first up- Bono was attending Alicia Keys wedding this past weekend. Alicia married Swizz Beatz and was not in New York as reported by others.
Sunday night the whole band got together onfor rehearsals — and, best of all for fans around the world, they rehearsed outside at Olympic Stadium rather than indoors at the Olympic Sports Hall. Other than Bono’s arrival, the two biggest pieces of news are probably these:
Reports coming in from U2 Place and U2 Itlatia suggesting a new song was rehearsed. Also the following Songs
One Day Like This (cover: Elbow)> Beautiful Day - Magnificent - Soon> Moment of Surrender - New Year’s Day - Hold Me Thrill Me Kiss Me Kill Me - Get On Your Boots
A second rehearsal included the following
Beautiful Day - Get On Your Boots - Mysterious Ways - I Still Have not Found What I’m Looking For - Many River to Cross (snippet) ( Possible New Song) - Miss Sarajevo
Diego Spagnoli: 2010Turin news: The first sound check at the stadium happened yesterday suggestions that it was U2 was a bit wrong. The taped music is part of the normal process of setup. The crew always plays some music over the PA’s to run meter tests and RF tests. Dallasm Sam and Joe have all been spotted in the statium. The stage is complete. Now all we need is the band.
Dave Long / U2TOURFANS 2010 Bono turned 50 this summer but the Irish star will have no time to relax. The 360 tour is U2’s first under its 12-year deal with Live Nation, which means the supergroup will be touring well into their early 60’s.
Billboard just released its Top Concert Tours for 2009, and leading the pack with the highest-grossing tour was U2. The other artists in the top five were Madonna, Bruce Springsteen, AC/DC, and Pink.
U2 spent 2009 touring behind its studio album ‘No Line on the Horizon,’ and will continue to tour in North America and Europe this summer.
U2’s deal with Live Nation earned them $108 million last year and the top spot on Billboard’s Top Money Earners list for 2009, thanks to the band selling out all 44 of its concerts in 2009. Total gross for the 360 tour was $311, 637, 740, with total attendance at 3, 071, 290.
Rehearsals for 10 concerts could start as early as today or Wednesday. This is a pretty long length of time of time between the start of rehearsals and the first date of the leg August 6th that makes it about 10 days. This has happened before. However in this case we expect it because of some new songs, and of course allowing Bono a chance to ease back into the mix of a live show. The bands security has said that we could expect rehearsals to start on Tuesday. Let the rumors begin.
Thanks to a couple of web savvy U2 fans we have a link for the stadium webcam. Currently not much has been happening however we do expect it to get interesting soon. Stadium webcam sits on top of the Stadio Olimpico.
Hey we heard from our friends in Chile and according to the state newspaper La Tercera they report that U2 will perform at the Estadio Nacional in March 2011 and also Brazil, Argentina and we heard Peru however it is all just a rumor. The newspaper claims that tickets will go on sale in September.
New Songs > It’s not the first time that the boys have stopped off the tour to record some tunes. We have heard and checked out Black Rock Studios in Greece and some recording sessions have been booked. Now we cannot confirm this so we still a rumor. Also we did notice that U2GIGS has reported as well as a couple of fans sites so as we like to say. Rumors may become facts and facts never become rumors, so let’s wait.
Backbeat Books is proud to announce the September 15th release of U2 FAQ, a new 400-plus page book on the revered rock band by award-winning music journalist John D. Luerssen.
Due September 15th in the U.S. and globally this fall, the latest in Backbeat’s acclaimed FAQ series (Fab Four FAQ, Fab Four FAQ 2.0, Pink Floyd FAQ), U2 FAQ promises Anything You’d Ever Want to Know About the Biggest Band in the World … and More!
Featuring an introduction by Cowboy Mouth’s John Thomas Griffith, the one-time frontman for Red Rockers, who opened for U2 on its Unforgettable Fire trek, U2FAQ also boasts rare artifacts and photos from U2 fans and collectors worldwide.
