U2 part of Haiti charity project

Its been reported on a couple of sites and tweets around the globe that The Edge say U2 has recorded a new song as part of a Haiti Charity project being organized by Jay-Z and Swizz Beatz. 

Comments heard on Dave Fanning radio (2FM) where during part of a conversation at Edges house.  Most of the conversation was around “It might be loud”  Catch the whole interview on via this direct link.

“Last night we wrote a song … Bono got a call from a producer, Swizz. He and Jay-Z wanted to do something for Haiti. So, Bono came up with the phrase on the phone, and last night we were here, we wrote a song — finished, recorded, and send it back to them. So, that might be the next thing you hear from us!”

Remember U2TOURFANS has been collecting donations over the past week. Also we have been working with our photographer team to find some rare images we could offer up in exchange for a donation. The photos come in different sizes and of course without the watermark. When you select a image your purchase amount will include a donation.

 

Credits: ATU2, U2Tours, U2TOURFAN, U2TOURANS, Dave Fanning

U2TOURFANS Offers Limited Edition Images to Support Haiti

U2TOURFANS has been collecting donations over the past week. Also we have been working with our photographer team to find some rare images we could offer up in exchange for a donation. The photos come in different sizes and of course without the watermark. When you select a image your purchase amount will include a donation.

The photos we have to offer where taken during the Tampa show from the photo pit( Offical Photo Pit Area ) Dave has been a rock photorgrapher for a couple of years and has provided us wth many images. We know you will agree that they are pretty great. Consider getting the as gifts and know that your making a difference.

All the photos can be found here.

Dave Long/U2TOURFANS 2009

 

KFOG Reports More Tickets

 

U2’s 360° Tour pulls into the Oakland Coliseum June 16, for what promises to be the biggest concert event of the year.  The show may still be a few months off, but we’re giving Fogheads the chance to win free tickets all next week.  


Listen to KFOG Monday 1/18 thru Friday 1/22, between 7am and 7pm, and when you hear the U2 Montage, be caller #10 to 1-800-300-KFOG and you’ll score a pair of tickets to the show.  We’ll be giving away 2 pairs of tickets a day, so stay close to your radio for your chance to win!

Oakland was quickly listed as “sold out” when tickets originally went on sale on November 2nd. Good tickets in all price levels will be released at 10am Tuesday 1/19 at LiveNation.com.

 

“The Unforgettable Fire”

— Irish band U2 released “The Unforgettable Fire” in late 1984. At the time, Bono was developing into not only the band’s charismatic leader. The time also marked the beginning of his more outspoken diatribes against injustices. And while some of the songs on the album weren’t as fully developed as the band’s future work, that chapter in the group’s history gets an upgraded overview that’s worth revisiting on the reissue of the updated, two-disc reissue of “The Unforgettable Fire” (Island).

On earlier albums, such as “Boy” and “War,” U2 made it clear that they had no problem wearing their hearts on their sleeves and their fists in the air as they proudly exhibited youthful rebellion.

But their world view became even wider thanks to their burgeoning notoriety. Despite having success and adulation, they were more acutely aware of the wrongs they saw in their expanded world view. Bono became enthralled with Martin Luther King Jr. during this period. King’s spirit is audibly alive on the defiant “Pride (In the Name of Love),” the album’s big single, and “MLK,” one of the set’s standout tracks.

Elsewhere on the album, U2 effortlessly conjures iconic images in their focus on the Unites States and its rich history, as heard on the solemn “Elvis Presley and America” and the equally stunning “4th of July.”

“Bad,” the disc’s emotional centerpiece, now takes on an eerie, almost hypnotic air in light of the world’s increasing fragmentation, with its message continuing to resonate as dramatically as it did more than 25 years ago.

The second disc in the package will confound collectors, as it includes a generous selection of rarities and remixes, most notably live versions of “A Sort of Homecoming” and “Bad,” outtakes like “Love Comes Tumbling,” plus a magnificent remix of “Wire” that will put a smile on the face of any U2 fan.

This is the album that linked U2’s youthful restlessness to their compelling maturity, as their next album, 1987’s “The Joshua Tree,” would find them perfecting their own kind of rock ‘n’ roll that moves the body, challenges the mind and awakens the spirit.

This updated version of “The Unforgettable Fire” manages to give a deeper, fascinatingly detailed perspective of a band leaving behind its youthful restlessness and confidently maturing with purpose and grace.

U2 goes to Africa

Tribute albums are challenging because not only do the acts involved have to face the reality of knowing that their version of a well-known song will never match the original’s impact, but sometimes, participating in such a project might be more of a marketing ploy and not be such a “tribute” after all.

Neither is the case on “In the Name of Love: Africa Celebrates U2” (Shout! Factory).

Bono has campaigned for many causes to help the people of Africa. That commitment didn’t go unnoticed by music producer Shawn Amos, an African-American who originally went to Africa to help build housing and was inspired to put together this collection as not only a way to pay tribute to U2, but also as a way to give back.

Proceeds generated from the disc’s sales will go to the Global Fund, a charity that seeks to fight AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria in Third World Countries.

Amos not only shows his formidable abilities as a producer, but also as an arranger, staying true to the rhythms and essence of African music while tipping his hat to U2’s Bono, The Edge, Adam Clayton and Larry Mullen Jr.

This collection comes to life thanks to several breathtaking performances, including Tony Allen’s otherworldly “Where the Streets Have No Name,” Les Nubians’ chilling “With or Without You” and a spine-tingling recasting of “Pride (In the Name of Love)” by the Soweto Gospel Choir.

The most dramatic moment may belong to Keziah Jones, who glides over the poly-rhythmic grove of “One,” and delivers warm, transcendent vocals.

Jones sounds to deeply understand the song’s plea for unity. This song is the most touching moment on the disc, one that makes it sound less like a tribute album and more like a love letter from the dry, parched plains of Africa to the cold, narrow streets of Ireland.



Evening Empire

For some reason today the following book came up for review again. A departure from the normal U2 news, we thought it might be a fun little weekend read by the fire -
Evening’s Empire is an alternative history of the sixties generation that feels truer than what really happened. This is a funny, sad testament to the lost boys who wouldn’t grow up.”
— Bono

The Year Is 1967. In England, and around the world, rock music is exploding — the Beatles have gone psychedelic, the Stones are singing “Ruby Tuesday,” and the summer of love is approaching. For Jack Flynn, a newly minted young solicitor at a conservative firm, the rock world is of little interest — until he is asked to handle the legal affairs of Emerson Cutler, the seductive front man for an up-and-coming group of British boys with a sound that could take them all the way.

