Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Star of Spiderman musical hangs with U2 in studio

Reeve Carney, the original lead in Spiderman: Turn Off The Dark, met old colleague Bono in Dublin




Speaking to HP's Craig Fitzpatrick in the Clarence Penthouse this afternoon, Carney said:

"I actually had the opportunity to hang out him in the studio the other night. Watching them work, I'm like, 'how are you guys still so hungry for this?' That's what's crazy to me. It's really inspiring to see guys who've had that much success still be like that. I'm not even sure I have that energy now!"

Carney was privy to "amazing" material likely to end up on the follow-up to 2009's No Line On The Horizon. "I'm really excited about it," he said.

He previously tweeted:


Carney came to the world's attention playing Peter Parker in the Bono and Edge-scored massive Broadway musical Spiderman: Turn Off The Dark and has performed with the pair on the season finale of American Idol.

He says himself and the U2 frontman bonded over being "huge Beatles freaks" and even got some of that famous Bono advice:

"He said that, when you're dealing with record companies and all these people, you really have to have songs that are bulletproof. It doesn't matter if is a hit, unless everyone thinks it's a hit at the label."

Carney, a musician in his own right, is set to play The Workman's Club in Dublin on March 1.  Bono has enthused of him: “Reeve was everything we could have hoped for: an amazing voice and a truly charismatic presence.”


 http://www.hotpress.com/news

"Invisible": Official Video





'Invisible'. The Video
The official video for 'Invisible', directed by Mark Romanek. 

Shot in black and white, in a Santa Monica airport hangar, with an audience of 1200. 

A sixty second clip from the video, premiered on February 2nd during the Super Bowl, launched a partnership with (RED) and Bank of America in the fight against AIDS

In 36 hours downloads of #U2Invisible raised more than $3m.  On iTunes all proceeds from 'Invisible'  continue to go to (RED) for the Global Fund.  Download here.

http://www.u2.com/

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Bono attended the 86th Academy Awards Annual Luncheon.



The nominees for the 86th Academy Awards gathered  for the annual Luncheon. Bono attended the ceremony at the Beverly Hilton Hotel.

Bono, who spoke to TheWrap.com  at the Academy’s nominees luncheon said his group will perform their nominated song, “Ordinary Love,” featured in the film Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom.

He said it will be the “only band performance of the song” and added, “After Mandela died, we didn’t think it would be right to release it as a single, because it would seem like we were trying to capitalize. So we’re going to do it this once — but it’s a pretty good place to do it.”

Bono also mentioned he’s proposed an idea to the Oscar telecast producers for next year’s show. He’d like the red carpet to have an imprint of the logo for his (RED) charity, which supports the fight against AIDS. He said, “We’ll have a camera looking down on the parentheses, and then the stars can all stand in the parentheses and look up.”


http://www.classichitsandoldies.com/

Adam Clayton settles case against bank and firm of accountants

Adam Clayton during the trial of former PA and housekeeper Carol Hawkins. Picture: Courtpix


U2 bass guitarist Adam Clayton has settled his legal action against a bank and firm of accountants over alleged negligence and breach of contract arising from the misappropriation by his former personal assistant of substantial funds from his bank accounts.
Carol Hawkins was jailed in July 2012 for seven years over stealing €2.8m of Mr Clayton’s money. She was convicted on 181 counts of theft from the bassist’s bank accounts over a four-year period.
When jailing Ms Hawkins, of Crannagh Road, Dublin 14, Judge Patrick McCartan said her crimes were “rooted in greed and nothing else”.
In separate High Court proceedings initiated in 2010, Mr Clayton, Danesmoate Demesne, Kellystown Road, Rathfarnham, Dublin, had sued Bank of Ireland Private Banking Ltd and Gaby Smyth & Co, chartered accountants, Merrion Road, Ballsbridge, Dublin 4.
He claimed €4.38 million damages and €4.8 million damages respectively against the defendants for alleged negligence and breach of contract arising from misappropriation by Ms Hawkins.
The High Court was previously told his claim related to the duties owed by bankers to their professional clients and his allegation he had employed a firm of accountants to monitor and reconcile his accounts.
Both defendants strongly denied liability.
Today, Mr Justice Iarfhlaith O’Neill was told the action had settled and could be struck out. No details of the settlement were outlined.

http://www.irishtimes.com/

Monday, February 10, 2014

The Guardian's and The Telegraph's Reviews on "Invisible"

#U2Invisible. Visible. February 11th.  http://smarturl.it/U2Invisible



The Guardian:
U2 – Invisible: New music

While not a single proper, the electro-tinged Invisible is apparently a 'sneak preview of U2's forthcoming 13th album.

