NLOTH Album Reviews Pt 3

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Here's another new review, mostly positive

U2: the verdict - Features - Independent.ie


U2: the verdict

By John Meagher

Friday February 13 2009

They took their time, didn't they? It's been four years and three months since the last U2 studio album -- the longest gap in the band's history. At times, this -- their 12th -- could have been called No Finish On The Horizon, such were the apparent difficulties and insecurities they faced when making it.

Initially, Rick Rubin, the American producer who helped rejuvenate the careers of Johnny Cash and Neil Diamond, was seen as the one that could move the band into exciting new areas. But those sessions, from July 2006, didn't work out and they turned once more to trusted old friends, Brian Eno, Daniel Lanois and Steve Lillywhite. The latter has worked on and off with the band since their debut album, Boy, the former pair from 1984's The Unforgettable Fire.

Recording took place in Morocco, New York, London and their Hanover Quay studio in Dublin with up to 50 new songs recorded. They were still tinkering with songs, titles and sequences right up to Christmas, further fuelling online speculation that they were suffering creative paralysis and not confident enough to let go.

And creative difficulties seemed all too apparent on early acquaintance with lead single, Get On Your Boots. "Is this it?" you could almost hear the punters say when the song was debuted on 2FM last month. Its insistent, fuzzy guitars were fine, although the nonsense lyrics were harder to stomach, but just where was the bold new direction the band and assorted friends had been promising us?

A bold change in direction will not be found on the album either. It won't wrong-foot the listener in the way that Achtung Baby or even Pop did. But suggestions that U2 had lost their mojo are just as unfounded - and unfair. No Line On The Horizon may not be a masterpiece, but it is unquestionably a very good, consistently strong collection that's every bit the match of their two huge selling albums of this decade, All That You Can't Leave Behind and How To Dismantle An Atomic Bomb. Even Get On Your Boots proves to be a grower, working well when heard within the context of the album.

Just shy of 54 minutes long, it's one of their lengthier efforts. And of the 11 tracks, only two could be described as duds (more of which anon). That's not a bad strike rate by anybody's standards.

It starts off strongly with the title track, a barnstorming stadium rock tune that could have come from the songwriting stable of Kings Of Leon. The young Southerners have supported U2 on the road, and that clearly has had an impact on Bono who sounds uncannily like that band's Caleb Followill in places. Imitation, flattery and all that...

It's followed by one of the album's stand-outs, the aptly titled Magnificent. This already sounds like a classic U2 song that combines disparate eras of their career in a hugely appealing way -- War-meets-Zooropa, if you will. Even the most avowed U2-hater is likely to struggle to come up with reasons to dislike the Edge's irresistible guitars and muscular rhythm section. It's one of two songs featuring the keyboards of will.i.am and while the Black Eyed Peas' main man is hardly a distinct enough keys player to make you sit up and take notice, Eno's typically smart production takes all the elements and concocts the sort of epic five-minuter that's become his stock-in-trade. Let's just say one of his more recent 'clients', Coldplay's Chris Martin, is likely to weep with envy when he hears it.

No Line On The Horizon is, for the most part, an upbeat album. There are several euphoric moments and lots of allusions to redemption. Songs like Moment Of Salvation -- which, at more than seven minutes long, definitely outstays its welcome -- is loaded with lyrics referencing 'soul', 'God' and 'fire'. The atmospheric Unknown Caller is cut from the same cloth. Let's face it, it would hardly be a U2 album if Bono wasn't engaged by such themes -- and if you're one of the many who finds this sort of stuff off-putting, much of the album simply won't work for you.

There are plenty of songs that won't have such a divisive effect, however. I'll Go Crazy If I Don't Go Crazy Tonight, for instance, is a massively uplifting number that's bound to be a live favourite when U2 take the show on the road this summer. There's humour too, as Bono, tongue firmly in cheek, notes: "The right to appear ridiculous is something I hold dear." Never a truer word spoken, Bono.

It's not the only self-deprecating moment on the album. Stand Up Comedy finds the frontman, who is given to wearing shoes with elevated soles, singing of "Napolean in high heels" before offering the killer line: "Be careful of small men with big ideas." The Edge's guitar playing is raw and dirty -- it's got Queens Of The Stone Age written all over it. But the song fails to captivate. It just seems a little too contrived.

