Originally posted by Remy:[..]
No one says so![]()
Civilisation might also still make it.

Originally posted by Remy:[..]
No one says so![]()
Civilisation might also still make it.
Originally posted by bartajax:[..]
Same here. But also, imagine if we heard only The Miracle and Song For Someone for SOI, or Boots and that song with 24 words as a title for NLOTH.
Blackout and The Little Things are okay and good (imo), The Best Thing is very weak if you ask me but it might just be a ''filler'' on the album. Right? Please?
Originally posted by ahn1991:Are critics actually that opposed to the SOE songs we've heard so far? I've read a lot of articles claiming SOE could be proof that the U2 goose still has one more golden egg.
Originally posted by LikeASong:(cross post) [..]
Yeah I'm hoping for better stuff than The Best Thing for SOE. Otherwise it might well be the unplanned end of their career. I'll explain myself.
All albums and singles since HTDAAB have gone mostly unnoticed to the general audience BUT AT LEAST the critics (those who still pay attention to U2, that is) and the fans have acknowledged that many of these songs were still good. SOI was commonly regarded as their best album since the end of the 90s both by the fanbase and the critics, if you bypass the backlash due to its release method and the unawareness of most of the music listeners out there.
BUT if SOE is as mediocre as its lead single tells it might be, U2 might be facing the lowest point in their career: without the wide audience awareness (they lost it 13 years ago), AND without the fans and critics backing and praising their efforts.
Originally posted by Fly40:....an egg comes out of a chicken..
...a chicken comes out of an egg...
What do we expect?
Originally posted by ahn1991:I feel that people who leave their passions at what they perceive to be the "perfect moment" always end up with regrets and eventually come back to try and satisfy those regrets. For people who are truly passionate about what they do, they will only stop when forces above their control force them to stop. You see this in athletes and artists all the time.
As much as I would hate to see U2 struggle at the tail end of their career, I would hate even more to see them struggle to come back after leaving.