Classic or Dud: U2

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You can always spot the 'custodians of rock' phase a couple of years before it comes. They wear leather waistcoats, hats and do photoshoots in the Arizona desert. Of course just out of shot is the helicopter waiting to whisk them back to air-conditioned comfort. Then before you know it the guitarist is trading 'licks' with Buddy Guy or someone.

Dr. C, Friday, 30 March 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

i don't sing along in the pub.

i don't care how much joy division they listen to (i mean, so does mogwai from all accounts). the overcooked grandiose "epic" vocals and cornball lyrics ("we eat and drink while tomorrow they die" *slap*) and totally nondescript rhythm section ruin very promising guitar parts and eno's production. i'd at least listen to an instrumental album by the edge.

search: "new year's day"

sundar subramanian, Friday, 30 March 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

so u2 = hitler? i only wished to convey the thought that they were not contrived.

keith, Friday, 30 March 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

I find Dr. C's analysis spot on. The alternate symptoms in the late eighties were wearing bad paisley clothing and getting produced by Jeff Lynne.

Ned Raggett, Saturday, 31 March 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

u2 = total classic. it's music for anyone who remembers being young and stupid, but who still had dreams and a whole lot of passion -- that is, before cynicism gets the best of you and your idealism is shot to hell.

if one doesn't like bono's voice or even bono himself, then there's not much you can do. though if you can dislike the band just because of bono, you probably don't much like the music in the first place. for example, i hate thom yorke. truly and thoroughly. but when the music's fine, i can put that aside. (stunning revelation: i quite like "pyramid song.")

i'm arguably the most classic rock person on this board, so it should be no surprise that i'm a sucker for their grandiose arena rock. here's a question: how many of you that rate the rolling stones a classic, rate u2 a dud?

fred solinger, Sunday, 1 April 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

I do at least rate "Have You Seen Your Mother Baby ..." as something closer to classic than I do any U2 song.

Robin Carmody, Sunday, 1 April 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Total shite. Only 'Under a Blood Red Sky' is okayish. The rest is well wank of the highest order. Of course it doesn't help when your singer is such a wanker and proud of it. And they're always at least 5 years behind the cool thing. At least Eno got some easy money producing their shit.

Omar, Tuesday, 3 April 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

yeh but fred, rolling stones are a classic, and u2 are a dud, because rolling stones have got 'shine a light' and 'have you seen your mother...' and 'under my thumb' and 'lets spend the night together' and all of 'their satanic majesties request' (underrated album or what?), whereas u2 have got... um, er, um...

gareth, Tuesday, 3 April 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

who are you guys kidding? u2 are classic! this thread is kind of pointless, i don't understand why so many people say dud. i can't stand the rockstar posing, especially after the 'returntoform' of the new record that personally i find boring as shite, but they're still u2, and they've been around for about 20 years and they still have hit singles that hold up over time and i can stand sitting through. classic, naturally. you try being as successful as consistently as they have!

michael dieter, Tuesday, 3 April 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Classic or Dud is no place for objectivity, Michael. I think cutting my fingernails is more consistently and aesthetically 'successful' than anything Bono's done for 14 years.

Tom, Tuesday, 3 April 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

" you try being as successful as consistently as they have! "

Michael, I don't understand your argument. Is it of '50 000 000 Elvis Fans Can't Be Wrong!' variety? The majority is always right, huh? Not that it even is a majority.

Nick, Tuesday, 3 April 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

two months pass...
This is not a question worth discussing, since obviously, whether you like to admit it or not, U2 is considered to be a classic group. In about 5 years or so, they will definitely be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, along with the other classic rock groups. I was surprised to see that so many of you reacted negatively to the group, calling them duds. I've never met someone who had such animosity to the group, usually at the worst people think U2 is ok music, but in no way are they a contraversial or disappointing group.

But I won't use the argument that U2 has millions of followers around the world, because so do NSYNC and Britney Spears, and we all know how talented (gag) they are. Instead, think about their 20+ year career history, and the number of hits they've produced. Whether someone likes U2's music or not should not be criteria in considering a group to be a classic. I'm not a Rolling Stones fan, but I have to admit, they are a classic, whether I like their music or not. U2 is in the same category- despite personal musical preference, they supercede personal taste because, in essence, THEY ARE A CLASSIC! You do not need to be a fan of U2's music to realize that they are a classic. Besides, how many are involved with Greenpeace, Amnesty International, etc etc and donate countless hours and money to causes, such as relieving 3rd world debt? Too many other rock groups are too high on coke and are too self-involved to partake.

