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Total ratings: 3619
Length: 4:24
Plays (last 30 days): 0
It's bigger than you
And you are not me
The lengths that I will go to
The distance in your eyes
Oh no, I've said too much
I set it up
That's me in the corner
That's me in the spotlight
Losing my religion
Trying to keep up with you
And I don't know if I can do it
Oh no, I've said too much
I haven't said enough
I thought that I heard you laughing
I thought that I heard you sing
I think I thought I saw you try
Every whisper
Of every waking hour
I'm choosing my confessions
Trying to keep an eye on you
Like a hurt, lost and blinded fool, fool
Oh no, I've said too much
I set it up
Consider this
Consider this, the hint of the century
Consider this, the slip
That brought me to my knees, failed
What if all these fantasies come
Flailing around
Now I've said too much
I thought that I heard you laughing
I thought that I heard you sing
I think I thought I saw you try
But that was just a dream
That was just a dream
That's me in the corner
That's me in the spotlight
Losing my religion
Trying to keep up with you
And I don't know if I can do it
Oh no, I've said too much
I haven't said enough
I thought that I heard you laughing
I thought that I heard you sing
I think I thought I saw you try
But that was just a dream
Try, cry, why try
That was just a dream
Just a dream
Just a dream, dream
This one has all the negative elements: gratuitous exclamation points and quotation marks along with repeating h8 filled emojis. Clearly this poster is without Mojo. However, mindless rage does not seem to be a problem.
This must have been around 1990. I never forgot it.
The words of this song helped me get through the diagnoses of my third child with microcephaly, cerebral palsy, epilepsy and legally blind and that was jut the start. The words are just what a parent goes through, the choosing of confession trying to figure what went wrong, the spotlight that the doctors put you and y our child through, the doctors saying consider this, consider that, losing your religion when healing does not appear, the lengths that you will be going through, did I say to much, and trying to keep an eye on your child. But overall, you see your child trying and that is what gets you through.
Can't hear this anymore for my next few lives.
Agree. Same goes to U2. Skip.
Their most important song.
Definitely not.
I'm curious as to why you feel the need to provide us a running list of your ratings for so many songs. Those who are interested can go look up your ratings.
I agree, what's in a number?
https://www.forbes.com/sites/c...
Kudos again, BillG! PEACE and Long Live RP!!
I have found a completely new appreciation for how well the sound engineering was done 30 years ago or more. Great performances were ruined at the time by over-processed radio stations grinding certain tracks like this one into oblivion. Now, much better affordable equipment and FLAC brings it back to life! I can hear things I never heard and appreciate old music given up for dead! Love RP
(Note to self: go get a real DAC and audio system)
Losing your religion, never your faith
whoa, know this: it's not your fault!
Or "being at the end of my rope" (Athens, GA usage) :-)
I'm curious as to why you feel the need to provide us a running list of your ratings for so many songs. Those who are interested can go look up your ratings.
Ah nostalgia!
Another impressive showcase of the FLAC lossless files with this track. I've heard this song a hundred times, maybe more, and boy....I don't think I ever really noticed the hand claps in this song. Kinda neat how a familiar song can become interesting again when you notice something (kinda how I heard Pink Floyd over the many years.)
Kudos again, BillG! PEACE and Long Live RP!!
May you be touched by His Noodly Appendage...
Got the T shirt.
I hate this song. Unfortunately for me, I listen to RP so much my login expires and by the time I can find the password, it has moved on so I can't hit the PSD button in time. Maybe the fact you can't get it out of your head has been the misguided reason for popularity.
Absurd. I suppose the mandolin dates it as an early-90s song?
Nah, it's a classic by any normal measure.
The_Walrus wrote:
Great songs, played once or twice a week are not played to often.
Great songs are great songs. I grew up on this album and this band. I might not seek this song out more than a couple times a year, but it will always bring a smile to my face when it shows up.
Great songs, played once or twice a week are not played to often.
Love this groovy song... this is an excellent article from yesterday—
REM's Mike Mills: 'To expose yourself, warts and all, was very daunting'
REM … "We never did things as we were supposed to do," says Mike Mills (left).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y6KmiIq2-m8
But as much as I love so much of what REM has released through the years, I reluctantly agree with the people who say they're tired hearing it. It's good, but not their best work and it got sooooooooo much airplay in the 90s.
Source: https://c.buyoly.com/stella-178-what-if-lg.jpg
"...We've traced the call... it's coming from inside the house!"
Source: https://c.buyoly.com/stella-178-what-if-lg.jpg
still marvelous... still love this song soooo much...
Everybody in my church be dancing... love this song...
https://boingboing.net/2013/01/21/rems-losing-my-religion.html
Everybody in my church loves this song...
come on, just ONCE....
I've lost my keys many times, and don't even ask how many times I've lost the remote control for the TV. My religion...I'm not sure about that; I think it's in a box in the attic...maybe not.
May you be touched by His Noodly Appendage...
the doctor, nurses, and mid-wife in the delivery room were playing music as my 2nd little wrangler was preparing for her birth. low and behold, losing my religion comes on, and sweet little abigail cheyenne came into this beautiful world. i've always loved this song, but that brought it into a whole new realm. definitely not just a dream. unforgettable.
What are you talkign about—this came out in 91'
Must have been some other mundane, hum drum, monotone R.E.M song. Sorry for the mistake but it was 20 some years ago. Go Buckeyes!
What are you talkign about—this came out in 91'
There are many better R.E.M. songs that are more off the beaten path. I can hear this on top 40 radio anytime, but RP is great for digging into the deeper cuts. Dig, Bill, dig!
