1. I was enjoying this review up until the part where he said the lyrics were "Know the line on the horizon, know the line."

    Oh guy boy.

    Originally posted by EntertainmentThe warning has been sounded. ''Danger! Danger! U2 are experimenting again!'' This is not exactly welcome news for those who remember the band's attempts at reformulating their cathedral-rock sound with of-the-moment trendiness (Zooropa, Pop) as something to be endured, not embraced, and who had been thrilled by their return to ''old-school U2'' on 2000's All That You Can't Leave Behind. Only once, with Achtung Baby, have Bono and Co. ever stretched far and found glory.

    But with their 12th studio album, U2 have Achtung it again. No Line on the Horizon is an eclectic and electrifying winner, one that speaks to the zeitgeist the way only U2 can and dare to do. ''Let me in the sound!'' Bono yelps several times on the record, most notably on the dense-and- danceable first single, ''Get On Your Boots.'' To be clear, No Line isn't some radical evolution of rock & roll. It's not even a radical reinvention of U2. Dirty guitar, heavy bass, cheesy keyboards, beeps and loops — those sounds were all there during the Zooropa/Pop digression. The difference this time is that U2 don't sound lost in them. ''Know the line on the horizon/Know the line,'' Bono sings on the title track, a raw and moody ode to the muse, where The Edge's rough riffing is soothed by ethereal synth. This is an adventurous experience created by responsible people, for responsible people — a record about searching for meaning, but always knowing the way home.

    The album's risk/reward pays off early with a pair of six-minute-plus epics, both of which have Bono seeking and receiving something like divine revelation in the rattle and hum of the everyday world. ''Moment of Surrender'' — wherein a profound encounter with ''a vision of invisibility'' goes down at an ATM — is an organ-fueled hymn that takes its own soulful time coming to an end. It is immediately followed by ''Unknown Caller,'' a rousing if kinda goofy spiritual wake-up call aimed at a culture of blurry-eyed BlackBerry addicts. Computer jargon is turned into spiritual maxims issued by a voice-of-God shout-chant chorus: ''Shush now/Oh, oh/Force quit and move to trash.'' Now you know what didactic spam sounds like.

    But what's eye-rolling and oblique at first becomes can't-stop-thinking-about-it infectious upon repeat listens: No Line is, for certain, a grows-on-you proposition. ''Get On Your Boots,'' which has invited some ''Do I like this or not?'' head-scratching among fans and critics, blazes to life as part of a trio of great, galloping rockers that form No Line's fun-and-fiery middle section. Yet the record's instant classic is its penultimate track, ''Breathe,'' a stomping, snarling rumination about engaging the world with open arms despite so much external gloom and internal angst. Ever the optimist, Bono evokes the threats of a global pandemic, an economic crisis, and hostile neighbors, then insists: ''These days are better than that.'' Preachy? Hell, yes. And bring it on. No Line on the Horizon offers idealism spliced with new attitude and the same old grace, and is all the better for it. Memo to U2: Don't leave this behind. A–
  2. Originally posted by haytrain:I was enjoying this review up until the part where he said the lyrics were "Know the line on the horizon, know the line."

    Oh guy boy.

    [..]


    Indeed....oh boy..
  3. Originally posted by ad87:hi folks!

    i walked in the supermarket and saw a dutch TV-guide with on front: Anton Corbijn, i immediatly bought it and it was about himself and the movie Linear for NLOTH!

    it is a nice interview, and some highlights i didnt know;
    - its a movie with no dialoges
    - its about a nord-african motorcyclist from paris burns his motor and goes to the south(marroco) that explains the burning motor on the cd!
    - its a movie more to accompanie the songs for the mood and the story
    - and one of his(Anton) favorite songs from the album....until december when u2 dicided to drop it of, is in the movie..WINTER

    and overal nice intervew, and looking forward to hear Winter!

    dont know if this was already known or mentioned
    so enjoy


    Good to have no dialogues..could make it a work of art instead of a B-film with cringeworthy acting..

  4. The mid section of the album i.e. Boots, Crazy and Stand Up ruin the album IMO. I mean, the rest of the song have this kind of darkish feel to them, and those 3 songs just break the mood...
    anyway that's how I feel about it
  5. Originally posted by blink:The mid section of the album i.e. Boots, Crazy and Stand Up ruin the album IMO. I mean, the rest of the song have this kind of darkish feel to them, and those 3 songs just break the mood...
    anyway that's how I feel about it


    I agree...Up to Unknown Caller, it's great..Crazy is okay but I skip Boots and sometimes Stand Up too, they don't fit on the album. So I continue with Fez-BB, WAS and Breathe to finish it of like it should be with Cedars.

    Don't know why Boots and Stand Up are on the album....make B-sides of them and put some real stuff on it.
  6. Originally posted by MWSAH:[..]

    I agree...Up to Unknown Caller, it's great..Crazy is okay but I skip Boots and sometimes Stand Up too, they don't fit on the album. So I continue with Fez-BB, WAS and Breathe to finish it of like it should be with Cedars.

    Don't know why Boots and Stand Up are on the album....make B-sides of them and put some real stuff on it.


    Maybe that's just why they are on the album. To interrupt, that's how it feels. They're both great rock tunes but it feels like you're banged on your head while having a nice dream.
  7. Originally posted by dieder:[..]

    Maybe that's just why they are on the album. To interrupt, that's how it feels. They're both great rock tunes but it feels like you're banged on your head while having a nice dream.
    haha yeah

  8. Originally posted by dieder:Maybe that's just why they are on the album. To interrupt, that's how it feels. They're both great rock tunes but it feels like you're banged on your head while having a nice dream.
    I love hearing the heavy drums start of GOYB just after the quiet ending of I'll Go Crazy. It fits perfectly in my opinion. I would have placed Stand Up Comedy in other place, though... Maybe after Magnificient or something like that. Not sure tho
  9. Originally posted by drewhiggins:It is all the versions (standard CD w/bonus track to the box-set).

    And I'll post my thoughts on the Linear film as well as Winter in the next few days.


    Is the box set out today aswell, FFS i didnt know that.
  10. My local JB has the standard cd, hopefully the box set and other formats will come in tomorrow.


  11. i went to jb in city and they said theyd have it later today, so ill have to buy tomoorw and that all the box sets were pre sold, DAMN!!!!! , oh and i know this is off topic but i bought my 1st ipod today and when i put an album on there it doesnt show the album cover, can someone plz help me?????
  12. Originally posted by Andrew_C:[..]

    i went to jb in city and they said theyd have it later today, so ill have to buy tomoorw and that all the box sets were pre sold, DAMN!!!!! , oh and i know this is off topic but i bought my 1st ipod today and when i put an album on there it doesnt show the album cover, can someone plz help me?????


    You must do it manually, click with the right mouse button on the album in iTunes, choose "get info" and on the right bottom there's a window. Double click on it and choose the album cover. (you must save the picture to your PC from somewhere)

    I wrote this on my Touch so don't wonder it's such a lame explanation