Soon after I finished they announced the vinyl boxset so I snapped that up and did it all over again. And then they announced their reunion! I got on board just in time, happy days
Discovering a Large Discography
- ridleybradout
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Re: Discovering a Large Discography
I did a chronological discovery of Sleater-Kinney a few years ago (I think I ran a commentary in the S-K thread) and it was extremely rewarding, especially given how much they developed over time. It was also really hard because it was so tempting to skip to The Woods given its reputation and how much I loved the two singles from it I'd heard. I think I went an album every few days which was probably too quick - 'Hot Rock' and 'All Hands...' kind of blended into each other a bit.
Soon after I finished they announced the vinyl boxset so I snapped that up and did it all over again. And then they announced their reunion! I got on board just in time, happy days
.
Soon after I finished they announced the vinyl boxset so I snapped that up and did it all over again. And then they announced their reunion! I got on board just in time, happy days
- bodysnatcher
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Re: Discovering a Large Discography
I'm going to try this simply because I've never been able to get into REM outside their more well-known songstragabigzanda wrote:Yea, I think REM is another start-from-the-beginning band.cutuphalfdead wrote:I went with REM chronologically and that worked great.tragabigzanda wrote:I think that before proper guidance can be offered, we need to know whose discography Leatherhead is checking out. For example, if it were Fugazi, I'd say start somewhere in the middle. If it were Bill Callahan, I'd say start somewhere around 2000. But if it were Sonic Youth, I'd say start at the beginning.cutuphalfdead wrote:Sometimes. Do you want to listen chronologically? Or would you rather start with something in the middle that stands out? There's no wrong answer here.Leatherhead wrote:Chronological or no?cutuphalfdead wrote:Start with an album and listen for as long as you want. When you're ready to move on, move on.
- tragabigzanda
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Re: Discovering a Large Discography
tragabigzanda wrote:I'd maybe bump Life & Limb for Epic Problemtragabigzanda wrote:Top 10 maybe?
Hello Morning
Close Captioned
The Kill
Place/Position
Do You Like Me?
Latest Disgrace
Recap Modotti
Nightshop
Break
Life & Limb
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Mon January 12, 2026 10:41 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- bodysnatcher
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Re: Discovering a Large Discography
My roommate in college was into R.E.M. enough that he had all their albums, and I remember when Up came out, we sat in the dorm, drinking and listening to it. He hated it so much. I really had nothing to compare it to other than their previous hits and Monster. I know I really liked Lotus and Suspicion, I had those on a mix cd that I listened to while driving at night on dark empty roads. I don't recall much of the rest of the album though, other than Daysleeper.tragabigzanda wrote:I agree that starting at the beginning is the best way to tackle REM, but have you ever heard Up? If their first few albums aren't grabbing you, Up is an outlier to their core sound and it's fantastic.bodysnatcher wrote:I'm going to try this simply because I've never been able to get into REM outside their more well-known songstragabigzanda wrote:Yea, I think REM is another start-from-the-beginning band.cutuphalfdead wrote:I went with REM chronologically and that worked great.tragabigzanda wrote:I think that before proper guidance can be offered, we need to know whose discography Leatherhead is checking out. For example, if it were Fugazi, I'd say start somewhere in the middle. If it were Bill Callahan, I'd say start somewhere around 2000. But if it were Sonic Youth, I'd say start at the beginning.cutuphalfdead wrote:Sometimes. Do you want to listen chronologically? Or would you rather start with something in the middle that stands out? There's no wrong answer here.Leatherhead wrote:Chronological or no?cutuphalfdead wrote:Start with an album and listen for as long as you want. When you're ready to move on, move on.
All I know is in college I worked in a dinosaur themed fast food place that had a 4 song playlist, and End Of The World was on it, and I can't ever listen to that song again.
- PHATJ
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Re: Discovering a Large Discography
Two of my favorite R.E.M. albums are the last two, so there's that. And I think Hi-Fi is their absolute best.