Thanks Bill for adding the PSD button!
(Thank god for the mute button.)
Thank you, I don't know why that simple concept is so hard for some to understand.
Probably because for me a truly great song like this doesn't diminish after loads of plays and a song that does in my view wasn't truly great - a similarly simple point of view. If I have voted 10 (and I have very often) it is not for how I used to feel about a song but how I feel about it now. To get to a point where I didn't want to hear this I would have to be locked in a room with the sort of knob that puts a cd single on repeat and leaves it playing for a long, long, time.
Ummm... I think you might be missing the point. Even the best song on the planet gets old when played too much. While it doesn't get any less good in a technical sense, the joy of listening to it is sucked out of it. While the pleasure the song brings to hear and how good it is really are different things, I think it's fair to assume that the poster doesn't mean to say that the song is bad because they hear it all the time, but instead they don't want to hear it anymore because they no longer enjoy it.
Thank you, I don't know why that simple concept is so hard for some to understand.
come on, just ONCE....
This sentiment - frequently posted here on the RP boards - is complete and utter nonsense.
...
A song is not any less good just because you've heard it alot. it just can't be.
Ummm... I think you might be missing the point. Even the best song on the planet gets old when played too much. While it doesn't get any less good in a technical sense, the joy of listening to it is sucked out of it. While the pleasure the song brings to hear and how good it is really are different things, I think it's fair to assume that the poster doesn't mean to say that the song is bad because they hear it all the time, but instead they don't want to hear it anymore because they no longer enjoy it.
I now belong to the church of..A Good Song Is Always A Good Song.
This sentiment - frequently posted here on the RP boards - is complete and utter nonsense.
The quality of a song should have absolutely no relation to how much or how little it has been played on terrestial or internet radio, MTV or VHI, or used in commercials or movies - even for the individual personal perspective - which is of course subjective.
Lets distinguish the more passive activity of radio listening - whether terrestial or internet - with the more active effort of programming your Ipod or whatever musical delivery device you may be using. I can see how in a more active mode, one of the reasons for not choosing to listen to a song you feel is "good" at a given moment may be that you may prefer to listen to another "good" song that they haven't heard as often.
Whereas the passive radio experience-is one where you will listen to the full range of choices provided by the DJ - and when a "good" song comes on you should just enjoy it. If you truly believe a song is "not good" then i can understand turning the radio off.
A song is not any less good just because you've heard it alot. it just can't be.
REM used to get played in elevators, but so many people were climbing out the hatch on top and cutting the cable in an attempt to escape that they've been banned by the Otis Corporation.
Otis! I love Otis elevators!
That's how I sees it.
I disagree with your sentiments, but applaud the delivery :)
This song always makes me think of being a wallflower at college discos, watching the girls I fancied rotten getting off with other guys whilst I felt sorry for myself. Sad, I know :(
9
REM used to get played in elevators, but so many people were climbing out the hatch on top and cutting the cable in an attempt to escape that they've been banned by the Otis Corporation.
you been Redding too much lately.
REM used to get played in elevators, but so many people were climbing out the hatch on top and cutting the cable in an attempt to escape that they've been banned by the Otis Corporation.
That's how I sees it.
NEXT, please!!!
And maybe his frustration/anger is even greater since his love is of the forbidden homosexual kind.
I don't know, but maybe he is playing with the ambivalent meaning of that expression "loosing my religion"?
Danimal174 wrote:
It's funny that the title of this song caused so much controversy, because it's not about religion at all. "Losing your religion" is a southern expression about losing your temper and doing or saying things that are "un-Christian".
That part is a play on words. This song is about not having the nerve to confess a love for someone. Losing his "religion" or temper over the frustration of it all.
But one need only look to the video to see they're playing with a more literal interpretation of some of the lyrics.
#9.
And bump this one up to 10 !
Absolutely perfect, overplayed or not.
The period where America's best band transitioned to a giant steaming heap of self-important mediocrity.
You're talking about U2, right? Because this set up the best trio of albums from a band as I think has ever been recorded, the high point being Automatic For the People in the middle...
Like Republicans, I'll never understand the post-80s REM haters...
(and yes I know U2 isn't an American band, but if you want to talk about bands that have descended into mediocrity after peaking in the late 80s/early 90s...)
#9.
Ahhh, this song takes me back to my college days in SoCal. Good times, good times...
profound... love it...
perzactly or something like that
I feel like I'm song~stalking you since I keep seeing you in all of the songs that I peek into.
Knock that off!
Dang, P te MD is not on the playlist, must upload.
Prepare to mute Martinelle!
:Falls out of chair:
Shallow
I don't know, but maybe he is playing with the ambivalent meaning of that expression "loosing my religion"?
Danimal174 wrote:
It's funny that the title of this song caused so much controversy, because it's not about religion at all. "Losing your religion" is a southern expression about losing your temper and doing or saying things that are "un-Christian".
It's funny that the title of this song caused so much controversy, because it's not about religion at all. "Losing your religion" is a southern expression about losing your temper and doing or saying things that are "un-Christian".
Oops, I was enjoying it until you told me what I should think. I'll try to get it right on my own next time - can't expect you to always be available for help.
A part of myself already, I guess.
maybe for you but this is the first time I've heard it on RP. I loved it yonks ago, and I still do.
This is the song that really got them international attention... there's a lot of great stuff on the album...
I really like the song "Belong" from this album. Just brilliant.
I agree. I have been a fan of theirs since '82 (seriously), and when this came out I felt they had "shifted gears" into a whole new level of excellence. Just an unbelievable song.
Ten ten ten.
Maaaaaaaake it stopppppppppp!