The album's most intriguing song is FEZ -- Coming Home, which is a triumph of Eno's yen for experimentalism over U2's big sound. (In fact, Eno and Lanois share songwriting credits on several tracks.) It was one of the first songs recorded -- during sessions in the Moroccan city that gives the song its title -- and it's a hint about what this album could have sounded like if the band really had thrown caution to the wind. Its electro-ambient intro features the sound of birds singing and the bustle of Moroccan life (it was apparently recorded in the outdoor courtyard of an ancient riad) and Bono referencing the "let me in the sound" line from Get On Your Boots, before it dissolves into a scattergun rock that shifts and slides into unexpected territory. The tempo changes are surprising and the song boasts a daring that the bulk of the other tracks, for all their merits, simply lack.

As mentioned at the outset, a pair of songs fall some way short of the mark. One of them is Stand Up Comedy. The other is Breathe, which finds Bono in semi spoken-word mode, although the song doesn't do enough to draw the listener in.

The plaintive White As Snow has no such problem. One of the slower tracks on the album, its intro recalls Sigur Ros while, later, a French horn highlights the evocative lyrics.

Closer Cedars Of Lebanon is the most overtly political song, and a real grower. Like many of its siblings on this album, its moody atmospheric texture recalls Achtung Baby-era U2. It's a downbeat song on which to conclude an album brimming with life and hope.

No Line On The Horizon is unlikely to disappoint the band's multitudinous fanbase. They haven't reinvented themselves as they have suggested, but instead play to their strengths. Fledgling bands with stadium rock ambitions could certainly learn a thing or two from this album.

After such a long and difficult gestation, the album feels like a triumph. It won't change the world, but it does give Bono, The Edge, Adam and Larry a ticket for world domination once more. Just watch those sales figures roll in.

No Line On The Horizon is released on February 27. Lead single Get On Your Boots is released in physical format today

- John Meagher

Again wrong titles??
Pop was in an other review released in 1994 ..
I don't quite believe those reviewers ;)
 
Hey guys, flicked through the new issue of Ireland's HotPress yesterday and quickly glanced at their review - 4/5 stars....it seemed quite a soft critique; alot of talking about the songs but few definative judgements.....it said something along the lines of it being a 'powerful record' that 'fans will find hard not to like'.....
 
Hey guys, flicked through the new issue of Ireland's HotPress yesterday and quickly glanced at their review - 4/5 stars....it seemed quite a soft critique; alot of talking about the songs but few definative judgements.....it said something along the lines of it being a 'powerful record' that 'fans will find hard not to like'.....

thanks, would be cool to get hold of a copy!
 
Exactly. Man, can't they just read and get the titles right? :|

Apart from that it's a good review, nothing new, though. Interesting that they find Breathe not so great while other reviews suggest it may be one of the best songs on the album, but it's all subjective.

And then we have:

Has there really been a review that has suggested Breathe is the best song on the album? Are you sure you're not taking the RS Eno quote and playing Interference telephone? I know some people have been impressed with it (I think its tracklisting position is going to give it a little more 'oomph' being surrounded by slow songs), but I don't remember any ecstatic praise.
 
Hey guys, flicked through the new issue of Ireland's HotPress yesterday and quickly glanced at their review - 4/5 stars....it seemed quite a soft critique; alot of talking about the songs but few definative judgements.....it said something along the lines of it being a 'powerful record' that 'fans will find hard not to like'.....

Nice, thanks!

I like the idea of finding it hard not to like.
 
Was this one posted yet?

KEVIN COURTNEY

U2-No line on the Horizon Mercury 4 out of 5

No one knows the line on horizon better than U2 – they’ve spent enough of their career gazing meaningfully in its direction. For their third studio album of the noughties, they decided to blur that line and let everything bleed into one vast wall of sound and twisted vision.

U2 brought us to a comfort zone of sorts with the last two albums, but here they’re up for taking a few risks and chancing arms, legs and cojones on this big, brash embrace of an album. It’s not so much throwing their arms around the world as trying to crush it in a big, fuzzy bearhug.

This is a record of twists and turns and death-defying loops, and anyone looking for a quick-fix anthem may be put off by the complexities on offer here. It’s U2’s prog rock album, so if you want to sing along, you’ll need to grab hold of your chin and pay close attention.

Magnificent comes on like Blondie’s Atomic filtered through Bowie’s Heroes, and is the first of three songs that clock in at more than five minutes. The longest one, Moment of Surrender, sees Bono finding – as usual – redemption in the dirt. Though the reference to getting money out of an ATM may be rather badly timed, it at least shows that his mind is still linked to the ordinary world.

Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois have co-songwriting credits on many of the songs, and Eno’s whooshing keyboard sounds and dense production threads through the album. (The tracks produced by Steve Lillywhite seem sparse by comparison.)