Thus begins Jack Flynn’s career with the Ravons, a forty-year journey through London in the sixties, Los Angeles in the seventies, New York in the eighties, into Eastern Europe, Africa, and across America, as Flynn tries to manage his clients through the highs of stardom, the has-been doldrums, sellouts, reunions, drug busts, bad marriages, good affairs, and all the temptations, triumphs, and vanities that complicate the businesses of music and friendship.

Spanning the decades and their shifting ideologies, from the wild abandon of the sixties to the cold realities of the twenty-first century, Evening’s Empire is filled with surprising, sharply funny, and perceptive riffs on fame, culture, and world events. A firsthand observer and remarkable storyteller, author Bill Flanagan has created an epic of rock-and-roll history that is also the life story of a generation.

BBC 'inappropriate' with U2 Album !

The BBC has admitted coverage of the launch of U2 album No Line On The Horizon last February, went too far - giving “undue prominence” to the band.

Critics said the BBC had given U2 “the sort of publicity money can’t buy”.

The corporation’s editorial complaints unit (ECU) acknowledged that radio coverage of the event, including a rooftop concert, breached guidelines.

It added the use of the slogan U2 = BBC “gave an inappropriate impression of endorsement”.

RadioCentre, the trade body for commercial radio companies, made a formal complaint over the coverage. 

U2 at the BBC
The surprise concert drew crowds of onlookers in central London

Complaints over the free publicity given to the band on BBC TV, radio and online included those of Conservative MP Nigel Evans, who said it was “the sort of publicity money can’t buy”.

“Why should licence fee-payers shoulder the cost of U2’s publicity?”

The ECU admitted that a reference to the BBC being “part of launching this new album”, in an interview between Radio 1 presenter Zane Lowe and U2 singer Bono, was inappropriate.

The body also upheld a complaint that it was inappropriate for the Radio 1 website to contain links to the websites of ticket agents for the band’s concerts.

‘Potentially sensitive’

“The Radio 1 leadership team have reminded executive producers and presenters about the issues to be considered in relation to judgments about undue prominence, and the distinction between the reporting of new artistic work and commercial promotion,” it said, earlier this week.

“The management of BBC Marketing, Communication and Audiences (the Division responsible for the U2 = BBC graphic) has reminded all staff of the need to consult the editorial policy team in a timely manner for advice when potentially sensitive issues such as commercial interests are involved.”

However, complaints about an edition of Jo Whiley’s Radio 1 show, and a BBC News online report of the U2 concert on the roof of Broadcasting House, were not upheld.

A crowd of around 5,000 watched the rooftop show, which capped off a day of promotion for the Irish band’s 12th studio album, with U2 appearing as special guests on Radio 1.

The band performed four tracks during the 20-minute gig, which was broadcast live on DJ Chris Evans’s BBC Radio 2 show.

U2TOURFANS Offers help Haiti

U2 fans we are setting up a way for our supporters to show some support. Consider your donation below or choosing one of the other links to show support.

Haiti has been hit by the first large earthquake in 240 years. The enormity of the effects of this devastating 7.0 quake are only barely understood at this time. Thousands may have been killed and tens of thousands left homeless. to make a difference. Please take this chance to lend them your support.

We thought a few lines from “ONE” would help all of us remember we are ONE.

One love
One blood
One life
You got to do what you should
One life
With each other
Sisters
Brothers
One life
But we’re not the same
We get to
Carry each other
Carry each other

One…life

One

 

U2TOURFANS has setup a link for donations that will be collected on behalf of its readers as well as our crew will be providing donations. We will post the total amount of the donations within the next 24hrs. Right now is the most important time to collect donations.

 

U2, Americal Idol, and Elevation DVD

Tour season is right around the corner and if you’re a fan you about jumping off the roof right about now. The band has been just kicking back, no major announcements. Of course lots of interesting rumors, should we pass them along? Well the only one worth throwing out is could it be possible that U2 allows the “artists” from American Idol to use their songs again? We asked the question last night on our Facebook fan page and course your welcome to throw up your comments too. Most say “Hell No”  

After watching a couple of minutes of AI we choose to dig into our DVD collection and attend a virtual concert.

U2 - Elevation Tour 2001: Live from Boston

After the huge, lavish spectacles of previous tours, U2  decided to tone things down a bit for Elevation, which accompanied their All That You Can’t Leave Behind album. Just as the album marked a return to a simpler more stripped-down sound, the live shows returned to smaller venues and a more intimate show, and from start to finish Elevation provides a welcome reminder of what a great band this is. Recorded in Boston, the show features a healthy mix of new and old songs, which were written over the course of two decades but sound as fresh and relevant as ever. From classics like “Sunday Bloody Sunday,” “Where the Streets Have No Name,” and “I Will Follow” right up to instant favorites such as “Beautiful Day” and “Elevation,” every track is stunningly executed. If you saw the concerts, this is a worthy and lasting souvenir; if you didn’t, watch this and you might be kicking yourself.

The disc does a great job of showing how straightforward the tour was. It was a big tour with a huge crew, but on stage the four musicians were pretty much on their own. The camera catches a few great close-ups of the members of the band in which you can really see their facial expressions. The Edge seemed quite preoccupied with playing the music. Larry Mullen and Adam Clayton seemed to be genuinely enjoying themselves. Bono played the rock star. There are a few great shots where you see The Edge looking to Larry Mullen for the rhythm. For a second they seem less like U2, and more like four guys in a band.

The setlist included songs from All That You Can’t Leave Behind, a few of the U2 classics, and a few refreshing unlikely choices (Gone, Bad, Stay (Faraway, so close), Until The End Of The World). The Edge used the set list as an opportunity to parade an amazing set of classic guitars including a full-bodied Gretsch, a pearl Telecaster, Edge’s classic Gibson Explorer, a Godin, a beautiful clear woodgrain finish Stratocaster, and a 12-string Richenbacher that The Edge kicks off the stage.

What we found most striking about the DVD was how great U2 is at putting on a rock concert. You can really see the experience of 20 years of touring. Bono plays the 20,000 strong audience like it was a percussive instrument. The Edge’s guitar and Bono’s voice alone can fill a stadium design for NHL hockey.

The album contrasts nicely with the material in the context of the concert. If Stuck in a Moment were a little more immature and unrefined, if would fit in perfectly on Rattle and Hum.

The live performances shed new light on some of what we had though where the weaker songs from All That You Can’t Leave Behind. New York, which always struck us as goofy (comparing the heat of New York to a “hair dryer in your face” just doesn’t hold up next to the biblical alegory of The End of the World- which Bono introduces this night with “this is judas”) and Walk On both shine make more sense in the live context.

Highlights include, the inclusion of Until The End Of The World and a great rendition of Stay (Faraway, so close). Introducing the band, Bono says “Even his mother calls him, The Edge”. The introductions to The Fly and Where the Streets Have No Nameare classic goosebump-inducing stadium rock moments.

