The Screwtape Songs: Bono, C.S. Lewis, and Zoo-Era U2

September 22, 2011

Those who follow the work of U2 may have heard that one of Bono’s literary influences is C.S. Lewis. Many people are familiar with Lewis as the author of The Chronicles of Narnia, especially since the release of a series of movies bearing that name. But Lewis was a prolific writer and one particular book was an important influence on U2’s lead singer.

For decades Bono has been playing with themes found in the writings of Lewis, specifically focusing on The Screwtape Letters. In this classic work, Lewis creates a fictional narrative in which a head demon, Screwtape, instructs and mentors a younger demon, his nephew, Wormwood. Screwtape’s task is to teach Wormwood how to distract and tempt the human that has been assigned to him.

The senior demon consistently counsels the younger to twist the truth in slight, almost imperceptible ways. This, he says, will lead to the greatest chance of success against the enemy (in this case, God).

There are things for humans to do all day long without His minding in the least—sleeping, washing, eating, drinking, making love, playing, praying, working. Everything has to be twisted before it’s any use to us. -Screwtape

Bono has played with this idea and has in the past become the Devil’s advocate in at least two significant ways. First, in U2′s song “The Fly,” Bono actually personifies the character he calls The Fly. Bono said that this early 90s hit was like a phone call from hell in which he, the senior demon, was letting loose the secrets of his trade. The Fly sings, “They say a secret is something you tell one other person, so I’m telling you, child.” And later in the song,

It’s no secret that the stars are falling from the sky
The universe exploded ’cause of one man’s lie
Look, I gotta go, yeah I’m running outta change
There’s a lot of things, if I could I’d rearrange.

But even more than the lyrics of the song, it’s the live presentation that crystallizes the message of The Fly. In 1994 on the Zoo TV tour the band flashed brazen graphics across state-of-the-art larger-than-life video screens. With messages like “Everything you know is wrong,” “Reject your weakness,” and “Watch more TV,” The Fly spewed half-truths and half-lies.

Interspersed amongst the cacophony of aphorisms were messages that required the viewer’s judgment as to how true or how false the statements were. In one case the message that read “It’s your world you can change it” morphed into one a bit more cynical of a consumerist culture: “It’s your world you can charge it.”

“The Fly” found new life on the Vertigo tour in 2005 as the diabolical messenger shifted the theme away from media, technology and materialism toward selfishness and individualism. Cast onto a screen several stories high, the word “YOU” was repeatedly flashed at The Fly’s hearers (see video I took here at the final concert on the Vertigo tour in Hawaii). “You are the difference,” “The secret is your self!” “Sell your soul,” and “Reclaim your space, it belongs to you” were some of the messages, all partially true and partially false. The listener must decide where the dividing line is and how the truth has been twisted. The film U23D took the barrage of messages one step further by cascading letters, words and sentences in front of the band and nearly on top of the theater audience. The presentation was wholly engaging. The Fly, as the deceiver, was at the top of his game. (For a thorough treatment of “The Fly” see Beth Maynard’s outstanding three-part commentary here: #1, #2, #3.)

A second way that Bono has personified the devil’s advocate of Lewis’s Screwtape Letters is through the MacPhisto character, also from the 90s-era Zoo TV tour. This persona was a greasy-haired, red-horned, decrepit has-been rock star who clearly voiced an ironic and evil agenda. MacPhisto assured his clamoring devotees that “Daddy’s Gonna Pay for Your Crashed Car” and then showered the delighted audience with fake paper money.

He followed that with a discourse to his adoring followers and offered them everything they ever wanted. Example: “People of the former Soviet Union, I’ve given you capitalism, so now you can all dream of being as wealthy and glamorous as me.” Of course, the underlying message in all of this was: be careful what you wish for, it may be your undoing.

The washed-up and washed-out demon, obviously reeling from many regrets, closed the concert a few minutes later by singing a haunting lament/love song, “Love Is Blindness.”

Love is drowning / In a deep well
All the secrets / And no one to tell
Take the money / Honey / It’s blindness

Love is blindness / I don’t want to see
Won’t you wrap the night / Around me
Take my heart / Blindness

It’s no surprise to see the ongoing ways that Bono brings the world of C.S. Lewis to the live performances of U2’s songs. On a more recent tour Bono continued to demonstrate the influence of Lewis with another persona often identified as evil.  As Edge’s guitar wails in siren like fashion, Bono confesses, “Jesus, this is Judas” and then launches into the apocalyptic song “Until the End of the Word,” an imaginative conversation in which Judas comes to Christ seeking love, reconciliation and forgiveness.

The unfaithful disciple sings, “Waves of regret and waves of joy. I reached out to the one I tried to destroy. You, you said you’d wait ’til the end of the world.” The song is dramatized as Bono takes on the character of Judas and Edge loosely plays the role of Christ. It is a brilliant piece of music, theater and art, the story of betrayal and redemption acted out on a concert stage. Lewis, I think, would be pleased.