Bono seems more passenger than driver here, and he sounds all the better for it. The Edge is in serious guitar hero form, going all Eric Clapton on the solo for Moment of Surrender , then kicking into Jimmy Page mode for the riff of Stand Up Comedy . Adam Clayton’s bass strains the sub-woofers, but Larry Mullen jnr’s drumming is an exercise in keeping the runaway train on track.

The band leave it till the middle section to bring out the quickfire tunes ( I’ll Go Crazy if I Don’t Go Crazy Tonight, Get on Your Boots and Stand Up Comedy ), then settle into some Eastern atmospherics on Fez – Being Born (Fez, Morocco is where the album sessions began). The Asian flavours linger on the penultimate blow-out, Breathe, and in the final dispatches of Cedars of Lebanon , but the Western-flecked White as Snow , a traditional arrangement with new lyrics, sits comfortably and confidently amongst them.

With No Line on the Horizon , U2 are no longer constrained by perspective or depth, and are free to throw the colours and shapes around and see where it takes them. They may not be the safe home ground of old, but they’ve arrived at a pretty interesting place.

Download tracks: Magnificent, Moment of Surrender, Stand Up Comedy
 
Has there really been a review that has suggested Breathe is the best song on the album? Are you sure you're not taking the RS Eno quote and playing Interference telephone? I know some people have been impressed with it (I think its tracklisting position is going to give it a little more 'oomph' being surrounded by slow songs), but I don't remember any ecstatic praise.

I read a German review that clearly said Breathe is the most impressive track on the album.

I think the Independent review is the first one that explicitly says that Breathe is not a great song.
 
Was this one posted yet?

KEVIN COURTNEY

U2-No line on the Horizon Mercury 4 out of 5

No one knows the line on horizon better than U2 – they’ve spent enough of their career gazing meaningfully in its direction. For their third studio album of the noughties, they decided to blur that line and let everything bleed into one vast wall of sound and twisted vision.

U2 brought us to a comfort zone of sorts with the last two albums, but here they’re up for taking a few risks and chancing arms, legs and cojones on this big, brash embrace of an album. It’s not so much throwing their arms around the world as trying to crush it in a big, fuzzy bearhug.

This is a record of twists and turns and death-defying loops, and anyone looking for a quick-fix anthem may be put off by the complexities on offer here. It’s U2’s prog rock album, so if you want to sing along, you’ll need to grab hold of your chin and pay close attention.

Magnificent comes on like Blondie’s Atomic filtered through Bowie’s Heroes, and is the first of three songs that clock in at more than five minutes. The longest one, Moment of Surrender, sees Bono finding – as usual – redemption in the dirt. Though the reference to getting money out of an ATM may be rather badly timed, it at least shows that his mind is still linked to the ordinary world.

Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois have co-songwriting credits on many of the songs, and Eno’s whooshing keyboard sounds and dense production threads through the album. (The tracks produced by Steve Lillywhite seem sparse by comparison.)

Bono seems more passenger than driver here, and he sounds all the better for it. The Edge is in serious guitar hero form, going all Eric Clapton on the solo for Moment of Surrender , then kicking into Jimmy Page mode for the riff of Stand Up Comedy . Adam Clayton’s bass strains the sub-woofers, but Larry Mullen jnr’s drumming is an exercise in keeping the runaway train on track.

The band leave it till the middle section to bring out the quickfire tunes ( I’ll Go Crazy if I Don’t Go Crazy Tonight, Get on Your Boots and Stand Up Comedy ), then settle into some Eastern atmospherics on Fez – Being Born (Fez, Morocco is where the album sessions began). The Asian flavours linger on the penultimate blow-out, Breathe, and in the final dispatches of Cedars of Lebanon , but the Western-flecked White as Snow , a traditional arrangement with new lyrics, sits comfortably and confidently amongst them.

With No Line on the Horizon , U2 are no longer constrained by perspective or depth, and are free to throw the colours and shapes around and see where it takes them. They may not be the safe home ground of old, but they’ve arrived at a pretty interesting place.

Download tracks: Magnificent, Moment of Surrender, Stand Up Comedy

Cheers for this. I wish they would leave Steve Lillywhite alone for a bit!

I know this is overly-simplistic, but I think that Eno/Lanois appeals to their creative side and Lillywhite to the straightforward radio friendly side... I think they could do without his safety net...
 
Was this one posted yet?

KEVIN COURTNEY

U2-No line on the Horizon Mercury 4 out of 5

No one knows the line on horizon better than U2 – they’ve spent enough of their career gazing meaningfully in its direction. For their third studio album of the noughties, they decided to blur that line and let everything bleed into one vast wall of sound and twisted vision.