Well how many more months away are we from the start ? 4 Months -

The Edge says he hates jamming

U2 guitarist the Edge is not a big fan of jamming. “I try and avoid it at all costs. Jamming is really the most awful, excruciating experience for me, I really don’t enjoy it,” he says.

“First of all, that’s not how I work as a guitar player. I compose using the instrument, I don’t really sit down and play for the sake of playing stuff.

“So the idea of jamming - endless, directionless noodling around some nondescript chord progression - I really find very boring.”

The Edge was in Dublin last week for the launch of the movie, “It Might Get Loud,” which focuses on guitarists Jimmy Page, The Edge and Jack White.

The Dublin launch was a rare respite from the monster 360 Tour which earned a whopping $123 million in the U.S. for the band, who sold more than 1.3 million tickets along the way

'Spider-Man' turns on the lights

“Spider-Man, Turn off the Dark,” the $50 million Broadway musical by Bono and The Edge, is back on – but not until fall 2010.

The show, the most expensive in Broadway history, was supposed to open in March at the Hilton Theater. It ran aground when David Garfinkle, its inexperienced and inept lead producer, failed to come with the money.Bono’s longtime business partner, Michael Cohl, stepped in to clean up the mess.

The financing is now in place, with a chunk coming from Disney, which recently acquired Marvel Comics. The show will likely begin previews in September and open in November, sources have said Refunds are now available for people who bought tickets for performances this spring — previews were supposed to have begun next month — and do not want to exchange them for new dates in the fall. “Cohl and Disney have sorted it all out,” one source said. “Garfinkle is around in name only.” Julie Taymor, who directed “The Lion King,” is staging “Spider-Man.” Alan Cumming is still on board as the Green Goblin. Spider-Man will be played by newcomer Reeve Carney.

 

Under the Big Top

Happy New Year, and please welcome our guest writer Nikki back -

By  Nikki Vanasse

Blackstone, MA

Crew Pass - ( Working Crew)U2’s convictions about live performance began even before the roots of their calling took hold. When teenagers form a band, they are most concerned with such details as learning their craft (U2 knew all of three chords and Adam barely knew how to pedal a bass), getting gigs, and making enough money to score a decent meal. For U2, it started with lighting.  The lighting had to be just right.  They obsessed with the lighting!  The visual aesthetic was nothing short of critical. The most recognizable show from their past, before The Joshua Tree tour, was the stage awakening that was the War Tour.  Red floors, white flags, stage climbing, camouflage draped over stage equipment; they were a band making a statement.  You see, it’s what they’ve always done. Statements about politics, religion, pop culture.  It should be no surprise to any hardcore fan that the shows evolved into what they are today.  The band’s fundamental philosophy was that the show had to be magnetic, keep everyone’s attention, and accessible to everyone.

Since the late 70’s when the boys were cutting their teeth on the local circuit, U2 always sought intimacy with their audience. The band performed at venues such as Dandelion Market in Dublin, Mount Temple, Trinity College, churches, youth clubs, and community centers mainly to provide access to the younger fans who essentially couldn’t get into the licensed pubs because they were simply too young.

U2 was born during a time when punk was on fire and rock bands were redefining the live rock show. In the late 60’s, Pink Floyd paved the way for the epic visual rock show followed by celebrated bands and artists such as Genesis, The Velvet Underground, and David Bowie. Bono’s MacPhisto, Mirror Ball Man and the Boxer characters are reminiscent of Peter Gabriel’s Green Man or David Bowie’s Ziggy Stardust or Thin White Duke. While U2 was yet to venture into such elaborate performances, these were some of the influences that tilled the soil that would soon cultivate the seeds of the operation we see today with their most technologically ambitious 360 Tour.

The minimalist stage sets of the Boy, Gloria, and War tours became increasingly difficult as the popularity of the band grew when The Unforgettable Fire was released and the tour had to be planned. The size of the venues were increasing and it became progressively difficult to keep the spectacle low-key.

At this time, Bono’s stage clothes consisted of a black knit mesh shirt, black and white checkered or black leather pants, and the mod black leather boots you could find anywhere in Europe at that time. Ironically enough, Adam, who has always been known as the most posh of the band even from the moment he answered Larry Mullen Jr.’s ad for a bass player at Mount Temple, often looked like any other kid cruising the streets back then. Except for the striking bush of blonde curls! The Edge and Larry dressed just like any other teenager you could find in Dublin. Today, they are very well put-together.

With War, things started to get more refined. There was also a lot of stage climbing by Bono. While the Unforgettable Fire proved more of a challenge for the stage design they had loved and proven successful, they still managed to create a very specific mood and atmosphere with large backdrops and monochromatic banners hanging above the stage.  With the explosion of The Joshua Tree, U2 was catapulted into superstardom and with that success, were provided the financial leverage to start exploring new presentations for the stage.

Another Show, Another town, another whateverWillie Williams has been a collaborator with the band on all aspects of their show since 1983. He takes direction straight from the band. They have always been in charge. In U2 Show (Diana Scrimgeour), he states that audiences assume that everything is spontaneous and controlled by the band; that it’s easy to change up the show on a whim from one night to another.  Not so.  It’s a very tight operation. The music goes hand in hand with the presentation and while there is some breathing room, there is little of it.

Williams has worked with many of the heavy hitters in rock such as R.E.M., David Bowie, and The Rolling Stones.  He states that “U2 is unique among their peers in respect of their approach to performing.” They are included in the design process from the time the very first thread of an idea is casually raised until the end of the tour.  Just like they’ve always done from the very beginning.

Williams’ job is to bring art to the stage and between tours, he gathers ideas.  He just doesn’t worry about the art of the show but what kind of show it might be.  He knows that fans don’t necessarily want U2 to change, but they also don’t want them to repeat themselves, and that’s a tremendous challenge.  About a year out from the first scheduled date of the tour (which in my opinion is a relatively short time to pull something together as massive as Zoo TV, Pop Mart, or 360!), Williams and the band come together like old school chums and begin churning ideas.  One of the most challenging pieces is figuring what technology is available, or on the cusp of availability by the time the show hits the road.  There’s a rule the design unit follows:  to conform to three concepts until there is that one idea that continues to interest and excite them.  Thus, the production is born.

While the designs are being discussed, ideas are funneled down to the band’s production manager, Dennis Sheehan (with the band since 1982), who is simultaneously covering details such as seeking bids from fabrication companies as soon as the design is settled, making sure the budget is on track with the accountants, and leading discussions with the entire tour team so that they get the idea and feel of the show and get proactive about any potential problems, in order to get in front of the 8-ball a bit.

Production rehearsals get underway and the crew spends two to four weeks constructing the show.  When shows are as complex as Zoo TV/Pop Mart/360, it’s critical to practice the set-up so that the crew can become as efficient as possible and iron out any difficulties or issues with the process.  This saves time.  Time is money.  With the cost of the current tour at $750,000, it’s an important factor.