Active and relevant for nearly thirty-five years, Bono, the Edge, Adam Clayton, and Larry Mullen, Jr. have been masters of reinvention, thriving artistically while continuing to sell out concerts across the globe. From their start at Dublin’s Mount Temple School in 1976 up to the 2009 Rose Bowl show that shattered a U.S. concert attendance record (previously set by the group in 1987), U2’s members have experienced some amazing collective highs. But in its ascent, the band has seen its share of personal, artistic, and commercial setbacks, including Bono’s recent debilitating back injury, which prompted the postponement of its U.S. tour until 2011.
These are just some of the topics U2 FAQ explores: How did Bono recover his cherished suitcase of lyrics 23 years after its 1981 disappearance? What movie dialogue is sampled in the middle of Seconds? What effect did bull’s blood have on Larry’s drumming? How did Bono’s visit to Central America inform The Joshua Tree? What are the details of Adam’s 1989 marijuana bust? How did Mick Jagger wind up on “All That You Can’t Leave Behind”? Can Bono really save the world?
“What makes U2 FAQ different from the other books written about the band, is that – aside from all of the information it gathers – is the fact that it explores the band’s vulnerabilities,” Luerssen says. “I think that with U2’s enormous popularity, it’s easy to forget that Bono, The Edge, Larry and Adam are human beings like the rest of us. And I explore that in chapters like Broken Nose to the Floor: Public Debacles, Dangers, and Embarrassments, and Don’t Talk Out of Time—True U2 Stories. It’s a must-read book, whether you love or loathe U2.”
Luerssen – a regular AOL Music/Spinner contributor who has also written for Rolling Stone, Billboard, All Music Guide, and American Songwriter and penned 2004’s highly praised Rivers’ Edge: The Weezer Story (ECW Press) goes beyond the essential facts, delving into the legendary fables and unique anecdotes that make
Last June, we told you geeks that Bono and The Edge (of that famous Irish rock band U2) would be scoring the music for the upcoming Spider-Man Broadway show entitled Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark. Now, a year later, you’re probably expecting us to tell you that the show is a smash success and all is well. Well, True Believers, things are once again not-so for teenage misfit Peter Parker.
Well, it’s not that bad. According to the New York Times (via RollingStone.com), a spokesman for the show said the $50 million production will begin full rehearsals on August 16th, only slightly behind their original launch date of February 2010. Apparently, the show (directed by Julie Taymor of Across the Universe fame) had a “cash flow problem”, which caused two of its stars, Evan Rachel Wood and Alan Cumming (playing Mary Jane Watson and the Green Goblin respectively), to leave the production. While there’s no word yet who will replace them, leading man Reeve Carney did happen to tweet that he’s already begun his aerial choreography.
After U2’s fateful string of bad luck including Bono’s bad back and its subsequent cancelled tour, the popular band is finally getting back on its enormously successful feet. And it’s coming in the form of a superhero, Spider-man to be exact.
Initial rehearsals have begun on a new Broadway musical based on the Spidey based Broadway called Spider-man: Turn Off the Dark. Julie Taymor, who previously helmed the hallucinatory Beatles trip Across the Universe is in progress of heading the project, which features music exclusively by U2’s Bono and The Edge.
Spider-Man is one of the most expensive Broadway Productions ever staged, costing about $50 million, which the producers actually had difficulty raising, thus postponing the production this past February. “I honestly can’t believe I’m getting paid to do things my mom would have killed me for when I was a kid! Ha!”, tweets musician Reeve Carney, who plays the Peter Parker character.
Although production details are still a bit sketchy at this moment, fans can begin rocking their Spidey senses when it debuts on Broadway this coming November.
Even with a bad back, Bono still has more power than the rest of us. He and his Irish band mates in U2 land at the top of Forbes annual Top-Earning Musicians with net earnings of $130 million for July 1-June 31. The only new artist to make the Forbes list is Lady GaGa, but she makes our list this week for a totally different reason that has nothing to do with money or fame, but with humanity.
1. U2: The Irish rockers top Forbes list of top-earning musicians. I believe they’ve found what they’re looking for.
2. Eminem (No. 1): Not only does “Recovery” log its fourth week at No. 1 on the Billboard 200, for the first time in his career, Eminem lands back to back No. 1s. After “Not Afraid” went to No. 1 in May, “Love the Way You Lie” goes to No. 1 this week, bumping Katy Perry’s “California Gurls” out of the top spot after six weeks.
