Originally posted by RattleandHum1988:Fair enough. I honestly can't really imagine being a U2 fan in the 80's and then transitioning into the 90's, must've been really awesomely weird.
So there was basically no notion that something really different was on the horizon? Bono didn't talk to the press all the time talking about how it was going to be a big change and all that?
Originally posted by paulc:Bono said something like ''there is a song on rattle & hum called God Part II, and some parts of that song is sonically where we are going in the future''
Originally posted by KieranU2:Looking at U2 as a band during Lovetown Tour, they were drastically different when it came to the release of 'The Fly'. Imagine watching the 'The Fly' video in September 1991 – a mere 20 months after you last saw them perform in any state. The band look badass; the sound is massively unique and different from what it was two years back; and they've already shaped the 90s. I'd be absolutely gobsmacked and unbelievably excited for the prospect of Achtung Baby. Listening to Achtung Baby nowadays gets me excited. The first time I ever listened to it improved my fan status of U2 exceptionally.
If you were old enough to appreciate the development of U2 during the 80s progessing into the 90s, then I am completely envious of you. It's something that any U2 fan would love to have witnessed.
I became a U2 fan in 1990, when I was 12. I remember when AB came out; it was my Christmas 1991 present from my girlfriend at the time. I was shocked. And in awe. I went to my first U2 show in 1993, after sadly missing Milan 1992 (my parents thought I was too young -- we had a HUGE fight). What a surprise of an album, and what a show! Nothing like the 80's. ('Hey you! I remember you!' Shouted Bono every night at his past self -- only 5 years earlier...).
End of nostalgic post!