U2 brought us to a comfort zone of sorts with the last two albums, but here they’re up for taking a few risks and chancing arms, legs and cojones on this big, brash embrace of an album. It’s not so much throwing their arms around the world as trying to crush it in a big, fuzzy bearhug.

This is a record of twists and turns and death-defying loops, and anyone looking for a quick-fix anthem may be put off by the complexities on offer here. It’s U2’s prog rock album, so if you want to sing along, you’ll need to grab hold of your chin and pay close attention.

Magnificent comes on like Blondie’s Atomic filtered through Bowie’s Heroes, and is the first of three songs that clock in at more than five minutes. The longest one, Moment of Surrender, sees Bono finding – as usual – redemption in the dirt. Though the reference to getting money out of an ATM may be rather badly timed, it at least shows that his mind is still linked to the ordinary world.

Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois have co-songwriting credits on many of the songs, and Eno’s whooshing keyboard sounds and dense production threads through the album. (The tracks produced by Steve Lillywhite seem sparse by comparison.)

Bono seems more passenger than driver here, and he sounds all the better for it. The Edge is in serious guitar hero form, going all Eric Clapton on the solo for Moment of Surrender , then kicking into Jimmy Page mode for the riff of Stand Up Comedy . Adam Clayton’s bass strains the sub-woofers, but Larry Mullen jnr’s drumming is an exercise in keeping the runaway train on track.

The band leave it till the middle section to bring out the quickfire tunes ( I’ll Go Crazy if I Don’t Go Crazy Tonight, Get on Your Boots and Stand Up Comedy ), then settle into some Eastern atmospherics on Fez – Being Born (Fez, Morocco is where the album sessions began). The Asian flavours linger on the penultimate blow-out, Breathe, and in the final dispatches of Cedars of Lebanon , but the Western-flecked White as Snow , a traditional arrangement with new lyrics, sits comfortably and confidently amongst them.

With No Line on the Horizon , U2 are no longer constrained by perspective or depth, and are free to throw the colours and shapes around and see where it takes them. They may not be the safe home ground of old, but they’ve arrived at a pretty interesting place.

Download tracks: Magnificent, Moment of Surrender, Stand Up Comedy


Great review, very interesting read. :up:

Where is it from?
 
I read a German review that clearly said Breathe is the most impressive track on the album.

I think the Independent review is the first one that explicitly says that Breathe is not a great song.

Yeah, that sounds about right. I'm getting the feeling that Breathe might be an example of a song that they felt was great, but they couldn't ever quite get it right (or, more specifically, to the place where it would be a monster smash hit)--like with (using the band's examples) Who's Gonna Ride Your Wild Horses and Staring at the Sun. Eno was praising Breathe to high heaven, but there hasn't even been any single talk around it...
 
This is a record of twists and turns and death-defying loops, and anyone looking for a quick-fix anthem may be put off by the complexities on offer here. It’s U2’s prog rock album, so if you want to sing along, you’ll need to grab hold of your chin and pay close attention.

:drool:

yeah, my prog-rock loving friends will :shame::madwife: at me when I'll show them this review...
:D
 
If No Line On The Horizon isn't ultimately rated alongside The Joshua Tree and Achtung Baby as one of a triumvirate of superlative U2 albums, then I'll be eating my pork-pie hat.

:hmm: Bold statement
 
Yeah, that sounds about right. I'm getting the feeling that Breathe might be an example of a song that they felt was great, but they couldn't ever quite get it right (or, more specifically, to the place where it would be a monster smash hit)--like with (using the band's examples) Who's Gonna Ride Your Wild Horses and Staring at the Sun. Eno was praising Breathe to high heaven, but there hasn't even been any single talk around it...

I agree with you...I think the breath will be one of the best u2 songs,beach clip of this song is at least awesome!What a melody,what a Bonos voice,what a Edge gitar work and backing vocals-fantastic.With breath they cant go wrong!!!!!
 
Was this one posted yet?

KEVIN COURTNEY

U2-No line on the Horizon Mercury 4 out of 5

No one knows the line on horizon better than U2 – they’ve spent enough of their career gazing meaningfully in its direction. For their third studio album of the noughties, they decided to blur that line and let everything bleed into one vast wall of sound and twisted vision.

U2 brought us to a comfort zone of sorts with the last two albums, but here they’re up for taking a few risks and chancing arms, legs and cojones on this big, brash embrace of an album. It’s not so much throwing their arms around the world as trying to crush it in a big, fuzzy bearhug.

