehman, who had produced their previous album Lifes Rich Pageant. This release not only launched "The One I Love" — R.E.M.'s first Top 10 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 at number 9 — but also gave them their first platinum album.

"Strange" was originally recorded by post-punk band Wire on their debut album Pink Flag.

R.E.M. expanded their instrumentation somewhat on the album, adding a dulcimer to "King of Birds" and a saxophone to "Fireplace".[5] Steve Berlin was brought in to add his saxophone skills because of a prior relationship with producer Scott Litt.[6] This experimentation would lead to their adoption of the mandolin, which featured prominently on their subsequent albums Green and Out of Time; furthermore, the band's musicians began swapping instruments both in concert and the studio with an effort to create new sounds and avoid stagnation.[7]

Packaging

The original sleeve for the album featured the message "File under Fire", a reference to what Michael Stipe considered to be the central lyrical theme of the album, and also references the chorus to "The One I Love".[8] A similar message ("File under water") could be found on the cover of the band's second album, Reckoning, as well as on the compilation album Eponymous ("File under grain") referring to the idea behind "Talk About the Passion", which was about hunger.[9] Two rejected suggestions for the title of the album—R.E.M. No. 5 and Table of Content—also appear on the sleeve artwork.[10] Other possible album titles included Mr. Evil Breakfast, Skin Up with R.E.M., and Last Train to Disneyland (the last one having been suggested by Peter Buck, who felt that America under the presidency of Ronald Reagan was beginning to feel a lot like the famed amusement park).[11]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic [12]
Chicago Tribune [13]
Christgau's Record GuideA[14]
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music [15]
Entertainment WeeklyA−[16]
Los Angeles Times [17]
Pitchfork8.2/10[18]
Q [19]
Rolling Stone [20]
The Rolling Stone Album Guide [21]
Uncut9/10[22]

In a contemporary review for The Village Voice, Robert Christgau said the band had moved on from their past work's escapism and that "their discovery of the outside world has sharpened their sense of humor along with everything else", citing "It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)" as an "inspirational title".[23] Rolling Stone reviewer David Fricke felt that the album was R.E.M.'s "finest to date", and said that "Document is the sound of R.E.M. on the move".[20]

Uncut praised the album in a 9/10 review saying, "If 1986’s Lifes Rich Pageant had marked the beginnings of R.E.M.’s emergence from their cocoon of indie diffidence, 1987’s Document was where they first properly reconciled themselves to their destiny as the only group of the 1980s American college-rock milieu to graduate to stadiums, and stay there."[24]

David Browne of Entertainment Weekly observed, "The record that gave R.E.M. a top 10 hit (”The One I Love”) mostly does no more than consolidate their strengths but has moments of undeniable power and the most sardonic apocalypse ever recorded, ”It’s the End of the World as We Know It (and I Feel Fine).”"[25]

Los Angeles Times praised the diversity of the music and themes, observing, "A tougher, meaner, leaner album than its immediate predecessors, with a far more hard-edged guitar sound and tenser rock rhythms. And the opaque mystery that was so enticingly R.E.M. has been largely replaced with something more definite and immediately tangible, though side trips--psychedelic, political and otherwise--are plentiful.[26]

Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic said that "where Lifes Rich Pageant sounded a bit like a party record, Document is a fiery statement, and its memorable melodies and riffs are made all the more indelible by its righteous anger."[12] Rolling Stone went on to include the album in their list of the 100 greatest albums of the 1980s (in 41st place), and then ranked it number 462 on 2012 list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.[27] In 2012, Slant Magazine listed the album at number 17 on its list of "Best Albums of the 1980s".[28]

Reissue

In 1999, the album was remastered by Bob Ludwig and re-released on Compact Disc by I.R.S. Records in the United States. This version came in a replica of the record sleeve made of cardboard. In 2005, Capitol Records (whose then parent company EMI at that time owned I.R.S. Records' catalog) issued an expanded DualDisc edition of Document which includes a digitally remastered version of the album on the CD side, a DVD-Audio, DTS and Dolby Digital 5.1-channel surround sound mix of the album done by Elliot Scheiner on the DVD side, and the original CD booklet.[citation needed]

Track listing

All songs were written by Bill Berry, Peter Buck, Mike Mills and Michael Stipe, except where noted.

Side one – "Page side"

  1. "Finest Worksong" – 3:48
  2. "Welcome to the Occupation" – 2:46
  3. "Exhuming McCarthy" – 3:19
  4. "Disturbance at the Heron House" – 3:32
  5. "Strange" (Bruce Gilbert, Graham Lewis, Colin Newman, Robert Grey) – 2:31
  6. "It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)" – 4:05

Side two – "Leaf side"

  1. "The One I Love" – 3:17
  2. "Fireplace" – 3:22
  3. "Lightnin' Hopkins" – 3:20
  4. "King of Birds" – 4:09
  5. "Oddfellows Local 151" – 5:21

1993 I.R.S. Vintage Years reissue bonus tracks

  1. "Finest Worksong (Other Mix)" – 3:47
  2. "Last Date" (Floyd Cramer) – 2:16
  3. "The One I Love" (Live at McCabe's Guitar Shop) – 4:06
  4. "Time After Time, Etc." (Live) – 8:22
  5. "Disturbance at the Heron House" (Live at McCabe's Guitar Shop) – 3:26
  6. "Finest Worksong" (Lengthy Club Mix) – 5:52

Note

  • Although sometimes referred to as such, the first release of this edition does not have the original tracks remastered. They follow the first print of the album and only add the extra tracks.

