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Waiting in the station for a bus
Going to a place that's far, so far away
And if that's not enough
Going where nobody says hello
They don't talk to anybody they don't know
You'll wind up in some factory
That's full time filth and nowhere left to go
Walk home to an empty house, sit around all by yourself
I know it might sound strange, but I believe
You'll be coming back before too long
Don't go back to Rockville and waste another year
At night I drink myself to sleep and pretend
I don't care if you're not here with me
'Cause it's so much easier to handle
All my problems if I'm too far out to sea
But something better happen soon
Or it's gonna be too late to bring you back
It's not as though I really need you
If you were here I'd only bleed you
But everybody else in town only wants to bring you down
And that's not how it ought to be
I know it might sound strange, but I believe
You'll be coming back before too long
This is so much like Blue Rodeo’s Til I Get Back On My Feet Again.
BR could sue.
Except BR doesn't have a song named that but I assume you mean Til I Am Myself Again which bears some resemblance but the chorus is completely different. R.E.M.'s was also released in '84 while BR's in '90.
This I didn't know (From the Wikipedia article on Rockville, MD):
The R.E.M. song "(Don't Go Back To) Rockville", released in 1984, was written by Mike Mills about not wanting his girlfriend Ingrid Schorr to return to Rockville, Maryland.[21]
My brother told me that years ago and I was sure it was a false rumor, knowing there are several Rockvilles in the US and the Schorr girl we knew was too young. Then I read it was her older sister I had admit he was right after all (typing this in my dad's basement after I went back to visit him.) Great tune made even better for me knowing the story behind it
This is Trump's anthem.
Can't stand it
There are a couple of interesting computer project have been fostered there. One is that the people who founded Web Methods went to HS their. The second is the development of MultiPlexing.
But really why would you want to go back to Rockville.
Loved this one then. Love it more now. Haters, just skip it.
Ok. Skip. Thank you.
Long long time to carry that weight. But that's what R.E.M. has done to us.
BR could sue.
Sorry, outvoted.
The R.E.M. song "(Don't Go Back To) Rockville", released in 1984, was written by Mike Mills about not wanting his girlfriend Ingrid Schorr to return to Rockville, Maryland.[21]
Dwight, is that you?
LOL
I kind of feel bad that I don't love much country music, but I'm really glad when some of it sounds great: Lucinda Williams, The Outlaws, Patti Griffin, probably some others I'm not remembering, and when great rock bands like the Stones or REM get into it. I think it's that a lot of the country music out there sounds superficial rather than sincere. Though I'm sure there's a big contingent out there who'd say it's the country that sounds sincere and the other stuff that's superficial. I come from the cities and the burbs, so I may be prejudiced. On the other hand, Mississippi blues always sounded sincere from the get-go, even the country, country kind.
From R.E.M.'s "perfect period."
Agreed. Loved them "back then".
From R.E.M.'s "perfect period."
Google the video for "Putting the Rock back in Rockville"
Highly recommended for anyone who knows 355 and Montgomery Donuts!
i'm with you.
I actually think they were referring to Rockville GA.
It's Rockville, MD.
hear yah!
CLASSIC post dude
(don't go back to) Little Falls works, but it sure doesn't sound right when you sing it.
I previously thought that this referred to Rockdale County, Georgia. Apparently not but that's what I hear and will for evermore.
And I thought it was Rockdale, NSW. Near where I grew up, and not some where I'd want to go back to!
I actually think they were referring to Rockville GA.
I previously thought that this referred to Rockdale County, Georgia. Apparently not but that's what I hear and will for evermore.
Regarding the R.E.M song it is very typical in sound of their early period.
Beaker wrote:
All Blue Rodeo songs sound the same, IMO. I've seen them often enough to even walk out on one of their concerts. Meh band.
And yes, there are similarities here.
This track certainly doesn't have what I might think of as the identifiable R.E.M. sound. Good track. Surprising that it's them.
I actually think they were referring to Rockville GA.
All Rockvilles suck. There's a law.
Sorry—I'm sure that will offend!
I actually think they were referring to Rockville GA.
