1. Originally posted by TheRefugee:There is very little chance that U2 will do a Springsteen and vary the setlist each night. Think back to how U2 described their 'Jukebox' days of the Lovetown tour and how they wouldn't do that again. Comparing a U2 show with a Bruce show is not like with like. How many musicians has Bruce on stage these days? I counted 16+ last year when he played Dublin. U2 will openly admit that they're not really proficient enough musicians to learn enough songs to vary a setlist regularly during a tour.

    Yes, we discussed this last week at the Bruce topic. I posted something really similar to your post: www.u2start.com/topic/by-post/530327/ ... They're not comparable in a lot of aspects, the comparison basically makes no sense besides the fact that they both fill up stadiums all over the world.
  2. I never said they had to do the variation Bruce does - twenty songs some nights. Just ten songs would be enough. U2 don't deserve to be worldwide superstars if they "aren't proficient enough" to remember/learn how to play a total of 60-80 songs to play over a tour. They have 2-3 days off between shows and travel on planes - I'm sure they could easily relearn/remember a couple of songs to play at the next show during that time.
  3. they can do it sort of .. don't play a song to infinite and then drop it forever
    they "learn" 60 songs during 360? good rotate them
    the will is enough
  4. not a matter of number of persons on stage .. PJ are 5+1 instead of 4+1
  5. Originally posted by clover68:they can do it sort of .. don't play a song to infinite and then drop it forever
    they "learn" 60 songs during 360? good rotate them
    the will is enough

    +1

    Is it really that hard for them to go through the back catalogue and say, alright here's the songs that we'll pool up to pick from:

    Boy:

    I Will Follow
    Out of Control
    The Electric Co
    An Cat Dubh

    October:

    Gloria
    October

    War:

    Drowning Man
    Sunday Bloody Sunday
    New Year's Day
    40
    Two Hearts Beat As One

    The Unforgettable Fire:

    Bad
    Pride
    The Unforgettable Fire
    A Sort of Homecoming
    MLK

    The Joshua Tree:

    Streets
    ISHFWILF
    With or Without You
    One Tree Hill
    Mothers of the Disappeared
    Running To Standstill
    Bullet the Blue Sky

    Rattle and Hum:

    All I Want Is You
    Desire
    Van Diemen's Land
    Angel of Harlem

    Achtung Baby:

    One
    Even Better Than the Real Thing
    Mysterious Ways
    The Fly
    Zoo Station
    Ultraviolet
    Until the End of the World
    Love is Blindness

    Zooropa:

    Stay
    Dirty Day

    Pop:

    Discotheque
    Staring at the Sun
    Please
    Wake Up Dead Man

    All That You Can't Leave Behind:

    Beautiful Day
    Elevation
    SIAMYCGOO
    Kite
    Walk On

    HTDAAB:

    Vertigo
    COBL
    Crumbs From Your Table

    NLOTH:

    Fez
    White as Snow
    NLOTH

    New album:

    6-8-Full album.

    Others:

    HMTMKMKM
    11 o'clock Tick Tock

    With U2 playing 8 songs from their new album, all those songs would total about 62 over the tour.

    Imagine the reaction that they would get if some of those songs were played regularly over a tour.

    I don't see how it can be that hard to play 62 songs all regularly over the length of a tour.

    There would only be about 20-25 songs they'd have to learn that weren't on 360..
  6. We can only go on what the band have said and done in the past in order to get an idea of what the future holds.

    Travelling Salesmen
    They primarily tour to promote their new work and staying relevant by playing the new songs rather than looking to the past. The band don't necessarily put on shows for the diehards to hear their favourite tracks. For better or worse, they're out there selling their new record and putting on a show too.

    History
    360 aside, U2 setlists rarely change much over the course of a tour. They've often joked that they only hit their stride performance wise on the last leg and when they find the setlist that works best for them, then they stick to it.

    Narrative
    Also, Bono has said in the past (circa PopMart) that he likes the show to have a kind of narrative structure. Changing up the tunes each night may impact on the story or theme. Old tracks that fit into the theme are played. Of course, things can change over a long tour, but will they tour on as big a scale as 360 again which necessitated such a long run to be financially feasible.

    Pacing
    An effective show requires pacing with a degree of ebb and flow. There are a lot of slow to mid paced songs in the list above (admittedly U2' stock in trade). Look at Adam's comments about Unforgettable Fire in the Ground Up cd liner notes. Some songs don't make it because they are too midpaced.

    Musical Proficiency
    As much as I'd love to hear the bass intro to Two Hearts..., I can only imagine the fear that Adam would have if he had to learn bass parts for 62 songs to be played regularly over a tour. I know the pedantic will point out that Adam and Larry can sit out the 'Everly Brothers' numbers, but Adam has said that he worries about making mistakes in the likes of Until The End of the World and Walk On, now imagine how he'd cope with the band changing it up drastically from night to night.
    Poor ol' Edge might crack up under the pressure of it all. It's not like Bono will help out. Bono has been in a band for how long now and he still can't play guitar.
  7. I agree with dylbagz, but there's no sense in trying to argue that position, because we all know it's a shot in the dark. Personally I don't mind how U2 does it, but it would be incredible to see them use the Pearl Jam method too. That being said I've had friends who've seen Pearl Jam and who've blamed that aspect of their show for it not flowing super well and seeming like a mixtape and not a "show".

    Also, it's not the amount of songs they can play that make U2 famous enough to play around the world, it's the songs they've written and the effect they have on people. If they see a great reaction when they play the "warhorses", they're going to play them, simple as that. So many people around here say "it's time they dropped the "warhorses"", thing is every one of those songs got a HUGE audience reaction at every show I went to. Like it or not many of those songs are staples of the U2 show.
  8. even the above mentioned artist and band have their stable warhorses .. they (the so-called warhorses) are not the "problem"



  9. In case you haven't seen their cover of Aslan's "This Is."

    Not going to lie, this performance gives me goosebumps. It's an amazing song and the band does an amazing job performing it. And Bono... omg Bono. If his voice is like this leading into the new album and tour to follow, they might have something that can top 360 from a vocal perspective.
  10. Originally posted by ahn1991:[YouTube Video]


    In case you haven't seen their cover of Aslan's "This Is."

    Not going to lie, this performance gives me goosebumps. It's an amazing song and the band does an amazing job performing it. And Bono... omg Bono. If his voice is like this leading into the new album and tour to follow, they might have something that can top 360 from a vocal perspective.

    U2 cover Aslan
  11. Well it looks live, but its more a studio recording than a live performance. Or Larry can drum without being at his kit (Check the clip there is a section where you hear him but he isnt there, to be magically appear from thin air a few seconds later).

    So I wouldnt read or listen too much into B's voice