I would like to participate more in these intriguing forums, but I am always disillusioned by the degenerating conversations that turn into insults. Can we please just turn the other cheek? America is far too angry as it is.
The better question is "can we not start insulting anyone at all?" I'm sure you noticed Geekor started the insult-tossing; so, you should really speak directly to him. If you believe in "turning the other cheek," that's fine. But you can't expect others to just let hostile insults slide. I'm an Italian raised by two Italians; I certainly don't...
Also, there have been no other "conversations turning to insults" on
any of these intriguing forums before Geekor showed his charming self. Until then,
all 8 of them have been peaceful. So, as long as he stays out of them, you have no reason to be disillusioned.
Otherwise: The best R.E.M. song is "Sitting Still," except maybe for "Nightswimming," but that might've been the 90s.
"Sitting Still" and "Nightswimming"--which was a 90's song--are definitely two of their best. Some of their others would be "Gardening at Night," "Driver 8," "These Days," "The Sidewinder Sleeps at Night," "Leave," and "Pretty Persuasion."
The best U2 song of the 80s was definitely not "Love Comes Tumbling," which is a good, rather obscure track, but derivative of other songs both by the band and others (Roxy Music much?) and doesn't even give Bono or Edge a chance to show off their vocal/helicopter guitar chops. My vote goes to "Gloria,"
You're absolutely right that "Love Comes Tumbling" is not their best song. And yes, Eno's production gave it--and "The Unforgettable Fire"--a Roxy Music sound, but that's not really a bad thing. However, this is the "Favorite Songs of the 80's," thread, not the "best song of the 80's" one. So "LCT" is my favorite 80's song of theirs, not their best. However, you do give me the opening to present a Greatest u2 songs list I came up with last week. I would be curious to read your thoughts on it...(I love "Gloria"; it would have been #11):
1. One. Their cynical ballad of love failed announced their freedom from Rattle and Hum's excessive earnestness.
2. New Year's Day. Their greatest anthem sings of love among personal and political upheaval.
3. Ultraviolet (Light My Way). Only Bono can celebrate the sordidness of love so sincerely...except Leonard Cohen.
4. I Will Follow. Bono's Clash-inspired tribute to his mother was their first classic.
5. Bad. Bono weaves beautifully between hope and despair in this arena ballad.
6. One Tree Hill. Their elegant elegy on a fallen friend is The Joshua Tree's gem
7. Running to Stand Still. Stark and lyrical meditation on drug use and succumbing to it.
8. The Unforgettable Fire. Eno left his greatest mark on this brooder about spiritual and sexual communion..
9. Sometimes You Can't Make it on Your Own. Bono's striking aria about spiritual and familial reconciliation.
10. Beautiful Day. Millennial anthem about hope amidst spiritual despair breathed life into the band.
And nobody probably knows it, but the single best song of the 80s is "Satisfied" by Van Morrison, from his woefully under appreciated epic album (six songs, 55 minutes) "Common One."
You'll have to do some convincing for me on this one. I don't quite see how this is the "best" song of the 80's, or how it's even better than his best songs on Avalon Sunset. At this juncture, I would actually go with "Welcome to the Jungle" as the best song of the 80's for it's savvy genre syncretism, Axl and Slash's bravura performances, and it's literally addressing the cultural and socio-political malaise of the decade.
FWIW, I was actually an award-winning paid/published rock music critic in the 80s-90s, so I'm not just some schlubb with a few opinions here. Not that my opinions were enough to help save Adam Schmitt's career. But I did get to interview Bono/Edge and Peter Buck. (and T-Bone Burnett, Ziggy Marley, James Taylor, etc., etc.)
I
never thought you or anyone else here was a "schlubb"...and I still don't. I just assumed you were another passionate music fan. But it is definitely cool you're a published rock critic, since I am most definitely not. I can't seem to shake my Modernist literature gig...
So, I even more look forward to your opinions when we do the 60's and, particularly, the Oughts.