Many of the previous arguments I've read are hardly convincing and seem petty, "U2 = dud, their music sucks and it's for old people and like, Bono's a twat and egomaniac...blah blah blah" So what if Bono's a drama queen? It's all part of the Rock act and makes it more interesting to the fans and followers (of which, you all know, they have millions). The group isn't just about Bono, come on, it's the entire package. U2 is without a doubt, a classic, and an undeniably great group.

V. MacManus, Monday, 11 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Classic if only for a)not even trying to hide the fact they have the worst bass player in history, and b)the line "Man melts the sand so he can see the world outside."

tarden, Monday, 11 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Whether someone likes U2's music or not should not be criteria in considering a group to be a classic.

Oh, that's a completely rubbish argument. Why is wrong for people to consider things on their own terms, and not accept pronouncements from Rolling Stone, Q et al at face value? I rather like the idea of people actually thinking for themselves instead of blindly accepting what they are told.

Nicole, Monday, 11 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

U2 involved in Greenpeace & Amnesty International...leaving aside that Greenpeace denies the livelihoods of strip-miners and lumberjacks, and Amnesty meddles in the internal security of tin-pot dictatorships who do perfectly well on their own thanks, I think a band's musical achievements should be separated completely from the amount of grandstanding they indulge in.

tarden, Monday, 11 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Which cuts both ways of course, as I like U2's records a lot. I think Zooropa is better than Amnesiac. But Jubilee 2000? C'mon, it's not HIS money that he lent out 30 years ago and didn't get the interest back, was it?

tarden, Monday, 11 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Finally found a page on this thing where I disagree with EVERYONE!

I can't hardly stand early U2 (whiny, monotonous, overblown), but everything from Joshua Tree on I find to be real groovy. Even Rattle & Hum. Achtung Baby is a great classic. The first side of Joshua Tree is flawless. Am I crazy?

brah gruplee, Wednesday, 13 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

First side of Joshua Tree IS flawless, second side irredeemable, especially the godawful harmonica.

tarden, Thursday, 14 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

That _Joshua Tree_ analysis is so on the money that it's taken my breath away. And here I was thinking I was the only one who felt that way...

Early U2 is quite clearly the bomb. The first three albums are glorious in their entirety. After that, they tend to be a mixed affair (the sole exception being _Achtung, Baby_ which is pretty much brilliant except for one song which is so dull that I can no longer recall its name or tune).

Dan Perry, Thursday, 14 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Classic. Some people have been saying things like "boring" "dull" and the rolling stones are better. That is total BS!!! Listening to U2 is like listenening to something that has never been done or never will or should not be done again. This is solid gold. What isn't boring? Some wastoid band like limp bizkit or metallica that are trying so hard to be hardcore that they are just blabbing on and on without a purpose. And the Rolling Stones? One of the biggest sellouts in history. No band on earth bought more into the corperate rock of the seventys. Some of their later stuff sounds like disco CRAP!!! We need U2 not just for the euphoric music but for sincerity.

Luke, Thursday, 21 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

"Listening to U2 is like listenening to something that...should not be done again"

Are you sure you mean this? Though I entirely agree.

Tom, Thursday, 21 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Disco crap, but GOOD Disco Crap, see the misunderstood 'Hot Stuff'.

Omar, Thursday, 21 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

one month passes...
I can't help but agree with V. MacManus.

Look guys, U2 is a powerful band. They inspire extreme hatred in some people, but they inspire extreme love in far more. Regardless of how much Bono offends you (I'm still unclear as to how that can happen... he's quite harmless) the facts still stand: U2 is one of most artistically and commercially successful bands of all time.

Many of you mantain that they were good in the 80's but sold out in the 90's. I suggest looking up the word "irony" in the dictionary. During their ZooTV and PopMart stadium tours they flat out refused corporate sponsorship (unlike the Rolling $tones) and lost money as a result. Just as you wouldn't assume that a battered old book is of poor literary quality based on its cover, you shouldn't attribute shallowness to a band just because they have video screens and flashy lights.

