1. Originally posted by RattleandHum1988[..]

    Really? Where are you from? In Canada they come out on tuesday.


    Brisbane. Official release date here is tomorrow but all the city stores have cheated.
    My credit card has just taken a hammering.

    Boy's Bonus disc is quite good....October's ok. War's not-so-good.
  2. should I buy all 3 doubles dicers or wait a week for the box set to be delivered?
  3. Originally posted by germcevoyshould I buy all 3 doubles dicers or wait a week for the box set to be delivered?


    Have you ordered the boxed set from Amazon? Depends how eager you are. That boxed set looks good with the space for UBRS remaster when it comes out. But I've just snatched all 3 of the shelves and I'm happy.

    Only problem is: No album covers for the bonus discs available from iTunes. Not even Boy and War album covers... For some reason October was there though.
  4. Just got the 3 deluxe sets, too. Somehow there's a hole in my pocket now.
  5. Amazon.com Box Set


    HMV T-Shirts





  6. Originally posted by yeahJust got the 3 deluxe sets, too. Somehow there's a hole in my pocket now.


    Yeah I don't know yet if I buy all three


  7. was thinking of those t-shirt sets. Don't think thay are worth 35 quid though. HMV are quoting very limited quantities though so possibe collectibles. If they have any in stock when I head in on monday 9i'll grab em. If not i'll choose between the box set and the 3 deluxe + vinyls.

    Expensive

    EDIT - just noticed that the box set isn't available until the 29th. The 3 deluxes it is then. I''ll maybe pick up the box set with the next wages
  8. Originally posted by yeahJust got the 3 deluxe sets, too. Somehow there's a hole in my pocket now.


    give me a review as to the lossless sound quality if you will . . .
  9. Originally posted by germcevoy[..]

    give me a review as to the lossless sound quality if you will . . .


    Will do when I've listened to them.

    Steve Lillywhite on the 3 albums:
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7511370.stm
    -----
    There's also an advertisement from Universal saying that UABRS will be rereleased on August 29th as deluxe edition with the Red Rocks DVD as Bonus...
  10. LILLYWHITE TALKS ABOUT THE REMASTERED U2 ALBUMS

    click link for audio interview with Stee Lillywhite:
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7512575.stm

    Grammy award-winning producer Steve Lillywhite was the man behind the mixing desk for U2's first three albums.
    Along the way, the band transformed from cocky Irish upstarts into bona fide rock stars, eventually reaching number one with 1983's War.

    As the band release re-mastered versions of those early recordings, complete with bonus tracks and new artwork, Lillywhite recalls the tension, tedium and inspirations behind the recording sessions.



    Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.

    Steve Lillywhite talks through the recording of four early U2 tracks

    BOY (1980)


    U2's first album was recorded when the band were all under 21, and its title references their youthful naivety.
    It was originally going to be produced by Joy Division cohort Martin Hannett, but he dropped out after singer Ian Curtis committed suicide.

    I always remember on that first album, I was sitting at the mixing desk with the band behind me and suddenly I heard all this giggling. I turned around and suddenly they all went sheepish, shushing each other like teacher was looking at them.

    I think they would admit that, like all teenage boys, they hadn't lived long enough to acquire a personality… There wasn't much talking in the studio. It was quite serious.

    We recorded in a place called Windmill Lane in Dublin. It was great for traditional Irish music but no Irish rock band had recorded there. Thin Lizzy came to London to make their records. The Boomtown Rats didn't record in Ireland either.


    So the studio crew were very surprised when I decided I wanted to record the drums out in the hallway by the receptionist, as there was this wonderful clattery sound I wanted to get.
    But that meant we couldn't record until the evening, because this girl was sat answering the phones all the day. Even then, we couldn't turn the ringer off the phone so occasionally it would go off mid-take.

    It was all pretty slapdash. But funnily enough, it's not unlike how the band still records.




    OCTOBER (1981)


    More low-key and introspective than its predecessor, October received mixed reviews from critics who were unimpressed with Bono's brooding.
    Recording sessions were overshadowed by concerns that the music industry was at odds with the singer's religious beliefs - and those of his bandmates Edge and Larry Mullen.