Control Room The production rehearsals are Williams’ opportunity to physically test all his concepts and plans regarding lighting, video effects, atmosphere…the mood and feel of the show.  Remember that throughout this entire process, everyone has input from the band to the entire tour team.  When the team says something might not work, it’s not always met with accord.  Even four weeks out from the launch of the tour, if lighting or staging isn’t quite right, this is a problem.  There isn’t much time to iron it out, or plead your case.  It’s a very intense period in the process.  This probably explains the rough edges at the start, if you’ve ever seen maybe the first few shows of any tour.

Finally, the band arrives at production rehearsals.  Set list at this point is Williams’ primary target.  While they all make agreements on how the show will open, what the middle will look and sound like, and how the show will end, the rest is open for some breathing room.  About one third of the set will be songs from the new album and they go to work making sense out of their history and decide which songs from their catalog can play into the context of the show.  The set list itself is a work of art.

The truth is so clear How does it all stay organized?  The hierarchy goes like this:  everyone who works on the tour is responsible to their department head (i.e. management, sound, accounts, lighting, video, back line, wardrobe, catering, drivers).  The department heads are responsible to the production/tour manager (Dennis Sheehan).  Sheehan answers to the band.  Everyone builds their own little piece of the show, the puzzle is put together and the rehearsals ensure it runs like a well-oiled machine.  

The fans by now have had a few months to stew on the music and get their frenzy up for the upcoming tour.  Rehearsals are completed, the machine is fired up and the show goes on the road!

Let us know if there is any specific production aspect you are curious about and we’ll see what we can do about bringing you the story!

 

The Gospel According to U2

Image by Dave Long 2009 U2 360 Tour Tampa Florida We had talked about starting a U2 book Club. We thought we would select the first book and see if we have an interest. We will have a link for threading the conversation. If you don’t have a copy of our first selection you can pick up a copy via the enclosed link.

We Get to Carry Each Other: The Gospel according to U2 (Gospel According to U2)

The title of Greg Garrett’s book about the spiritual side of Bono and U2 proclaims his central argument from the front cover. The book is called We Get to Carry Each Other: The Gospel According to U2.

Do you know those famous words?

Rolling Stone ranks “One” (the song in which this line appears) as No. 36 among the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time. It was released way back in the early 1990s, when the band was at a crossroads and nearly broke up. Depending on your age, you might recall the more recent Mary J. Blige version of the song, which also was a hit.

The words that end the song — which prompt men and women around the world to “sing along” — are:

One love, one blood, one life. 
You got to do what you should. 
One life with each other: sisters, brothers. 
One life, but we’re not the same. 
We get to carry each other. 
Carry each other. 
One, one.

And, in singing along, we’re essentially joining in a global hymn, Greg argues. He writes, “The meaning of life, U2 ultimately reminds us, is not in how much gold you pile up, how many mansions you build, how many people you can order around, or even how loudly and devoutly you pray and proclaim your salvation. It is in what we get to do for each other. 
“This is U2’s faithful message to the world.”
 Did you catch that key phrase, “get to,” in the lyrics and in Greg’s book? That phrase means that it’s one of life’s great privileges that we get to help each other. Wow! That’s a sermon that’ll snap your head around, if you stop to listen to the lyrics!

Our spiritual mission doesn’t lie in graciously deciding that we’ll donate a little bit of money or expend a little effort on behalf of the needy — when it’s convenient for us. No. The orientation here is waking up in the morning and feeling thankful that we get to help out wherever we can.

CONVERSATION WITH GREG GARRETT ON U2:

DAVID: We’ve told readers about your work before, Greg — especially your earlier book on the spiritual lessons of comic book super heroes. You’re always drawing creative connections between spirituality and popular culture. Tell us what you do for a living - beyond writing books.

GREG: I am professor of English at Baylor University and I’m writer in residence at the Episcopal Seminary of the Southwest in Austin and I’m a licensed lay preacher in the Episcopal Church. Mostly, I’m known as a writer and a teacher.

DAVID: We should explain to readers that, in addition to attending U2 concerts and following the band’s work over the years — you once had an opportunity to sit down with these guys and interview them.

GREG: I did. It was back in the days when I was a rock journalist. I interviewed them after they had recorded their second album.

DAVID: These guys are not card-carrying members of any particular religious group, are they? They’re not regularly practicing Catholics, for example.

GREG: No, they absolutely are not. The interesting thing for many of your readers is that they have been people of faith — but outside of almost any organized religious tradition for more than 30 years. 
They grew up in Ireland and saw the people of Ireland blowing each other up over divisions of faith. They’ve felt they could live out their lives of faith more authentically outside of any organized tradition. Three of the four members would think of themselves as Christian but they have not been part of a formal Christian organization for more than 30 years. They seem to be very much in tune with various faith and wisdom traditions, though. They have worked with the Dalai Lama and with Jewish leaders and many others — so it’s a very ecumenical understanding they have about how we are called to be the face of change for the world.

We Get to Carry Each Other: The Gospel according to U2 (Gospel According to U2)

DAVID: In a way, they’re a voice for the “Nones” — the growing ranks of Americans who answer with the word, “None,” when pollsters ask them for their “religious affiliation.”

GREG: Yes, Brian McLaren talks about them in this way. In a very real sense, they model new ways of being a faith community. The have a very clear sense of mission — we are called together to help people. And, as they work out this mission, they seem to be modeling a new way to be people of faith.

DAVID: Why are they so enduring in their popularity?

GREG: Not only are they a band with incredible longevity, so they have lots of sales and awards and fans who follow them, but they’re also a band that continually reinvents itself and keeps itself relevant. The new album, No Line on the Horizon, has new sounds and ideas. 
I don’t want to criticize other bands by name, but people know which bands only go back to work when they need more money. U2 was freed from that necessity very early in their career because of some smart business decisions they made. They’re free from having to worry about making more money. So, in an album like No Line on the Horizon, there are elements of their past albums — but you also hear some new Eastern stuff that comes from recording in Morocco. It’s recognizable as U2, but they’re still exploring new music. They’re not resting on their laurels.

DAVID: They started out with some concerns very close to home, but they’ve become world citizens. That’s a pretty surprising transition for four guys from Dublin.

We Get to Carry Each Other: The Gospel according to U2 (Gospel According to U2)

GREG: The four did grow up in Dublin. Ireland was what they knew. But they soon had some powerful experiences of the world. 
Particularly, Bono traveled to Central America and Africa. In Ethiopia, he had a father hand him a starving child and tell him: “Take him home with you, please. If he stays here, he will die.” That’s powerful stuff. 
Their consciousness expanded so greatly that they came to see the whole world needs help — not just the people in Ireland.

