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R.E.M.'s hometown of Athens, Ga., still welcomes fans 45 years after the band started there

Paul Butchart gives tours of musical landmarks all over Athens, Ga. In his hands is R.E.M.'s 1983 Murmur album, with the original trestle bridge photograph on the back cover. The bridge behind Butchart is a reconstruction, and now part of a walking and biking trail.
Melanie Peeples
Paul Butchart gives tours of musical landmarks all over Athens, Ga. In his hands is R.E.M.'s 1983 Murmur album, with the original trestle bridge photograph on the back cover. The bridge behind Butchart is a reconstruction, and now part of a walking and biking trail.

R.E.M. is turning 45 years old this Saturday, which is a perfect time to take a trip to its hometown.

Let's just say, you can get there from here. All it takes is the right frame of mind.

You don't take a trip to Athens. You make a pilgrimage.

Now, get in your car and point it towards Athens, Georgia. You're ready for some driving music like "Driver 8." The world outside blurs past you. The walls are built up, stone by stone. Fields dividing one by one. Take a break when you need to.

Before you know it, you have reached your destination. It's a plain, little parking lot, with a free-standing church steeple.

Saint Mary's Episcopal Church Steeple, also known as the R.E.M. Steeple, stands in monument to the place where R.E.M first performed on April 5th 1980, for a friend's birthday party.
Melanie Peeples /
Saint Mary's Episcopal Church Steeple, also known as the R.E.M. Steeple, stands in monument to the place where R.E.M first performed on April 5th 1980, for a friend's birthday party.

"We are standing here at the site of Saint Mary's Episcopal church," says Paul Butchart, who gives tours to people from all over the world, who come here for one reason. " It was here in 1980, that R.E.M. played their first show." It was a birthday party of a friend of his.

The church building is long gone, torn down to make way for condos, but the brick and stone steeple remains, a monument to where it all started.

But if you really want to go back to the beginning, to "begin the begin" you're gonna go to Wuxtry Records in downtown Athens. Not the main store, but the boxcar sized building on the side.

Wuxtry Discount Records is just around the corner from the main store. This is the actual space where REM's Peter Buck and Michael Stipe first met.
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Wuxtry Discount Records is just around the corner from the main store. This is the actual space where REM's Peter Buck and Michael Stipe first met.

This is the exact space where Wuxtry employee Peter Buck met a customer named Michael Stipe, who kept coming back to buy cool records. They struck up a friendship and, in true Athens fashion, formed a band. And in 1987 had their first big hit with "The One I Love."

Nick Bonell works here today and, of course, plays in his own band, The Asymptomatics. He says even though it's been 14 years since R.E.M. disbanded, the fans keep turning up.

"All kinds of people come to this store asking questions about the history."

Nick Bonell sits in the Wuxtry record shop where then-employee Peter Buck met Michael Stipe. Shortly after REM was born. Bonell, true to Athens form,  also plays in a band: The Asymptomatics.
Melanie Peeples /
Nick Bonell sits in the Wuxtry record shop where then-employee Peter Buck met Michael Stipe. Shortly after, R.E.M. was born. Bonell, true to Athens form, also plays in a band: The Asymptomatics.

Less than a mile is away is the famous Weaver D's restaurant. There is only one room, and as you walk in, Dexter Weaver calls out to you, "What can I get you, Doll, Baby?"

Squash casserole is on the menu along with a host of other Southern specialties.

Outside the little green brick building hangs the sign with the restaurant's slogan: Automatic For The People. R.E.M. liked it so much, they named an album after it.

This one-room soul food restaurant, Weaver D's, was an R.E.M. favorite. They even named their 1992 Grammy-nominated album after the restaurant's slogan: "Automatic For the People."
Melanie Peeples /
This one-room soul food restaurant, Weaver D's, was an R.E.M. favorite. They even named their 1992 Grammy-nominated album after the restaurant's slogan: "Automatic For the People."

Weaver, a tall, jolly man of 70 tells the story as, "we were nominated for album of the year," like he was on the album. "I was! They got the title from me," he laughs. "So, it's we."

R.E.M. even took Weaver up to New York for the Grammys. When he came back home, sacks of fan mail started rolling in. Those who couldn't travel here to eat, ordered T-shirts.

Dexter Weaver, owner of Weaver D's, says the members of R.E.M. still stop in from time to time, when they're in town.
Melanie Peeples /
Dexter Weaver, owner of Weaver D's, says the members of R.E.M. still stop in from time to time, when they're in town.

Half a mile down the way from Weaver's restaurant maybe the most iconic R.E.M. landmark of them all: The Murmur Trestle, an old wooden railroad bridge immortalized in a black and white, pure Southern Gothic photo on the back cover of its 1983 album.

Today's bridge is a reconstruction, but it looks a lot like the old one. It spans a little creek, in a lush, green ravine. Bring your album cover and take a photo with it. The words ring in your ears. "This is where we walked. This is where we swam. Take a picture here. Take a souvenir." 

Happy birthday, R.E.M.

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