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Losing My Religion

"Losing My Religion" is a song by American alternative rock band R.E.M., released in February 1991 by Warner Bros. as the first single and the second track from the group's seventh album, Out of Time (1991). Built on a mandolin riff, it was written by lead singer Michael Stipe and is about unrequited love.[4] The song was an unlikely hit for the group, garnering extensive airplay on radio as well as on MTV and VH1 due to its critically acclaimed music video, directed by Tarsem Singh. The single became R.E.M.'s highest-charting hit in the United States, reaching No. 4 on the Billboard Hot 100 and expanding the group's popularity beyond its original fan-base. At the 1992 Grammy Awards, "Losing My Religion" won two awards: Best Short Form Music Video and Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal.[5] In 2017, "Losing My Religion" was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.[6]

This article is about the R.E.M. song. For other uses, see Losing My Religion (disambiguation).

"Losing My Religion"

"Rotary Eleven"

February 19, 1991 (1991-02-19)

September–October 1990

4:28

Background[edit]

R.E.M. guitarist Peter Buck wrote the main riff and chorus to the song on a mandolin while watching television one day. Buck had just bought the instrument and was attempting to learn how to play it, recording the music as he practiced. Buck said that "when I listened back to it the next day, there was a bunch of stuff that was really just me learning how to play mandolin, and then there's what became 'Losing My Religion', and then a whole bunch more of me learning to play the mandolin."[7]


Recording of the song started in September 1990 at Bearsville Studio A in Woodstock, New York.[7] The song was arranged in the studio with mandolin, electric bass, and drums.[8] Bassist Mike Mills came up with a bassline inspired by the work of Fleetwood Mac bassist John McVie; by his own admission he could not come up with one for the song that was not derivative.[7] Buck said the arrangement of the song "had a hollow feel to it. There's absolutely no midrange on it, just low end and high end, because Mike usually stayed pretty low on the bass." The band decided to have touring guitarist Peter Holsapple play acoustic guitar on the recording. Buck reflected, "It was really cool: Peter and I would be in our little booth, sweating away, and Bill and Mike would be out there in the other room going at it. It just had a really magical feel."[8] Singer Michael Stipe's vocals were recorded in a single take.[9] Orchestral strings, arranged by Mark Bingham, were added to the song by members of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra at Soundscape Studios in Atlanta, Georgia, in October 1990.[10]

Composition and lyrics[edit]

"Losing My Religion" is based on Peter Buck's mandolin-playing. Buck said, "The verses are the kinds of things R.E.M. uses a lot, going from one minor to another, kind [of] like those 'Driver 8' chords. You can't really say anything bad about E minor, A minor, D, and G – I mean, they're just good chords." Buck noted that "Losing My Religion" was "probably the most typical R.E.M.-sounding song on the record. We are trying to get away from those kind of songs, but like I said before, those are some good chords."[8] Orchestral strings play through parts of the song. The song is in natural minor.[11]


Stipe has repeatedly stated that the song's lyrics are not about religion. The phrase "losing my religion" is an expression from the southern region of the United States that means "losing one's temper or civility" or "feeling frustrated and desperate."[12] Stipe told The New York Times the song was about romantic expression.[13] He told Q that "Losing My Religion" is also about "someone who pines for someone else. It's unrequited love, what have you."[14] Stipe compared the song's theme to "Every Breath You Take" (1983) by The Police, saying, "It's just a classic obsession pop song. I've always felt the best kinds of songs are the ones where anybody can listen to it, put themselves in it and say, 'Yeah, that's me.'"[15]

Critical reception[edit]

Caren Myers from Melody Maker named the song Single of the Week, adding, "'Losing My Religion' occupies a smaller, more intimate space, delicately picking a path with mandolins and acoustic guitars, soothed by the mournful sweep of a string section. Deceptive echoes of "World Leader Pretend" dissolve on second listen as the song wraps itself around the impossibility of communication with glancing but painful accuracy. Stipe's writing is getting sparser and more intense, riddled with oblique insights but unwilling to point out where. This is R.E.M. at their most tender and unsettling, Stipe's careworn voice filled with inexplicable sadness, but as warm and familiar as ever."[21] A reviewer from Music & Media wrote, "Hearing such a beautiful song with a striking mandolin arrangement, provides an ample religious substitute."[22] Terry Staunton from NME found that it "is likely to be read as self-reflection on R.E.M.'s position in the worldwide musical scheme of things, doubt and discomfort at the prospect of unwanted disciples".[23] Parry Gettelman from Orlando Sentinel remarked that here, the band returns to its "trademark jangle", "but Buck employs a mandolin instead of a Rickenbacker. Stipe touches again on what seems to be ambivalence about his role as a pop star, and about the need to communicate with an audience."[24] David Fricke from Rolling Stone felt that "there is melancholy in the air: in the doleful strings and teardrop mandolin of "Losing My Religion".[25] Celia Farber from Spin praised it as "a gorgeous, gorgeous song", adding, "When Stipe sings "That's me in the corner/That's me in the spotlight losing my religion", I actually get a hot/cold flash and have to play the song about 30 more times. Right away."[26]