DAVID: Is this spiritual mission we’re talking an effort by the entire U2 band? Or is this really Bono we’re talking about in terms of these spiritual commitments?

GREG: That’s a cool question and difficult to answer. From years of following U2 and from my research for this new book, I would say: Bono is the point person, but he is representing the band in concerns they share. 
When we look at the benefit concerts they do — or the benefit tour they did for Amnesty International — you can see this is a thrust they’re making together. It’s like they’re part of a family and they make these efforts together. 
 Here in America recently, the guitar player The Edge partnered with Gibson guitars to help get instruments back into the hands of musicians along the Gulf Coast who lost their instruments in the big hurricane. So, the whole band obviously cares about these issues.

DAVID: With so much music released over the years, what albums would you suggest that newcomers pick up to familiarize themselves with U2?

GREG: The obvious and perhaps the easiest answer is to get one of the Best Of albums. If you listen to some of the music from early to mid career, a lot of people will say: “Ohhh, that song is by U2?”
 Another good first choice is All That You Can’t Leave Behind. This is the album that came out in October of 2001.

DAVID: Rolling Stone called it the band’s “third masterpiece.” Joshua Tree and Achtung Baby were the first two in Rolling Stone’s list.

GREG: This is the album associated with many of the things we were dealing with after 9/11. Then, early the following year, they performed at the Super Bowl. So that album is a good choice. 
But I also recommend the new album, No Line on the Horizon, because it’s as intentionally spiritual as anything they’ve ever written.

DAVID: In Part 1 of this U2 story, we shared some of the words from a song on that new album, “Cedars of Lebanon.” The song warns people to “choose your enemies carefully, ‘cause they will define you.”

We Get to Carry Each Other: The Gospel according to U2 (Gospel According to U2)

GREG: Yes, they’re warning that we can be defined by our hatred. The album has allusions to the Middle East adventures of Great Britain and America. 
U2 has been standing up against practices like torture and rendition that are just now coming to light more fully. In a very real sense, they’re saying that your enemies will define you. You’ve got to be cautious about how you combat evil — because it can make you evil yourself.

DAVID: They seem to be stepping into the classic tradition of the ancient Hebrew prophets — these courageous figures who stood up to powerful figures and called for justice and a return to basic religious values.

GREG: One of the sections of my book deals with the tradition of prophetic voices and I take a look at the idea of “prophetic” as not referring to “predicting the future,” which is a definition a lot of people know from popular culture, but “prophetic voice” as a phrase really describing someone who speaks truth to power. For Bono and U2, this isn’t about religious propositions or orthodoxy — it’s about deep spiritual truths like standing in solidarity with the poor. Bono describes what he is doing now as serving as a lobbyist for the poor.

DAVID: You’ve traveled widely, Greg. You’ve heard many of the world’s great preachers — yet your book explains that you’ve been profoundly moved, over many years, by the spiritual messages preached by this rock band.

GREG: I wrote this book because I do have a profound personal connection with the band. And it’s not just that I sat down with them for an interview 27 years ago. It’s because their music and their lives have shown up in my life over and over again. 
 All the work I have done in writing and teaching about religion and culture has grown out of this kind of experience. 
U2 is one way that many people feel God moving in their lives. For so many people, they don’t feel it in organized religion but in experiences like turning on the radio and hearing a song they desperately needed to hear at that moment. I have a passion for this particular book and this group — because these musicians have set out on an authentic spiritual quest and have told the world about it honestly. 
They are reaching out to millions through their music — letting us know we are not alone in our journeys.

This article was originally published at Read The Spirit.

We Get to Carry Each Other: The Gospel according to U2 (Gospel According to U2)

U2's Bono proposes

U2’s Bono proposes ‘Festival of Abraham’ in Jerusalem

U2 lead singer Bono has suggested holding an arts festival that celebrates the origin of the three Abrahamic religions: Judaism, Christianity and Islam. In an op-ed published by the New York Times, the rocker, who is also the founder of the advocacy group ONE and (Product) RED, said the festival is “something that could never have happened in the Naughts but will maybe be possible in the Tweens or Teens — if there’s a breakthrough in the Mideast peace process.” In the editorial, which lists “10 ideas that might make the next 10 years more interesting,” the Irish singer said the proposed festival could be held in a different location every year.”Jerusalem would obviously be the best place to start,” he wrote. “In Ireland, at the height of the ‘Troubles,’ it was said that the only solution for rabid sectarianism was to let 1,000 punk-rock bands bloom: music helped create a free space for dialogue (of a high-volume variety). So no politicians allowed. Artists only,” said Bono.

Bono and Edge brave weather

U2 gets Meteor nominations

U2 picked up three nominations Thursday for the 2010 Meteor Ireland Music Awards: Best Irish Band, Best Irish Album (No Line On The Horizon), and Best Irish Live Performance (for the U2 360 shows at Croke Park). The public can vote for winnes in all three categories via the Meteor Awards web site. The awards ceremony will take place on February 19 at RDS in Dublin, and will air on RTE television two days later.

U2 are expected to dominate the Meteor Music Awards having been nominated in three categories including best Irish band. Calling Out all U2TOURFANS readers sign up today for meteors facebook page and vote. 

Be sure to comment with #U2TOURFANS 

The 11-time winners are also nominated for best Irish album with No Line on the Horizon , which has had neither the commercial success nor critical acclaim of most of its predecessors.

The band were also nominated for best live performance for their three shows at Croke Park last year.

Bell X1, who had a successful year in 2009, have also been nominated in the same three categories. Their album Blue Lights on the Runwa y went to number one in the Irish charts and spawned their most successful single to date, The Great Defector .

The Coronas were nominated in the best Irish band category and for their album Tony was an Ex-Con .

Lead singer Danny O’Reilly, who is the son of singer Mary Black, said the nomination was a reward for the effort they put into their new album which peaked at number three in the Irish charts. The band have just completed a Asian tour of Singapore, Thailand and Indonesia.

“We spent a lot of time on the record and put everything into it. It’s nice to be nominated alongside bands that you grew up listening to like U2 and Snow Patrol,” he said.

There were few surprises among the nominations, except the inclusion of the relatively unknown Dublin singer Valerie Francis ahead of last year’s winner Imelda May in the best Irish female category.

The public will be able to vote in eight categories: best radio DJ, best regional DJ, best Irish band, best Irish male, best Irish female, best Irish pop act, best Irish album and best Irish live performance.

For the first time in the 10 year history of the awards, there will be a most promising new artist category and unsigned acts will be able to upload their music videos on Youtube to be judged by an expert panel.

The awards take place on February 19th at the RDS and will feature Florence and the Machine, the Script, Westlife, Paulo Nutini, The Coronas and Pixie Lott.

