The future needs a big kiss!

 

Topic: News

Montag, 22. November 2004
chron.com: It must be grand being a member of U2 and knowing that every album you put out will be a success. Albums released by the Irish supergroup almost immediately become a standard by which other rock albums are measured. While younger bands struggle to find ways to expand their sound without alienating a fickle fan base, U2 goes anywhere it wants and confidently tells its listeners, "This is what you need." [arrow more]


netmusiccountdown.com: U2's Bono and The Edge helped celebrate the opening of the Clinton Presidential Center last Thursday, November 18, in Little Rock, Arkansas. The pair performed a three-song set before former President Bill Clinton took the stage to address the more than 30,000 people who turned out for the dedication ceremony.
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Sonntag, 21. November 2004
channelnewsasia.com: Almost a quarter of a century since Irish band U2 bounced onto the music scene, the group on Monday releases its latest album, and it looks like Bono and crew are going back to their roots.

Forget the dance rhythms and the electronic sounds of U2's experimental phase in the 1990s, their 14th album "How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb", the first for four years, is good ol' guitar rock. [arrow more]


Samstag, 20. November 2004
u2inu2spiegel.de: Die PR-Maschine für das neue Album der irischen Popband U2 rollt auf Hochtouren. Ein norddeutscher Radiosender lud 30 Gäste ein, die elf Songs in der Hamburger U-Bahn vorab anhören durften - in der U 2. [arrow more]


usatoday.com: How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb, U2's 11th studio album and first since 2000, arrives Tuesday amid more anticipation than any release this year. The blissful and aggressive Vertigo, No. 1 at modern rock stations, is the band's hottest U.S. single to date and just knocked Eminem off the top of the U.K. chart.

Despite Internet piracy, retailers expect a monster opening week and huge holiday sales, and promoters predict instant sellouts for a world tour starting March 1 in Miami. [arrow more]


canoe.ca: On the one hand, there are those who prefer the band's earthy, earnest emotional arena-rock. On the other hand, there are those who favour their esoteric, ethereal experiments. Which is to say: No matter what kind of an album Bono and co. make, somebody always seems to end up bummed.

To their credit, though, U2 are good enough to give each side a decade to call their own. The rockers got to lay claim to the '80s, when Bono lit The Unfogettable Fire and waved the white flag for Sunday Bloody Sunday. [arrow more]


contactmusic.com: Veteran rockers U2 wanted there new album HOW TO DISMANTLE A BOMB to sound like a live band playing in a studio, because they were desperate to capture the sound of youthful energy.

Previously famed for their heavily-produced sound on albums including ZOOROPA, the BONO-fronted legends wanted to get back to being a band again after listening to records by younger groups THE HIVES and THE LIBERTINES.

Bassist ADAM CLAYTON says, "It was really down to making the songs work with the three or four musical elements. On previous records we tended to do a live take but then there would be overdubs to get something out of the song. So this is raw and that was the intention. [arrow more]


yahoo.com: U2 has sold more than 120 million albums worldwide and won 14 Grammy Awards during the course of its 26-year career, so you would think that there would be a level of ease that comes with a new release.

Not so, says the Irish band's longtime manager Paul McGuinness.

"There is absolutely no resting on our laurels," he tells Billboard. "I say to people we have to break the band every time we put out a record."

And this is with an album that McGuinness expects to debut at No. 1 in "32 or 33 countries." [arrow more]


dolomiten.it: Die Ankündigungen von Bono, Sänger von U2, ließen aufhorchen: Das nächste Album seiner Band wäre rau, kompromisslos und von Gitarren getrieben, ließ der Ire in Interviews wissen. [arrow more]


itv.com: The new Band Aid 20 video has been shown for the first time - with pop queen Madonna reminding people "none of us can forget".

U2 frontman Bono won the battle to belt out "And Tonight Thank God it's Them Instead of You" as he did two decades ago. Coldplay's Chris Martin, singers Dido and Robbie Williams have the opening lines of the song. [arrow more]


 
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