1. Originally posted by roxrios:[..]

    If I may add a third to that !!!!

    In U2 album release years, it's really not that far away!!!

    So close, Yet so Far!!!





    Originally posted by bones44044:All I want to say is that I love november . birhtday Nov 24. what a great treat every couple of years a new album is released right around my birthday . and every coulpe of years here in the states Thanksgiving falls on my b-day so I get a big ass meal cooked for me and I can pig out and listen to U2 all day






    If we knew back then what we know now...
  2. http://africa.reuters.com/wire/news/usnN22407329.html

    Poverty campaign inspires new U2 song, says Bono


    WASHINGTON, Oct 22 (Reuters) - When 116 million people recently stood up against worldwide poverty, their coordinated cry failed to make big headlines -- but they did inspire Irish rocker and activist Bono to write a new song for his group U2.

    In an interview with Reuters on Wednesday, Bono said the Stand Up and Take Action campaign in 131 countries had moved him to start creating a song called "Stand Up".

    "It's not finished yet but it's inspired by this concept of stand up. It's a little diamond, though," Bono said, speaking by telephone from Los Angeles.

    "It's not a 'let's hold hands and the world is a better place sort of song.' It's more kick down the door of your own hypocrisy," he said.

    Organizers said the 116 million people who called on global leaders not to forget their promise to reduce world poverty and hunger by 2015, represented nearly two percent of the world's population and was a Guinness World Record "for the biggest mass mobilization on a single issue".

    World leaders set a series of agreed targets on poverty, education, health, equality and malnutrition known as Millennium Development Goals or MDGs, eight years ago.

    But developing countries fear rich nations will use the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression as an excuse to scale down their promises.

    African leaders have already accused rich donor nations of not keeping to their aid commitments, which has become critical to combat the effects of higher world food prices.

    "Although they were not a legal contract, and we wish they were, there is a moral contract that was made," Bono said.

    "To break a promise to yourself, to your partner, to your family, a politician to his constituents, are all bad things to do -- but it's a heinous crime to make a promise to the poorest most vulnerable people on earth and break it. That's just not acceptable," he said.

    He said while the MDGs may be "the worst acronym in the history of activism," the Stand Up and Take Action events around the world on Oct 17 to 19 showed that people knew what they stand for.

    "The numbers show that people are aware that those promises were made and why politicians can't think 'oh we can get away with it because no one really knows about it'" Bono said.

    For years, Bono has used his celebrity to raise money and draw attention to global poverty and highlight how aid, when used properly, can help prevent and treat diseases like malaria and HIV/AIDS.

    "It is dreadful to think that we could take the foot off the pedal at our end and they run out of road on theirs," he said of concerns that less aid will slow Africa's progress.

    Still, Bono said the region had demonstrated significant economic potential after several years of strong economic growth, led by a new generation of leaders.

    "I have faith in Africans who are becoming very adept at this balancing act between necessary aid flows and realizing that business, commerce and investment can take you out of catastrophe," said Bono.

    (Reporting by Lesley Wroughton. Editing by Alan Elsner)
  3. got this from the @U2 mailing list

    Daniel Lanois brings his eclectic style to the stage
    Lynn Saxberg , canada.com
    Published: Thursday, October 24, 2008

    Daniel Lanois is at a creative peak these days -- his brain not only
    brimming with the latest U2 licks, but also casting back 20 years to
    reflect on the shaping of his first solo album, Acadie.

    A repackaged version of his 1989 debut is in stores this month. Lanois
    made himself available for a phone interview from New York City, where
    he was working with Bono and the lads on the next U2 disc.

    Will it be another Achtung Baby, or more like How to Dismantle An
    Atomic Bomb? We were supposed to be talking about Acadie, but couldn't
    resist pressing for hints about Lanois' most famous clients. U2 is due
    to release the new disc next year.

    "It's very sophisticated, rhythmically, " said a coy Lanois. "I'm
    talking high-grade and wicked. We've gotten to a place, a combination
    of myself and (Brian) Eno, I think we've just done something that's
    never been done before. The president of the company is singing like a
    bird."


    </snip>

    o god they are killing me
  4. Originally posted by thefly07:got this from the @U2 mailing list

    Daniel Lanois brings his eclectic style to the stage
    Lynn Saxberg , canada.com
    Published: Thursday, October 24, 2008

    Daniel Lanois is at a creative peak these days -- his brain not only
    brimming with the latest U2 licks, but also casting back 20 years to
    reflect on the shaping of his first solo album, Acadie.

    A repackaged version of his 1989 debut is in stores this month. Lanois
    made himself available for a phone interview from New York City, where
    he was working with Bono and the lads on the next U2 disc.

    Will it be another Achtung Baby, or more like How to Dismantle An
    Atomic Bomb? We were supposed to be talking about Acadie, but couldn't
    resist pressing for hints about Lanois' most famous clients. U2 is due
    to release the new disc next year.

    "It's very sophisticated, rhythmically, " said a coy Lanois. "I'm
    talking high-grade and wicked. We've gotten to a place, a combination
    of myself and (Brian) Eno, I think we've just done something that's
    never been done before. The president of the company is singing like a
    bird."


    </snip>

    o god they are killing me


    enough about 'birds'....lol

    It's Achtung revolution for U2 here, I think.


  5. lol i thought the same thing about birds, and yes, I agree with you


  6. haha the word birds doesn't seem to fall here so well.


  7. i think it's just because Lanois used the same expression to describe Bono awhile ago


  8. yeah or because the Brian Eno birds-project
  9. Originally posted by www.u2gigs.com2008-10-16: Sam's Chowder House - Half Moon Bay, California, USA

    Setlist: not available
    Comments: Bono and Edge attend the annual meeting of Elevation Partners, a firm of which Bono is a founding member. For the event, the company fully booked Sam's Chowder House. Bono spoke to the assembled employees, partners, and investors and drew parallels between running a business and the creative process of writing music. Reports indicate that Bono and Edge then played two unreleased songs from the forthcoming new album, but no titles or other details are known.