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.
Originally posted by hkle77:What's the problem? U2 is still a great live band, no matter what they put out on CD.I've seen that recently on the JT tour 2017. Still an awesome rockband!!!
Originally posted by RattleandHum1988:[..]
I don't know, I mean R.E.M hasn't come back, have they?
I get what you mean, and I do respect the notion, but I don't know. U2 have always maintained the "two crap albums and we're out" mantra. By my count, they've certainly had two at this point, whether you're counting the ones THEY consider to be crap, or ones that their fans do. At the very least I'm sure everyone here could pick at least one, and that one is probably one the band consider crap too (October seems to be universally panned, both by fans and by the band, Pop has been referred to as a good moment by people like Edge, but it's clear that Bono probably considers it a misstep (despite their hardcore fans loving it, I don't think their more "casual" fans do), and I know I read interviews where they said NLOTH didn't turn out the way they had hoped it would, etc. - but it's all beyond the point).
The question is, have they failed to recognize that this might've already happened? Have they recognized it but refuse to leave their legacy where these albums may have come out?
[..]
The problem is, and this is my opinion, that an old band who goes on tour like that looks like they're only doing it for one reason - money. If they're doing it to support more artistic output, that's a different thing. As much as I agree with you and have loved seeing U2 live, I never want to see them become a touring Vegas act.
Originally posted by cesar_garza01:[..]
How about one nostalgia tour and one crap album and you're out?
That sounds an awful lot llke a Vegas act to me.
Originally posted by cesar_garza01:[..]
How about one nostalgia tour and one crap album and you're out?
That sounds an awful lot llke a Vegas act to me.
Originally posted by bpt3:[..]
I hear what you're saying about the band last having both popular and critical appeal with Vertigo and not really consistently since then...but the critical reviews of Best Thing so far have been overall good, right? Even the Kygo remix has gotten love from an unlikely fan base source. And regarding SOE early listens from radio stations, feedback has been positive, too.
Don't know if I'd sound the alarm just yet.
Originally posted by Bloodraven:[..]
Apparently we're looking at the world from the same angle...![]()
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TBTAM has been received by the U2less world (apparently) way better than Boots and Joey were received back then.
And even if many fans aren't excited by it, many others are, so, this is far from being a bad call or a crisis point.
Blackout and Little Things sound pretty good and -I think- worthy of being in a millenial U2 album. If that's not good enough for you, fair enough, but then I think you're seeing this crisis since several years ago, so there's nothing new in here.
The only thing I'm not excited and a bit worried, is the lyrics... they sound like a lazy narrative sprinkled with cliches here and there. But whatever, I never understand the lyrics unless I'm reading them anyway, so I can live with it.
Originally posted by RattleandHum1988:[..]
Haha, fair enough - but this bolded part, the lyrics are hugely important to me.
Originally posted by u2_michaelc:[..]
Little things has great lyrics
Originally posted by u2_michaelc:[..]
Little things has great lyrics