Nutini and Florence and the Machine have been nominated in the best international album category for Sunny Side Up  and Lungs  respectively.

U2 360 Bootlegs Available

BONO: “My feeling”, he adds, “is that it is cool for people to share our music — as long as no one is making money from the process. We tell people who come to our concerts that they can tape the shows if they want. I think it is cool that people are so passionate about our music”

Whats a bootleg ?

Bootleg recording is an audio and/or video recording of a performance that was not officially released by the artist, or under other legal authority. The process of making and distributing such recordings is known as bootlegging. A great many such recordings are simply copied and traded among fans of the artist without financial exchange, but some bootleggers are able to sell these rarities for profit, sometimes by adding professional-quality sound engineering and packaging to the raw material.

Bootlegs can consist of recordings of live performances, or material created in private or professional recording sessions. Changing technologies have had a great impact on the recording, distribution, and varying profitability of the underground industry. The copyrights for the song and the right to authorize recordings often reside with the artist, according to several international copyright treaties. The recording, trading and sale of bootlegs continues to thrive, however, even as artists and record companies attempt to provide “authorized” alternatives to satisfy the demand.

In 1991, when a bootleg of U2’s studio sessions called The New U2 (the first version of what would eventually become the  bootleg) was being distributed, Island Records took out a full-page ad in the British publication Music Week warning record stores that the label would “take legal proceedings” against anyone selling the bootlegs. U2 manager Paul McGuinness issued a press statement saying the bootleggers were cheating fans by distributing inferior material.

In a later interview about the incident, Bono said: “The only thing that can piss you off is if people are charging a lot of money for something that isn’t very good. It [the Achtung Baby working tapes] got bootlegged in Berlin and it was just like having your notebook read out. That’s the bit I didn’t like about it. There were no undiscovered works of genius, unfortunately, it was more just gobbledy-gook.”

During 2001, several other comments were made by the band regarding the recording of their shows. They made it clear that they were fine with people recording their performances and trading them. They did make it clear that they were opposed to people making money from those recordings. As Bono says, “We invite people to bootleg our shows. We invite people to make copies, we’ve no problems with that, but if some guy is gonna make money off the back of this, we’re gonna find out where he parks his car.” Even with those comments being made, those recording cannot openly do so at a show, as security does still take steps to prevent that

Now speed forward to 2009. If you attended a 360 show you know that pretty much the whole inner circle was dedicated to Bootleggers - from Video to Audio. You can pretty much get the whole tour from what we deem to be the best source available today. The only comment to make is that if your purchasing a bootleg your wrong. Stop it - The concept of free exchange of musc dies when you do something like that. Just enjoy the music, show and share.

Suggested Shows

2009-06-30 - Barcelona
2009-07-20/21 - Amsterdam
2009-07-07/08 - Milan
2009-07-02 - Barcelona
2009-07-18 - Berlin
2009-07-11   Paris, France - Stade de France

Remember Paris ?

Driving home last night I was listening to the Paris concert again. It’s cold all over the east coast of North America is under a deep freeze yet I had the windows open and I was just enjoying the concert all over again. Have you ever had a chance to re-listen to the concert or watch the video over again it’s as if you are attending the show for the first time?  So I thought I would dig up the review, some selected photos and of course our favorite videos from the show.  Paris had two shows, we have videos from both shows and the setlist as well as photos. We have a large selection of Paris videos and on our facebook fan page we will be posting a specail link for something very cool for our U2 fans. So if you have not joined our FB page now is your chance.

Paris Review July 11, 2009

That theme was further augmented during the band’s latest stop at Paris’s enormous, 90,000- capacity Stade de France, returning almost four years to the day of their last visits here – on July 9th and 10th, 2005 – for the Vertigo tour.

‘Thank you for coming out and thank you for giving us a great life,’ Bono crowed to the packed audience. ‘Thank you for giving us the chance to build this madness, this space station.’

That theme was further augmented during the band’s latest stop at Paris’s enormous, 90,000- capacity Stade de France, returning almost four years to the day of their last visits here – on July 9th and 10th, 2005 – for the Vertigo tour.

On Saturday night, the inhabitants of the International Space Station made a repeat appearance on The Claw’s circular screens, engaging in prerecorded banter with the band.  Guy Laliberte – billionaire founder of Cirque de Soleil, and soon-to-be resident of the Station – also received a shout-out during “In A Little While”.

“We have somebody with us tonight who is about to be the first clown in space,” Bono joked, referring to former stilt-walker and fire-eater Laliberte.

While the much-maligned “masks” made an appearance once again, those looking for a bit of levity from Bono’s politics received it during the Sunday night encore, when the singer engaged in a brief E.T. impersonation before show finale “Moment of Surrender”.

He was also in a joking mood during a brief interview for French television the day before; after Larry Mullen, Jr. cordially complimented the Stade de France as “an incredible place,” Bono quickly added, “Of all stadiums to get to trash, this is the most beautiful.”

The direction of the Paris gigs indicated that the nightly setlist is solidifying into something fairly consistent, at least for this leg of the tour; the opening four songs of new material have not changed, and neither has the three-song encore, expanded only once so far to include “I’ll Go Crazy If I Don’t Go Crazy Tonight” during the second night in Barcelona.  “In A Little While” and “Stuck in a Moment” – from All That You Can’t Leave Behind – continue to be interchanged, with the former being performed Saturday, and the latter making an appearance on Sunday.

Sunday night’s show also featured some surprises, with the tour debut of a solo-free “Mysterious Ways”, and an electric version of “Angel of Harlem”.  The ever-expanding “I’ll Go Crazy If I Don’t Go Crazy Tonight” was preceded by brief renditions of David Bowie’s “Let’s Dance” – the first time the band has performed it in any form – and K.C. and the Sunshine Band’s “That’s the Way (I Like It), making its first appearance since 1997’s Popmart Tour.

Crowds were energetic and enthusiastic both nights, the floor a rolling wave of activity during songs both new (”Get On Your Boots”) and old (”I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For”).  The crowd briefly took over singing duties on the latter from Bono during Sunday night’s show, with both band and singer dropping out during the first verse to let the audience build the song’s momentum

We will always have Paris on that summer night in July 2009. If you think of another show that was better let us know. For now kick back and enjoy. Sign up on Youtube to be a part of 2010 Subscriber list. Don’t miss a minute of the show.

Bono Draws Fire !

AS we reported earlier today Bono’s NY Times piece has begun to draw fire. Maybe we should have focused on this part of the story however we thought we would take the highroad.

He hinted that China’s efforts prove that tracking net content is possible. The editorial drew sharp criticism, both on its economic merits and for the suggestion of net content policing.

“The immutable laws of bandwidth tell us we’re just a few years away from being able to download an entire season of ‘24’ in 24 seconds,” he wrote.