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chewm
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Re: Discovering a Large Discography
I went all over the place with REM, but the first 2 albums I listened to are Reckoning and Life's Rich Pageant, which are some of the early ones.
Everybody should listen to Reckoning, what a perfect record.
Everybody should listen to Reckoning, what a perfect record.
- bune
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Re: Discovering a Large Discography
My first REM album was:

Remember the long-form CD boxes? Those were so weird.

Remember the long-form CD boxes? Those were so weird.
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guestT
Re: Discovering a Large Discography
I spent all of 2015 going through Bob Dylan's discography chronologically. Made a calendar for it and everything. That was SUPER rewarding, but I still felt like I barely scratched the surface.
In 2016 I tried to do the same with REM and was like
through Out of Time then kinda got bored and quit.
This year I'm doing the Ramones and Tom Petty.
In 2016 I tried to do the same with REM and was like
This year I'm doing the Ramones and Tom Petty.
- bodysnatcher
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Re: Discovering a Large Discography
Yeah I do. I had PJ's "Ten" in that, but i threw it awaybune wrote:My first REM album was:
Remember the long-form CD boxes? Those were so weird.
I never really understood the point of them
- tragabigzanda
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Re: Discovering a Large Discography
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Mon January 12, 2026 10:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- wease
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Re: Discovering a Large Discography
And harder to steal, presumably.tragabigzanda wrote:I think the reasoning behind them was so CDs could be comfortably displayed in the same bins that held vinyl.bodysnatcher wrote:Yeah I do. I had PJ's "Ten" in that, but i threw it awaybune wrote:My first REM album was:
Remember the long-form CD boxes? Those were so weird.
I never really understood the point of them
Let me tell you, Homer Simpson is cock of nothing!
- C. Montgomery Burns
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- tragabigzanda
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Re: Discovering a Large Discography
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Mon January 12, 2026 10:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- bodysnatcher
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Re: Discovering a Large Discography
Rock the Vote
- bodysnatcher
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Re: Discovering a Large Discography
So today I started the Chronological REM. I'm on Reckoning now. Not sure how long this will take, it's a lot of REM. At some point I'm gonna be like, "Michael Stipe? Michael STOP."
- tragabigzanda
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Re: Discovering a Large Discography
tragabigzanda wrote:I'd maybe bump Life & Limb for Epic Problemtragabigzanda wrote:Top 10 maybe?
Hello Morning
Close Captioned
The Kill
Place/Position
Do You Like Me?
Latest Disgrace
Recap Modotti
Nightshop
Break
Life & Limb
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Mon January 12, 2026 10:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- bodysnatcher
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Re: Discovering a Large Discography
Things I blame Kurt Loder for:tragabigzanda wrote:It's Kurt Loder's fault that the US political system is broken.
Killing Kurt Cobain
the VMAs
John Norris
- tragabigzanda
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Re: Discovering a Large Discography
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Mon January 12, 2026 10:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- bodysnatcher
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Re: Discovering a Large Discography
Every so often I'm flipping channels late at night, and that guy STILL has that 1am talk showtragabigzanda wrote:Still not as bad as Carson Daly and TRLbodysnatcher wrote:Things I blame Kurt Loder for:tragabigzanda wrote:It's Kurt Loder's fault that the US political system is broken.
Killing Kurt Cobain
the VMAs
John Norris
Last edited by bodysnatcher on Fri January 06, 2017 7:23 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- washing machine
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Re: Discovering a Large Discography
To chud's point in the second post of this thread, Last September I decided to dive into Four Tet's discography chronologically. It's now January and I'm still very much on Rounds for the foreseeable future.
dimejinky99 wrote:I could destroy any ai chatbot you put in front of me. Easily.
- bodysnatcher
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Re: Discovering a Large Discography
washing machine wrote:To chud's point in the second post of this thread, Last September I decided to dive into Four Tet's discography chronologically. It's now January and I'm still very much on Rounds for the foreseeable future.
Rounds is one of my all-time favorite records, and the climax of his discography for me.
I appreciate some of the directions he went afterward, but just not as easily digestible