Posts Tagged ‘U2’

As reported U2 are to play their 1987 huge selling album The Joshua Tree  this year. The band have announced a six-week tour of North American football stadiums, including a stop at the Bonnarroo Music + Arts Festival in Manchester, Tenn., with a three weeks worth of dates in Europe to follow.

The European portion will begin May 8th in London and conclude August. 1st in Brussels, including a stop at Croke Park in their hometown of Dublin on July 22nd.

U2: The Joshua Tree Tour 2017 will mark the group’s first time playing a classic album in concert. They picked one packed with hits, including “Where The Streets Have No Name,” “With or Without You” and “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For.” For hardcore fans, the tour is an opportunity to hear rarely played deep cuts like “Exit,” “Trip Through Your Wires” and “In God’s Country.” It will also feature the first live performance of “Red Hill Mining Town.”

U2 guitarist The Edge says they’re still figuring out how to structure the show. “The show might not necessarily start with Track 1, Side 1 ‘Where The Streets Have No Name’ because we feel like maybe we need to build up to that moment,” he says. “So we’re still in the middle of figuring out exactly how the running order will go.”

“Recently I listened back to The Joshua Tree for the first time in nearly 30 years,” Bono quoted “It’s quite an opera. A lot of emotions which feel strangely current, love, loss, broken dreams, seeking oblivion, polarisation… all the greats… I’ve sung some of these songs a lot… but never all of them. I’m up for it, if our audience is as excited as we are… it’s gonna be a great night. Especially when we play at home. Croke Park… it’s where the album was born, 30 years ago.”

The Edge said that the election of Donald Trump influenced the decision to play The Joshua Tree. “That record was written in the mid-’80s, during the Reagan-Thatcher era of British and U.S. politics,” he said. “It was a period when there was a lot of unrest. Thatcher was in the throes of trying to put down the miners’ strike; there was all kinds of shenanigans going on in Central America. It feels like we’re right back there in a way.”

Perhaps recalling the lyric in “God Part II” where Bono sang, “You glorify the past when the future dries up,” the Edge was quick to note that this new tour isn’t about nostalgia. “There’s an element of nostalgia that we can’t avoid, but it’s not motivated by a desire to look backwards. It’s almost like this album has come full circle and we’re back there again. It’s kind of got a relevance again that we’re certainly aware of.”

U2’s record company didn’t like the title, According to Bono, ‘The Joshua Tree’’s title – coined on a trip to the Mojave Desert – didn’t have the ring of a masterpiece to it. “You get record-industry people saying, ‘As big as the Beatles — what’s the name of the album?’ ‘The Joshua Tree.’ ‘Oh, yeah, oh, right.’ It’s not exactly ‘Born in the Joshua Tree’, or ‘Dark Side of the Joshua Tree’,” It sounds like it would sell about three copies.”

Kirsty MacColl helped decide the track list, The late singer volunteered to pick ‘The Joshua Tree’’s running order while the album was being mixed. The only specifics were for ‘Where the Streets Have No Name’ to open, with ‘Mothers of the Disappeared’ closing. The rest was up to her. It’s fair to say she did a pretty great job.

At the time, U2 felt ‘Sweetest Thing’ didn’t fit with the rootsy, grand-scoped feel of ‘The Joshua Tree’. As such, they used it as the B-side to ‘Where the Streets Have No Name’. But due to its legacy as a fan favourite, the song was re-recorded and re-released as part of the band’s ‘The Best of 1980-1990’ compilation.

The death of the band’s roadie inspired one of the album’s best songs, ‘One Tree Hill’ was written in memory of Greg Carroll, a roadie who went on to become one of Bono’s close friends. A tragic motorcycle accident in Dublin killed Carroll, and the song was written shortly after, building from a jam session between Bono and Brian Eno. The frontman recorded his vocals in one go, too overwhelmed by emotion to attempt another take.

Tickets will go on sale to the general public next Monday, Jan. 16th, for the European dates

The Edge also gave an update on the recording of Songs of Experience, saying that they were “pretty much complete” with it when the election happened and they decided to change their plans. “We definitely want to take this opportunity to think about it, make sure it’s really what we want to put out given the changes that have occurred in the world,” he continued. “And maybe a little will change, but we absolutely wanted to take that chance just to reconsider everything. And who knows? We may even write a couple of new songs because that’s the very position we’re in. We’ve given ourselves a little bit of breathing space for creativity.”

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U2 are to release iNNOCENCE + eXPERIENCE Live in Paris next month on blu-ray, DVD and a lavish super deluxe edition box set.

