NLOTH Album Reviews Pt 3

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great review Neil. After hearing the album a few times now, there is a few points I disagree with however.

I feel that the middle of this album is more than just mere relief from the complexities of the first few songs, it's a natural continuation of it. The main chorus hook in Crazy Tonight is such a fantastic moment because it just knocks you on the head and punches it's way out from the sonic fog of the first half. It is a perfectly placed song on a perfectly coherent album. Then Boots & SUC trail off into pop mode and the whole thing feels like it's about to go off into party land, and then all of a sudden, you're driftng back into the sonic fog, except this time it's thicker. Just brilliant really...
 
great review Neil. After hearing the album a few times now, there is a few points I disagree with however.

I feel that the middle of this album is more than just mere relief from the complexities of the first few songs, it's a natural continuation of it. The main chorus hook in Crazy Tonight is such a fantastic moment because it just knocks you on the head and punches it's way out from the sonic fog of the first half. It is a perfectly placed song on a perfectly coherent album. Then Boots & SUC trail off into pop mode and the whole thing feels like it's about to go off into party land, and then all of a sudden, you're driftng back into the song fog, except this time it's thicker. Just brilliant really...

you've heard it a couple times now? i'm so jealous! :D
 
great review Neil. After hearing the album a few times now, there is a few points I disagree with however.

I feel that the middle of this album is more than just mere relief from the complexities of the first few songs, it's a natural continuation of it. The main chorus hook in Crazy Tonight is such a fantastic moment because it just knocks you on the head and punches it's way out from the sonic fog of the first half. It is a perfectly placed song on a perfectly coherent album. Then Boots & SUC trail off into pop mode and the whole thing feels like it's about to go off into party land, and then all of a sudden, you're driftng back into the sonic fog, except this time it's thicker. Just brilliant really...

My God... Walt, you're making me way too excited for my own good.
 
great review Neil. After hearing the album a few times now, there is a few points I disagree with however.

I feel that the middle of this album is more than just mere relief from the complexities of the first few songs, it's a natural continuation of it. The main chorus hook in Crazy Tonight is such a fantastic moment because it just knocks you on the head and punches it's way out from the sonic fog of the first half. It is a perfectly placed song on a perfectly coherent album. Then Boots & SUC trail off into pop mode and the whole thing feels like it's about to go off into party land, and then all of a sudden, you're driftng back into the sonic fog, except this time it's thicker. Just brilliant really...

:drool::drool::drool:
 
I actually read it without knowing it was by Neil McCormick.

Best review yet. It actually talks about the music rather than about other stuff

Both the positive and negative points are really well made.

It gives me hope for the album, particularly because it is positive but not sugar-coated.
 
didnt know where to post, so i'll ask here. @u2 says u2 appeared at Friday Night with Jonathan Ross yesterday. Anyone got any news on that, if thats even true?
 
didnt know where to post, so i'll ask here. @u2 says u2 appeared at Friday Night with Jonathan Ross yesterday. Anyone got any news on that, if thats even true?

The show is filmed in advance of the friday show, but not this early. It should be on the wednesday or even thursday before it is broadcast on 27th.
 
didnt know where to post, so i'll ask here. @u2 says u2 appeared at Friday Night with Jonathan Ross yesterday. Anyone got any news on that, if thats even true?

Its the Thursday before the show normally
 
7 of the 12 tracks credited to both band and producers, and recorded with a six-piece line up featuring Eno on electronics and Lanois on acoustic and pedal steel guitar.

I thought there were only 11 tracks om the album.
 
Maybe he is counting Fez/Being Born as two tracks? He seems very detail oriented about his U2.

I loved this review.
There are two words that the word layered goes extremely well with:
Vocals
Rhythms
 
I would love to have Winter as a bonus track on the album. In the Corbijn movie but not good or approriate enough to feature on the album. I don't understand that.
 
great review Neil. After hearing the album a few times now, there is a few points I disagree with however.

I feel that the middle of this album is more than just mere relief from the complexities of the first few songs, it's a natural continuation of it. The main chorus hook in Crazy Tonight is such a fantastic moment because it just knocks you on the head and punches it's way out from the sonic fog of the first half. It is a perfectly placed song on a perfectly coherent album. Then Boots & SUC trail off into pop mode and the whole thing feels like it's about to go off into party land, and then all of a sudden, you're driftng back into the sonic fog, except this time it's thicker. Just brilliant really...

