Thursday, June 9, 2011

Back in the USA: U2's Victory Lap




After U2 clattered through a sped-up, revamped version of "Magnificent" at the kickoff of the final leg of their 360° Tour, Bono smiled and offered an apology to the Denver crowd: "It's in development, that one," he said of a song they've played more than 100 times over the past two years. With 7 million fans in attendance, the 360° Tour is the most successful of all time, beating the Rolling Stones' record with a $700 million gross. But with fewer than 20 dates to go, the band still considers it a work in progress. "We'd like to get it to the place that we want it to be," says the Edge. "The final one or two shows, I'm sure, is where we'll fully realize the 360° Tour. This show is still being born, even if it's two years in."

After the band flies to Vegas following the Denver show, Bono dashes over to an elliptical machine set up in his hotel room and gives it a little hug: "Hi, honey, I'm home," he says, cackling. He feels lucky to be able to work out—and to walk without a limp, for that matter. The current U.S. and Canadian dates were scheduled for last summer, until Bono needed surgery for a serious back injury. "There were some terrible things that could have happened," he says. He's fully recovered, but the tour has now gone on so long that multiple members of the crew have conceived and given birth to babies during its run.


With so much time to evolve, the set list is dramatically different from what U.S. audiences last saw, in 2009. Instead of the No Line on the Horizon track "Breathe," the show now starts with a blazing "Even Better Than the Real Thing." U2 are preparing to celebrate the 20th anniversary of Achtung Baby in the fall, so they're in a Nineties mood—"I'm blown away by how productive and creative that time was," says the Edge. They've also added the rarely played "Zooropa" and even a welcome snippet of "Discotheque."

U2 are happiest about a change involving the Burmese leader Aung San Suu Kyi, who had been placed under house arrest by that country's military regime for 15 years: Each night during "Walk On," the band would make a dramatic call for her release—and in November 2010, she won her freedom. Now, in a video freshly shot in Burma, Aung San Suu Kyi herself addresses the crowd before "One" (Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who previously had that slot, popped up during "Magnificent"). "If you demand it, change will come," she says. "It starts with just one person. One."


Even as it embarked on the biggest tour ever, the band was trying to record a new album, and Bono and the Edge were also trying to save their troubled Spider-Man Broadway musical. "Our drug of choice in this band is doing really difficult things," says Bono. Longtime manager Paul McGuinness puts it more simply: "The expression is to bite off more than you can chew," he says. Bono acknowledges that a new U2 album probably got snagged in the web. "But we don't tell Larry and Adam that," he says with a laugh. "It's not like songwriting has stopped. We're crushing tunes every day."

It wasn't until early this year that the group abandoned the idea of getting an album out before the end of the tour, after working on separate sets of songs with Lady Gaga producer RedOne and Danger Mouse. "We had to have a meeting and look at the schedule to see if we could pick up any extra time to work on it," says Adam Clayton, "and we just realized that we couldn't. To be honest, everyone was a bit gutted. But it was the only sensible decision."


When the tour ends, the three 150-foot-high stage sets that the band has been dragging around will survive: McGuinness has been negotiating to "recycle" them as permanent event spaces around the world. The band will return to the studio, with the expectation of releasing an album toward the end of next year, most likely from the Danger Mouse sessions. "We have to focus on what we do best, and the work we did with Danger Mouse came closest to that," says Clayton. "We want to be in the clubs and make pop music as well as the thing U2 does, but in the end, the thing we did with RedOne doesn't feel like the right fit."

U2 are looking forward to moving on. "It's making me giddy," says Bono, "the idea that this thing will be over in August. I will be sad to say goodbye to the space station, but I'm very excited about the free time to finish these songs." How about some rest? "I'm not tired at all," says Bono, taking a gulp of beer. "But I'm looking forward to, as Johnny Cash said, 'Walking barefoot in my yard.'"






By BRIAN HIATT FOR ROLLING STONE



The Edge on writing new songs

In this video, the Edge discusses how U2's 360 tour has evolved from a showcase for their most recent album No Line on the Horizon to a celebration of their entire body of work, past, present and future. "We're in that stage of just enjoying writing and playing and not thinking too much about creating a finished collection of songs," he says of the new material the band has debuted in recent concerts.


www.rollingstone.com

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Surprises in Oakland!





We love it here, Oakland, San Francisco, you’ve got a lot of everything. You guys invented  the C21st, didn’t you?'

A beautiful night, tailgating parties in the parking lot, fine warm-up with Lenny Kravitz and the  usual storming opening to the show with Real Thing, I Will Follow, 'Boots', Magnificent, Mysterious Ways.... before  Bono takes time out to reflect a little on the unique local vibes.

'I think I understand why you think, and why you act differently,' he says. 'It’s music: music shaped the Bay Area and the Bay Area shaped the world.'