What? Def Leppard wasn't getting it done for ya'?
I will make 2 observations here. First, the Gertrude Stein quote apparently was in reference to her childhood home having slipped into something else (or so I have heard), and may not be justifiably used to disparage Oakland. At the Berkeley/Oakland line presently stand large signs/sculptures stating HERE and THERE. Second, what could a Valium trip possible be? Trip cannot be the right word for the pharmacological muting of an 'experience'.
Point taken about Gertrude Stein's quote; apparently there is debate about she meant. However, the unflattering shoe fits Oakland from what I saw, so Oakland gets to wear it along with Rockville. Maybe there's a lot more to Oakland than the acres of shipping containers that I saw when passing by on a BART train, but I doubt it. The city seems to have spiraled into a mess of poverty, crime, departing businesses and demands for more municipal services.
Maybe things have improved there recently, what with exploding real estate prices in San Fran and the pressure to find affordable housing outside that city. I hope so. Someone on the Oakland Wiki asserts that the New York Times is way behind in its bleak depiction of the city.
Rockville wasn't and isn't poor. It's more of a bedroom community at a ludicrous extreme. The developers threw up whole neighborhoods of the same houses at once. I'd regularly get lost walking near my townhouse because it all looked the same. People don't congregate or mingle anywhere in the city as far as I could tell. If developers deliberately wanted to subdue and sedate a populace, they'd look closely at Rockville for how to succeed.
As for your objection to "valium trip": I've never taken Valium so I can't use personal experience to reply. However, people do take Valium just for kicks; I think they're looking to feel "comfortably numb" as the Pink Floyd song has it. You're not knocked unconscious when you take a normal dose of Valium; your experience of your surroundings is altered. Some people feel zombified, others are more talkative, sociable and tactile.
Rockville did feel like a zombifying drug trip. It reminded me at times of Pleasantville from the movie of the same name—safe and sanitized suburbia where someone else had done the thinking and decision-making for you.
Checked to see 'cause I was sure it was BR. It's not the wine
This pre-dates any recordings from Blue Rodeo.
I lived in Rockville, MD for less than a year and that was way too long. As Gertrude Stein said of Oakland, CA, "There's no there there." It's largely a collection of large-scale development where all the houses (or townhouses) look the same. There's no downtown to speak of and the heart of the city mostly consists of blah concrete buildings housing the county government. It's a place where the developers won and the residents never quite figured out that they needed to fight for a sense of community. Now, with all the traffic congestion in the DC area, there are half-hearted attempts to "urbanize" areas alongside highways with semi-contained communities but the battle was lost long ago. Sadly that's true of a lot the DC suburbs.
The people I really knew in Rockville were some of most incurious and cocooned folks I'd ever met. If something didn't affect their daily lives, they didn't care. The whole place felt like a really boring Valium trip. I find it quite poignant that F. Scott Fitzgerald—one of the 20th century's great authors, a man obsessed with class, wealth and glamor—is buried in Rockville in a crowded crooked cemetery right next to a nondescript stretch of a six-lane highway.
I will make 2 observations here. First, the Gertrude Stein quote apparently was in reference to her childhood home having slipped into something else (or so I have heard), and may not be justifiably used to disparage Oakland. At the Berkeley/Oakland line presently stand large signs/sculptures stating HERE and THERE. Second, what could a Valium trip possible be? Trip cannot be the right word for the pharmacological muting of an 'experience'.
The power of music;providing both the push and pull of our lives.
Thanks for the anecdote.
Nice tune.
Heard it live quite a few times back in their/my early years ...
Agreed, neither have I.
Yeah...gotta be R.E.M.'s best ever...
It's their best IMO...as addictive as chocolate...
Checked to see 'cause I was sure it was BR. It's not the wine
Early REM is timeless!!
No,it's just so irritating it seems that way.
