Peter Buck was the guitarist for
R.E.M., arguably the most important and influential American rock band of the post-punk era. The big, jangly sound of
Buck's Rickenbacker was one of
R.E.M.'s musical signatures as they rose from cult status to mainstream acceptance, and his eclectic tastes and embrace of other stringed instruments (especially mandolin) was a major part of
R.E.M.'s stylistic growth through their career. Nearly as important as his guitar work was
Buck's eagerness to champion other artists he believed deserved a higher profile.
Buck would take his favorite bands out on the road as
R.E.M.'s opening acts, talk them up in interviews, and produce and/or play on their recordings, and in the '80s and '90s,
Buck's endorsement carried significant weight in the alternative music press. After
R.E.M. finally parted ways in 2011,
Buck released some fine solo recordings but devoted most of his time to projects with others. He produced and accompanied
Alejandro Escovedo,
the Jayhawks, and
John Wesley Harding, and recorded and toured with
Filthy Friends,
the Minus 5,
the Baseball Project, and
Arthur Buck.
Born December 6, 1956, in Berkeley, California,
Peter Buck was managing the Athens, Georgia-based Wuxtry record shop when he met University of Georgia student
Michael Stipe, and with bassist
Mike Mills and drummer
Bill Berry, they formed
R.E.M. in the spring of 1980. Distinguished by
Buck's chiming guitar riffs, the group honed an atmospheric, jangly pop sound often reminiscent of
the Byrds, touring relentlessly prior to issuing their debut single, "Radio Free Europe," on the tiny Hib-Tone label in mid-1981; after the record's success on college radio attracted the attention of I.R.S. Records, they released the
Chronic Town EP a year later.
R.E.M.'s first full-length album, 1983's
Murmur, cemented their reputation as critics' darlings; despite little mainstream airplay, 1984's
Reckoning reached the Top 30 and with the darkly beautiful follow-up
Fables of the Reconstruction, the band earned increasing MTV visibility for the videos "Can't Get There from Here" and "Driver 8."
While 1986's
Life's Rich Pageant revealed a growing awareness with sociopolitical concerns (among them environmental issues and American foreign policy), the following year's
Document was
R.E.M.'s commercial breakthrough, buoyed by the Top Ten hit "The One I Love." Released on Election Day 1988, the Warner Bros. label debut
Green was
R.E.M.'s most pointedly polemic effort to date, although the hits "Stand" and "Pop Song 89" also reflected the band's wry sense of humor. Following the
Green tour,
R.E.M. took an extended break, during which time
Buck, Mills, and
Berry teamed with singer/songwriter
Warren Zevon to record an LP as
the Hindu Love Gods.
Buck, who earlier produced
the Feelies' 1986 comeback LP
The Good Earth, also helmed sessions for
Kevn Kinney (
MacDougal Blues), Run Westy Run (Green Cat Island), and
Uncle Tupelo (March 16-20, 1992); a comic book written and drawn by then-unknown singer/songwriter
Jack Logan even depicted the guitarist as a superhero.
R.E.M. returned in 1991 with the chart-topping
Out of Time, which generated the Top Ten hits "Losing My Religion" and "Shiny Happy People"; the elegiac masterpiece
Automatic for the People followed in 1992 and as alternative rock took over the pop charts, the band was widely acknowledged among the chief inspirations behind a generation of new artists. In the wake of 1995's
Monster,
Buck formed the side project
Tuatara, an experimental, free jazz-inspired collective also featuring
the Screaming Trees'
Barrett Martin and
Luna's
Justin Harwood; the group's debut album,
Breaking the Ethers, appeared a year later, followed in 1998 by
Trading with the Enemy. In 1997, he also teamed with ex-
American Music Club frontman
Mark Eitzel for the collaborative LP
West. He returned to
R.E.M. -- by then a trio following
Berry's retirement -- for 1998's
Up, the album that established that the group could continue without
Berry. Over the next decade,
Buck would pursue side projects between
R.E.M. albums, frequently playing with such old friends as
Robyn Hitchcock and
Scott McCaughey; he played bass in
McCaughey's band
the Baseball Project.
R.E.M. announced their disbandment in the fall of 2011. In the spring of 2012,
Buck announced he was recording his first solo album. The eponymous result was released in October in an extremely limited edition of 2,000 vinyl copies.
Buck busied himself with the occasional supporting gig for his solo debut and also with his Todos Santos Music Festival, a charitable multi-day festival he launched in 2012 and which would be held on a regular basis over the next few years. Early in 2014,
Buck was back with I Am Back to Blow Your Mind Once Again, another vinyl-only album. He toured behind the LP, supporting
Alejandro Escovedo on a few dates;
Buck also helped produce
Escovedo's 2016 album
Burn Something Beautiful and anchored his backing band. A third vinyl-only album from
Buck, Warzone Earth, appeared in October 2015.
Buck and most of the same crew that backed
Escovedo for
Burn Something Beautiful would reunite in the band
Filthy Friends, a project that found
Buck collaborating with
Corin Tucker of
Sleater-Kinney.
Filthy Friends' debut album,
Invitation, was released in 2017, and
Emerald Valley appeared in 2019.
Buck also served as producer on
Paging Mr. Proust, a 2016 LP from
the Jayhawks.
Buck collaborated with South Florida cult hero and longtime friend
Charlie Pickett on a 2018 Record Store Day single, "What I Like About Miami" b/w "So Long Johnny," and the tracks later appeared on
Pickett's 2019 long-player What I Like About Miami.
Buck and singer/songwriter
Joseph Arthur also wrote and recorded a set of songs that they released in 2018 under the banner of
Arthur Buck.
Buck teamed up with yet another talented friend,
Luke Haines (of
the Auteurs,
Black Box Recorder, and
Baader Meinhof) for a collaborative release, 2020's
Beat Poetry for Survivalists, that matched
Haines' surreal lyrics with
Buck's melodies and guitars. ~ Jason Ankeny & Mark Deming