“A decade’s worth of music file-sharing and swiping has made clear that the people it hurts are the creators…the people this reverse Robin Hooding benefits are rich service providers, whose swollen profits perfectly mirror the lost receipts of the music business.”

In a move that drew significant criticism, Bono went on to suggest that the feasibility of tracking down file-sharers had already been proven.

“We know from America’s noble effort to stop child pornography, not to mention China’s ignoble effort to suppress online dissent, that it’s perfectly possible to track content,” he said.

Several commentators assailed both the logic of net monitoring and the economic arguments of the essay, pointing out that U2 topped 2009’s list of top-grossing live acts.

“Bono has missed that even a totalitarian government…can’t effectively control net-content,” tweeted Cory Doctorow, a blogger and journalist noted for his study of file-sharing policy.

“If only greed and ignorance could sequester carbon, Bono could FINALLY save the planet,” he added.

in the spirit of rock star excess

Did you happen to catch Bono’s op ed in the NY Times ? Ten for the Next Ten, In case you did not know. Bono happens to be a guest columnist for the NY Times.  Here a bit of what Bono had to say in his own words. Also we have included some other U2 News that has been reported. We will be starting our guest columinist later in the week.

IF we have overindulged in anything these past several days, it is neither holiday ham nor American football; it is Top 10 lists. We have been stuffed full of them. Even in these self-restrained pages, it has been impossible to avoid the end-of-the-decade accountings of the 10 best such-and-suches and the 10 worst fill-in-the-blanks.

And so, in the spirit of rock star excess, I offer yet another.

The main difference, if it matters, is that this list looks forward, not backward. So here, then, are 10 ideas that might make the next 10 years more interesting, healthy or civil. Some are trivial, some fundamental. They have little in common with one another except that I am seized by each, and moved by its potential to change our world.

Return of the Automobile as a Sexual Object

How is it that the country that made us all fall in love with the automobile has failed, with only a few exceptions, to produce a single family sedan with the style and humor and grace of the cars produced in the ’40s, ’50s and ’60s? Put aside the question of whether those models were male (as in longer, lower and wider, Dr. Freud) or female (as in fender skirts, curvy belt lines and, of course, headlights). Either way, they all had sex appeal. (In Ireland in the ’70s, it was the E-Type Jag that made sense of puberty.) Today, however, we have the mundanity of our marriage to the minivan and the S.U.V. and long-term relationships with midsize cars that are, forgive me, a little heavy in the rear cargo hold.

Are aerodynamics to blame? Economics? Or that most American of inventions, design by committee? It hurts me to say this about democracy (and I know because my band is one), but rarely does majority rule produce something of beauty.

That’s why the Obama administration — while it still holds the keys to the big automakers — ought to put some style fascists into the mix: the genius of Marc Newson … Steve Jobs and Jonny Ive from Apple … Frank Gehry, the architect, and Jeff Koons, the artist. Put the great industrial designers in the front seat, right along with sound financial stewardship … the greener, the cleaner, the meaner on fossil fuels, the sexier for me. Check out the Tesla or the Fisker Karma car, designed by the same team that gave the world the Aston Martin.

The Edge speaks to HOT PRESS

The last time we spoke, you mentioned the possibility of a new U2 album coming out before the end of the year. That’s obviously not going to happen, but when can fans expect a new record?

Edge: We would like it to be sooner rather than later. We are working on some stuff that sounds amazing, but it’s hard to say when it’ll actually be done. Well, certainly I don’t, and I know Bono doesn’t want to leave too long of a gap between the last record and the next one.

What’s the feel of the songs you’re working on at the moment?

Edge: It’s too early to say, but because the last record was an experiment writing with Brian [Eno] and Danny [Lanois] in that kind of free-flowing workshop, Bono and I — we’re really kind of songwriting in a much more formal way at the moment. We’ve got some stuff, more abstract stuff that we could put together as a release, but right now what’s really intriguing me is plain, old-fashioned songwriting, and we have some amazing stuff.

How about the Spiderman musical? It’s been reported that, thanks to the recession, it’s run into problems. Is it going ahead?

Edge: Well, it’s all ready to go. We’re just waiting for the word that we can … we’ve pretty much done our job. We’re waiting for the word that our director, Julie Taymor, can get back and get into the theatre and start putting the show together. We’re told it could be any day. We’ve got new producers involved: Michael Cohl is coming in, to become an additional producer. So they’re busy working on raising finance and getting all that stuff in order. I’m really happy with the music and the script, and the cast that we have are fantastic, so I don’t have any concerns, ultimately, but it’s kind of frustrating that it’s taking so long.

Catch the rest of the story via HOT PRESS

Other News

In other news as we have reported before “It might get loud” currently available on DVD - Check the link on the front page for details on how to order your own copy. The Edge sat down with Neil McCormick for a little one on one conversation about the movie. Hey be sure to read the whole interview you will find something very funny.

Its not often that you might find yourself on stage with some of the greatest guitarists in the world, so what did you learn from the experience?

Edge: What did I learn? Even though all guitar players are reaching for the ideal guitar tone, I was struck by how different they sounded, and in the hands of other people with different set of ears to put a sound together, its such a different result, and it just showed me how the instrument is so versatile. A trumpet sounds pretty much like a trumpet, and that’s true of a lot instruments, pianos sound like pianos, but there’s something about the guitar, the range of possibilities is much broader. And I really felt our differences influences and points of view were really contained within our sound and choice of sound and ways of playing.
 

Indeed, the way the different personalities express themselves through their instrument is something that comes across very clearly in the film. Yet while the individual journeys that bring you to that shared stage are fascinating, when you do all get together, there’s no great musical explosion, just a lot of tentative twiddling, really.

Edge:That was the other thing I learned: how useful drummers and bass players and singers are! Put three guitarist together in a room and what you get is lots of guitars. Also I was thinking about what would I play out of my stuff  for these guys, and I realised what I do isn’t really designed to be heard solo. Its not like I sit down and write a guitar piece and that becomes a song. I actually rely on what Adam and Larry are doing to complete the picture. The Streets Have No Name doesn’t make any sense out of context, it just becomes this very Philip Glass like set of motifs, and the meaning is really in the changes in the bass and drums. So that was actually a nice realisation, I’m one of those guitar players who’s really integrated into his band. I’m not like Jimmy or Jack, who can play solo guitar that would stand up on its own
 

Do you often play with other guitarists?