    Another setback came when a briefcase full of lyrics was stolen, forcing Bono to rewrite some of the songs.

    U2 could have gone two ways after Boy. They could have broken out and gone bigger - but in fact what they did was they shrunk a little bit. They were a little bit scared of the world, I think.

    Yes, there were Bibles dotted around the room during the recording. There was a fair amount of that. But I was so busy trying to pull teeth - trying to make an album - that it sort of washed over me.

    It was completely chaotic and mad in the studio and, obviously, Bono's lyrics being lost contributed to the atmosphere. I'm not sure whether any of those words would have been used on the album - only he knows that - but certainly it would have been a starting point.



    Bono has to sing these songs for two years on the road. He always says: "I'm a travelling salesman. I need to make sure my vacuum cleaner is the best vacuum cleaner there is"
    Steve Lillywhite

    But what came out was quite serene in a strange way. One song - Scarlet - only has one word: "Rejoice". People don't do songs like that any more.
    In the end, October wasn't a big record. After the rock and roll things they tickled on the first album, people were expecting something that was a bit more "rawk". What they got, in fact, was perhaps an indication of where the band would go later on in their career.

    The Joshua Tree was probably where they married the sensibilities of those first two albums and that was where they struck gold.


    WAR (1983)


    U2's third album saw them break through into the mainstream - even knocking Michael Jackson's Thriller off the top of the UK charts.
    Re-energised and re-focused, the band also gained a political edge with songs like Sunday Bloody Sunday.

    The band had been questioning whether their beliefs could coincide with their new experiences. And in the end it was their manager Paul McGuinness who sat down and said, "don't be so silly, you can have them both".

    In his sort of matter-of-fact way, he convinced them that the world would be better if they carried on making music.

    But I think we all realised that there'd been a step back with October and that, if we were going to go for it, we had to have the urgency of the first album.

    I remember Bono saying to The Edge, "don't be like The Edge. Be like Mick Jones from the Clash".

    Because Edge is like a scientist. He has the white coat on and pencils in his pocket. And I think what Bono wanted him to do was take off the white coat and put on the star-studded leather jacket.


    Preceding the album, all the band had their first vacation in a long time. I went with Paul McGuinness and Adam to Tuscany.
    Edge was the only one who stayed at home. And he presented us with Sunday Bloody Sunday when we got back. And we just went, "wow, this is really good".

    I listened to the album the other day and certainly New Year's Day is a spectacular piece of work. It's sonically great, it's mature, and Edge's piano-playing - he's got such a great touch. And that bassline was Adam's finest moment.

    But it's funny, we didn't think of it as a single. It was one of the young interns in the studio who first said to me, "that song is brilliant". And we all went, "oh, really?"

    One of the strange things about that album is that we used Kid Creole's backing singers, the Coconuts. They just happened to be in Dublin on tour, so we hung out with them and they came in and sang on Surrender. So it was sort of random - this serious Irish rock band having the Coconuts on their album.

    But there's nothing U2 like better than a pretty woman.


    The new versions of Boy, October and War are released on 21 July by Island Records. Steve Lillywhite was talking to BBC News entertainment reporter Mark Savage
  11. Originally posted by aussiemofoJust purchased all 3 deluxe sets and listening now! Very polished...photos inside are great. And some of these unreleased tracks are pretty decent!


    EDIT: And Drew I think Speed of Life sounds more like Electric Co than Saturday Night.


    Maybe it was Speed of Life I was talking about. So how much did you pay for your three aussiemofo, and where'd you get them from? I'm gonna grab Boy next week (or this week, whenever) and get October / War in the next week for sure. Just re-listened to ATTTTG and it wasn't that one.

    And I checked iTunes (Australia) and the Boy / War / October Deluxe discs are all there.

    But $31.99 for 128Kbps iTunes protected files? No damned way in this world.
  12. Originally posted by Remy[..]

    Yeah I don't know yet if I buy all three


    Me too, recently bought U2 by U2, and planning to buy the Mexico DVD (Harry, don't start.. ), so another 100 euros is a bit too much for a poor bloke like me.