3. Rihanna (not ranked): The news is good for Eminem, but it’s great for Rihanna. “Love the Way You Lie” is her seventh No. 1 since she first debuted on the Billboard Hot 100 in June 2005, giving her more No. 1s in that time frame than any other artist. Lady GaGa is plotting as we speak.
4. James Taylor and Carole King (not ranked): In a summer of tour cancellations and poor sales, James Taylor and Carole King proved that there’s a lot of life left in acts that deliver the goods. Both in their 60s, the pair completed a 58-date world tour this week that grossed $63 million and averaged 95% capacity. They’ve got a friend…lots of them.
5. Lady GaGa (not ranked): This week Lady GaGa did something much more significant than sell tickets: She stood up, loudly and proudly, against anti-gay protesters from Westboro Baptist Church, who picketed her show in St. Louis. She asked her fans not to engage the protesters and, instead to pray for them. At the show’s conclusion, she tweeted: “Tonight love and hate met in St. Louis….Hate left but love stayed + together we sang.” Instead of WWJD, maybe we should ask ourselves WWLGD?
6. Big Champagne (not ranked): The media metrics company launches the “Ultimate Chart” to measure a single’s popularity and to challenge Billboard’s Hot 100. Like the Hot 100, the Ultimate Chart measures radio play and tracks sales, but also includes data from social networking sites such as YouTube. Be prepared for Justin Bieber to be No. 1 until he turns 25.
7. Roger Faxon (not ranked): The new EMI chief makes his first visit to LA in his new capacity to review the U.S. operation. The question is what will he change. Despite the parent company, Terra Firma’s woes, EMI looks strong with Lady Antebellum and Katy Perry. Do we see more synergies between EMI’s publishing powerhouse and the label side?
8.New Music Seminar (not ranked): The revived music conference, which ruled supreme in the ‘80s, made news this week primarily for a session that laid out by the number revealing just how tragic album sales are. We won’t run down all the sobering stats, but here’s one to wrap your brain around: Number of albums selling more than 250,000 copies in 2009: 85. Number of albums selling more than 250,000 copies in 2001: 214. But who’s counting…
9. Chris Isaak and Harry Connick Jr. (not ranked): Bret Michael, Elton John, Steve Lilywhite and even Donald Trump were among the names bandied about to replace Simon Cowell as an “American Idol” judge. While nothing is official, Isaak and Connick appear to be the last two standing. Both are great choices, but we’re casting our vote for Isaak.
10. Joss Stone (not ranked): She’s the new Bond girl. Even though it looks like it may be a hot minute before we get a new 007 film, she appears alongside Daniel Craig and Judi Dench in the new video game, “James Bond 007: Blood Stone.” She also sings an original song, “I’ll Take It All.”
30 years ago our Chief Editor was just a boy, for sure not a man, yet the future was as bright as it is today. Today we stand on the cusp of a new music dawn and U2 has returned to the studio and most fans will agree its not a come back, they have yet to leave the building.
When “I Will Follow” and “A Day Without Me” came ripping out of radios in late 1980, it was obvious the band that recorded these singles was far too ambitious to be pigeon-holed as new wave, post-punk or simply pop. The guitar lines – a jittery Morse Code of single notes sculpted into a hook for “A Day Without Me,” the shimmering chords of “I Will Follow,” the delay-swabbed sound of both that crossed the line from mere effect into melody – alone advertised a broad creative sweep, and the lyrics aimed to define what it means to be human, albeit from a superbly youthful viewpoint.
Thirty years later that band, U2, has a firm grasp on one of the broadest creative palettes in rock history and has blossomed into one of the grandest groups of all time, as well as a force to be reckoned with in the music business and even the world of politics. Despite the fiery spirit of those singles and their debut album Boy, nobody who saw their first U.S. shows at New York’s CBGB, the Rat in Boston and Toad’s Place in New Haven, CT, could have reasonably predicted the arch of their growth, success and influence – even though the group’s fresh-faced, then-19- and 20-year-old members rocked those less-than-packed houses with heads-down dedication and no shortage of perspiration.
