Originally posted by vanquish:Thanks, I think I'll get the magazine version it's only $3 more expensive than the one below it.
Do you have to preorder these? Or will JB HI FI have them in stock?
Originally posted by vanquish:Thanks, I think I'll get the magazine version it's only $3 more expensive than the one below it.
Do you have to preorder these? Or will JB HI FI have them in stock?
Without going into too many details, yeah, I have a friend from long ago that engineered the NY sessions last fall....I've mentioned this before. I don't want to say too much about him. We're starting to become close again and anyway he invited me to the city (NYC) for dinner and we met at the studio and he surprised me with a "want to hear the U2 album"?
and of course I was like "HELL YEAH!!!".
I did not ask too many questions, because I want to stay on his good side for buisness reasons. But let me say he played me about 2 minutes of each song, (which you could say is actually NOT hearing the whole record of course).
But comparing with the WM clips.....wow.
The songs are really good. I'm not willing to jump to "3rd masterpiece" because as I say, it was only 2 minutes each song. But it is really good.
I tried to remember as much as possible, but let me say: it does at times remind me of Peter Gabriel, and as I've actually said before, Sting. But in a U2/Passengers way.
I wonder about the writing credits, becase the Eno stamp is all over it.....Edge did not play all those keyboards......
Anyway,
NLOTH: reminds me of "Come Talk To Me" from Peter Gabriel.
Awesome.
Magnificent: UF with Morrocan drums.
Awesome.
MOS:
slinky funk ballad; reminds me most of Sting's "Brand New Day Album"...
Bono's vocal deliery is totally off the cuff.
UC:
Intro is the best since Streets....I almost teared up during it.....long intro, then the verse from the beach clip kicked in.... then he stopped it. Did not hear the Edge solo at the end.
Crazy:
A great tune as far as I can tell. Kind of like a SIAMYCGOO but with a nice funk groove. Way better than said previous tune.
Boots:
I still don't like it.
SUC:
the Zepplein riff is not on the WM clips.....it's a cool tune, but not my favorite.
Fez:
Passengers. Eno all ove the place; when it kicked in, my friend stoppped it...
WAS:
chilling, just like snow.
the music fits the title perfectly, more so than any U2 song in the last 10 years.
Breathe:
unlikely intro....I wasn;t crazy about this from the beach clip, but it's shaped up nicely. I still don't like the groove, but must concede they did a great job with it.
Cedars:
only heard 30 seconds...not enough to comment, but seems cool.
I'm pretty pumped for this album, but will refrain from any praise until we hear the whole thing.
BTW, my friend is working with Lanois on his next project....will keep y'all posted.
Boots is the turning point; the first half is upbeat and happy .......after Boots...dark.....
Originally posted by nowiamthemaster:1st "official" review - Irish Independent Newspaper Friday 13th 2009
No Line On The Horizon is, for the most part, an upbeat album. There are several euphoric moments and lots of allusions to redemption. Songs like Moment of Salvation [sic] - which, at more than seven minutes long, definitely outstays its welcome - is loaded with lyrics referencing "soul", "God" and "fire".
Originally posted by u2joost:[..]
Moment of Salvation??![]()
Originally posted by nowiamthemaster:[..]
Hence the [sic] - means I know the spelling is wrong & that the original author made a mistake - doh!!
KEVIN COURTNEY
U2 No line on the Horizon Mercury ****
No one knows the line on horizon better than U2 – they’ve spent enough of their career gazing meaningfully in its direction. For their third studio album of the noughties, they decided to blur that line and let everything bleed into one vast wall of sound and twisted vision.
U2 brought us to a comfort zone of sorts with the last two albums, but here they’re up for taking a few risks and chancing arms, legs and cojones on this big, brash embrace of an album. It’s not so much throwing their arms around the world as trying to crush it in a big, fuzzy bearhug.
This is a record of twists and turns and death-defying loops, and anyone looking for a quick-fix anthem may be put off by the complexities on offer here. It’s U2’s prog rock album, so if you want to sing along, you’ll need to grab hold of your chin and pay close attention.
Magnificent comes on like Blondie’s Atomic filtered through Bowie’s Heroes, and is the first of three songs that clock in at more than five minutes. The longest one, Moment of Surrender, sees Bono finding – as usual – redemption in the dirt. Though the reference to getting money out of an ATM may be rather badly timed, it at least shows that his mind is still linked to the ordinary world.
Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois have co-songwriting credits on many of the songs, and Eno’s whooshing keyboard sounds and dense production threads through the album. (The tracks produced by Steve Lillywhite seem sparse by comparison.)
Bono seems more passenger than driver here, and he sounds all the better for it. The Edge is in serious guitar hero form, going all Eric Clapton on the solo for Moment of Surrender , then kicking into Jimmy Page mode for the riff of Stand Up Comedy . Adam Clayton’s bass strains the sub-woofers, but Larry Mullen jnr’s drumming is an exercise in keeping the runaway train on track.
The band leave it till the middle section to bring out the quickfire tunes ( I’ll Go Crazy if I Don’t Go Crazy Tonight, Get on Your Boots and Stand Up Comedy ), then settle into some Eastern atmospherics on Fez – Being Born (Fez, Morocco is where the album sessions began). The Asian flavours linger on the penultimate blow-out, Breathe, and in the final dispatches of Cedars of Lebanon , but the Western-flecked White as Snow , a traditional arrangement with new lyrics, sits comfortably and confidently amongst them.
With No Line on the Horizon , U2 are no longer constrained by perspective or depth, and are free to throw the colours and shapes around and see where it takes them. They may not be the safe home ground of old, but they’ve arrived at a pretty interesting place.
Download tracks: Magnificent, Moment of Surrender, Stand Up Comedy