An already top-of-the-range decibel reading now goes completely off the scale.   'And the music is still potent,' he continues. 'The ideas are still coming. Don't know if you noticed, but there was a major summit over the Bridge last night, they're calling it the G3 Summit - U2, Greenday and Metallica. In bars.'



Adam and Bono, he reports, were not among the high-ranking delegates at the Summit but Edge is able to report back on the salient agenda items: 'We dealt with the important issues of the day, new touring concepts, we discussed the possibility of the three bands creating their own festival and touring... some great ideas discussed.'
But after the first hour, he concedes, his memory 'gets fuzzy'. Eager for more information, Bono turns to Larry - whose response is characteristically robust.

'What went on at that summit... stays at that summit.'

This response is universally acclaimed and Bono turns to the subject of Lou Reed, who is in the house tonight, at which point Larry breaks into a chorus of 'Perfect Day'...  and Oakland goes ballistic.

'Lou, we love you man!' says Larry at the end of his moment on lead vocals, a moment no-one is going to forget.

Bono confirms that tonight  'the great man is walking amongst us' and soon we're into All I Want Is You. Later, during Vertigo, Lou is back in the set when Bono sings a  snatch of 'Dirty Boulevard'. And, as in Seattle the other night, Bono also drops into David Bowie's Space Oddity in the outro to Beautiful Day -  Commander Kelly brings greetings from space again.

'Imagine a man looking down on us from 200 miles up. Looking down at our beautiful crowded planet.  What would he say to us? Commander Kelly?'

As Miss Sarajevo arrives, Bono adds, 'America, you don't have to put another man on the moon... Just bring us back to earth...'




'Thank you,' says Bono. 'For your love, your support...thank you for giving us a great life...'


Setlist


Even Better Than The Real Thing

I Will Follow
Get On Your Boots
Magnificent
Mysterious Ways / Norwegian Wood
Elevation
Until The End Of The World / Anthem / Where Have All The Flowers Gone?
Perfect Day / Happy Birthday
All I Want Is You
Stay (Faraway, So Close!)
Beautiful Day / Space Oddity
Pride (In The Name Of Love)
Miss Sarajevo
Zooropa
City Of Blinding Lights
Vertigo
Crazy Tonight / Discothèque / Life During Wartime / Psycho Killer
Sunday Bloody Sunday
Scarlet
Walk On / You’ll Never Walk Alone
One
Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow / Where The Streets Have No Name
Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me, Kill Me
With Or Without You

www.u2.com

Sunday, June 5, 2011

U2 brings 'Beautiful Day' to Qwest


Special to The Seattle Times
If there was anything the 65,000 U2 fans at Seattle's Qwest Field could have found fault with in the band's show Saturday night, it might have been the choice of opening song. A magnificent night of music, on the best day of weather in nine months, might have kicked off with the one song in U2's catalog that would have best summed up this outdoor concert: "Beautiful Day."
As it was, "Beautiful Day" showed up 10 songs into the set, and Bono did acknowledge the weather: "The whole city looked like it had come out of a washing machine," he said, standing in the middle of the "Claw," the 90-foot-tall scaffolding that covered the stage.
The "Claw" was the most extravagant and creative staging ever used in any live performance. With 500,000 video pixels, it sometimes dominated the show, and gave the proceedings an IMAX-in-the-making feel.
U2 has always been a band that loves a grand gesture, but they've also succeeded because their music conveys intimate emotion. That's why the highlights were the smaller moments, like an acoustic take on "Stay (Faraway, So Close!)," where Bono and leaned on guitarist the Edge. Larry Mullen Jr. and Adam Clayton were also spot-on all night.
The 360 Degree tour is the single biggest moneymaking tour in rock history because the circuslike spectacle of it is without peer. But the tour also has drawn fans because U2 reworked many of their songs with fresh arrangements. Bono alluded to this: "If there is one idea that underpins our band, it's the idea that you can start again."
The show was a personal renewal for the singer — it had been postponed for a year after he had back surgery. He seemed healthy, and effusive, and added lines from David Bowie, Carole King, R.E.M. and the Beatles into songs.
Even "You'll Never Walk Alone," made famous by Frank Sinatra, was worked into "Walk On." Amnesty International logo lights were paraded around the stage, and Bono talked about the detention and freedom of Aung San Suu Kyi — her son was at the show.
U2 songs are most inspiring when they are political (footage of Arab-world uprisings played during "Sunday Bloody Sunday"), but even with the 54-ton "Claw," it was a moment of personal intimacy during "Beautiful Day," that most moved. Astronaut Mark Kelly sent a video message from space to tell his wife (U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, injured in an Arizona shooting) he loved her, adding, "she knows." Bono worked the line into "Beautiful Day," making the sweet refrain of "she knows," part of the song. It was that kind of small moment that made a giant show something to remember.