Guitarist David Evans, better known as The Edge, has been U2’s sonically creative spearhead over their 30 years in operation. He has defined a highly personal six-string style based on simple chords and licks that take on a much a bigger architecture thanks to his imaginative technique and his creative use of effects. And throughout all of the band’s musical explorations – collaborations with Brian Eno and B.B. King, revisionist strip-downs, baroque constructions, disco intoxications, electro-pop peccadilloes – his sound, even when stretched in all kinds of directions, has been as recognizable a constant as Bono’s voice.
Even before The Edge and his three partners entered the studio to record Boy in March 1980, Gibson guitars were at the heart of his sonic strategy. His main axe was a worn natural finish Gibson Explorer pumped through a Vox AC-30 buoyed by the era’s spanking new digital delay and chorus pedals. Producer Steve Lillywhite, one of the soundboard giants of the new wave era, perfectly captured his bedrock sound on the hits and deeper cuts like the exuberant “Out of Control” and “Stories for Boys.”
The Edge developed this sound with the use of his delay, setting his feedback dial to add half the duration of his eighth notes to every one struck – creating cascades of what’s termed “dotted eighth notes,” thanks to his setting the “repeat” function to regenerate two or three notes. He also, early on, developed a style of playing the same note on two strings simultaneously to create a droning tone.
It’s a gambit that’s served him well over the years, even as he’s branched out into synthesis, looping and other more modern techniques of turning sound into lush layers. He’s also expanded his fleet of guitars, primarily drawing on the Gibson family of instruments to build his armada. Here’s a rundown of some of the Gibsons the Edge has been observed playing on stage and in the studio.
• Gibson Explorers are still his signature instrument. The Edge prefers the Gibson Limited Edition Explorer built in 1976. He owns several, including the one he used on Boy, which is now retired from the stage.
• Gibson Les Pauls are an important part of his tone bank. The Edge has two white Les Paul Customs with black tone and volume knobs, from 1973 and 1975. He also has a 30th Anniversary Les Paul Gold Top from 1982 and a 2005 Les Paul Standard.
• Gibson SGs are in the picture, too. There’s a 1966 cherry finish that he used for “Elevation” and a ’65 in Pelham blue.
• Epiphones have hung from his shoulders on stage, as well. He employed a 1962 Epiphone Casino with a tobacco finish on the U2 360° tour and has been spotted with a Sheraton and a 2006 Epiphone Les Paul Standard.
• Gibson SJ-200s are among The Edge’s preferred acoustic guitars and he reportedly owns at least three, including a Pete Townshend model.
• And Gibson ES-series hollowbodies and semi-hollowbodies are a part of his trick bag. His 1953 ES-295 made a cameo in the “Desire” video and he strapped on an ES-330 for the “Who’s Gonna Ride Your Wild Horses” and “One” videos.
You may not know that for years U2 has traveled by charter. AMP Visual has been the company hired to produce the graphics for the charter tour planes. Graphics are updated each leg of the tour. In our photo section we have a couple of action shots of the plane as it flys around the world.
“For this U2360° tour, we called the airline, THREESIXTYAIR with the name featuring above the first passenger windows. For the US leg of the tour, we called the plane ‘Infinity’ from the song Breathe. We also added ‘The Future Needs A Big Kiss’ from the song Get On Your Boots as a sign-off near to nose of the plane.”
Dave and the boys are re-working some classics like ” All I Want & Grace” Dave reported on Twitter that they are in “Sacramento” now this does seem a bit strange. Why would the boys be in the studio with Dave? Maybe he was saying that he is doing some work for them. That sounds more like it. In case your wondering Hollister is a former member of the R&B quartet BLACKstreet and has also released several solo albums.
Fans thats why you have to follow on twitter, this whole conversation went on during the early hours of 3AM however in Cali it was a bit earlier. Sign up for twitter and follow along.
U2’s recently cancelled North American tour is likely to cost the London market $17mn due to contingency cover purchased by the band and its promoters, The Insurance Insider can reveal.
The rock band were forced to call off the US leg of their 360o World Tour when Bono underwent emergency surgery after injuring himself while rehearsing for the shows.