Invisible is the second song in as many months to be released by U2 and yet we're seemingly still no closer to an actual announcement about their much-delayed 13th studio album. "We have another song we're excited about to kick off the album," Bono told Rolling Stone when announcing Invisible, a new song (but not a single) that soundtracked an advert for the charity Red during last night's Super Bowl. "This is just sort of a sneak preview – to remind people we exist," he continued. While that last statement might seem a bit ridiculous coming from a man whose band have sold upwards of 150m records during their near-40 year career, it's also telling given the relatively muted response afforded their 2009 album No Line on the Horizon. So while November's Ordinary Love was U2 in default mode, the brittle, electronic passage that opens Invisible is something of a surprise, coming on more like Joy Division than Coldplay-covering-U2-covering-Coldplay. Of course, by the time the sky-scraping chorus crashes in, ushered by some typically chiming guitars, the whole thing shifts and we're on safer ground, but there's a more textured, characterful feel to it all. By the final coda of "there is no them, there's only us", which is the sort of chant-worthy rock lyric you'd expect from U2, you sort of feel happy to have them back.

http://www.theguardian.com/

The Telegraph 

U2 get maximum Super Bowl visibility

Bono and U2's new single 'Invisible', which was premiered in a halftime advert during the Super Bowl, is a song made for pop radio formats says Neil McCormick

"You don't see me ... but you will," sang Bono at Super Bowl half-time on Sunday. It was no idle promise. U2 used America's most coveted and expensive TV advertising slot to launch their comeback before a television audience in excess of 100 million. Their new single may be called Invisible but its aim is to achieve maximum visibility for the return of (arguably) the world's biggest and most divisive rock band.
At first, the single itself seems surprisingly modest. Sleek and tight, built on a perky drum machine and bass synth rhythm, it mixes pulsing Kraftwerk electro and chugging pop rock guitars with an initially understated and very Eighties retro feel. The chorus surges in a manner reminiscent of their early hit New Year's Day but the band seem almost at pains not to get too grandiose, aiming instead for a kind of insistent, earworm poppiness. It is certainly not the kind of stadium scale anthem fans (and, indeed, detractors) have come to expect but the hookline reveals its ambition. Bono twists the modest title by insisting "I am not Invisible" and it is fair to assume we will be hearing a lot more of U2 in the year to come.

When they finished their 360 world tour in 2011, the band appeared to be beset by an uncharacteristic crisis of confidence. Although it was the highest-grossing pop tour in history, their 2009 album No Line On The Horizon was widely deemed a creative and commercial disappointment, and failed to deliver any big singles. Frontman Bono openly questioned whether the band could remain relevant and insisted "We have to make hits if we are to survive."
Reflecting their determination not to become a vintage, nostalgia act, the four piece have spent much of the past three years writing, recording, rejecting and refining a vast amount of new material, enough for several different albums by some accounts. They have been working principally with ultra-hip American producer Brian Burton (aka Danger Mouse), a leftfield maverick who has scored his own pop hits with Cee Lo Green in Gnarls Barkley, and collaborated with such cult artists as Beck, Damon Albarn's Gorillaz and neo-blues duo The Black Keys.
The first fruits of their labours suggest that U2 are scaling down their rocky sound for a contemporary pop world of small speakers and social network song sharing where digital genre bending electronica reigns supreme. Their Oscar nominated theme song for Mandela, Ordinary Love, was a subdued, stripped back, atmospheric ballad. Invisible seems to confirm an unsuspected taste for musical understatement.

However, there is nothing understated about the marketing campaign, which is what this is really all about. Thirty-second advertising spots at the Super Bowl command fees in the region of 4 million dollars. U2 are launching their new recording in conjunction with Bank of America. You can download it free for 24 hours, with each download generating a dollar donation to (RED), a global charitable fund set up by Bono in 2006 (up to a ceiling of two million dollars). It does seem a slightly odd arrangement, with a bank effectively underwriting the band's marketing with charitable donations. It's the kind of thing sure to annoy Bono 's many critics: good works and self-promotion rolled into one.
It means the single will not be eligible for the charts but I am not sure that matters. They have effectively made a song for pop radio formats that don't play old rock bands anymore, and come up with a way to deliver it straight to a mass audience. Judging by knee jerk Twitter and Facebook response, U2's dedicated fan base seem to be supportive of the band's new direction but the band will want to be seen as more than just a heritage act.
Lyrically, the song seems a subtle comment on the world's dispossessed, and by that I don't think Bono means old rock stars. He is addressing the global poor, especially perhaps the immigrant populations who work for low wages yet attract so much political opprobrium. "There's only us, there is no them," sings Bono in the coda. But while the artistic intent may be to speak for the invisible masses, the commercial drive is surely all about putting the U2 brand where a younger audience will not be able to avoid it.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/

EDUN at New York Fashion Week

NY Fashion Week - Edun


The Africa-focused clothing line founded by rocker Bono and his wife, Ali Hewson, has a fan in Chelsea Clinton.

Clinton, who works with the Clinton Foundation and the Clinton Global Initiative, chatted with the label's two visionaries Sunday night on the front row of Edun's fall runway show.

"I just have such tremendous respect for everything that Ali and Edun have created in their continued commitment to fabricating in Africa, which I think is so important," she said.

Does she think the fashion manufacturing base in Africa is strong enough for other companies to follow suit?

"Absolutely. I mean seven of 10 of the fastest-growing countries in most of the last 10 years have been in sub-Saharan Africa, so I think there is already vital fashion happening in Africa," said the daughter of former President Bill Clinton and former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton.