Seattle Concert: 4th June 2011





'Emerald City, shining in the sun, where are you gonna take us?'

It was the question Bono asked as the show opened in Seattle tonight  and we had the answer during Beautiful Day, when NASA Commander Mark Kelly brought us a message from the final space mission of the shuttle Endeavour. (more on this coming up).

On a glorious evening at the home of The Seahawks, U2360  took Seattle into orbit tonight ...  and safely back to earth again. From the opening chords of Even Better Than The Real Thing to the closing benediction of Moment of Surrender this was a night to remember - with an audience who'll never forget it: 'You're incredible people!'

Thanking everyone for their patience in waiting for these postponed dates, and to Lenny Kravitz for 'giving us lift-off',  
Pearl Jam's Eddie Vedder, members of Heart and  Peter Buck of R.E.M. were seen around.There was  a nod to  REM ('It's the end of the world as we know it...') in 'Until The End of the World' before Bono described meeting two year old  Sophia earlier in the day -  playing the guitar. Sophia got him thinking about the band.

'I was watching her play and I know, for a fact, that I can behave and feel  like that.
'You know, if there is any single idea that underpins our band,  it's that you can start again. 
'Pretend you don't know us!  We've been on the road for a while, but this is the day we start again...
'You think of him as a tough guy.  But I tell you, he is very thoughtful.  On the drums -  Larry Mullen Jr.
'On my left, you think of him as a ladies man.  Well he is.  But he is a perfect gentleman. On bass -  Adam Clayton.
'Edge, you think he is a techie zen master guitar genius but I see him as one of Lady Gaga's dancers. A funky dude on the dancefloor, just get out of his way.
'And as for me, despite what you’ve heard, I’m a man of simple needs. Just get me 70,000 people, 200 articulated lorries and a spaceship, and I feel good about myself...'

And just get us All I Want is You, Stay, Beautiful Day, Zooropa, City of Blinding Lights.... and we feel good about ourselves too.

'Neon heart dayglo eyes 
A city lit by fireflies
They're advertising in the skies
For people like us
And I miss you when you're not around
I'm getting ready to leave the ground...'

Special mention tonight for Alexander, the son of Aung San Suu Kyi, who was with us and to Bill and Melinda Gates, in their home city. 

Moment of Surrender is a chance to 'think of our little planet spinning round the sun -  this is for all the people who are trying not to fall off …'





SET LIST
Even Better Than The Real Thing
I Will Follow
Get On Your Boots
Magnificent
Mysterious Ways
Elevation
Until The End Of The World
All I Want Is You
Stay (Faraway, So Close!)
Beautiful Day
Pride (In The Name Of Love)
Miss Sarajevo
Zooropa
City Of Blinding Lights
Vertigo
I'll Go Crazy / Discotheque
Sunday Bloody Sunday
Scarlet
Walk On
ENCORE
One
Where The Streets Have No Name
ENCORE 2
Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me, Kill Me
With Or Without You
Moment Of Surrender


More pics here,




www.u2.com

Thursday, June 2, 2011

U2 puts on concert of the decade




Being in one place at one time with 65,000 other people who are all focused on ANY single thing is amazing. It’s a miracle in itself.

It’s the sort of thing that separates us from the animals.
So U2 had a lot going for it even before the band showed up at Commonwealth Stadium on Wednesday night. Bonus that these guys are masters of the stadium spectacle. They’ve done this before, haven’t they?

The great thing about U2 is that they’re not ashamed to be rock stars, not afraid to make everything they do larger than life and in fact seem eager to turn every concert into “the concert of the decade.”

Wednesday night proved that point in Edmonton, as strong a show if not better than the band’s 1997 appearance in the same building – the concert of the last decade, and we seem to be missing a decade here. No matter. U2 is timeless.

The hit parade spanned 35 years and the myriad moods of U2, but the feel of this show was all in the moment.

With all the hype, massive production and electric stadium energy, the concert was surprisingly simple and intimate. Guitarist the Edge, bassist Adam Clayton and drummer Larry Mullen Jr. played in a relatively small space in the centre of the 50 metre “Space Station” that was topped by a humongous elasto-morphing, high definition video screen. With at least eight cameras catching every little detail of U2’s performance, every tic, grimace and smirk, you really felt like you were right there with the band. Best of all: you could see they were having fun. That has to count for a lot after
35 years.

Bono was a loose and gangly presence, striding around the enormous spiraling catwalks and moving bridges over a sea of lucky fans in the inner circle as he serenaded the audience. He urged us early, “Come on, City of Champions!” Nice he got Edmonton's nickname right this time. He talked about rugby, about “ice hockey,” which also seemed go over well with the crowd. He played with his melodies, pumped as much drama into his performance as he could – fully aware that all his flamboyant rock star moves could be taken as ironic. It doesn’t excuse excess, but it sure makes it a lot more fun.