Tour promoters Live Nation and U2 have a contingency policy placed into the London market by specialist entertainment broker Robertson.
Well we knew it would be a matter of days before we started to see some interesting comments about the boys and the cash they earn. Frankly who cares. Its their money and so what. If you like the music and you buy the CD’s and everything else that comes along with being a fan of course they are going to make money. Now the lead dog has the best view so its natural for the dogs that follow to be an ass, because hell thats all they look at all day as they try to reach the top. Here is an interesting view from an ass. - Share your comments, thoughts and of course all views are always welcome. Just remember if your an ass we may just point it out.
Tooth-sized phallus, Bono, is probably swimming in his room of coins right now while he waits for The Edge to finish making his 500 ft tribute to Barbara Cartland made out of diamonds, saffron and black printer ink.
Oh, not to mention also having the audacity to expect people like us, who earn about 6 pence an hour, to cough up our meagre incomes into the hands of whichever plight they’ve aligned themselves with when they woke up this morning. And we know Bono & Co. are rich because Forbes have released their rich-list of musicians which, for the most part, is a list of artistes so dull that you might need to staple your eyeholes open just to get through it.
Over the past 12 months, U2 have been raking it in, earning an outrageous £84.9m. If you believe the rumours, most of that tootles off to some offshore account in Holland, which probably has cheque books made from African children’s woe.
Last month, the band gave a push to another up-and-coming technology — BD Live, which was installed on copies of its “U2 360° Tour” Blu-ray DVDs.
Using an Internet-connected player, BD-Live connects discs to a website where content is uploaded from a host.
Every time a user inserts the disc, new items and feeds, such as clips from the band, can be accessed through their television set.
Users are given a live feed of the band’s progress throughout the tour: The first download will feature a video that U2 filmed for users, in which they apologize to fans for missing a leg of their tour.
“U2 360° Tour,” released through Universal Music, marks the first Blu-ray title to be produced in the U.K. with BD-Live content. It was installed through specialty content production company the Pavement.
Cost to install the program code is around £200-£300 ($300-$450), while cost to manage the website averages approximately $7,600 per year.
“It’s important that the world knows the tech is out there,” says Pavement founder Andy Evans. “One of the biggest concerns I hear from clients is that they fear BD-Live costs too much to install and maintain. The reality is it probably costs less than a full-page magazine ad.”
Evans adds that while Hollywood majors currently use BD-Live as a means of streaming up-to-date trailers on Blu-ray discs, it also a marketing tool for distributors.
“With BD-Live, you can monitor how often people are watching your DVD, who they are and where they are viewing it,” he says.
Evans says that soon users will be able to buy tickets through their Blu-ray disc and link up to friends and communicate through the disc.
U2 are making their latest comeback. Following Bono’s back surgery (which forced the cancellation of their North American tour), the group will hit the road in Europe for a series of dates and be back around the United States next summer.
U2 have had a fascinating career, as even though they’ve been one of the biggest bands in the world for the better part of the past three decades, they have still regularly been cast as underdogs on the comeback trail. Their story arc is remarkable, and it hit an interesting point when they released Pop in 1997.
When you consider most albums, you have to consider the context along with the songs. But in the case of Pop, it’s almost all about the context. The last time U2 had appeared, it was a part of the absolutely gigantic ZooTV tour, which at the time was one of the most ambitious stadium-sized rock shows ever produced.
It was in support of the hugely successful Achtung Baby, a moody art rock album masquerading as pop music (it helped that “One,” the one track on the album that doesn’t really fit, was a huge international hit). The band followed Achtung with a pair of strange experiments: 1993’s Zooropa, which was an album that leaned heavily on electronics and was written and recorded in between legs of ZooTV, and 1996’s Original Soundtracks 1, a heavily ambient album produced by Brian Eno and credited to Passengers (it was so out there that the label didn’t want them to release it under their own name).
That meant it had been nearly six years since a “proper” U2 album had been put on the market, so expectations were high. Those expectations were compounded by the fact that in the run-up to Pop’s release, people were suggesting that U2 had somehow managed to solve the conundrum that was facing rock music at the time.
