Steve Baltin from
Cash Box named "Strange Currencies" "maybe the sweetest song" from the
Monster album. He explained, "There's a simple longing, mixed with reassuring, in the way
Michael Stipe sings "
I tripped and fell/did I fall/what I want to feel I want to feel it now." A sparse but lovely melody accompanies Stipe's tour de force. [...] Of course it will be a smash at the usual outlets, it's R.E.M.; but look for this one to break out at
Top 40 and maybe even at
Adult/Contemporary." Chuck Campbell from
Knoxville News Sentinel said it's the song "with perhaps the most enduring appeal" on the album, declaring it as "a languid track on which Stipe explores the enigma of a would-be lover with alternating fits of determination and vulnerability." Jennifer Nine from
Melody Maker complimented it as "buoyant". Another
Melody Maker editor,
Andrew Mueller, wrote that it "puts the accompaniment to '
Everybody Hurts' through a cheap and brutal amplifier and replaces universal balm with the self-abasing heroics of the unrequited admirer. "
Fool might be my middle name", he sings, gloriously, uselessly besotted, "
I tripped and I fell...you will be mine". Ah, the pathos, the hopeless deluded joy of it all. Lovely." Barbara Ellen from
NME said, "Like
Morrissey, Michael Stipe is an expert on the agonies of obsessive, unrequited love. [...] The lyrics of 'Strange Currencies' are among his most deceptively simple and potent yet, encapsulating all the need, hope and dread of a painful, secret crush".
Roy Wilkinson from
Select noted how Stipe "wanting
to turn you on". Howard Hampton from
Spin felt it's better than its "tearjerking predecessor", "Everybody Hurts", describing it as a "tremulous, pledging-my-soul" track. ==Music video==