Much appreciated was the various drips of Canadiana inserted into the show. At one point, Bono brought up a woman from the audience to recite the lyrics to Neil Young’s Heart of Gold as if they were poetry. Bono looked so relaxed he might as well be in his own living room. When he sang, his
power and passion were tremendous. This is the very definition of being “in the zone.”

Hearing 65,000 fans cheer their brains out is a thrill in itself. After an opening set from the Fray – the American band that everyone thinks is British and sounds like a cross between U2 and Coldplay (does every modern rock band with a piano have to get compared to Coldplay? Yes) – U2 band took
the stage around sunset to open with Even Better Than the Real Thing. Read into that what you want. The Edge’s distinctive chiming guitar led the way in I Will Follow, sounding as fresh as it did when it came out in 1980. Mysterious Ways brought the energy to an even higher level, something that would happen repeatedly throughout the night: Beautiful Day, Pride (In the Name of Love), Vertigo, each song much more than a mere song, but a stadium anthem that invites the mass singalongs that again are thrilling in themselves, just to be there. To elevate, as it were, rock songs into such grand and grandiose statements would seem absurd from anyone but U2.

Fourteen years since their last appearance in Edmonton, Bono, The Edge, Adam and Larry have almost perfected the stadium rock experience. They’re not ashamed to make it as big as they possibly can – because that’s what we expect from these guys.




BY  ,EDMONTON SUN
http://www.edmontonsun.com


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Edmonton: Hitch-hiking and Concert

It was threatening to rain and once or twice it began to drizzle but in the end it held off right until the close of the show and, compared to Winnipeg, it even  felt quite warm. 
This being Canada, there was a serious sporting motif in the show tonight, references to ice hockey, rugby, American football and,  er,  hitchhiking...

'Edge and I used to play rugby,' remembered Bono. 'There's none of this dressing up as cars and crashing into people like in American Football. You play ice hockey...'

Judging by the reception to this innocent remark,  they don't just play it here, they live it. 'You won what? The first game, of course you did. One game up!'

As luck would have it, on his day off, Bono picked up some firsthand experience of the local ice hockey team, The Edmonton Oilers.

'I like people who play ice hockey, they stop for hitchhikers, I know this from experience. I was hitchhiking in Vancouver yesterday, actually I was! And this guy and his girlfriend picked me up. He was cool, an ice hockey player, his name was Gilbert Brule as it happens, I'm so grateful I've decided I want to be Gilbert Brule.(click here for the hitch-hiking tale)
Brule, being an Oiler, this led Bono to compare the rest of the band to  Oilers.
'Larry is more like the Mark Messier of the band, the dude gave us our first and only job.
'On my left, the Grant Fuhr of this band, need I say more? On the bass Adam Clayton Jnr...
'On my right, now who might he be? He's kind of great, the Great One. Who am I talking about? The Wayne Gretzky of U2. On lead guitar - The Edge!
'What do you want to play The Edge?'

All I Want Is You gave way to Stay as 65,000 Canadian fans joined in word-for-word and ahead of Beautiful Day a girl arrived on stage to read lyrics from Heart of Gold by a Canadian rock'n'roll legend Neil Young and Bono ended the song by returning to it: 'Keep me searching for a heart of gold...'

Scarlet, Walk On and One were a celebration of Aung San Suu Kyi and the continuing campaign to free those imprisoned for their political views in Burma. Some of that light drizzle at the end of City of Blinding Lights  gave us a snatch of Singing in the Rain but with Vertigo ('are you ready for lift-off?) this space station took off again and Edmonton was kissing the future.

Did we mention that the band were on fine form again tonight?  Unusually the set list was pretty  similar to the one in Winnipeg  but tonight Moment of Surrender was back and with a special dedication to the survivors of the fire in the Alberta town of Slave Lake.

“I have some people here from Slave Lake I’d like to dedicate my song to . Whoever it is you want to hold in your hearts, hold them in your heart.”

 Setlist 



Even Better Than The Real Thing

I Will Follow
Get On Your Boots
Magnificent
Mysterious Ways
Elevation
Until The End Of The World
All I Want Is You
Stay (Faraway, So Close!)
Beautiful Day / Heart Of Gold
Pride (In The Name Of Love)
Miss Sarajevo
Zooropa
City Of Blinding Lights / Singing In The Rain
Vertigo
Crazy Tonight
Sunday Bloody Sunday
Scarlet
Walk On / You’ll Never Walk Alone
One
Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow / Where The Streets Have No Name
Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me, Kill Me
With Or Without You
Moment of Surrender


www.u2.com/www.u2fanlife