Back in 1996, a reasonable portion of the population believed that dance music was going to take over as the next great underground genre to blow up to stadium size. Everybody was extremely excited about the Prodigy, and the Chemical Brothers were being treated like big time rock stars and not just a pair of DJs.
More and more bands were dipping into the electronic pool, augmenting their rock tunes with breakbeats, bits of trip-hop and whatever else floated over from the United Kingdom. It was seen as a conundrum that needed to be solved, as though somebody would eventually crack the code and deliver a song or an album that would successfully bring together the two disparate worlds to create a new genre.
Everybody was convinced that Pop was that album. Before anybody heard any music, people who thought about pop music for a living seemed to think that U2 had solved it, and when they dropped the single “Discotheque” a month before, it seemed like Pop was going to change everything. “Discotheque” grafted some super-distorted guitars, techno-funky bass and a sweaty breakbeat, and it still allowed for a killer chorus it sounded like the collision of modern dance music and rock and roll.
But when the album came out and fans listened to the other 11 songs on the album, there was much confusion. The first three songs on the album — “Discotheque,” “Do You Feel Loved” and “Mofo” — made an effort to attach disparate dance genres (like techno, house and drum and bass) to U2’s refined approach to stadium rock.
The problem is that none of those songs particularly succeed as dance songs or as rock workouts. “Discotheque” runs out of steam, “Do You Feel Loved” isn’t dynamic enough and “Mofo” devolves into a beat-happy mess.
And then U2 seem to abandon the premise entirely. Luckily, they do it for the sake of “If God Will Send His Angels” and “Staring at the Sun,” neither of which contain very much in the way of electronics but both of which contain blissful melodies and hypnotic hooks. (“If God Will Send His Angels,” in particular, seemed to be laying the groundwork for their throwback 2000 album All That You Can’t Leave Behind.) “Gone” is also a spectacular anthem with a giant chorus — in fact, Bono has a great time on Pop, as there are places for him to experiment as well as to hit his usual high notes. (Conversely, the Edge has the roughest time on Pop, as his guitar tones are often subverted, distorted or lost entirely.)
Latter day U2 albums also contain a healthy amount of obsessions with American culture, and Pop contains two such tracks: “Miami” and “The Playboy Mansion.” The former is an intense beat experiment that does a lot of swirling but doesn’t go much of anywhere, and “The Playboy Mansion” is about the closest thing the band has ever come to making a novelty song. Still, it’s charming in spots and has a jaunty little melody.
The album wraps up with the smoldering “If You Wear That Velvet Dress,” the lurching “Please” and the sparse, powerful “Wake Up Dead Man.” Really, those three songs act as a microcosm for U2’s entire career, as it has the right combination of romanticism, Catholicism, passion and darkness. Unfortunately, none of those songs have the sort of sweetness that lurks under even the most militant U2 tunes, which makes for a rather uneven finish to what ends up being a bizarre, disjointed album.
So Pop didn’t change the way we think about rock music, nor did it change the way we think about U2 (they ended up really coming back with All That You Can’t Leave Behind a few years later). Bono, the Edge, Adam Clayton and Larry Mullen, Jr. seemed to be distracted by keyboards and irony, which may explain why Pop is by far the most schizophrenic release in U2’s canon.
It’s an interesting entry in the band’s history (and a fascinating look at the state of rock music in 1997), but not up there with the essential All That You Can’t Leave Behind, Achtung Baby and The Joshua Tree.
One thing is for sure, U2 has created something that you can’t leave behind.
John Lydon seems to be suffering from more delusions than his usual sort lately, as evidenced by a new interview with Britain’s Daily Star tabloid.
While discussing why he chose not to work with Damon Albarn on Gorillaz’s latest release, Plastic Beach, the former king of controversy also threw in a dig at U2 for reasons no one but John Lydon would probably understand.
The former Sex Pistols frontman revealed he was annoyed to not have been invited to participate in many major UK festivals, saying they hadn’t had any offers.
“They have been quite negative, which has astounded us because PIL is the perfect festival band,” he said. “You don’t want U2 — that’s a band that never should have existed, there’s no life experience in any of their songs.”
Somehow, Lydon goes from talking about why PiL is right for festival shows to why U2 shouldn’t exist.
