R.E.M. : PERFECT SQUARE

  1. Opening Credits
  2. Begin The Begin
  3. What's The Frequency, Kenneth?
  4. Maps And Legends
  5. Drive
  6. Animal
  7. Daysleeper
  8. The Great Beyond
  9. Bad Day
  10. The One I Love
  11. All The Way To Reno
  12. Orange Crush
  13. Losing My Religion
  14. At My Most Beautiful
  15. Electrolite
  16. She Just Wants To Be
  17. Walk Unafraid
  18. Man On The Moon
  19. Everybody Hurts
  20. So Fast, So Numb
  21. Country Feedback
  22. Permanent Vacation
  23. Imitation Of Life
  24. It's The End Of The World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)
  25. End Credits
    Extras (Stirling Castle, Scotland, July 1999)
  26. A Stirling Performance

Label : Warner Reprise Video

Length : 143 minutes

Venue : Bowling Green, Wiesbaden, Germany

Recording Date : July 19, 2003

Release Date : March 9, 2004

NTSC : 16:9

Review (Wikipedia) : Perfect Square is a 2004 concert film of the alternative rock band R.E.M., filmed on July 19, 2003, at the Bowling Green in Wiesbaden, Germany. It was released by Warner Home Video on March 9, 2004. The concert features a performance of the song "Country Feedback", which Michael Stipe opens by declaring it his "favorite song". The rendition features appended lyrics from another song, Reveal's "Chorus and the Ring", and a guitar solo by Peter Buck, neither of which are in the original. The performance (in audio form) also found its way onto the limited edition issue of the In Time compilation, which was released a few months after the Wiesbaden concert. Other concert highlights include the appearance of two then-new songs, "Bad Day" (Also originally known as PSA when first written in the early 1980s) and "Animal", and the re-emergence of the long-lost song "Permanent Vacation". "Permanent Vacation" dates back to 1980, years before their first album, while "Bad Day" dates back to 1985. Included on the DVD release is a bonus documentary, A Stirling Performance, chronicling the band's three-night stand at Stirling Castle in Scotland in July 1999. The documentary demonstrates the effect the concerts had on Stirling and its residents. It was released in 2000.