And if U2 were a dud band, why would they go out of their way time after time after time to change their musical style, often against what is currently popular. 'War' was a big success, so why go do 'The Unforgettable'? If 'The Joshua Tree' made them the most popular thing to come out of Ireland since the potato, why do something like 'Rattle and Hum'? And if their earnest, save-the-whales style of the 80's worked so well, why in God's name would you go off with something like 'Achtung Baby' and ZooTV? And why then change into 'Pop'? Why?

Because they've got balls. U2 just keeps changing and growing, usually with success (UF, JT, Achtung) but sometimes getting burned (Rattle and Hum, Pop). Instead of choosing the quick and easy path by just repeating a familiar sound over and over, U2 never let the critics, the media, or any of you punks drag them down.

Because like the Beatles and the other established classic bands, U2's twenty-year career has been a continuous growth process. U2 just keeps evolving, so they ALWAYS HAVE SOMETHING NEW AND INTERESTING TO SAY.

And THAT is the critical component in seperating the wheat from the chaff. THAT is what makes U2 a classic, and THAT is what makes the Rolling $tones a dud.

Amen.

Sam Cunningham, Sunday, 29 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

both

classic in the sense that they came out with a few good pop songs and records

dud in the fact that they are absolute crap now, are absoulute hypocrites and sellouts (the abc documentry sponsored by McDonalds, ticket prices only the rich can afford, bono dissing the "violence" by anti-capitolist protestors in Genoa whilst he was on a luxury yacht with tony blair without one mention of that protestor who was shot twice in the head, etc), were influenced by punk and yet at the same time sneered at the genre, along with the fact that bono's ego is larger than the size of the american continent and believes that the world revolves around him

i also think they ripped off depeche mode-badly-when they came out with achtung baby, only a few good songs on that record, and pop was much, much worse

i no longer buy u2 albums anymore, not even used

the walrus, Friday, 3 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

What is this bizarre and much-cherished idea among U2 fans that U2 records sound radically different from one another?

Tom, Friday, 3 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

They do! Good and Bad sound extremely different to the discriminating listener!

Sterling Clover, Friday, 3 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

You listen to Bono's obnoxious falsetto on Lemon and then listen to Sunday Bloody Sunday and tell me that their style never changed, Tom.

Ally, Friday, 3 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Yeah, _Zooropa_ doesn't sound AT ALL like it came from the same group that produced _Boy_.

Dan Perry, Friday, 3 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

one month passes...
That's it - the falsetto. That's why I hate them now. I guess when a guy has no singing talent, i would rather hear him scream than try to sing. (Although Axl Rose screamed a lot, and he just plain sucks.)

Dave, Tuesday, 2 October 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

actually, the falsetto is the Edge

chameleon, Saturday, 13 October 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

two months pass...
I confess I can absolutely not be objective about that subject since I'm a big U2 fan. However I admit that U2's musical lifestyle has had lows (lots in the latest album) and highs (almost all the rest), that Bono sometimes gets to sing out of tune (only on stage, but who doesn't ?!) and that his ego's really as large as America. But U2 emit so much strength, (good-)will, energy, faith and pure love that they're able to kidnap my heart and steal my mind. And when I get them back I do feel great. They're able to influence some people's mood, maybe even to open some other's mind. Is it what you find so dud about them ? That they're able come up with something more spiritual than "I can't get no satisfaction" ? (I'm not criticising the Stones, I love that song). Anyway they're classic !

Emeline Brunet, Friday, 21 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

They're able to influence some people's mood, maybe even to open some other's mind. Is it what you find so dud about them ?

Uh, no. They just *bore* me. Is that so hard to understand?

Ned Raggett, Friday, 21 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Bono had a mullet at one point, no? And Adam Clayton a rattail?

If so, dud.

If not so -- liked them well enough when I was a teenager. Thought Rattle and Hum (a/k/a Boring and Dumb) was the aural equivalent of a clump of pubic hair in the shower. Originally hated "The Fly," and thought Bono's Fly-schtick was stupid, but came to like Achtung Baby well enough. Stopped caring not soon thereafter. Like the fact that Bono speaks up for Jubilee and Amnesty International, but since when does being a do-gooder necessarily = being a good music-maker?

Verdict: classic, but barely.

Tadeusz Suchodolski, Saturday, 22 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Wow, I can't believe I never posted on this thread. U2 roolz! Really, I don't think they've come close to the Achtung, Baby level with anything since. But each of Zooropa, Pop, and All That . . . has two or three really nice little rock ditties. And I think they are by far the most bearable rock band that gets major radio play in the US.

bnw, Saturday, 22 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

And I think they are by far the most bearable rock band that gets major radio play in the US.

