pepokiss
Rock n' Roll Doggie ALL ACCESS
Someone on Facebook posted this article about the Joshua Tree Tour, saying he was sick of reading this, that the writer absolutely went against U2... but not only the writer has a point, HE'S RIGHT
The article ---> http://lefsetz.com/wordpress/2017/01/09/u2-joshua-tree/
These 2 thoughts were the ones that resonated the more with me, and I think with you, too, about this whole SOE thing
"U2 needs a hit single.
They don’t need an album, which will be instantly forgotten, they need a track, everybody needs a track.
No one listens to albums anymore."
I liked that because I've been thinking about that for like 8-9 years. Albums are dead. We're back in the 50s-60s when artist just had singles and the albums were like the "greatest hits" records...
"But an artist takes chances. An artist surprises us. An artists hangs it all out.
Once you second-guess the audience, once you give the people what they’re looking for, you’re done. You’re not an artist, you’re a businessman. Artists lead the way and change the culture. That’s what U2 used to do."
That's the Joshua Tree Tour. They're giving in.
I like the idea and I'm traveling, but hey, I'm just 32, I had 3 when TJT came out, my first show was Popmart Santiago 98. But still, it seems weird. It will be weird.
Ever since the Popmart US Tour fiasco (because in Europe and all around the world POP and Popmart were succesful and sold out stadiums) we're stuck with this U2, afraid to go out on tour with something half done (I can get that), but carving to the US crowd. And I know they know they can do a REST OF THE WORLD ONLY Tour and sold out every last place on the earth... but the US gets the cake, always.
And they're afraid to fail. And they're stuck in the album concept, when that's already dead.
1 good single every half a year for 2 years and they'd be as relevant or even more than ever.
Anyway, see you on Vancouver, May 12
The article ---> http://lefsetz.com/wordpress/2017/01/09/u2-joshua-tree/
These 2 thoughts were the ones that resonated the more with me, and I think with you, too, about this whole SOE thing
"U2 needs a hit single.
They don’t need an album, which will be instantly forgotten, they need a track, everybody needs a track.
No one listens to albums anymore."
I liked that because I've been thinking about that for like 8-9 years. Albums are dead. We're back in the 50s-60s when artist just had singles and the albums were like the "greatest hits" records...
"But an artist takes chances. An artist surprises us. An artists hangs it all out.
Once you second-guess the audience, once you give the people what they’re looking for, you’re done. You’re not an artist, you’re a businessman. Artists lead the way and change the culture. That’s what U2 used to do."
That's the Joshua Tree Tour. They're giving in.
I like the idea and I'm traveling, but hey, I'm just 32, I had 3 when TJT came out, my first show was Popmart Santiago 98. But still, it seems weird. It will be weird.
Ever since the Popmart US Tour fiasco (because in Europe and all around the world POP and Popmart were succesful and sold out stadiums) we're stuck with this U2, afraid to go out on tour with something half done (I can get that), but carving to the US crowd. And I know they know they can do a REST OF THE WORLD ONLY Tour and sold out every last place on the earth... but the US gets the cake, always.
And they're afraid to fail. And they're stuck in the album concept, when that's already dead.
1 good single every half a year for 2 years and they'd be as relevant or even more than ever.
Anyway, see you on Vancouver, May 12
