If a "play link" in the left list of the tracks appeared, click the "play link". You can see YouTube video thumbnails related the track. Clicking the thumbnail, the YouTube video will play.
Product Details
Label / Release Date: Warner Bros / Wea (1994/09/27)Average Customer Review:

CD Arrived On Time hahaha
I prefer This album instead of "Accelerate"
Monster is a very underappreciated album
Scratch That Name on The Record Player
Much Maligned Album Actually Reveals Itself To Be IncredibleEditorial Review
R.E.M. pushed the jangle out of the picture with Monster, replacing it with reverberating snaps, crackles, and pops. An album that wraps itself to '70s glam finery while reaching out to the flannel-clad post-Nirvana throngs, it largely succeeds at demonstrating that these Georgians still know how to rock. The MTV fave "What's the Frequency, Kenneth?" kicks things off on a high note as Peter Buck's distorted power chords set the tone for the 12-song set. "Strange Currencies" may be alarmingly reminiscent of the Automatic for the People hit "Everybody Hurts," but it's actually the superior song. "Let Me In" is a heavily distorted nod to the fallen Kurt Cobain. While Monster is far from R.E.M.'s most consistent effort, it stands as a ragged and risky respite from safe and sound alterna-rock. --Steven Stolder
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