This is a record of twists and turns and death-defying loops, and anyone looking for a quick-fix anthem may be put off by the complexities on offer here. It’s U2’s prog rock album, so if you want to sing along, you’ll need to grab hold of your chin and pay close attention.

Magnificent comes on like Blondie’s Atomic filtered through Bowie’s Heroes, and is the first of three songs that clock in at more than five minutes. The longest one, Moment of Surrender, sees Bono finding – as usual – redemption in the dirt. Though the reference to getting money out of an ATM may be rather badly timed, it at least shows that his mind is still linked to the ordinary world.

Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois have co-songwriting credits on many of the songs, and Eno’s whooshing keyboard sounds and dense production threads through the album. (The tracks produced by Steve Lillywhite seem sparse by comparison.)

Bono seems more passenger than driver here, and he sounds all the better for it. The Edge is in serious guitar hero form, going all Eric Clapton on the solo for Moment of Surrender , then kicking into Jimmy Page mode for the riff of Stand Up Comedy . Adam Clayton’s bass strains the sub-woofers, but Larry Mullen jnr’s drumming is an exercise in keeping the runaway train on track.

The band leave it till the middle section to bring out the quickfire tunes ( I’ll Go Crazy if I Don’t Go Crazy Tonight, Get on Your Boots and Stand Up Comedy ), then settle into some Eastern atmospherics on Fez – Being Born (Fez, Morocco is where the album sessions began). The Asian flavours linger on the penultimate blow-out, Breathe, and in the final dispatches of Cedars of Lebanon , but the Western-flecked White as Snow , a traditional arrangement with new lyrics, sits comfortably and confidently amongst them.

With No Line on the Horizon , U2 are no longer constrained by perspective or depth, and are free to throw the colours and shapes around and see where it takes them. They may not be the safe home ground of old, but they’ve arrived at a pretty interesting place.

Download tracks: Magnificent, Moment of Surrender, Stand Up Comedy

this:

Download tracks: Magnificent, Moment of Surrender, Stand Up Comedy


where??
 
The herald review is some serious stuff. Very very good read.

And again:

In the natural order of things, the ageing U2 should by now be trailing in the wake of younger, more dynamic bands. This is not the case. No Line On The Horizon raises the bar for Coldplay, The Killers and Kings of Leon.

Plus he confirms that White as snow is indeed the soundtrack for Brothers.

Man, I think I actually teared up reading this review.

:up:
 
the idiot is saying they are only WORTH downloading, at least thats what I think?

it was from the bottom of the article djerdap posted but i didn't copy in the whole article - hang on i'll fix that

so i was wondering if there was a link on the article to download the tracks... long shot i know lmfao
 
hey the independent review may have brought up an interesting point (or it could just be another error!)

after giving an overview of album, the reviewer does a track by track review:

Notice what is said of Cedars of Lebanon:

11: Cedars Of Lebanon

Like a prize-winning short story, this has an insightful documentary feel that makes it the perfect coda to the album.

The writing here is brilliant and, as throughout, the playing shows a band at the height of its powers.

It's the tremendous sonic dynamics that grab you as the bass and drums lock into an irresistible Madchester beat and carries on with a rising lift that oozes optimism as Bono sings, 'She said, "Infinity is a great place to start"'.

Isn't this also a line from the opening track?? Therefore is it just a case of:

1. The reviewer's review is based on the 'once only' screening he heard, and he has got his lyrics messed up,
2. They appear in both NLOTH and COL to form the theme of the album, or

3. Everyone already knew this and I am just slowwwwwwwwww???
 
hey the independent review may have brought up an interesting point (or it could just be another error!)

after giving an overview of album, the reviewer does a track by track review:

Notice what is said of Cedars of Lebanon:

11: Cedars Of Lebanon

Like a prize-winning short story, this has an insightful documentary feel that makes it the perfect coda to the album.

The writing here is brilliant and, as throughout, the playing shows a band at the height of its powers.

It's the tremendous sonic dynamics that grab you as the bass and drums lock into an irresistible Madchester beat and carries on with a rising lift that oozes optimism as Bono sings, 'She said, "Infinity is a great place to start"'.

Isn't this also a line from the opening track?? Therefore is it just a case of:

1. The reviewer's review is based on the 'once only' screening he heard, and he has got his lyrics messed up,
2. They appear in both NLOTH and COL to form the theme of the album, or

3. Everyone already knew this and I am just slowwwwwwwwww???

I think the reviewer's wrong, he has things mixed up. I don't think the line appears in both songs.
 
All the guy did was mistakenly repaste his review of the NLOTH song at the end of the album review...
 
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