A very good way of putting it.

Ned Raggett, Saturday, 22 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

one month passes...
truly classic.... the beat, the passion, the raw sound... it helped me come back to life in the late 80's

kevin moore, Thursday, 24 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I knew Bono was somehow involved with evil magic...

adam, Saturday, 26 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

it helped me come back to life in the late 80's

Your name is not Lestat.

Ned Raggett, Saturday, 26 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I'm on the lookout for a used copy of Zooropa. I like that record.

Mark, Saturday, 26 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

three weeks pass...
"I suppose they make a great band for somebody who buys one album a year."

Well I guess you buy more than one album a year since "_Achtung Baby_ deserves death", U2 just bore you and "This _Rattle and Hum_ album is pretty shit, one or two tracks aside". Just curious, I wonder what kind of music has your favour and what albums you didn't drown in your acid remarks this year.

Emeline Brunet.

Emeline Brunet, Friday, 22 February 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I have never owned a U2 record. Am I just wrong?

tav, Friday, 22 February 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I wonder what kind of music has your favour and what albums you didn't drown in your acid remarks this year.

Last year? Lateralus, Exciter, Group Sounds, The Blueprint, Ended Up a Stranger, Amnesiac, How I Loved You (and the Michael Gira solo) for starters, I could go on if you wanted me to. Point is, I love *that* and find U2 objectionable -- and I really don't care what you think. If you're a U2 fan in turn, you shouldn't be caring what I think. ;-)

Ned Raggett, Friday, 22 February 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Ned, you will give in to "The Fly". That's probably the best single U2 ever released. Of course, nowadays I'd like to punch Bono into next week, but that song is the real, yo.

Dan Perry, Friday, 22 February 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I. HATE. U2. I want to cut up their leather clad bodies and feed them to all their slack jawed guinness drinking tractor driving Irish fans.

I also love that guy at the top who said they experimented with electronica on 3 of their albums. you can't buy comedy that good. Don't you love when bands don't actually "experiment with electronica" but they say that they did and then all their fans are like "HEY THIS E-L-E-CTRONICA STUFF IS VERY GOOD".

Ronan, Friday, 22 February 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Ned, you will give in to "The Fly".

I was so not a fan of that song when it came out. It's been years since I've heard it, so maybe time has dulled the pain -- though I suspect not.

Ned Raggett, Friday, 22 February 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

"The Fly" has one of the greatest choruses that U2 ever wrote, ranking up there with "I Will Follow", "New Year's Day", "Pride", and "With Or Without You".

Dan Perry, Friday, 22 February 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

"The Fly" has one of the greatest choruses that U2 ever wrote

love the backhanded compliment Dan! i mean, thats hardly saying much is it;)

gareth, Friday, 22 February 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Oh, come on. Back in their prime, the thing that made U2's singles so great was how the chorus was absolutely perfect for the song. "I Will Follow" is particularly great in this regard, as are "With Or Without You" and "The Fly". (And, now that I think about it, "Beautiful Day" and "Stuck In A Moment That You Can't Get Out Of".)

Dan Perry, Friday, 22 February 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

"Stuck in a VH1 Video You Wish You Could Turn Off," more like. Bring on the hate! Icky album.

Ned Raggett, Friday, 22 February 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

"The Fly" not only has a fantastic chorus, the song's basically all chorus - the verses are pretty awkward and to me, tossed off. Actually, I suppose the solo is pretty as well, but really it's the chorus that does it for me. Sometimes I wish that's all the song was.

Vinnie, Friday, 22 February 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Bono truly missing the opportunity to reprise his Sinatra duet, which would have been fitting for a few different reasons.

Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 1 October 2023 17:47 (six months ago) link

That was the most arresting thing about the original Xoo TV production for me, falling through these idk star maps in slow motion for Love is Blindness, it was absolutely perfect, I wonder if they've replicated that.

