1. Originally posted by MWSAHImagine the new tracklisting:

    1) Arabian Desert
    2) Ali Baba
    3) Sahara heat
    4) .....

    4) Brown eyed girl
    5) Brown haired girl
    6) A man and two women


  2. Haha,

    7) The camel, the nomad and the ugly..
  3. 8) Tea In The Sahara (Police cover version),probably b-side if anything.............
    9) Morocco (.........we've had Miami & New York).
    10) The Magic Carpet (a complete reworking of an old original song "Judith,Judith can you hear me ?")

    .............maybe next tour Edge wears a Fez instead of the beanie.He needs a change...........
  4. 11) Where the streets have no name

    12) Whos gonna ride your wild camels
  5. Originally posted by snitch[..]

    i know that!! that's why i'm glad u2 are recording with them again!!!
    and about what i said before about wondering lanois and eno would bring new stuff.... well, i trust them, so i think they'll bring something good and fresh! my doubts were only induced by the expectation of the new album...

    expectation is killing us all i guess!


    I agree! I can't wait at all!!!

    Anyway I also am optimistic about this new work. They're making something unforgettable, according to me...

  6. Originally posted by RemyFrom U2.com:

    The U2.Com team have just returned from Fez, Morocco where the band have been songwriting with Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois. Throughout June, we’ll be bringing you some stories from inside the U2 Riad.

    Although working with long-time friends and producers Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois, it was a new slant on this relationship. Larry seemed to be enjoying the experience, ‘It’s the first time we’ve worked with Brian and Dan in a purely songwriting capacity,’ he said. ‘So it’s very different, quite experimental and kind of liberating because of that…’

    But as far as where these new songs will go - the message is clear - it’s early days and there is no definite plan about where and when this music goes next. “We have no plans for the music yet,” Bono told us. “We’re just going to make it until we can’t not put it out!"


    Great news. Larry's words make me feel very happy! However I didn't like Bono's last sentence very much... When can't they not put out their new work???
  7. Originally posted by MSWAHImagine the new tracklisting:

    1) Arabian Desert
    2) Ali Baba
    3) Sahara heat
    4) .....
    7) The camel, the nomad and the ugly..

    Originally posted by Remy4) Brown eyed girl
    5) Brown haired girl
    6) A man and two women
    Originally posted by gmc8) Tea In The Sahara (Police cover version),probably b-side if anything.............
    9) Morocco (.........we've had Miami & New York).
    10) The Magic Carpet (a complete reworking of an old original song "Judith,Judith can you hear me ?")

    Hahahahaha I can't stop laughing!!!
    Specially with The Camel, The Nomad And The Ugly, A Man And Two Women and Morocco...
  8. Nooooooooooooo!!!!!
  9. noo!!


  10. It was clear from the beginning that the stuff they were doing down there wasn't necessarily for a new album:
    Originally posted by Remy
    ‘There’s no word on what the new material is for, ‘according to one of the team in Fez.



    But don't forget that an album can be a "project", too
  11. Exactly, I'm sure they'll use some of it for a new album.

    From u2.com:
    U2.Com have been in Morocco with Brian Eno, Danny Lanois and U2. Over the next couple of weeks we’ll be bringing you the inside track on the Fez songwriting sessions. Sometimes, explains Larry, you just have to get away in order to write the songs.

    A large white articulated lorry has been parked inconspicuously in the middle of Fez for the last couple of weeks. It almost completely obscures the traditional Moroccan riad behind it. There is no-one on duty at the open doorway behind it, but wander into the cool interior, down a small spiral staircase and you find yourself in a big, marble-pillared atrium which you discover, to your surprise, has been temporarily remade as a rock’n’roll recording studio.

    Next to one pillar is the unmistakeable figure of Brian Eno, wearing a blue, short-sleeved summer shirt, and peering into his Mac Powerbook. The wide brim of a lurid green parasol hangs over his desk, protecting him from the mid-day sun, streaming through the open roof onto this unexpected recording space U2 have created in North Africa.

    Eno isn’t here to produce a record, but to collaborate on writing new songs. He is one of six musicians, forming a wide circle around the atrium floor. Next to him, moving clockwise, Larry Mullen is at his kit rehearsing a new beat. Further along is Adam Clayton, plucking a familiar-looking, battered green bass guitar. Next up, in a brown, peaked cap and playing a steel-stringed guitar, is Daniel Lanois. Assorted technicians, all well-known faces in the U2 entourage, move in and around the circle, including Dallas Schoo, Edge’s long-time tech, who is tuning the guitar that Edge will pick up next. Next to him, sitting on a velvet settee, surrounded by books, Bono is scribbling out lyrical ideas.

    ‘Brian ?’ asks Danny Lanois. ‘Can we hear that track from last night again ?’

    ‘Number one or number two?’ replies Eno, as a break in the music reveals the melody of birds in the eaves of the house.

    ‘The birds are perking up,’ says Eno. ‘They’ve been extremely stern critics during our stay!’

    That U2 are songwriting in this ancient city, the place they first visited to shoot the Mysterious Ways video in 1991, has remained largely a secret to the local community. Eno and Lanois, working together with the band on an extended period for the first time since the ‘All That You Can’t Leave Behind’ sessions in 2000, arrive unnoticed each morning about an hour before the band. They use the time to listen back to ideas they came up with the day before – and in sessions earlier this year. These two weeks are the third and fourth in which the six musicians have been songwriting.

    ‘It’s a pretty interesting place to have a recording studio, don’t you think?’ asks Bono.

    And pretty creative, adds Larry. ‘We’ve been coming up with two or three ideas a day I guess,’ he explains. ‘It started in France when they came down to write with us a couple of months back and it will probably continue later in the year.

    ‘It’s the first time we’ve worked with Brian and Dan in a purely songwriting capacity so it’s very different, quite experimental and kind of liberating because of that…’

    ‘Let’s all come in on Larry this time, from the intro…’ comes the voice from under the parasol, calling everyone back to the music. The song gets underway with Eno throwing gentle instructions across the circle: ‘Verse, verse, chorus…’

    One track they’ve been working up sounds like a soul song with distinctly Arabic rhythms. Another is an epic story-telling piece which seems to run for seven or eight minutes. This time, as the music stops, the birdsong is in competition with a local muezzin, calling the people of Fez to prayer.

    ‘It’s kinda nice to bathe in making music like this,’ explains Larry. ‘Normally we have to get a song finished but here we’re going through lots of different ideas, finishing out some, getting them to a certain point and then leaving it to see what might happen…’
    At this stage, he says, no-one knows what will happen to the work – which is partly why it is so enjoyable. And the exotic location brings its own spirit to the music.
    ‘It happens wherever you are. If you’re in France or Dublin, you pick up what’s in the atmosphere. Fez might seem a strange choice but sometimes, to write the songs, you just have to get away from all the things that interrupt your day.’
    Some days local musicians, percussionists and fiddlers, are also in the house, adding to the songwriting mix. And elements of the music are being informed by the distinct Arabic music scale.
    ‘They don’t do 4/4,” says Larry. ‘They work in 5/4 and 6/8 and 3/4. They work in very complex rhythms so it’s very interesting for us to be a part of. It’s definitely a learning curve for us…”

    More from Fez coming up.