I think that some of these reviewers would benefit from a couple of weeks or even a couple of months of listening to this album. I say that because it seems like most of them aren't able to make sense of the density of the album and how all of the parts fit. Neil comes the closest to anyone else I've read of really capturing the big picture of the album, but even he seems to be confused a bit by it. I'm sure by the time we've all heard it and time had passed we'll all get a better understanding of how all the parts fit. It took me 2 years after the initial listen of Achtung Baby to "really get it". The overall theme and subtle nuances took a lot longer than the more obvious ones. I think the same will happen with this album.

I don't think any album is perfect. Give me any album from any band in history and we can find flaws or short comings in them...but thats okay because luckily we judge great albums/music not by what they are missing but instead what they contain.

It seems to me that NLOTH contains a lot of dense musical mass, which will only unravel itself in time.....of course we still need to hear the damn thing first...that would be a great start. :up:
 
by Chris Jones
16 February 2009

Like all of U2's best work there's a schism at the heart of their 12th studio album. It's the polarity between the hedonistic and the profound; the thin line between the general and the particular: rock and a very hard place. Their very lucrative humanitarianism may stick in the craw of many, but this skill allows them to make important points about all our lives while never forgetting to move our collective booties.

Much of No Line On the Horizon examines the state of the planet from the viewpoint of victims and witnesses. White As Snow sets a traditional air beneath a tale of an Afghanistan where ‘’only poppies laugh under a crescent moon’’. World citizenry is reflected in uber-cool, William Gibson-style lyrics on Breathe (''16th of June, Chinese Stocks are going up, And I'm coming down with some new Asian virus''). However the hi-tech metaphor card is perhaps overplayed on Unknown Caller's dreadful ''Force quit and move to trash'' lines.

There's plenty to rejoice about here. Not only is old mucker Steve Lillywhite back at the desk on several tracks, resurrecting the days of War, but the Edge's guitar also returns to the glory days on the title track as well as the hilariously titled I'll Go Crazy If I Don't Go Crazy Tonight with the echo pedal set to eleven. Add to these the massed ''oh, oh''s, and it at least feels like a classic, even if a lack of obviously hummable tunes makes it more of a grower than an instant hit.

The symbiotic relationship with Brian Eno (and Daniel Lanois) seems to have almost reached the point of imperceptibility. From the musical box sprinkles on the chugging title track to the the mid-point palate cleanser FEZ-Being Born's cut-up first half, the touch may be light but it's as much a part of their sound as Larry's rattling toms or Adam's one note runs.

Get On Your Boots, sounds unnervingly like U2 doing a Muse impersonation. Not necessarily a bad thing but, as on Pop, it sounds odd when U2 sound like followers rather than leaders. But it would be unrealistic to expect a band at the wrong end of a 35-year career to be as lithe as they once were.

But there are at least two classics here. The closing Cedars Of Lebanon is beautifully weary tale told by a journalist in the Middle East; while conversely Stand Up Comedy is a rowdy, grand gesture urging you to ''stand up for love'' as as only U2 can. It also contains one of Bono's greatest lines in "stop helping God across the road like an little old lady''.

It seems that faith is what still drives these men: the faith in music to convey an important message; the faith in the power of faith itself. But overall No Line On The Horizon seems to show that U2 really still have faith in themselves.
 
by Chris Jones
16 February 2009

Like all of U2's best work there's a schism at the heart of their 12th studio album. It's the polarity between the hedonistic and the profound; the thin line between the general and the particular: rock and a very hard place. Their very lucrative humanitarianism may stick in the craw of many, but this skill allows them to make important points about all our lives while never forgetting to move our collective booties.

Much of No Line On the Horizon examines the state of the planet from the viewpoint of victims and witnesses. White As Snow sets a traditional air beneath a tale of an Afghanistan where ‘’only poppies laugh under a crescent moon’’. World citizenry is reflected in uber-cool, William Gibson-style lyrics on Breathe (''16th of June, Chinese Stocks are going up, And I'm coming down with some new Asian virus''). However the hi-tech metaphor card is perhaps overplayed on Unknown Caller's dreadful ''Force quit and move to trash'' lines.