MaresNest, Sunday, 1 October 2023 17:49 (six months ago) link

You'd think it would be perfect - it's already planetarium shaped in there - but they've gone for silhouettes of butterflies and insects, increasing in quantity until they've blacked out almost the whole screen.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fZIYLMM0ykE

you can see me from westbury white horse, Sunday, 1 October 2023 17:57 (six months ago) link

Eugene Robinson of Oxbow has made U2 the subject of his latest newsletter:

He was quiet. Unusually quiet. Or at least unusual for an Irish cat from New York. It could have been the drink, or the night, but it was significant enough to warrant an intervention, or at least a query. In this case, what the hell was wrong?

“I just got back from Reno,” Shaughnessy said of “the biggest little city in the world”. This, in and of itself, may or may not have been a cause for sorrow. But I waited.

“I saw Steppenwolf.” Steppenwolf of the heavy leathers, fringed vests and overall bad-ass biker beards and suggestion of the same in the shape of their hit song “Born to Be Wild.”

“Did they play ‘Born to Be Wild’?”

“They were playing it as I walked in,” he said, his brows knit. “They were wearing rented tuxes. And did it lounge style.” He paused in a way that indicated that this was not at all for comedic effect.

“To be funny?”

“There was nothing funny about this at all.”

And so the last and enduring image is of the young turks having metastasized into old men just doing what old men do: looking for a warm place out of the rain where they might make a little scratch for having been any/everything but.

A distinctly mixed bag of circumstances because on the one hand like the Chinese proverb seems to imply — “Don’t laugh at the prostitute. Laugh at the poor person.” — there’s nothing wrong with getting that money. On the other hand like Joseph Welch once asked of Senator Joseph McCarthy, “have you no decency, sir?”

I’m unsure of what price is attached to decency but waking up this morning to news that the band U2 started their 25-night residency at Las Vegas’ MSG Sphere, complete with Paul McCartney, Snoop Dogg and Dr. Dre in the house, I had started to wonder. Specifically, when did it happen that there was no social sanction at all for doing the lamest shit ever?

Or, more specifically, when did we outgrow shame?

And don’t hit me with the “get it? card”, as if this was some meta ploy to mine irony for all it’s worth and I just don’t…get it, that is. If you had unlimited funds and means and were limited only by your imagination is this where it carries you? Keep in mind this is also not a critique of U2’s music, music I haven’t listened to after they sang about boys meeting men in the shadows. I mean I guess their music is fine.

In reality I really have a soft spot in my heart for U2 as it was through their good graces that my group OXBOW actually managed to have a place to record, Windmill Lane in Dublin, when we recorded music for our Serenade in Red record, with vocals by Marianne Faithfull. Picking through the remnants of their equipment on the weekend that they were choosing not to work I got misty eyed about their graciousness, whether or not it was done specifically to help us.

Moreover, I remember when in some sort of turmoil my friend Bruce Lamont from the great band Yakuza admitted to me in a quiet moment that he had a side project. The side project in question? A Led Zeppelin cover band. And a Led Zeppelin cover band that not only seemed to be sanctioned by Robert Plant but also had just got a booking for a national tour of the House of Blues.

I was ecstatic, and said so. In the same way that you’d be if you had a friend who fought the law but instead of the law winning, it was your friend who had done so. It felt like a win for the little guy, like the house had taken one on the chin, and so how is it that the U2 deal is different?

And more importantly is it better or worse after the Apple iPod stunt?

For those with shorter memories, this was when Apple and U2, back in 2014, force fed the entire installed base of Apple users with the new U2 record, whether or not they had requested it. It felt like a muscle move, and for those of us who despair at how casually muscle moves are made, it was a casus belli.

Bono went on to apologize for said stunt. Which was probably the right PR move. Though it should also be noted that he has not backed away from the latest Jann Wenner imbroglio, which seems very much the wrong PR move, but you know what? I’m not big on apologizing. Especially after having a boss who would routinely require these as some form of ritual humiliation, I find them to be an extension of muscle, and lacking in authenticity.

In fact I dream of a malefactor standing at a podium to deliver a speech that I lust after with some sort of sexual intensity: “SO….you GOT me!” And then goes on to non-apologize in the most Christian of ways: “YOU who are sin-free step RIGHT UP!”

Even Trump, the most massive of line steppers, has pulled shy of doing this instead just opting for the systematic denial of the reality of experience.

But U2, replete with more money than G-d, critical accolades for the better part of their careers, and some small scintilla of integrity, pulls a Celine Dion and goes to the heart of a place that’s as steeped in corporate capital as any bank for…their fans? Their wallets? Their legacy? Even an exceedingly high Hunter S. Thompson dug on the soullessness of the Vegas endeavor and yet here they are.

And apologies to those Dion fans. HER being here makes total sense and seems to stem from a deep understanding of her place in space. So hats off to her.

But U2? Cui bono here?

Well, it seems we have 25 days to figure this out. As a touring musician I sort of understand it from a mountain going to Muhammad perspective: if OXBOW could do 16 shows in a row, like we just did, without driving to 16 different places, wouldn’t that be cool?

It would be. However if you think U2 is piling into a Mercedes Sprinter cargo van to scoot between shows you’re out of your mind. No, these climate conscious rockers are private jetting to gigs leaving me just where I was: why?

I guess if I could figure this out I’d be where they are instead of where I am, but where I am is just fine since it’s absent all of the nettlesome questions regarding, what the FUCK was I thinking? when I look in the mirror.

read-only (unperson), Sunday, 1 October 2023 21:50 (six months ago) link

a dullard ponders

mark s, Monday, 2 October 2023 08:42 (six months ago) link

Dud.

papal hotwife (milo z), Monday, 2 October 2023 09:01 (six months ago) link

Been looking through the various clips on YT, almost feel like polling the backgrounds, Streets is amazing.

MaresNest, Monday, 2 October 2023 23:53 (six months ago) link

We should have a dedicated SPHERE thread

kirsten gilla band (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 3 October 2023 04:37 (six months ago) link

I like how the sphere looks from the outside.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/F7TXe66WkAADFRR?format=jpg&name=large

Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 3 October 2023 13:35 (six months ago) link

Wait, is no one going to invoke the Saudi Orb?

https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRNOcem4Vwtkkh0OsYF0-IahlFNvpHCzbBKEw&usqp=CAU

The Royal House of Hangover (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 3 October 2023 14:26 (six months ago) link

one month passes...

Feel like this is my most listened to bootleg ever

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DN-oQWqrDi4

It's not even the best PopMart boot - it sadly omits the Lemon Perfecto mix and obv a lot is missed out by not having the visuals - but it just sounds so great.

you can see me from westbury white horse, Thursday, 16 November 2023 16:18 (five months ago) link

I heard what must be a new (to me) U2 song on the radio today, something called "Atomic City." It's fine, and sounds a bit like "Big Neon Glitter" by the Cult. I think it was maybe released to promote the Vegas thing. I'd paste the video but ... nah, it's basically a commercial, and the band seems bored.

Josh in Chicago, Monday, 27 November 2023 19:05 (four months ago) link

That single was depressing. By far the most memorable thing about it was the hook they borrowed from Blondie's "Call Me." I get it's an homage, but with little of value to add, the record suggested they were out of ideas.

birdistheword, Monday, 27 November 2023 23:04 (four months ago) link

(For new records that is - they still put on a good spectacle.)

birdistheword, Monday, 27 November 2023 23:04 (four months ago) link

one month passes...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rXfwz0fMWdQ

MaresNest, Monday, 15 January 2024 10:31 (three months ago) link

Cool. They look so strange stuck on that little stage after so many vast sets. I bet Bono is relieved not to have to run around the whole time.

Josh in Chicago, Monday, 15 January 2024 14:25 (three months ago) link

one month passes...

I saw the band pop up in the news again, was it just because the Vegas residency ended?

Apparently Larry was there but is still recovering from his surgery. And I guess Bono hasn't been seen playing guitar since his bike accident, too. Age or injury eventually gets everybody.

Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 6 March 2024 17:47 (one month ago) link

Well, Bono has never been particularly good at playing the guitar, so not much is lost. That may be harsh but it's the case. Even when he played, it was mixed low and made little difference.

alpaca lips now (Ye Mad Puffin), Wednesday, 6 March 2024 18:28 (one month ago) link

i think the Vegas stuff has worked out really well for them, kind of the opposite of the iPhone shit. using this venue as a way to get back into the conversation after several albums which didn't do the trick was pretty sharp.

omar little, Wednesday, 6 March 2024 18:34 (one month ago) link

I was surprised to learn a few years ago that Bono's playing the only electric guitar on Roy Orbison's "She's a Mystery to Me" besides Orbison himself.

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 6 March 2024 18:38 (one month ago) link

the footage looked rad as hell tbh

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 6 March 2024 18:56 (one month ago) link


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