Michael Stipe and the Ageless Boys of R.E.M.
The group's gone electronic.
The singer's gone Hollywood. Is this the band's end? Nah, it's
a new beginning
Monday,
May. 14, 2001 Michael Stipe isn't supposed to be
here. He is a 41-year-old singer for a 21-year-old band:
R.E.M. In rock-'n'-roll years, R.E.M. is 147 years old. Every
member — Stipe, guitarist Peter Buck, 44, and bassist Mike
Mills, 42 — is easily old enough to be Christina Aguilera's
father.
Nonetheless, here are the boys of R.E.M. — Buck, Stipe and
Mills — all lined up like talk-show guests in the offices of
Warner Bros. Records. Stipe's bald, Buck's a little paunchy,
and Mills has that unsettling Bob Costas thing going on where
he appears both boyish and middle-aged. Great rock groups
don't usually stick around for the gray hairs to come in;
they're supposed to burn out, fade away, hey hey, my my, well
whatever, never mind. In fact in 1998, when R.E.M. was
finishing its last album, "Up" (its first without original
drummer Bill Berry, who retired after recovering from a brain
aneurysm and lives on a farm outside Athens, Ga.), the guys
did disband — but only briefly. "When we mixed that record, I
thought it was our last will and testament," says Stipe. "Then
we talked, and we realized that each of us wanted to continue
making music somehow and that the people we wanted to continue
making music with were in the room." Says Buck: "We just had
to get past the weird stuff."
There's still plenty of weird stuff going on with R.E.M.
Buck is facing charges in London over an April 21 "air rage"
incident in which he allegedly got drunk and assaulted crew
members on a British Airways flight. (Buck issued an apology
and faces a court date on June 18). Yet despite aborted
breakups and possible breakdowns, R.E.M. — arguably the most
influential rock band of the '80s and '90s — is poised for
fresh success. The trio's new album, "Reveal" (Warner Bros.),
is its best since its 1992 megahit, Automatic for the People.
"With the exception of U2, there's no one who has stayed
together and stayed relevant for as long as we have," says
Stipe. "We can't possibly compete with Limp Bizkit and Britney
Spears, and I have no real desire to. But as long as people
are excited about our work, we're going to expend the energy
to do it." Stipe later adds, for good measure, "I'm only two
years older than Tom Cruise and three years older than Brad
Pitt."
Pitt and Cruise aren't just points of comparison for Stipe;
they're also colleagues. In recent years Stipe has become
increasingly involved in the filmmaking scene. Rockers who go
Hollywood often find that when they stop singing and start
speaking, their words lose their magic: the great Bob Dylan in
the megabomb movie "Hearts of Fire," Mick Jagger in every
flick he ever made. Stipe has slipped into films not as an
actor but as a producer. In 1999 he had his greatest celluloid
success as a co-producer of the Oscar-nominated movie "Being
John Malkovich." Stipe is currently producing a wide range of
films, including the high school coming-of-age feature "Our
Song" (opening in New York City on May 23 and wider in June),
the women's prison drama "Stranger Inside" (airing on HBO June
23) and "13 Conversations About One Thing," a drama about
karma, which should hit the festival circuit later this year.
"Onstage it's all about me, whether it should be or not," says
Stipe. "But Peter's frankly much smarter and more articulate
than I am, and so's Mike. So there's an interest from me in
being behind the scenes in movies. I get a lot of satisfaction
from that."
Stipe operates two film companies, the New York City-based
C-Hundred (which he started with producer-director Jim McKay
in 1987) and the Los Angeles-based Single Cell Pictures
(launched in 1995). Both are now run under Self Timer, a
parent company that Stipe heads, and both focus on low-budget
films. "I refer to what we do as 'under the radar,'" says
McKay, who directed "Our Song," a C-Hundred film with a budget
of under $500,000. Single Cell's films tend to have bigger
stars; "13 Conversations" features Matthew McConaughey and Amy
Irving.
You won't find Stipe in the office pushing papers. "I'm not
a numbers guy," says Stipe, "even though I'm a Capricorn."
Stipe splits his time between homes in Athens, Los Angeles and
New York City and is often on the road. "He's like Bosley in
"Charlie's Angels" — he's always traveling," says Single Cell
co-head Sandy Stern. But Stipe is a hands-on producer. Jill
Sprecher, director of 13 Conversations, says that while Stipe
was making Reveal in a studio in Dublin, Ireland, last year,
he would regularly call top actors, pushing them to take a
role. "I think the reason we got the cast we did was because
of him," says Sprecher.
The singer's divided career hasn't hurt his music. "Reveal"
is a smooth combination of lush, mysterious melodies and
high-tech production. It's like a trip through a rain forest
on a hovercraft. On "Up," the band overemphasized the
electronica; on "Reveal," the judicious techno touches
contribute to a sense of drama and experimentation. Stipe's
lyrics remain characteristically erudite and elusive. On
Imitation of Life he croons, "Charades, pop skill/ water
hyacinth, named by a poet." On "Chorus and the Ring," he
sings, "It's the poison that in measures brings illuminating
vision/ It's the knowing with a wink that we expect in
Southern women." His lyrics may appear random, but they can
aim for Proustian resonance. A line on "Imitation" — "That's
cinnamon that's Hollywood" — is meant to conjure memories of
eating cinnamon toast in childhood and feelings of innocence
lost.
Stipe says he's "phenomenally overworked" but happy. He
says he's been "in a relationship with an amazing man" for
about three years (he says his partner isn't a celebrity). In
the past Stipe avoided questions about his sexuality, but he's
now more comfortable discussing it. "I was being made to be a
coward about it," he says, "rather than someone who felt like
it really was a very private thing." He now readily describes
himself as a "queer artist." But not everything about Stipe is
open for explanation. When he is asked why he seems to have a
blue brick tattooed on his right hand, he just smiles.
"Reason?" he says. "This is Michael Stipe you're talking to,
young man."
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