Edge: No, I try and avoid it at all costs. Jamming is really the most awful, excruciating experience for me, I really don’t enjoy it. First of all, that’s not how I work as a guitar player. I compose using the instrument, I don’t really sit down and play for the sake of playing stuff. So the idea of jamming – endless, directionless noodling around some nondescript chord progression – I really find very boring. Obviously a great song is fun to play, but U2 were never really in that phase of The Beatles in Hamburg or Van Morrison in showbands or Dylan in the folk clubs, of knowing and learning a big collection of classics. We never did that, and at the time we were forming as a band there really wasn’t a large collection of songs that we felt like learning. It was actually a moment where the past was being thrown out the window, so its very much part of our DNA as a band not to be too reverential, as a general rule, and to try and look forward all the time. Invention being what we value most highly as opposed to emulation – which is what a lot of musicians feel is important, being able to play like the greats.
 

So what did meeting Jimmy Page mean to you, because at the time of U2’s origins, at the beginning of punk, Led Zeppelin and the so called dinosaur rock bands were almost seen as the enemy, something to be rebelled against.

Edge: Before meeting Jimmy, I listened back to some Zeppelin stuff and realise it has stood the test of time. It has the hallmark of timeless music, it hasn’t dated, while so much from that era really did date and in fact has completely vanished. It was really dynamic, the visceral power of it was pretty thrilling still, and it brought me back to when I was 14 or 15. That was a nice realisation. And also meeting the man and realising we had so much in common, and actually we are kind of brothers in arms rather than antagonists in terms of musical philosophy.

So what did you find that you had in common?

Edge: I think what has come through, after all the dust has settled on the music of that era, is that everybody assumed that what was important was improvising and having a dexterity with the instrument, so that Eric Clapton and Jeff Beck, the gunslingers of the time, were highly revered, but it turns out it was actually always about composition, always about idea and themes and stuff that you actually had to write. And that where I think Jimmy Page scored, is that his guitar playing was a lot more composed than any of the others of that era and much better for that. And although it’s probably uncool to admit it – and I don’t know if he would ever admit it – but even his solos were really well composed and thought out. I don’t think he was just a guy who would sit down and play the first thing that came into his head, like a Gary Moore, Jeff Beck or Eric. I think he really had the chance to figure things out. It’s the discipline of the work. Its really sharp, really hard, not fuzzy. That was one of the realisations for me.

If you were to listen to a collection of the best selling singles of the last year, the guitar is almost noticeable by its absence. When it comes to pop music, its all about synths and electronically treated sound, so even where  there is a guitar, its not necessarily recognisable, or the featured instrument. What do you think is the future of the guitar?

Edge: I don’t think it’s in jeopardy. It seems pretty bright. There’s always somebody on the horizon who seems to be really able to make the instrument their own, and find ways to use it that haven’t been heard before. The biggest band in America right now, in terms of profile and records is The Kings Of Leon, and before them it was The Killers, so there seems to be still a huge interest in guitar music. I’m looking forward to the next Arcade Fire album, and I think Nick Zinner from Yeah Yeah Yeahs is a guitar player who’s really done some interesting things. Ok, the electronica movement seems to be very much in vogue at the moment, probably MGMT kick started that, then you’ve got Justice and the Bloody Beetroots and all that hard dance stuff, but the guitar is managing to hold on, its one of the essential ingredients in contemporary music, like drums. Them Crooked Vultures is also quite cool. I’m not sure it’s on the level of classic but it’s a very interesting guitar record.

It’s been a strange year for U2. You had the biggest tour in the world and sold about four million of your album No Line On The Horizon, but it never really caught fire the way other U2 albums have. Indeed, its perceived as a flop.

Edge: Yeah, there is that smell in the air. We allowed ourselves to think about having a big hit record when in fact it’s a very interesting record but it’s quite a dark record, it’s not really radio friendly. Even ‘Get On Your Boots’, which is high octane, its not  a slam dunk of a hit song. I think everyone just got caught up in the plan as opposed to sitting back and thinking about the record we’d made. But I feel OK about it. Often U2 are accused of being more successful than we deserve, in this case I think this record is less successful than it deserved. I think its got some of the best songs we’ve ever written. ‘Moments Of Surrender’ is right up there, and ‘Unknown Caller’.

What about the new album, the long rumoured ‘Songs Of Ascent’, which is supposed to be based around more low key material from the Horizon sessions.

Edge: Well that’s what I’m working on this week, actually. I’m songwriting. In fact, I wrote something this morning just before getting on the phone with you, it sounds great. So on that level we’re pushing forward, we’re not taking it easy, but we won’t really know til the new year what we’ll be able to achieve. There’s a certain sort of practical window of opportunity to release the record that we are operating within. If the material isn’t ready for the early new year we’ll probably have to put it on hold. But I’m looking forward to the idea of playing some of the songs live before they’re released. That would be my consolation prize if we don’t get the album done. We’ve never done it, we’ve always talked to all of our producers about the idea, but I think it would give the tour a little frisson which I  think it needs. If you have two or three new songs no one’s heard before thrown in from time to time, I think that would be very exciting, for us as well, to try them and see how they get on

So we can expect to hear new U2 songs at Glastonbury.

Edge: Glastonbury is going to be fun. I’ve never been.

I think Adam is the only member of U2 whose been to Glastonbury. He went with the Waterboys in the Eighties

Edge: We’re busy men! We’re often actually doing U2 tours when Glastonbury is on, or working on a project, so its not so strange that we’ve not been. But what is interesting is the way people talk about it, its got this semi-religious aspect. Bono and I were talking about our last record, one of the sub plots is pilgrimage, and in some ways that’s exactly what Glastonbury is. So we’re going to make our pilgrimage.

And what about Spiderman, the musical you have been working on with Bono, which seems to have run into a few funding problems?

Edge: It’s in this hiatus and were just waiting for word on the fundraising to get the production back on track. All the songs are pretty much written, we’ve got a bunch of lyrics to finish off, but all the music is pretty much there, and its all sounding really convincing. It’s a great script, great director, great choreographer. It will happen.

So 2010 is shaping up to be another busy year for U2
Edge:
And they’re shooting the film of your book (Killing Bono). That’s great news. I was talking to the director about who should play me, and I think we agreed on Brad Pitt

Glastonbury Festival Promise

U2 have promised that they will make an impact on this year’s Glastonbury Festival, when they headline the Worthy Farm event in Somerset for the first time in their career on Jun. 25.

Speaking to the Times this weekend, guitarist the Edge (pictured right) said that the band had previously been mistrustful, saying, “I used to be sceptical of its roots, the hippy thing” but now “have a good feeling about it.”

The Edge, real name Dave Evans, also said 2010 felt like the right time to play the annual event, saying, “It feels like we really have to do it because if we don’t do it now, we never will.”

U2 are the first confirmed headliners for the 40th anniversary of the festival — another headliner has been confirmed, but not yet disclosed by artist booker Emily Eavis, who runs the festival alongside her father Michael.

Rumoured bands to headline include the Rolling Stones and Muse. Lets wait to see what happens