Synopses & Reviews
An electrifying cultural biography of the greatest and last American
rock band of the millennium, whose music ignited a generation--and
reasserted the power of rock and roll
In the spring of 1980, an unexpected group of musical eccentrics
came together to play their very first performance at a college party in
Athens, Georgia. Within a few short years, they had taken over the
world - with smash records like
Out of Time,
Automatic for the People,
Monster and
Green. Raw, outrageous, and expressive, R.E.M.'s distinctive
musical flair was unmatched, and a string of mega-successes solidified
them as generational spokesmen. In the tumultuous transition between the
wide-open 80s and the anxiety of the early 90s, R.E.M. challenged the
corporate and social order, chasing a vision and cultivating a magnetic,
transgressive sound.
In this rich, intimate biography, critically acclaimed author
Peter Ames Carlin looks beyond the sex, drugs, and rock'n'roll to open a
window into the fascinating lives of four college friends - Michael
Stipe, Peter Buck, Mike Mills and Bill Berry - who stuck together at any
cost, until the end. Deeply descriptive and remarkably poetic, steeped
in 80s and 90s nostalgia,
The Name of This Band is R.E.M. paints a cultural history of the
commercial peak and near-total collapse of a great music era, and the
story of the generation that came of age at the apotheosis of rock.
Review
"Indie rock fans have long held up R.E.M. as a reflection and a goal: typical weird kids who found each other in art school or the aisles of a record store, old souls reborn as young punks, lovers of the American arts who tore them apart and built something fresh from the rubble. Peter Ames Carlin, one of our most thorough and insightful music biographers, recognizes the complexity of the R.E.M. story and honors it at every level: personal, musical, cultural. Longtime fans will love the deep dissections of the band's musical process and the way Carlin weaves their story through the bigger tale of indie culture and politics in the 1980s and beyond. Newcomers will appreciate his deft perceptions of four very different personalities and the creative dynamic that produced some of the late twentieth century's most indelible music."
—Ann Powers, NPR music critic and author of Traveling: On the Path of Joni Mitchell
“Carlin brilliantly captures how a ‘spunky alternative band whose singer spoke in riddles’ became a powerhouse that brought alt rock into the mainstream. . . Vividly bringing to life the political and cultural ferment of the 1990s. . . Carlin examines how R.E.M. balanced their ‘countercultural’ ethos with the commercial appeal it brought them, touching on what it means for rock when the “rebels” become the ‘dominant culture.’ Kinetic prose elevates this perceptive portrait of one of America’s most vital bands.”
—Publishers Weekly ★ (starred review)
“In the spring of 1983, I saw R.E.M., a band I had never heard of, open for the English Beat in Boston. It is no hyperbole to say it changed my life. It was an electrifying sense of discovery. Reading Peter Ames Carlin's book is like rediscovering R.E.M.. Peter masterfully spins the story and captures the magical chemistry of the most significant band of the 1980s.”
—Bill Janovitz, author of Leon Russell: The Master of Space and Time's Journey Through Rock & Roll History
About the Author
Peter Ames Carlin is the author of several books, including Sonic Boom: The Impossible Rise of Warner Bros. Records, published in 2021, and Bruce, the biography of Bruce Springsteen published in 2012. Carlin has also been a freelance journalist, a senior writer at People in New York City, and a television columnist and feature writer at The Oregonian in Portland. A regular speaker on music, writing, and popular culture, Carlin lives in Seattle.