"It just hasn't penetrated to this side of the Atlantic. I think that with people like Ali and companies like Edun investing in Africa, it will not only help bring African-made products to American consumers but will also, ultimately, help African designers come to the United States."

Clinton called the collection in earthy colors of charcoal, camel and rust "absolutely gorgeous" and thinks it's in good hands with Edun's new designer, Danielle Sherman, who joined last year.

After a rocky start, Edun for the first time made 85 percent of its spring-summer clothes in African factories, primarily in Kenya and Madagascar, Sherman said. The company, intended to promote trade and create jobs in Africa, was founded in 2005.

The company's mission is not charity, she cautioned. "It's not handouts. Its core mission is to give people work. That's really the ethos." Key to success, the company learned, is to have staff on the ground in Africa working closely on the manufacturing end.

Aesthetically, Edun has honed its look. This time around, Sherman incorporated graphic elements through texture blocking and weaving. Other fabric manipulations produced hair-like and Astroturf textures, and she used faux fur.

Photo: Barneys Spring 2014 Women's Designer Book shot by Bruce Weber

"We really are playing with materials to build that youthful playfulness," she said. "There's a kind of art student feeling to it."

Part of that playfulness came in a woven herringbone in patent leather on a chunky-heeled boot, the result of a collaboration with Manolo Blahnik.

"We were really lucky to work with them," Sherman said.


Paul McGuinness on Life After U2, Midem, Calling Out Tech Companies (Q&A)

Paul McGuinness on Life After U2, Midem, Calling Out Tech Companies (Q&A)


Paul McGuinness, legendary U2 manager and winner of this year's Billboard Industry Icon Award, does not mince words. Not only did he deliver one of Midem's best speeches at the award's ceremony, but he also gave a fantastic follow-up interview discussing life after U2, his thoughts on major tech firms, the Midem conference and why he's not afraid to jump into the fray. 
Billboard: Congratulations on being named Billboard's 2014 Industry Icon
Paul McGuinness: I'm grateful, honored, thank you.
You've always kind of shied away from the limelight, how do you feel about doing events like this. 
When people come to work for me one of the things that is part of their jobs is to read the trades. And that always means Billboard, and Music Week as well, and I expect them to know what's in there. And find the time each week to read Billboard, not just weekly but daily actually there's important stuff in there.
Do you look at Billboard.biz?
Yeah of course.

Do you find it hard to take a step back after being in the music industry for so long? Is it a hard to transition to make or are you looking forward to it?
I've been looking forward to it. There are other parts show biz that i'm interested in as well. I'm one of the owners of the film studios in Ireland. And a few years ago I was involved in setting up Ireland's TV3 which i'm not involved in any longer but that was exciting. I certainly intend to remain involved in the entertainment just not managing artists any longer. That's the big change, I'm not going to do that anymore.
Was running the record-setting U2 360 tour the hardest you've ever worked as a manager
Oh yeah, it was a giant undertaking. II think it was about 110 shows and as i said we grossed three-quarters of a billion dollars. So the sums of money were staggering. To set it up was staggering. But then the rewards were enormous.
Did you get burned out working on it? Didn't it run for 2-3 years?
Well it ran for longer than we intended because Bono had a serious back injury so we had to postpone. So everything was bigger. So were setting world records. There was  even a record-setting insurance claim.
How were your stress levels through that?
It was a strain to hear every morning that we had spent x million of dollars and that rate of burn, that's a strain. But Live Nation make it very easy. We have very strong relationship with Arthur [Fogel], it would be impossible without them. The last tour we did without a worldwide promoter was in 1991. When the band took the risk, I didn't really want to take the risk after that and neither did the band.
It was interesting what you said in your acceptance speech about you and the band "infiltrating" a major label at Universal and effectively using the mechanisms to your own benefit and also how you were able to get your masters back.
We got them back, they wanted to extend the deal and we had to claw them back. We said you can extend the deal but we're licensing them to you. We were having enough success to make that work for both parties.
When was your first Midem
I want to say early-80s, about 1983 or 1984 maybe?
And what was it like then?
It was much more crowded. And quite wild late night. It was pre-digital so everyone was making deals in the corridors.  And the record companies in the mid-80s they were just starting the CD boom and there was a lot of let's just say excess. Overall, the music industry prepared for the digital age very badly. There's no doubt about that. All this stuff was coming, you could sense it but the label bosses were very short sighted—anyone who thought past the holiday season was regarded as a strategic thinker.
Do you feel Midem is still worth your while?
Yes I do. Over the years the conference part has become much more significant than it used to be. It used to be really a side part and now there's a genuine exchange of policy ideas and it's very formative and the debate is very often conducted here. People take it very seriously intellectually.  The trade fair has kind of diminished because everyone's doing it online rather than on the street. It used to be much more of a bazaar.
Power Music Biz Trio: (From left) Beggars Group chairman Martin Mills, Billboard Industry Icon Award honoree Paul McGuinness and venerated music man Seymour Stein at Billboard's 2014 Industry Icon brunch at the Carlton Hotel in Cannes, France.Desjardins/Image & Co.