Uberlin

Album: Collapse Into Now (2011)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • The initial demo for this song was recorded in New Orleans, and when the band reconvened in Nashville a few months later they opted to add only Stipe's vocal and some brushed drums. All three R.E.M. members contributed to the instrumental bridge played on a Korg monotron.
  • Stipe's esoteric lyrics frequently defy coherent interpretation. Producer Garret "Jacknife" Lee admitted to The Huffington Post regarding this song, "Michael had a lyrical idea that was so complex that I didn't understand what he was getting at, even after he explained it to me. He has pages and pages of lyrics and ideas, with back stories for characters that don't figure in the song."
  • Michael Stipe explained the song's meaning to the German edition of Rolling Stone: "I wanted to picture an almost blunt outsider's perspective – the experience of a guy who is walking through a city that is completely new to him and still very unfamiliar. I have combined these two words to express that. I don't pretend being a German or a Berliner. Not at all. I just tried to figure out the mind of this outsider. The city could as well be New York. In each of these big, great cities, you can be completely alone. This is the guy up to the last verse, when he finds somebody and says: 'Let's try to make something happen. Tonight. Right now.' I write fictional life stories. It's about thoughts and emotions and fears people have. Expectations and optimism and desire. That's not hard [to figure out]. People always project a lot onto public figures and perhaps they think that I only hang out with Eddie Vedder and Patti Smith and Gwyneth Paltrow, but it's not like that. My life is different. I don't know many people who set themselves apart from the so-called normal life. And even these people come from ordinary backgrounds and have become famous coincidentally and luckily. But I don't see myself that way. I ride the U-Bahn like everyone else."
  • Mike Mills (from the German edition of Rolling Stone: "We couldn't believe that this pun isn't used more frequently! The song's protagonist – at least that's my interpretation – has had a lot of trouble, many problems and goes to Berlin to get out of it. I can still empathize very well with people that have ordinary jobs and struggle with everyday life and wait for the evening to come. I have cleaned toilets, mucked out horse barns, worked at McDonald's. I remember the daily grind, just like Peter and Michael do. Those who forget that, they have a problem. Besides, we only really started making money with music quite late in the 1980s – thus I have worked from the age of 15 until almost 30, although already being in the band."
  • Sam Taylor-Wood directed the music video for this song, which has her real-life fiancé Aaron Johnson dancing and kicking his way through London's Brick Lane. The pair met when Johnson portrayed John Lennon in Taylor-Wood's directorial debut, Nowhere Boy in 2009. He also starred as the title superhero in Kick-Ass.

Comments: 2

  • Pól from LondonThe Video is actually filmed along Redchurch Street, Shoreditch, which runs West of Bricklane.
    He steps out the door of No. 30 - Here's the location on Google Maps: May 2012 - https://goo.gl/maps/bw431Jge4jo
  • Jon from Enumclaw , WaGot this song off itunes for free and love it! R.E.M. is by far one of my favorite bands of the 80s and 90s!!!
see more comments

Editor's Picks

Tommy James

Tommy JamesSongwriter Interviews

"Mony Mony," "Crimson and Clover," "Draggin' The Line"... the hits kept coming for Tommy James, and in a plot line fit for a movie, his record company was controlled by the mafia.

Steely Dan

Steely DanFact or Fiction

Did they really trade their guitarist to The Doobie Brothers? Are they named after something naughty? And what's up with the band name?

David Gray

David GraySongwriter Interviews

David Gray explains the significance of the word "Babylon," and talks about how songs are a form of active imagination, with lyrics that reveal what's inside us.

JJ Burnel of The Stranglers

JJ Burnel of The StranglersSongwriter Interviews

JJ talks about The Stranglers' signature sound - keyboard and bass - which isn't your typical strain of punk rock.

Tim McIlrath of Rise Against

Tim McIlrath of Rise AgainstSongwriter Interviews

Rise Against frontman Tim McIlrath explains the meanings behind some of their biggest songs and names the sci-fi books that have influenced him.

George Clinton

George ClintonSongwriter Interviews

When you free your mind, your ass may follow, but you have to make sure someone else doesn't program it while it's wide open.