Release date: 21/11/92 | Length: 5:14 | Release: Automatic for the People | SuE: #17 | UK: #18; US: #30
Now Andy did you hear about this one
Tell me are you locked in the punch
Opening one of the greatest closing triplets of any album, let alone R.E.M.’s discography, Man on the Moon showcases a slightly lighter side to the band in comparison to what haunts a lot of Automatic for the People. Unlike so much of the group’s work that requires reading between the lines, this single was partly biographical, focusing on the perplexing comedian Andy Kaufman. This is not the first time that Kaufman would be linked to R.E.M., as the band soundtracked Miloš Forman’s 1999 film of the same name, most notably with the song The Great Beyond.
Kaufman wasn’t the sort of man to simply tell gags, but to entertain the audience with his peculiar brand, including his Elvis Presley impersonations, referenced by Michael Stipe with an additional impression by the frontman himself: “Hey baby”. Whilst his more mainstream highlights included stints on Saturday Night Live and Taxi, his adventures also led him into wrestling, hence the double entendre “Tell me are you locked in the punch”. Seeing as how his act would go well beyond the usual realms of comedy and into alienation, it was considered by many that what he was doing was not a joke, but just playing himself.
The tendency for Kaufman to goof around and constantly deliver the unexpected meant that upon his untimely death at the age of 35 in 1984, many believed his passing to be an elaborate hoax and yet another joke, and that’s where the title of the song comes into play, drawing comparisons to those who deny the moon landings: “If you believe, they put a man on the moon”. Whilst the song comes in no way close to advocating these conspiracies, there is a little deliberation with the fantasy and romanticism of believing that there is more than meets the eye, even going so far as to reel off a list of now accepted theories that were originally scoffed at: “Mister Charles Darwin had the gall to ask”.
Musically the song has a country tinge to it, opening with its iconic bassline before the guitars slide around. It’s very pleasant, but doesn’t show off on a song where the vivid lyrics take centre stage. The demo (titled C To D Slide 13 on the expanded version of the album) uses Peter Buck’s favourite toy, a mandolin, as the main riff in close harmony with the bass, highly reminiscent of Hairshirt from Green. It’s second nature just to accept Michael Stipe’s “yeah”s as melody, but it was actually a wry nod to friend Kurt Cobain’s habit of inserting a multitude of them in Nirvana songs, specifically in response to Lithium.
Man on the Moon also has the honour of being the last song ever performed by the band, in Mexico City at their final gig in 2008. I recall reading somewhere that they were fully aware that this would be their final ever performance, three years before their dissolution, and exchanged sly glances to one another to say “yep, this is it”. There’s an energy to it that might only be explained with this knowledge in retrospect, especially when Stipe declares “we are R.E.M. and this is what we do”. Bowing out on It’s the End of the World as We Know It would’ve been too cheap. This coda was far more dignifying.