There's plenty to rejoice about here. Not only is old mucker Steve Lillywhite back at the desk on several tracks, resurrecting the days of War, but the Edge's guitar also returns to the glory days on the title track as well as the hilariously titled I'll Go Crazy If I Don't Go Crazy Tonight with the echo pedal set to eleven. Add to these the massed ''oh, oh''s, and it at least feels like a classic, even if a lack of obviously hummable tunes makes it more of a grower than an instant hit.

The symbiotic relationship with Brian Eno (and Daniel Lanois) seems to have almost reached the point of imperceptibility. From the musical box sprinkles on the chugging title track to the the mid-point palate cleanser FEZ-Being Born's cut-up first half, the touch may be light but it's as much a part of their sound as Larry's rattling toms or Adam's one note runs.

Get On Your Boots, sounds unnervingly like U2 doing a Muse impersonation. Not necessarily a bad thing but, as on Pop, it sounds odd when U2 sound like followers rather than leaders. But it would be unrealistic to expect a band at the wrong end of a 35-year career to be as lithe as they once were.

But there are at least two classics here. The closing Cedars Of Lebanon is beautifully weary tale told by a journalist in the Middle East; while conversely Stand Up Comedy is a rowdy, grand gesture urging you to ''stand up for love'' as as only U2 can. It also contains one of Bono's greatest lines in "stop helping God across the road like an little old lady''.

It seems that faith is what still drives these men: the faith in music to convey an important message; the faith in the power of faith itself. But overall No Line On The Horizon seems to show that U2 really still have faith in themselves.

Yet again, we have reviewers calling their favorite songs classics.
Every songs except Crazy Tonight and Boots has been called a classic.
Thanks for the post.

Overall I thought this was a ridiculous review.
 
i love that line :drool:

I do too - I find it so strange that so many reviewers are quite lukewarm about Unknown Caller... From the beach clip which Ive been listening to for almost 5 months now its one of my favourite pieces of music ever by anyone... I can't imagine it's gotten worse between then and now....
 
I do too - I find it so strange that so many reviewers are quite lukewarm about Unknown Caller... From the beach clip which Ive been listening to for almost 5 months now its one of my favourite pieces of music ever by anyone... I can't imagine it's gotten worse between then and now....

It all has to do with expectations.
 
not sure if this one has been posted yet:

U2: No Line on the Horizon

The Times, February 16, 2009

Pete Paphides

3 / 5

Talk about raising the stakes. "If this isn't our best album, we're irrelevant," Bono declared when asked about U2's new album, No Line on the Horizon, released on March 2. Anyone who has heard the current single, Get on Your Boots, surely won't need reminding how quickly such statements can repeat on you. Quite how such a dog's dinner of Dylan-esque free association and Bolan-esque electric boogie made it beyond the rehearsal room is anyone's guess.

But even before that point the drip-feed of information around No Line on the Horizon had been worrying. Sessions with Rick Rubin were abandoned early. The group made better progress with Brian Eno and Danny Lanois, the producers of U2's 1987 album The Joshua Tree, which prompted Universal to set a deadline for release for autumn 2008. And yet no amount of frantic finessing could ensure the album's arrival in shops by Christmas.

It's a relief, then, to report that on their 12th album U2 come out of the traps sounding like, well, their old selves. The title track captures a band powering along with the majestic velocity of a Sherman tank. You want it to last, and it does for a time. "I was born to sing for you," intones Bono on the stunning Magnificent, a lyric that brings religious intensity to what, by anyone else, would be a mere love song.

What follows is less a disaster and more a loss of focus, brought about, you suspect, because this is really a compilation of highlights from several disparately spread sessions. That they spent 16 months retooling Stand up Comedy should have told them that this lolloping mid-paced rocker simply wasn't good enough – and certainly not with lines such as "Stop helping God across the road like a little old lady". Trailed as the centrepiece of the album, Moment of Surrender is regarded by the band as the equal of One (1991). But Bono's impassioned testifying is left exposed by a meagre tune.

About three quarters in, however, it's a relief to report that you have heard all of the new album's low points. Adapted from a folk song, White as Snow is Bono's best vocal, depicting a war-torn landscape through eyes exiled by it.

