Thanks for the link!
For those having trouble with the translation page (didn't work for me):
U2 is done: Can not do more
One of the world's tallest rock bands sounds a bit dodgy on yet another mediocre album
Once upon a time, it was a big event when U2 released a new album. It's not anymore, because the giants' format is dulled.
Megaband's latest 'Songs of Innocence' release from 2014 was a blur of dimensions and will only go into history because, in collaboration with Apple, it was delivered free to 500 million global users of iTunes.
See also: U2 album is 'devastating'
The album's overbearing launch gave backwards, so you would think that U2 like everyone else was interested in forgetting the fadus, but added a complete lack of sense, they call the follow-up 'Songs of Experience'.
It has been an artistic declaration of failure to publish a tour since the New Testament proved to be a popped version of the aftermath.
Uambitious songs
Experience has, however, apparently not made Bono, The Edge, Adam Clayton and Larry Mullen Jr. smarter, and as Metallica released 'Reload' after 'Load' disappointed, the backbone is back with a feeling that the Quartet has lost its grip on its career.
The Irans surrendered to the past in the past months to give album concerts with 30-year-old 'The Joshua Tree', which together with the group's other distinctive slices, 'Achtung Baby' and 'War', has a clearly defined identity.
See also: U2: Not much worth it
On 'Songs of Experience', U2 turns into a musical nobody's country where the most remarkable discovery is that there is astonishing little to come.
U2 is not good and they are not bad. They are only on unambitious songs like 'Landlady', 'The Blackout' and 'Get Out of Your Own Way' who resign without crucial riffs, hooks and ideas.
The legends are visited by Kendrick Lamar on harmlessly stunned 'American Soul', but the presence of the rap star appears to be the veterans' awkward attempts to seem relevant for a time that apparently ran from them.
Sober remnants
The alarm clocks bumble, as 'You're the Best Thing About Me', worryingly reminiscent of the fabric of Bryan Adams.
Just as you've lost all hope that U2 is able to force just a simple good song out of the system in 2017, they are impressed in the form of the little psychic ballad 'Summer of Love' whose cuddly melody suddenly gets d 'Gentlemen to sound like they have something on their minds.
See also: U2: Burned supertanks
Sparky 'Red Flag Day' can also be known, but the number's naive tone and characteristic choir is a strange backstreet echo of the orchestra's first records from the early 1980s.
'I believe my best days are ahead', Bono sings without conviction in the sad remnants of the voice of the clumsy 'Lights of Home'.
He does not even think about it. We do not, at least, do.