Don’t worry, John: U2’s itinerary was messed up recently because Bono hurt his back. Didn’t you hear about them pulling out of Glastonbury?
The 54 year old said, “They gave me a bell but the answer was ‘no’. I really don’t want to be dabbling in other people’s gene pools.”
“I’ve worked the many so-called famous people but it’s never been for any deliberate financial motivation. If I did it wouldn’t be a business phone call followed by a management agreement and then for an album manufactured and marketed as to what the current popular trends were.”
Instead John’s is keen to make new music with his band Public Image Limited (PIL) who kick off a six-date UK tour next week.
Public Image Limited are playing a string of 02 Academy dates around the UK in London, Bristol, Liverpool, Oxford, Leeds and Glasgow.
Helping Bono on his way to recover he seems to have a great deal of support from his friends in high places.
U2’s front man his wife of nearly 29 years, Ali, were snapped lounging on Oracle owner, Larry Ellison’s yacht “The Rising Sun” with Roman Abramovich. “The Rising Sun” is the largest privately owned yacht in the world.
This spotting of Bono comes just weeks after he hung with his friend Lance Armstrong at his villa in the South of France. It must be nice to be in with such circle of friends.
The Chelsea football club owner, Roman Abramovich, met the couple of the massive yacht in the Mediterranean sea just off the French coast.
Bono has been staying at his own holiday home in the South of France. His hope is to be healthy enough to return to performing this fall for the next leg of his “360 Tour”.
If these are the people he calls friends imagine who his doctors are!
Did you know ?
Co-owned by Larry Ellison, CEO of Oracle Corporation, and David Geffen of Geffen Records, Rising Sun carried a price tag of $200 million.
Built with the intention of surpassing Octopus in size, 453 feet long Rising Sun was built by Lürssen in Germany. Not only did Rising Sun surpass Octopus, the yacht is so big that it can’t even dock at most marinas—it exceeds their size limits.
With 82 rooms on five stories, Rising Sun’s living area exceeds 8,000 square meters. Rising Sun is totally pimped-out with onyx countertops, a gym, spa and sauna, Jacuzzi bathrooms and a private movie theater with giant plasma screen.
It also boasts an extensive private wine cellar, 3,300 square meters of teak-layered deck space, and a basketball court on the deck doubles as a helicopter pad.
Also did you know that “The Edge” owns one?
U2 guitarist The Edge (David Howell Evans) has banded together with a group of mates to buy £12m luxury yacht The Cyan. Bono had a chance to lease the boat a couple of years back. Wonder if the going rate of 200K is still available ?
Rumours wondered if it was that Bono had purchased the yacht however the The Edge set the record straight by saying:
It’s not Bono’s yacht at all, it’s mine. Bono doesn’t know a thing about boats.
“For years it was a dream of mine to own a yacht, but to be honest, it was a bit out of my league. So myself and a few friends got together, chipped in, and bought the Cyan. I don’t know where the story that Bono owns it came from.”
Luxury motor yacht CYAN has a total of 6 cabins able to sleep 10 guests. The yachts master cabin which is full width of the beam on the main deck has a King size bed, a large study, two walk-in closets, and his and hers bathrooms interconnected by a Jacuzzi bath. Aldo located on the main deck is an additional Queen cabin with ensuite which is best suited for a nanny or bodyguard as the entrance for this cabin is via a separate corridor leading to the galley. On lower deck are another 2 Queen staterooms with ensuite bathrooms and 2 Twin cabins with ensuite shower room. All of the cabins have a TV, DVD and VCR. All guest cabins are decorated in limed oak and are light and spacious.
Rock Stars and their toys, you gota love it. Hey what would you do with your rock star money?
For most fans today’s news was bitter sweet. The whole idea of having to wait a whole year before the boys come back to America seems a bit much for a few fans. For the most part fans see this as a possibility to catch U2’s new album which by the Summer 2011 should be out. At least the first single should be. Have you had time to look at the new dates and see what impact if any the dates make on your new travel plans? What do you think ? We want to hear from you.
As fans began to get the news of updated dates U2’s site become flooded with fans trying to get news. Early the site was down as they scrambled to deal with the large amount of traffic. U2TOURFANS had an increase that swelled as the day progressed.