The core of all three editions is U2’s 30-song concert performance in Paris in 2015 where they played much of their most recent album Songs of Innocence as well as a healthy selection of classics such as Where The Streets Have No Name and With or Without You. This is the performance where they are joined by Eagles of Death Metal at the end.

iNNOCENCE + eXPERIENCE is available on standard DVD, while a blu-ray and two-DVD edition adds plenty of extra content including extra live material (including being joined on stage by Patti Smith) and all the promo videos from the Songs of Innocence album.

A super deluxe edition contains the blu-ray and both DVDs and includes a 64-page hardback book, along with a plethora of bits and bobs, such as postcards/art prints, sticker sheet, stencils, badges, a dog tag (individually numbered) and a USB lightbulb.

iNNOCENCE + eXPERIENCE is released on 10th June 2016.

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The concert film captures the Irish band’s ground-breaking tour as it returned to the French capital for two very special shows in December last year. In addition to guest performances from Eagles of Death Metal and Patti Smith, U2 – ‘iNNOCENCE + eXPERIENCE – Live In Paris’ puts viewers inside the Paris arena with Bono, Adam Clayton, The Edge and Larry Mullen Jr. and deluxe versions of the release also include behind-the-scenes footage of band and crew; an interview with live broadcast director Hamish Hamilton; exclusive tour visuals narrated by the band’s lifelong friend Gavin Friday; music videos; additional live tracks filmed during the tour; and much more. It sees the band perform fan favourites from latest album ‘Songs of Innocence’, with highlights featuring ‘Cedarwood Road’, ‘Song For Someone’ and an acoustic version of ‘Every Breaking Wave’, as well as career- spanning staples including ‘I Will Follow’, ‘Pride (In the Name of Love)’, ‘Vertigo’, ‘Sunday Bloody Sunday’, ‘Until The End of the World’, ‘Beautiful Day’, ‘Where The Streets Have No Name’ and many more.
DVD – Standard DVD – 30 Tracks.
CD / DVD – Double Deluxe DVD Set with DVD one featuring 30 Tracks plus 2nd DVD featuring extras, Naration by Gavin Friday, 9 Videos etc.
Heavy – Limited edition set with 2 DVDS plus Blueray and 64 pagebook, 4 postcards / art prints in black envelope, Sticker sheet, 4 stencils, USB lightbulb, 3 Badges and black dog tag on black chain (individually numbered 00001 – 15000).

U2 – ” Celebration “

Posted: November 23, 2015 in MUSIC
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=27&v=vlfEtJaHakw

After everything everyone still has a grudging respect for U2, and  I say “grudging respect” because a) they are one of the biggest rock bands in history and plenty of people love them ) I can’t overlook the fact that of any “classic” rock act, they’ve probably been consistently better than most bands you can name, and for a long period of time,  Even the towering genius of David Bowie’s peak creative years have got nothing on U2 who have never really been “bad” in over 35 years.  U2 have had a remarkably good run of it. Bono, although he’s undeniably done some good things in the world, strikes me as a man who absolutely who loves himself, like Sting does. So here we have 1982’s “A Celebration.”. “A Celebration” does not appear on any U2 album and was deleted six months after it came out. According to a 1983 interview with drummer Larry Mullen Jr.:

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“We did a video of it. We went to this prison in Dublin, where the 1916 uprising took place, called Kilmainham Jail, and filmed it with the idea of breaking out. It was very much a look at ourselves. Like when we were in school and everyone was telling us ‘you’re crap’ and we couldn’t get a record dealit was the triumph of breaking through.”

The reason for the record’s cold shoulder from the group who recorded it—and were presumably proud enough of it to shoot a video for the song. This is a corker of a song with an amazing guitar riff.  but it’s still tragically the least known song in U2’s large catalog. Eventually it was released on CD in 2004 on The Complete U2.

 

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On November 7th, 1983, U2 released the fantastic live album, Under a Blood Red Sky, an 8 song live album that defined U2 as a live act (yet people were still surprised when U2 played Live-Aid 2 years later).  The album consists of live recordings from three shows on the band’s “War Tour” 

A live recording that features real danger. When U2 played Red Rocks Amphitheatre outside Denver on June 5th, 1983, the weather was so terrible that less than half the sold out crowd showed up, and both opening acts (the Alarm and Divinyls) canceled over safety concerns. That did nothing to deter U2 and especially Bono. In 2004, guitarist The Edge told Rolling Stone that Bono “scared the shit out of me” by climbing a lighting rig to wave a white flag during “The Electric Co.,” coming close to live wires. But the real lightning came from this live album, concert film and the fog-shrouded “Sunday Bloody Sunday” music video. Even though most of Under a Blood Red Sky’s album tracks came from shows in Boston and Germany, the Red Rocks visuals stand as U2’s last moment of young, ragged glory before mega-stardom set in. “It was a benchmark,” said Adam Clayton.

You can watch the accompanying concert filmU2 Live at Red Rocks: Under a Blood Red Sky, whose release helped establish U2’s reputation for putting pathos into their live performances, and one particular performance—that of the track “Sunday Bloody Sunday”, is considered by some to be of the greatest moments in Rock and Roll.

Tracklist:

Gloria
11 O’Clock Tick Tock
I Will Follow
Party Girl
Sunday Bloody Sunday
The Electric Co.
New Year’s Day
40″

peter-rowen-u2-cover-album-boy

Remember the time Bono wasn’t an arena rock god? It’s hard to believe that there was the time when U2 were a small Irish band emerging from the Post-Punk scene—back when they started their career over 35 years ago, on this day (October 20th) with an amazing debut album called Boy. Recorded over a time span of five months, by a band that borrowed a lot from their peers – namely Siouxsie and the Banshees, from whom they pilfered the Glockenspiel sound that defines their first hit single “I Will Follow”,  and Joy Division, whose producer Martin Hannett was supposed to produce U2’s  debut album. but after Ian Curtis’ untimely death, however, the Factory Records sound engineer was unfortunately too distraught to do so.  Despite this, Steven Lillywhite’s production is quite remarkable, and it’s had to imagine “Boy” sounded any different than it turned out to be.

There are many stories to be told about U2’s excellent debut record – one being that the band nearly disbanded because of their Christian faith which didn’t really promote being in a rock band, and another regarding their close connection to the Virgin Prunes – and that the brother of Prunes guitarist Guggi, Peter Rowen, is the boy on the album cover as well as Dik, the Prunes’ drummer, being U2 guitarist The Edge’s brother, and so many other stories.

In case anyone forgot, let it be written there – this is a celebration of a band that has been amazing and rightfully went on to achieve huge success, becoming one of the biggest bands of all time, ad giving us great tracks such as Stories For Boys, The Electric Co., An Cat Dubh, I Will Follow or Out Of Control – just on this album alone—which is now considered a classic. Before Bono went became some sort of mutation of The Fly, U2 went on to release equally strong, sometimes even stronger releases like October, War, The Joshua Tree, Rattle and Hum or Achtung Baby. Nevertheless, U2’s youthful debut is my favorite album of the band, displaying the band’s youthful take on Post Punk, Wave and their influences while already letting glimpses of what they could become shine through their seemingly naive playfulness.

U2 played the third show of their five-night run at Chicago’s United Center Sunday night, and for the second song of the evening, they dug out “Gloria” from their 1981 LP October. “We’re a band from the north side of Dublin called U2,” Bono told the crowd. “This is the first time we’ve played this song in about 20 years.” (They actually played the tune more than a few times on the 2005 Vertigo tour.)

Prior to the show, the group soundchecked 1983’s “Two Hearts Beat As One,” which they haven’t played since the Lovetown tour in 1989. It didn’t make the show, but Bono did sprinkle a few lines from it into “Beautiful Day.” The Edge worked on the guitar parts for “The Crystal Ballroom” from the expanded edition of Songs of Innocence prior to the show as well.

This was U2’s first show since the landmark Supreme Court decision on Friday that granted marriage equality to all Americans, and Bono celebrated by wearing a rainbow flag during “Pride (In The Name of Love).” The singer also modified the lyrics of “Beautiful Day. “See the world in green and blue,” he sang, via  U2 “A rainbow of colors right in front of you.”

U2’s Songs of Innocence + Experience Tour continues with two more Chicago shows this week, heading over to Toronto and Boston before wrapping up the American leg with an eight-night stand at New York’s Madison Square Garden. The band will then head to Europe for the remainder of the year.

U2 – ” New Year’s Day “

Posted: January 1, 2015 in MUSIC
Tags: , ,

u2newyearsday

Song by rock band U2. It is on their 1983 album “War” and it was released as the album’s lead single in January 1983. Written about the Polish Solidarity movement, “New Year’s Day” is driven by Adam Clayton’s distinctive bassline and The Edge’s piano and guitar playing. It was the band’s first UK hit single, peaking at #10 on the singles chart,and charting on the Billboard chart in the United States for the first time in their career. In 2010, Rolling Stone magazine placed the single at #435 on their list of “The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0adDZ2-Y9_s

Bruce Stepped in for the injured Bono at the concert in New York City for World Aids Day December 1st 2014

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

U2 performed on the Graham Norton show broadcast last friday 17th October usually recorded in the studio on the wednesday 15th, afterwards all the band members joined Graham Norton to chat about a few things including Bono’s reason for wearing shades,

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7e18H-mCfdI

U2 performed two songs on the Graham Norton BBC TV Talk show seated with guests Robert Downey Jnr, Robert Duvall, and Stephen Fry the band performed a live studio version of “The Miracle of Joey Ramone” then this acoustic version of “Song For Someone” .