Nick66
Rock n' Roll Doggie ALL ACCESS
On the contrary ATYCLB was a safe record for the radios to please the pop kids, which is the worst approach you can have as an artist.
Once again, you never fail to be completely wrong in your wrongy wrongness.
How is creating a record that was an overwhelming critical and commercial success, that appealed to both die hard fans and casuals alike, created an entire new generation of fans, kicked off what is regarded as one of their most successful and memorable tours, won 7 Grammy awards, produced one of their most beloved and successful singles, and cemented the bands legacy represent the "worst approach you can have as an artist". Sounds like it worked out pretty well to me from just about any angle you look at it, whether you personally like the record or not.
I'll also add that it pulled the neat trick of, as Headache mentioned, not only sounding nothing like what was on the radio at that time but actually getting played on the radio alongside the songs it sounded nothing like. Not to mention that, despite the oft-repeated fallacy that it's U2 returning to their comfort zone, etc., ATYCLB actually sounds very little like anything U2 had done before. The distance between the sound on ATYCLB and Pop, or ATYCLB and Joshua Tree, is much greater than that between Pop and Zooropoa or Achtung Baby.
If there's no ATYCLB and Beautiful Day, U2 is a band that fizzled out in the late 90's...and, not for nothing, certainly would not be a band Apple would want to have anything to do with.