No less potently, Cedars of Lebanon takes shape amid a sonic fug that mirrors the exhaustion of its war reporter narrator: "Child drinking dirty water from the riverbank/ Soldier brings oranges he got out from a tank."

No Line on the Horizon isn't U2's best album. But irrelevant? When four members of a group click and the tape is running, irrelevant doesn't really come into it. And, over 54 minutes, there are enough of those moments to remind you that you write off U2 at your peril. Next time, though, Bono might want to use his powers of diplomacy to the benefit of his band. If you can get George Bush to sanction the largest response by a Western government to the Aids crisis then can't you convince your label to wait until you have really delivered your best album?

(c) The Times, 2009.
 
No Line on the Horizon delivers some real surprises

Evening Herald, February 16, 2009

Danielle Cahill


The wait is finally over and with the Friday's official release of the new single Get on Your Boots, fans of home-grown superstars U2 are finally able to get their teeth into the new album. But does this much-anticipated effort from the lads deliver? Danielle Cahill finds out.

Between listening to Bono speak about poverty on the global stage and hearing tales of whose house was given what kind of planning permission in south county Dublin you could almost be forgiven for forgetting what it is that U2 do best. But, with their 12th studio album, the boys from da north side get back to basics with their strongest offering in years.

No Line on the Horizon delivers a range of sounds you wouldn't normally associate with one of the biggest stadium rock groups in the world. Throw in a brief homage to 70s rock, a hint of folk music, a touch of otherworldly tones and add some of the longest tracks the band have ever released and what you end up with is an interesting mix of electic sounds that promises to dominate radio airplay in the coming months.

The album's title track is, according to Bono, one of the fastest songs they have recorded and it's a great mix of strong guitar sounds and electro pop and haunting lyrics. Magnificent is a lot rockier and sounds like what you would expect of a U2 song. Though few acts could get away with lines such as "I was born to sing for you".

Despite its length, one of the stand out tracks for me is easily Moment of Surrender. At more than seven minutes this song shows the band at their best with Bono delivering strong vocals backed up by great guitar work and a real earthy sound. The almost biblical lyrics though, could send many rock fans running in the other direction what with all the talk of stations of the cross and souls. The first time I heard this track I wasn't overly impressed, but of all the songs on the album, it is the one that my mind replays over and over again.

Oddly the two longest tracks are back-to-back on the album with Surrender being followed by the six-minute epic that is Unknown Caller. There are some decent guitar sounds on this one and the lyrics are an interesting play on the importance of technology in day-to-day living. "Force quit, move to trash" are the kind of words you don't really expect on a rock album.

I'll Go Crazy If I Don't Go Crazy Tonight will be all over the radio and no doubt become a popular ring tone too as it sees the band return to the rock and roll sound we've all long associated with them. With will.i.am playing keyboards and lyrics such as "every generation gets a chance to change the world" blending smoothly with the kind of guitar sounds that will keep everyone happy.

Stand Up Comedy sounds like a throwback to 70s rock that come across as a mixture of Led Zeppelin and Pink Floyd. Music fans should get a kick out of the self-deprecating lyrics like "stand up to rock stars/ Napoleon in high heels", with Bono singing "be careful of small men with big ideas".

Mixed by producer Brian Eno, Fez-Being Born is a real departure for the band and it begins with a long musical intro that combines an electronic sound with an otherworldly quality which then blends into a more traditional rock track - all together it puts the listener in another place. The track was recorded in Morocco and the rich array of unusual sounds is daring for a band that is clearly hoping for world domination with this album.

White as Snow sounds folksy and with lyrics rich in themes such as sowing seeds and finding a land as white as snow, this is one song that you wouldn't expect from U2.

The last track, Cedars of Lebanon takes music fans on a brief tour of conflict in the Middle East as seen by a war correspondent. "Choose your enemies carefully because they will define you," Bono sings in the most political track on the album. It's a haunting song with a rich narrative that is well worth a second and third listen.

Given the long gestation period of this album, its accidental though short-lived online bootleg release, the final product has a lot riding on it. No doubt fans will mull over its textured sounds and lyrics for months to come and the band have been kind enough to offer five separate formats for music lovers to appreciate. It's not just another album, it's a multi-faceted offering from a band who are smart enough to understand that every brand needs options. Whatever listening option you choose, this is one album you will playing over and over again.
 
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