We All Go Back to Where We Belong explained

We All Go Back to Where We Belong
Cover:R.E.M. - We All Go Back to Where We Belong.jpg
Alt:A black background with "R.E.M." written in white along the left side and "WE / TO / ALL / WHERE / GO / WE / BACK / BELONG" written in white in a starburst design, clockwise from left-to-right
Border:yes
Type:single
Artist:R.E.M.
Album:Part Lies, Part Heart, Part Truth, Part Garbage 1982–2011
Recorded:July 2011
Studio:John Keane Studios, Athens, Georgia, United States
Label:Warner Bros.
Prev Title:Discoverer
Prev Year:2011

"We All Go Back to Where We Belong" is the final single from American alternative rock band R.E.M., released in 2011. The song is the lead single from the band's final album, the career-spanning greatest hits compilation Part Lies, Part Heart, Part Truth, Part Garbage 1982–2011. The song was made available over the Internet on October 17, 2011.

Recording

The song was originally written by bassist Mike Mills and was recorded by the band in Athens, Georgia in July 2011, after the sessions for its final studio release, Collapse into Now. The band finished this song as well as the demos "A Month of Saturdays" and "Hallelujah" with producer Jacknife Lee initially with the intention of creating an album independently, after having fulfilled its contractual obligations to Warner Bros. Records, but decided to disband instead.

Two music videos with direction by Dominic J. DeJoseph and Michael Stipe—one starring Kirsten Dunst and the other with John Giorno. Stipe conceived of the concept for the videos spontaneously while recording his vocal track and asked DeJoseph to make the videos in the style of Andy Warhol's Screen Tests. Stipe personally asked Dunst—his neighbor in New York City—to star in the video and did three takes with Dunst; the one that was chosen had him singing the song to her off-camera.

Reception

Critical reception

Early reviews of the song considered it a "low-key, string-drenched ballad" (Stereogum) and compared it to the pop styling of Burt Bacharach and R.E.M.'s 2001 album Reveal. Jon Dolan of Rolling Stone gave the song 3.5 out of five stars, writing that the "orchestral folk rock... suits their breakup perfectly." Exclaim! Alex Hudson had a similar sentiment, declaring the single "a nice kiss-off with lyrics that read a bit like a pensive goodbye message." Claire Suddath of Time also considers it a fitting final single, comparing it with the wistfulness of "Man on the Moon" and The Boston Heralds Jed Gottlieb has compared it favorably to R.E.M. ballads "Nightswimming" and "Perfect Circle".

Chart performance

Chart (2011)Peak
position
Netherlands (Dutch Top 40 Tipparade)19
Venezuela Pop Rock General (Record Report)8

Personnel

R.E.M.

Technical personnel

References