1. well, here I go... had planned not to listen to any leaked material, but I'm too weak as it seems

    "funky" is the word for these snippets. I like the first part, but the second... mmh... but then, I'll wait for Monday (just 2 more days!) to listen to the complete song on high volume. To this day, U2 have never failed me with their music, so why now. Here is hope it won't be... too... funky
  2. Originally posted by drewhiggins:[..]

    I listen to R&B a lot more, but it certainly has that same sort of sound (2000+). It sounds like hip-hop-rock more so, with a garage and industrial sound. That said, we're only hearing through a tape recorder.


    If Clip 2 sounds like Hip Hop, Vertigo sounds like Techno.
  3. Bono's voice in clip 1 sounds really high, perhaps thats due to the tinny recording.
  4. a question regarding that iTunes release on Monday (?????) .... at u2.com it says

    "Get On Your Boots, the first single from U2’s new album No Line On The Horizon, will be released as a digital download on February 15th" ... so how trustworthy is that Alan Cross-announcement ??
  5. Originally posted by loftarasa:a question regarding that iTunes release on Monday (?????) .... at u2.com it says

    "Get On Your Boots, the first single from U2’s new album No Line On The Horizon, will be released as a digital download on February 15th" ... so how trustworthy is that Alan Cross-announcement ??


    I don't know, just see for yourself this monday
  6. The birds are singing that Alan is right (Itunes US/Canada that is)
  7. U2.com:

    17.01.2009
    'A big song with lots of layers...'

    He'll be the first to play it on Monday, so what does Dave Fanning think of the new single ?

    On Monday morning, the world finally gets to hear Get On Your Boots. As usual, the person to premiere the track will be Irish TV and radio presenter Dave Fanning, someone who's been championing the band since he first started playing their demos on pirate radio more than three decades ago. Ever since, Dave's got the first play of a new U2 single. We tracked him down at 2FM in Dublin.

    So you’ve heard the single, which the rest of the world will hear on Monday - first impressions?

    First impressions is that there’s eleven tracks on the album and ‘Get On Your Boots’ is the one you’d instantly say is the single. It’s the ‘Vertigo’ of the album - although a completely different kind of song. That was a new song which was an instant hit night after night on the last tour and this song will be the same on the next tour. People will be impressed, it’s very U2 and there’ s nothing wrong with that, a big song with lots of layers but not overproduced. Great track.

    Sounds like you’ve heard the album too?

    I have, just a few times though and it’s hard to give you first impressions because I need to hear it in the car and in the bath. But certainly you know in hearing it that they remain a great creative force as a band, what I’m not sure of yet is whether it is the beginning of a new sequence of albums or the third in a series that began with All That You Can’t Leave Behind.
    It’s a big record though and I was struck by the running order, that tracks 2 (Magnificent), 3 (Moment of Surrender), and 4 (Unknown Caller) alone are almost twenty minutes of music. Normally you find longer songs at the end of a record, but these come before you even reach Get On Your Boots. Some of the lyric writing seemed more personal than usual to me, and there’s lots of buried songs on there too, songs that will grow on you – like if you ask your average U2 fan to sing ‘A Man and A Woman’ or ‘Crumbs Under your Table’ from How To Dismantle An Atomic Bomb they might not be able to, but they were gems. The album has plenty of songs like that, songs to return to.

    There was a time when they let you choose the single release.

    Yes, it’s hard to believe that thirty years ago they came into my show, all four of them every night for a week, and we played three of their songs a night and asked the audience to decide what the single should be. Out of Control got it, with Stories for Boys as a b-side and we threw in Boy-Girl too. I remember a thousand copies of the single were pressed and we launched it at Windmill Lane and about 15 people turned up.
    I’d been playing their demo tapes since being on pirate stations in 1978, I just got behind them, I never even knew they would get as far as another demo. I’m not brilliant, I couldn’t predict anything, I was more into The Undertones at the time but U2 just seemed to be going along the same lines as me and I liked them.

    Ever since you’ve always had the world premiere of a new U2 single from a new album.

    I’ve had the world exclusive ever since, Paul McGuinness always likes to start a new campaign with me. I asked him about it this morning, he said he thought I was a good luck charm. But my feeling on this album is that while it’s been a really long wait, it is worth the wait. They were the biggest band of the eighties, then they dominated the nineties and now they’re writing a whole new chapter in another decade - not young anymore but still looking very cool. I think of all the 17 year olds who are going to buy this record and it will only be the third or fourth record they have bought - they’re still right up there.

    One other song that really stood out for you ?

    Stand Up Comedy – the nearest thing they’ve ever done to Led Zeppelin. But I could change my mind, wait till I’ve heard it in the bath a few times. One - from Achtung Baby - never hit me for months.


  8. And would you trust Dave Fanning? To say what he's said is something, and that he likens Stand Up Comedy to the Zep.


  9. Dave says that 'Crumbs (Under Your Table) is a gem. So much for this.

    Seriously. Take this review like all other prerelease reviews. They all came from long time companions/fans of the band who are as happy as you and me to have some new U2 stuff.
  10. Originally posted by yeah:[..]

    Dave says that 'Crumbs (Under Your Table) is a gem. So much for this.

    Seriously. Take this review like all other prerelease reviews. They all came from long time companions/fans of the band who are as happy as you and me to have some new U2 stuff.


    I like Crumbs From The Table. I wouldn't put it as a gem or classic.


    One - from Achtung Baby - never hit me for months.


    It might not have hit him for months. It hasn't hit me since I first heard it. I would be rating it down there as the one song which kept Achtung away from being a masterpiece for me. The Unforgettable Fire, Pop and The Joshua Tree have no weak songs; they are masterpieces.


  11. haha, so we will have the song on monday