The single placed second in the Village Voice Pazz & Jop annual critics' poll, behind Nirvana's "Smells Like Teen Spirit".[27] R.E.M. was nominated for seven awards at the 1992 Grammy Awards. "Losing My Religion" alone earned several nominations, including Record of the Year and Song of the Year.[28] The song won two awards, for Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals and Best Short Form Music Video.[29] In 2004, Rolling Stone listed the song at No. 169 on its list of the "500 Greatest Songs of All Time". In 2007, the song was listed as No. 9 on VH1's 100 Greatest Songs of the 90s.[30] In 2009, Blender ranked it at No. 79 on its list of "The 500 Greatest Songs Since You Were Born".[31] The song is also included on The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's list of 500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll.[32]

Music video[edit]

The accompanying music video for "Losing My Religion" was directed by Tarsem Singh. As opposed to previous R.E.M. videos, Michael Stipe agreed to lip sync the lyrics.[33] The video originated as a combination of ideas envisioned by Stipe and Singh. Stipe wanted the promo to be a straightforward performance video, akin to Sinéad O'Connor's "Nothing Compares 2 U". Singh wanted to create a video in the style of a certain type of Indian filmmaking, where everything would be "melodramatic and very dreamlike", according to Stipe.[34] Singh has said the video is modeled after the Gabriel García Márquez short story "A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings" in which an angel crashes into a town and the villagers have varied reactions to him.[35]


The video begins with a brief sequence inside a dark room where water drips from an open window. Recreating a scene from the Andrei Tarkovsky film The Sacrifice, Buck, Berry, and Mills run across the room while Stipe remains seated as a pitcher of milk drops from the windowsill and shatters; the song then begins. Director Singh also drew inspiration from the Italian painter Caravaggio and the video is laden with religious imagery such as Saint Sebastian, the Biblical episode of the Incredulity of Thomas and Hindu deities, portrayed in a series of tableaux.[36] Actor Wade Dominguez (1966-1998), who played Emilio in Dangerous Minds (1995), appears in the music video.[37]


The music video was nominated in nine categories at the 1991 MTV Video Music Awards. The video won six awards, including Video of the Year, Best Group Video, Breakthrough Video, Best Art Direction, Best Direction, and Best Editing.[38] "Losing My Religion" also ranked second in the music video category of the 1991 Pazz & Jop poll.[27]


The music video hit one billion views on YouTube in September 2022, becoming the band's first video to do so.[39]

MTV performances[edit]

On November 10, 1991, R.E.M. performed "Losing My Religion" with members of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra to celebrate the tenth anniversary of MTV. It was recorded at the Madison Morgan Cultural Centre in Madison, Georgia, about twenty miles south of Athens.[40]


They also performed the song earlier in the year for MTV Unplugged, and again in 2001.

 – drums, percussion

Bill Berry

 – electric guitar, mandolin

Peter Buck

 – bass guitar, backing vocals, string synthesizer and arrangement

Mike Mills

 – lead vocals

Michael Stipe

Personnel adapted from Out of Time liner notes,[41] except where noted


R.E.M.


Additional musicians

Covers[edit]

Finn Hudson (Cory Monteith) covered the song in the 2010 Glee episode "Grilled Cheesus".[86] The song reached number 60 in the US on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 47 on the Canadian Hot 100.[87][88] Tori Amos recorded a cover version which appeared in the film Higher Learning. Italian band Lacuna Coil covered the song on their 2012 album Dark Adrenaline. Italian metal band Graveworm covered the song on their 2003 album Engraved in Black. American heavy metal band Trivium covered the song on their 2013 album Vengeance Falls.[89] Canadian singer-songwriter Dan Mangan covered the song on his 2020 album Thief.[90] Hootie & the Blowfish covered the song for the 2020 reissue of their 2019 album Imperfect Circle. In a 2020 interview, guitarist Matt Bryan emphasized how influential R.E.M. had been in the band's development.[91][92]

Black, Johnny. Reveal: The Story of R.E.M. Backbeat Books, 2004.  978-0-87930-776-9

ISBN

Buckley, David. R.E.M.: Fiction: An Alternative Biography. Virgin, 2002.  978-1-85227-927-1

ISBN