europop2005
Refugee
- Joined
- Mar 19, 2006
- Messages
- 2,420
I was watching these two being sung as they were always meant to be sung...which one is the more defenite? Personally I love the Live Aid version...he just hits the nail on the head
BonoVoxSupastar said:Rattle and Hum blows both of them away...
Fuck the revolution!!!
BonoVoxSupastar said:Rattle and Hum blows both of them away...
Fuck the revolution!!!
BonoVoxSupastar said:Rattle and Hum blows both of them away...
Fuck the revolution!!!
perrypickwick said:
COBL_04 said:
I'm not even going to look but I'll guess that involves a president.
Yeah, what the hell is it with the "Shhhhhunday" business at Live Aid? I've never heard it sound this way before. Perhaps Bono was using a different mike on that day, not his normal one. Who knows, but I always thought it was way out of left field given the other few hundred versions of the song I've heard. One thing for sure Larry's snare drum has never sounded so great as it does at Live Aid.Aygo said:Rattle And Hum version is not here, so I'm gonna choose Red Rocks version... I hate that "Shhhhhunday" of the Live Day.
AndrewCowley said:
Yeah, what the hell is it with the "Shhhhhunday" business at Live Aid? I've never heard it sound this way before. Perhaps Bono was using a different mike on that day, not his normal one. Who knows, but I always thought it was way out of left field given the other few hundred versions of the song I've heard. One thing for sure Larry's snare drum has never sounded so great as it does at Live Aid.
For the Live Aid performance there was something different about how Larry's drums were set up. They sound way different to anything I've heard from U2 live before. Given that Live Aid was shared between many bands perhaps the mikes, effects and so on weren't what U2 usually use.europop2005 said:the drumming in Live Aid is better though
Yeah, but haven't we all accepted that this was the period when he was destroying his voice by singing this way? In hindsight it doesn't seem real smart to me. Yes his JT and Lovetown voice did sound great (not always; there is the famous 'kermit' voice during the JT tour) but look at the after effect.david said:wow. bono's voice really did sore during the amnesty tour in 86.. i wonder how many tracks he laid down for the joshua tree when his voice was like that????
AndrewCowley said:
Yeah, but haven't we all accepted that this was the period when he was destroying his voice by singing this way? In hindsight it doesn't seem real smart to me. Yes his JT and Lovetown voice did sound great (not always; there is the famous 'kermit' voice during the JT tour) but look at the after effect.
Agreed. But that 'stage god' thing you mention was mostly due to his willingness to make those 80's big statements between songs. Bono simply doesn't 'give out' this much any more. I'm not being critical. Just a reflection on how times change and how long this band has been around for.perrypickwick said:
but it was worth it - moments of pur magic. And one we will see on DVD in short time. That voice during that time made me a fan - somtimes he sang like there was no tomorrow. So much power and strengh in his voice. I think the Paris concert can make new fans - it thrilling to see what a stage-god he was these days.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tbke8BGyVNw
ZOOTVTOURist said:... take the version from Croke Part III in Dublin '05, a nice one, too ...