I lived in Rockville, MD for less than a year and that was way too long. As Gertrude Stein said of Oakland, CA, "There's no there there." It's largely a collection of large-scale development where all the houses (or townhouses) look the same. There's no downtown to speak of and the heart of the city mostly consists of blah concrete buildings housing the county government. It's a place where the developers won and the residents never quite figured out that they needed to fight for a sense of community. Now, with all the traffic congestion in the DC area, there are half-hearted attempts to "urbanize" areas alongside highways with semi-contained communities but the battle was lost long ago. Sadly that's true of a lot the DC suburbs.
The people I really knew in Rockville were some of most incurious and cocooned folks I'd ever met. If something didn't affect their daily lives, they didn't care. The whole place felt like a really boring Valium trip. I find it quite poignant that F. Scott Fitzgerald--one of the 20th century's great authors, a man obsessed with class, wealth and glamor--is buried in Rockville in a crowded crooked cemetery right next to a nondescript stretch of a six-lane highway.
Sorry--I'm sure that will offend!
Just a tiny-little boring Nothing!
I agree with Stingray? Yes, this is the weakest REM song ever.
....could have been the wine, could have been the Willie Nelson.
....could have been the wine, could have been the Willie Nelson.
REM Reckoning is a phenomenal album.
I agree. I've never heard it before, but I love R.E.M., and this song is very good for the ears. Hi, romeotuma! Miss you here. Hope you're okay, after dancing like a bow-legged gypsy mule-skinner. Oh, crap - I was trying to be so compassionate and concerned, and then you come up with that... I'm laughing my assets off. Bow-legged gypsy mule-skinner???
I might have to sorta love you after that one....
miss you so much, Cynaera...
love this marvelous song...
Shazam! Love it! Amen!
what a fantastic classic... love this album...
Agreed, neither have I.
Yeah...gotta be R.E.M.'s best ever...
EVERYBODY in my church loves this song...
Early REM is timeless!!
Definitely would not.
Agreed, neither have I.
Q:Where does so much of modern music go off the rails?
A: Trying to scratch anywhere close to this kind of accomplishment, and finding it impossible.
The unhurried arrangement, the embrace of melody and harmony, heartfelt lyrics.
Well Said.
Q:Where does so much of modern music go off the rails?
A: Trying to scratch anywhere close to this kind of accomplishment, and finding it impossible.
The unhurried arrangement, the embrace of melody and harmony, heartfelt lyrics.
It a beautiful day in Rockville today. Come on by!
michael stipe does not sing on this song.....I saw them in concert last year and think it was the bass player....
Mike Mills sings the high harmony on the studio version, Mike Stipe sings lead.
In the last concert I saw, you are right, it was reversed with Mike Mills singing lead and Mike Stipe singing harmony.
michael stipe does not sing on this song.....I saw them in concert last year and think it was the bass player....
Thank you... you are marvelous... life is grand here— hope the same is true for you... and yes, I love this song soooo much...
Tell me about the magic of VEGAS Hotel-rooms!
You are sooo funny! Really (no irony)!
I don't know if it is my favorite of theirs when they were good or not, but I cannot think of any other at the moment, so it's pretty damned good, how bout that?
Just a tiny-little boring Nothing!
I agree. I've never heard it before, but I love R.E.M., and this song is very good for the ears. Hi, romeotuma! Miss you here. Hope you're okay, after dancing like a bow-legged gypsy mule-skinner. Oh, crap - I was trying to be so compassionate and concerned, and then you come up with that... I'm laughing my assets off. Bow-legged gypsy mule-skinner???
I might have to sorta love you after that one....
Great song... love it... Rockville is about 80 miles south of Athens, in the middle of nowhere... don't go back to Rockville... stay in Athens, like R.E.M. did...
romeotuna wrote:
Rockville is about 80 miles south of Athens... in the middle of nowhere... don't go back to Rockville... this is a great song... |
So I see now you're repeating your previous comments in addition to the ever-inspiring "This is so good for the ears" line. Plus, you don't even have the right Rockville. Geez man.
The Performer by $Waveswinger
©2008-2010 $Waveswinger
One of the best stage presences in the history of rock and roll... in my humble opinion.
Okay, so I might be a bit biased.
Michael Stipe and Peter Buck- R.E.M.
Sasquatch Festival 2008
The Gorge, WA