Bono said in a video message that they have been working on some new music. We can expect to hear more about that in the coming weeks. In case you have been under a rock today here is the announcement.
U2’s summer concerts in North America, postponed in May to allow Bono, the band’s lead singer, to recover from back surgery, have been rescheduled for next year.
The 16 shows will now begin on May 21 at Invesco Field in Denver (where the band was to have played on June 12, 2010), and continue through July 23, when it will play at TCF Bank Stadium in Minneapolis. The show at New Meadowlands Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J., originally scheduled for July 19, 2010, will now be on July 20, 2011. The band has posted the full schedule on its Web site.
Tickets for the original shows will be honored on the new dates, said Live Nation, the tour’s promoter.
We have posted a new link to take U2TOURFANS on the road with you. You will be able to find the link on the left side of the front page of the site. Or you can click on this link below.
The 2010 European tour, which has not been affected, begins as scheduled on August 6th in Turin.
U2’s manager Paul McGuinness thanked fans for their ongoing support, “We’re delighted the dates are rescheduled and in all the same venues we originally planned to play. It hasn’t been easy to accomplish this and I’d like to thank the managers of the many venues and sports teams across North America and Live Nation Global Touring for their help and cooperation in making this complex new plan possible. Above all we want to thank the U2 fans for bearing with us. They’re the best and the band wants to get back to where they belong, surrounded by their audience.”
The U2 360° Tour is produced by Live Nation Global Touring and sponsored in 2010 by BlackBerry.
The North American Tour rescheduled dates, are confirmed as follows:
May 21
Denver, CO
Invesco Field
(formerly June 12/10)
May 24
Salt Lake City, UT
Rice Eccles Stadium
(formerly June 3/10)
June 01
Edmonton, AB
Commonwealth Stadium
(formerly June 23/10)
June 04
Seattle, WA
Qwest Field
(formerly June 20/10)
June 07
Oakland, CA
McAfee Coliseum
(formerly June 20/10)
June 17
Anaheim, CA
Angels Stadium
(formerly June 6/10)
June 18
Anaheim, CA
Angels Stadium
(formerly June 7/10)
June 26
East Lansing, MI
Spartan Stadium at MSU
(formerly June 30/10)
June 29
Miami, FL
*Sun Life Stadium previously Dolphin Stadium
(formerly July 9/10)
July 05
Chicago, IL
Soldier Field
(formerly July 6/10)
July 08
Montreal, QC
Hippodrome
(formerly July 16/10)
July 09
Montreal, QC
Hippodrome
(formerly July 17/10)
July 11
Toronto, ON
Rogers Centre
(formerly July 3/10)
July 14
Philadelphia, PA
Lincoln Financial Field
(formerly July 12/10)
July 20
East Rutherford, NJ
New Meadowlands Stadium
(formerly July 19/10)
July 23
Minneapolis, MN
TCF Bank Stadium
(formerly June 27/10)
Tickets for the previously scheduled performances will be honoured at the door. Tickets for the rescheduled performances will be available at www.livenation.com and all usual outlets. Refunds if required available at point of purchase.
LOS ANGELES, July 13 /PRNewswire/ — Live Nation Entertainment announced today that the U2 360 degree tour dates in the US, which were recently postponed due to Bono’s emergency back surgery, have all been rescheduled for Spring/Summer 2011 with all tickets being valid at the rescheduled performances.
The 2010 European tour, which has not been affected, begins as scheduled on August 6th in Turin.
U2’s manager Paul McGuinness thanked fans for their ongoing support, “We’re delighted the dates are rescheduled and in all the same venues we originally planned to play. It hasn’t been easy to accomplish this and I’d like to thank the managers of the many venues and sports teams across North America and Live Nation Global Touring for their help and cooperation in making this complex new plan possible. Above all we want to thank the U2 fans for bearing with us. They’re the best and the band wants to get back to where they belong, surrounded by their audience.”
The U2 360 degree Tour is produced by Live Nation Global Touring and sponsored in 2010 by BlackBerry.
The North American Tour rescheduled dates, are confirmed as follows: