Bono's intro for Grove Press Psalms

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truecoloursfly

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Grove Press recently published a series of little literary paperbacks, including an abridgement of King James' Psalms. Many of you may already own this little treasure, but for those who don't, I can't think of a better place to share it (as if we haven't heaped our plates enough here already LOL). The book includes this prefacing note: "...Presenting individual books from the Bible as separate volumes, as they were originally conceived, encourages the reader to approach them as literary works in their own right.
The first twelve books in this series encompass categories as diverse as history, fiction, philosophy, love poetry, and law. Each Pocket Canon also has its own introduction, specially commissioned from an impressive range of writers, which provides a personal interpretation of the text and explores its contemporary relevance."

DebbieSG brought up the question of "music as sacrament" in another thread, and I nearly quoted this whole thing there... but let's give it some room to itself, shall we? Bono's made no secret of his feelings on the subject -- most recently in the DVD notes -- which resonate deeply with my own, and I turn to his words in this sweet little edition almost as often as to the Psalms themselves. [The ellipses are all his, of course; nothing's left out of the transcription.]



Explaining belief has always been difficult. How do you explain a love and logic at the heart of the universe when the world is so out of whack? How about the poetic versus the actual truth found in the scriptures? Has free will got us crucified? And what about the dodgy characters who inhabit the tome, known as the bible, who claim to hear the voice of God?
You have to be interested, but is God?
Explaining faith is impossible...Vision over visibility...instinct over intellect...A songwriter plays a chord with the faith that he will hear the next one in his head.
One of the writers of the psalms was a musician, a harp-player whose talents were required at "the palace" as the only medicine that would still the demons of the moody and insecure King Saul of Israel; a thought that still inspires, if not quite explaining Marilyn singing for Kennedy, or the Spice Girls in the court of Prince Charles...
At age 12, I was a fan of David, he felt familiar...like a pop star could feel familiar. The words of the psalms were as poetic as they were religious and he was a star. A dramatic character, because before David could fulfil the prophecy and become the king of Israel, he had to take quite a beating. He was forced into exile and ended up in a cave in some no-name border town facing the collapse of his ego and abandonment by God. But this is where the soap opera got interesting, this is where David was said to have composed his first psalm--a blues. That's what a lot of the psalms feel like to me, the blues. Man shouting at God--"My God, my God why hast thou forsaken me? Why art thou so far from helping me?" (Psalm 22)
I hear echos of this holy row when un-holy bluesman Robert Johnson howls, "There's a hellhound on my trail" or Van Morrison sings "Sometimes I feel like a motherless child." Texas Alexander mimics the psalms in "Justice Blues": "I cried Lord my father, Lord eh kingdom come. Send me back my woman, then thy will be done." Humorous, sometimes blasphemous, the blues was backslidin' music; but by its very opposition, flattered the subject of its perfect cousin Gospel.
Abandonment, displacement, is the stuff of my favourite psalms. The Psalter may be a font of gospel music, but for me it's in his despair that the psalmist really reveals the nature of his special relationship with God. Honesty, even to the point of anger. "How long, Lord? Wilt thou hide thyself forever?" (Psalm 89) or "Answer me when I call" (Psalm 5).
Psalms and hymns were my first taste of inspirational music. I liked the words but I wasn't sure about the tunes--with the exception of Psalm 23, "The Lord is my shepherd." I remember them as droned and chanted rather than sung. Still, in an odd way, they prepared me for the honesty of John Lennon, the baroque language of Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen, the open throat of Al Green and Stevie Wonder--when I hear these singers, I am reconnected to a part of me I have no explanation for...my "soul" I guess.
Words and music did for me what solid, even rigorous, religious argument never could do, they introduced me to God, not belief in God, more an experiential sense of GOD. Over art, literature, reason, the way to my spirit was a combination of words and music. As a result the Book of Psalms always felt open to me and led me to the poetry of Ecclesiastes, the Song of Solomon, the book of John...My religion could not be fiction but it had to transcend facts. It could be mystical, but not mythical and definitely not ritual...
My mother was Protestant, my father Catholic; anywhere other than Ireland that would be unremarkable. The "Prods" at that time had the better tunes and the Catholics had the better stage-gear. My mate Gavin Friday used to say: "Roman Catholicism is the Glamrock of religion" with its candles and psychedelic colours...Cardinal blues, scarlets and purples, smoke bombs of incense and the ring of the little bell. The Prods were better at bigger bells, they could afford them. In Ireland wealth and Protestantism went together; to have either, was to have collaborated with the enemy, i.e. Britain. This did not fly in our house.
After going to Mass at the top of the hill, in Finglas on the north side of Dublin, my father waited outside the little Church of Ireland chapel at the bottom of the hill, where my mother had brought her two sons...
I kept myself awake thinking of the clergyman's daughter and let my eyes dive into the cinema of the stained glass. These Christian artisans had invented the movies...light projected through colour to tell their story. In the '70s the story was "the Troubles" and the Troubles came through the stained glass; with rocks thrown more in mischief than in anger, but the message was the same; the country was to be divided along sectarian lines. I had a foot in both camps, so my Goliath became religion itself; I began to see religion as the perversion of faith. As to the five smooth stones for the sling...I began to see God everywhere else. In girls, fun, music, justice but still--despite the lofty King James translation--the scriptures...
I loved these stories for the basest reasons, not just the New Testament with its mind-altering concept that God might reveal himself as a baby born in straw poverty--but even the Old Testament. These were action movies, with some hardcore men and women...the car chases, the casualties. the blood and guts; there was very little kissing...
David was a star, the Elvis of the bible, if we can believe the chiselling of Michelangelo (check the face--but I still can't figure out this most famous Jew's foreskin). And unusually for a "rock star", with his lust for power, lust for women, lust for life, he had the humility of one who knew his gift worked harder than he ever would. He even danced naked in front of his troops...the biblical equivalent of the royal walkabout. David was definitely more performance artist than politician.
Anyway, I stopped going to churches and got myself into a different kind of religion. Don't laugh, that's what being in a rock'n'roll band is, not pseudo-religion either...Show-business is Shamanism: Music is Worship; whether it's worship of women or their designer, the world or its destroyer, whether it comes from that ancient place we call soul or simply the spinal cortex, whether the prayers are on fire with a dumb rage or dove-like desire...the smoke goes upwards...to God or something you replace God with...usually yourself.
Years ago, lost for words and forty minutes of recording time left before the end of our studio time, we were still looking for a song to close our third album, War. We wanted to put something explicitly spiritual on the record to balance the politics and romance of it; like Marley or Marvin Gaye would. We thought about the psalms..."Psalm 40"...There was some squirming. We were a very "white" rock group, and such plundering of the scriptures was taboo for a white rock group unless it was in the "service of Satan". Or worse, Goth.
"Psalm 40" is interesting in that it suggests a time in which grace will replace karma, and love the very strict laws of Moses (i.e. fulfil them). I love that thought. David, who committed some of the most selfish as well as selfless acts, was depending on it. That the scriptures are brim full of hustlers, murderers, cowards, adulterers and mercenaries used to shock me; now it is a source of great comfort.
"40" became the closing song of U2 shows and on hundreds of occasions, literally hundreds of thousands of people of every size and shape t-shirt have shouted back the refrain, pinched from "Psalm 6": "How long (to sing this song)". I had thought of it as a nagging question--pulling at the hem of an invisible deity whose presence we glimpse only when we act in love. How long...hunger? How long...hatred? How long until creation grows up and the chaos of its precocious, hell-bent adolescence has been discarded? I thought it odd that the vocalising of such questions could bring such comfort; to me too.
But to get back to David, it is not clear how many, if any, of these psalms David or his son Solomon really wrote. Some scholars suggest the royals never dampened their nibs and that there was a host of Holy Ghost writers...Who cares? I didn't buy Leiber and Stoller...they were just his songwriters...I bought Elvis.

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He set my feet upon a rock
made my footsteps firm


the greatest frontman in the world -- by truecoloursfly: http://www.atu2.com/news/article.src?ID=1575
 
LOL...I was a Goth for awhile in the 80s. But def. was never 'in service of Satan'!! YIKES.
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We were a very "white" rock group, and such plundering of the scriptures was taboo for a white rock group unless it was in the "service of Satan". Or worse, Goth.

Thanks for this Deb, lotsa work!
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My religion could not be fiction but it had to transcend facts. It could be mystical, but not mythical and definitely not ritual...

This really made me think about my own concept of religion and spirituality. This statement agrees with me. I have always sought a religion/spirituality that was this way. Amazing how the man knows what I'm thinking.
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------------------
And your earth moves beneath
Your own dream landscape

You can dream, so dream out loud!

"The way to be optimistic is not to shut your eyes and close your ears." -Bono

Create Light, Create Unity, Create Joy, CREATE PEACE!
 
that is an amazing piece, isn't it...there's lots I could respond to in that! Maybe some other time, but the part that goes with music as sacrament are:

"Words and music did for me what solid, even rigorous, religious argument never could do, they introduced me to God, not belief in God, more an experiential sense of GOD. Over art, literature, reason, the way to my spirit was a combination of words and music."

then

"Show-business is Shamanism: Music is Worship; whether it's worship of women or their designer, the world or its destroyer, whether it comes from that ancient place we call soul or simply the spinal cortex, whether the prayers are on fire with a dumb rage or dove-like desire...the smoke goes upwards...to God or something you replace God with...usually yourself."

I feel much the same way about the experience of music, I have always felt it's the closest thing to Heaven we have. Interesting that he says that music can be worshipping God or oneself. Maybe if it's touching our spirit, then it is some sort of sacrament, but if it's only serving our pleasure, it loses that power.

I am thinking of the Christian community's condemnation of Rock n Roll in general as "The Devil's Music." I think some people are looking for transcendence in that music, and it may be a kind of a sacrament to them, that may lead to spiritual growth. I listened to the Beatles, here with George Harrison a Hare Krishna and John Lennon some sort of Universalist, but their songs of love and life filled my soul.

The term Bono uses "Shamanism" really says a lot about the way he sees his role at a concert...a Shaman heals the community. That really seems to have happened on this Elevation tour, many more people got that sacrament.

It's a strange kind of sacrament though, isn't it? Like he said in the essay, not ritualistic or based on any ancient myth, but could be given in any situation that we are listening to music in. I still think musical sacrament at the U2 concerts, with the blessing that was on it, was a phenomenal one.
 
Thanks for sharing that. I read about this foreword in the Walk On book and really wanted to read it and here it is.
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I think this is the second time I read or hear, as someone said, Bono speak. This and the Harvard speech. Everything else I've heard from him is either his lyrics of course or answers to questions in interviews, never anything that he has got time to think about, rewrite, his thoughts.
Thanks, I have to read it again.
 
Anu, please share here your paper from the U2 Conference in April on Bono and the Psalms. I believe that this a great topic and an intrinsic facet of U2's music. I imagine that you have already included Bono praying Psalm 51:15: "O Lord, open my lips, so my mouth show forth thy praise" before Streets at the Super Bowl in front of one of their largest world wide audiences
 
"to write a daily devotion for every U2 song! Headphone Devotionals and Bono's Psalter" Anu, I look forward to reading them
 
I am going to present a paper at the U2 Conference in April on Bono and the Psalms. Have my work cut out for me.

Did you ever present this paper? Is it public? Curious fellow Tennessean also grew up on U2 & UF/JT.
 
Thanks for sharing this (oh, like 12 years ago! Lol). Any time I get to read Bono's thoughts on scripture I'm floored. He has some amazing insight and has consistently expressed them in a manner that convinces me his heart is like David's - after God's own heart.
 
:reject:
This really made me think about my own concept of religion and spirituality. This statement agrees with me. I have always sought a religion/spirituality that was this way. Amazing how the man knows what I'm thinking.
smile.gif


------------------
And your earth moves beneath
Your own dream landscape

You can dream, so dream out loud!

"The way to be optimistic is not to shut your eyes and close your ears." -Bono

Create Light, Create Unity, Create Joy, CREATE PEACE!

IDK It kind of feels as if there are peeking inside my brain directly into my soul when they write...it's kinda a weird feeling, almost like an invasion of privacy or something...
 
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