In the book Bono: In Conversation with Michka Assayas Bono exhibits another influence as he alludes to Lewis’s notion that Jesus must be either “Liar, Lunatic or Lord” (from Mere Christianity):

“Look, the secular response to the Christ story always goes like this: he was a great prophet, obviously a very interesting guy, had a lot to say along the lines of other great prophets, be they Elijah, Muhammad, Buddha, or Confucius. But actually Christ doesn’t allow you that. He doesn’t let you off that hook. Christ says:

No. I’m not saying I’m a teacher, don’t call me teacher. I’m not saying I’m a prophet. I’m saying: “I’m the Messiah.” I’m saying: “I am God incarnate.” And people say: No, no, please, just be a prophet. A prophet, we can take. You’re a bit eccentric. We’ve had John the Baptist eating locusts and wild honey, we can handle that. But don’t mention the “M” word! Because, you know, we’re gonna have to crucify you.

And he goes: No, no. I know you’re expecting me to come back with an army, and set you free from these creeps, but actually I am the Messiah. At this point, everyone starts staring at their shoes, and says: Oh, my God, he’s gonna keep saying this. So what you’re left with is: either Christ was who He said He was, the Messiah or a complete nutcase. I mean, we’re talking nutcase on the level of Charles Manson. . . . I’m not joking here. The idea that the entire course of civilization for over half of the globe could have its fate changed and turned upside-down by a nutcase, for me, that’s farfetched.” (p. 227).

Do C.S. Lewis and Bono belong on the same stage together? Yes, it’s easy to imagine. Lewis’s influence on U2 is easily detected and chronicled far above and beyond the examples I discuss in this post. The themes and nuances of the Oxford author as they appear in the work of U2 are plentiful, sometimes subtle, other times not so much. It’s a joy to really investigate these and to hear the voice of Lewis rise up with depth and focus in U2.

We are incredibly grateful to writer and professor Tim Neufeld for sharing this piece with us; he is ‘on loan’ to us from a sister fansite (@U2) where he is a regular contributor.

 

 

Red Hot Return of the Chili Peppers

September 14, 2011

 

 ‘Ole Ole Ole Ole… Red Hot, Red Hot’ With non-stop chants and constant clamoring, 45,000 people greeted the Red Hot Chili Peppers back to the concert stage during a perfectly chilly, chili pepper night in Bogota, Colombia. 

Having not performed an official show since 2006, anticipation was high for opening night of the Chili Peppers World Tour 2011-2012, and there were certainly questions and doubts from critics.

How will the addition of new guitarist Josh Klinghoffer affect the group’s dynamics?

Can the group maintain their chemistry on stage now that mainstay guitarist John Frusciante left the band?

Well, at 8:01 pm, Flea, Anthony Kiedis, Chad Smith and Josh Klinghoffer took the stage with their 2002 single “By The Way,” and with no hesitation, answered the critics in one swoop.

Like caged animals waiting to unleash their fury, the Chili Peppers exploded for 115 minutes of non-stop energy, a bonanza which took the Colombian audience and those hardcore fans who had traveled to Bogota into a ride that included such classics as “Californication,” “Under The Bridge,” “Otherside” and most of the band’s new album I’m With You including current radio mainstay “The Adventures of Rain Dance Maggie.”

Supported by four 30ft tall LCD video screens reminiscent of U2’s 1997 landmark POPMART Tour, the Southern California band acted like a group on a mission, a mission to show that no only had they not missed a beat, but they were better than ever.

As for the debut of new guitarist Josh Klinghoffer, it must be said that John Frusciante’s presence is certainly missed. Being Klinghoffer’s first official show, his nervousness sometimes got the best of him, and he seemed more at ease staying in his spots and not trying anything out of the script. This said, his musical talents are not arguable, and the other three members were constantly helping him, giving him nods of approval and checking on him between songs.

After every other song on this evening, Kiedis appeared awestruck. Wide-eyed, the singer now sporting a 70’s mustache looked around the Bogota sold out park, seemingly overwhelmed by the love that hasn’t faded from their fans.

In short, it’s a thrill to have the Red Hot Chili Peppers back on the road. A group that has overcome multiple obstacles throughout their history, but yet refuse to relinquish the unique spot they have in rock n roll’s current hierarchy. —Jaime Rodriguez, Contributing Writer

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

It Might Get Down: New U2 Doc Debuts

September 9, 2011

From all media reports, the Toronto International Film Festival (abreviated by Tweeters and just about everyone else as TIFF) got electrified by hosting the premiere of the new U2 documentary From The Sky Down.

Directed by the award-winning director Davis Guggenheim (It Might Get Loud, An Inconvenient Truth) and put together in a mere months, the film will debut to a wider audience on Showtime in October. The DVD will then get packaged with the 20th anniversary deluxe reissue of Achtung Baby, followed by a separate release of just the documentary.

About collaborating with U2 on this film, Guggenheim remarked, “They said from the beginning, we want you to make the movie that you want to make and they let me.”

An anniversary peek into the creative process of how U2 re-invented themselves with postmodern post-Joshua Tree promise, From The Sky Down should be a real treat for serious U2 fans.

The review of the movie in the Toronto Globe and Mail, however, questioned its worth as a standalone film, suggesting “this documentary on the Irish quartet U2 in creative flux at the end of the 1980s is not the significant film his others are.” For many others of us though, we will enjoy the backward, reflective gaze on the band’s process, or as the review puts it, seeing “special light thrown on the mysterious ways of musicians.”