25th anniversary bonus disc, recorded live at Muziekcentrum Vredenburg in Utrecht, Netherlands, September 14, 1987

  1. "Finest Worksong" – 4:10
  2. "These Days" – 3:36
  3. "Lightnin' Hopkins" – 3:43
  4. "Welcome to the Occupation" – 2:52
  5. "Driver 8" – 3:35
  6. "Feeling Gravitys Pull" – 5:31
  7. "I Believe" – 4:32
  8. "The One I Love" – 4:20
  9. "Exhuming McCarthy" – 3:23
  10. "Wolves, Lower" – 4:23
  11. "Fall On Me" – 3:05
  12. "Just a Touch" – 3:04
  13. "Oddfellows Local 151" – 5:01
  14. "Little America" – 2:50
  15. "It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)" – 4:01
  16. "Begin the Begin" – 3:58
  17. "Disturbance at the Heron House" – 3:42
  18. "Moral Kiosk" – 3:02
  19. "Life and How to Live It" – 6:28
  20. "So. Central Rain" – 5:19
    • Previously released on the B-Side of the 1988 "Finest Worksong" single as part of the song called "Time After Time, Etc.", of which it comprises the final 5:19.

Personnel

Production

  • Bill Berry – production
  • Peter Buck – production
  • Mike Mills – production
  • Michael Stipe – production
  • Scott Litt – production
  • Steve Catania – engineering
  • Tom Der – engineering
  • Toni Greene – engineering
  • Gary Laney – engineering
  • Ted Pattison – engineering
  • Todd Scholar – engineering
  • Bob Ludwig – mastering at Masterdisk, New York City, New York, United States; remastered at Gateway Mastering, Portland, Maine, United States in June 1999
  • Elliot Scheiner – mixing on 2005 re-release
  • Jim McKay – photography
  • Michael Meister – photography
  • Sandra-Lee Phipps – photography
  • Ron Scarselli – packaging

Chart performance

Weekly charts

Album
YearChartPeak
position
Weeks on
chart
1987Billboard 20010[4]33[29]
1987UK Albums Chart285[30]
1987Australia (Kent Music Report)479[31]

Singles

YearSongChartPosition
1987"It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)"Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks16[29]
1987"It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)"Billboard Hot 10069[29]
1987"The One I Love"Billboard Hot 1009[29]
1988"The One I Love"Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks2[29]
1988"Finest Worksong"Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks28[29]
1988"Finest Worksong"UK Singles Chart50[30]
1988"The One I Love"UK Singles Chart51[30]
1991"The One I Love"UK Singles Chart16[30]
1991"It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)"UK Singles Chart39[30]

Certifications and sales

OrganizationLevelDate
RIAA – USGoldNovember 2, 1987[32]
RIAA – USPlatinumJanuary 25, 1988[32]
BPI – UKGoldJuly 22, 2013[33]

Release history

RegionDateLabelFormatCatalog
United StatesSeptember 1, 1987I.R.S.vinyl LPIRS-42059
Compact DiscIRSD-42059
cassette tapeIRSC-42059
United KingdomSeptember 14, 1987I.R.S.LPIRLD 19144/MIRG1025
Australia1987I.R.S.LP460105 1
Brazil1987EpicLP231111
Greece1987I.R.S./CBSLPILP-460105 1
Japan1987I.R.S.LP28AP-3382
The Netherlands1987I.R.S.LPILP-460105 1
Zimbabwe1988CBSLPASF-3174
Worldwide1990MCACompact Disc42059
I.R.S.cassette tapeIRSC-42059
Worldwide1992UniversalCompact Disc19144
The NetherlandsMay 11, 1993I.R.S.Compact Disc7 13200 2 6†
Brazil1993EMICompact Disc7 13200-2
Worldwide1993EMICompact Disc1508
United KingdomSeptember 1, 1997I.R.S.LP0777/CTMCD 337†
Worldwide1997EMICompact Disc337
Worldwide1998CapitolCompact Disc93480
Worldwide1999CapitolCompact Disc21276
United States1999I.R.S.LP724349946613-4
Compact Disc72435-21276-2-7‡
Europe1999EMICompact Disc13200†
United States2000EMILP499466
United States2003CapitolDVD-Audio90149•
United States2005CapitolDualDisc99398•
United States2008CapitolLP220591
United StatesSeptember 25, 2012Capitol / EMICompact Disc5099997200628††

Notes

  • †I.R.S. Vintage Years edition, with bonus tracks
  • ‡Compact Disc remastered edition
  • •DualDisc remastered edition
  • †† 25th anniversary edition, with bonus disc
  • A truncated edition of Document was also issued on Armed Forces Radio—catalogue number P-24576—with "Finest Worksong", "Welcome to the Occupation", "Fireplace", "Lightnin' Hopkins", and "King of Birds" on one side and tracks from Pink Floyd's A Momentary Lapse of Reason on the other.

References