U2 Adapts To Changing Times, Laments Loss Of Obama Election Joy

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - U2 Adapts To Changing Times, Laments Loss Of Obama Election Joy stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS

NEKESA MUMBI MOODY | 10/23/09 08:17 PM | AP

What's Your Reaction?
U Two

Even while maintaining its status as one of the few musical acts that can still fill stadiums, U2 is struck by how quickly its world is changing – musically and politically.

Charismatic front man Bono, in a reflective mood as U2 closes the North American leg of its "360" tour, notes the different, more polarized atmosphere in the United States since the band performed its anthem, "City of Blinding Lights," at President Obama's inauguration in January.

"I didn't think it could come to this so quickly, after the joyous occasion of that election," Bono says in an interview on board the band's plane, as they jet to another stop on the tour. "I thought America was looking good. ... Things are getting a little rough now."

Bono says he's been in touch with Obama and is confident the president will deliver on promises made during the campaign, including the singer's favorite issue: funding to fight AIDS in Africa. "The Obama administration is just getting going. (He) has promised to double aid over the next years, because even though (President George W.) Bush tripled it, ... the United States is still about half as what European countries give as a percentage, and I think he knows that's not right."

Meanwhile, Bono the rock star and the rest of U2 are struggling a bit themselves – as incongruous as that might seem for a band that will have performed to millions of people before its tour wraps overseas next year. (U2 ends its North American tour on Wednesday in Vancouver, British Columbia.)

Like other bands in the digital age, U2 is struggling to grab new listeners. Its members admit to frustration at the average album sales for its most recent release and wonder, as bassist Adam Clayton put it, whether the idea of an impassioned rock 'n' roll fan is becoming a thing of the past. (One experiment – U2 is broadcasting one of this weekend's concerts in Los Angeles on YouTube.com.)

"The commercial challenges have to be confronted," Clayton says during an interview backstage at "Saturday Night Live," as awaits the band's performance on the show's season kickoff. "But I think, in a sense, the more interesting challenge is, 'What is rock 'n' roll in this changing world?' Because, to some extent, the concept of the music fan – the concept of the person who buys music and listens to music for the pleasure of music itself – is an outdated idea."

The band's latest CD, "No Line on the Horizon," debuted at the top of the charts when it was released in March and has sold a respectable 1 million, according to Nielsen SoundScan. But the CD, which features more electronic music experimentation from U2, is the group's lowest selling CD in more than a decade. It represents a marked drop from 2004's "How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb," which has sold 3.2 million copies to date, and 2000's 4.3 million seller, "All That You Can't Leave Behind."

Story continues below
advertisement

"No Line" is also an album that hasn't had that one signature hit.

U2's last CD had "Vertigo," which wasn't a huge song on the pop charts, but became so ubiquitous thanks to Apple's iPod commercial that it might as well have been a No. 1 smash.

The first single from "No Line" – the driving, upbeat "Get on Your Boots" – didn't have a similar platform and didn't crack Billboard's top 30 singles pop chart. Meanwhile, "I'll Go Crazy If I Don't Go Crazy Tonight" was featured in a Blackberry ad as part of the new partnership between the mobile device and U2 but was not released as a single.

Songs from the new album are clearly resonating with die-hard fans. "Get on Your Boots" drew one of the more frenetic responses from the crowd during a recent concert in Foxborough, Mass., outside of Boston, as did the anthemic show closer, "Moment of Surrender." Yet the album hasn't had the impact for which U2 had hoped.

While noting that signature U2 songs such as "Beautiful Day" and even "One" weren't massive or immediate hits, Bono does acknowledge disappointment that the band didn't quite "pull off the pop songs" with the new work.

"But we weren't really in that mindset," he says, "and we felt that the album was a kind of an almost extinct species, and we should approach it in totality and create a mood and a feeling, and a beginning, middle and an end. And I suppose we've made a work that is a bit challenging for people who have grown up on a diet of pop stars."

Some would argue that the Irish rockers – Bono, Clayton, The Edge and Larry Mullen Jr. – remain pop's biggest act. They are entering their fourth decade of music-making with a string of awards, from Grammys to Billboard to Golden Globes, tens of millions of records sold and a social impact that few musical acts can ever hope to achieve. Still, they find themselves in the same challenging position as most pop groups today, who must seek new ways to connect with music buyers in a declining industry and an increasingly fractious entertainment world.

"Music exists in an environment where people are multitasking, and I think that's a very different environment," says Clayton, who grew up appreciating jazz but realized "it was for people who took life a certain way, but it wasn't part of the modern world for me.

"I worry that the world of rock 'n' roll that I grew up in is destined to end up that way."

U2, of course, is hardly in danger of becoming a band that only gets heard in obscure clubs or on niche radio stations.

Its "360" tour is a massive undertaking that has the band performing in the center of stadiums, hence the "360" title. The production, which includes stages that take days to dismantle, has been one of the top grossing tours in the country since it kicked off in September, despite a price tag that runs upward of $250 (at least 10,000 tickets for $30 have been made available for every show).

And when the band played at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J., last month, it broke attendance records with a crowd of about 84,500 fans.

"In many ways, U2 has had such an enormous amount of success over the years we're almost proof against that," the band's longtime manager, Paul McGuinness, says, talking about U2 and the music industry's decline. "We're still selling a lot of recorded music, but it's a much smaller part of our business than playing live. This tour, by the time it's finished, we would have played ... to roughly 6 million people."

It is during live shows when U2 feels the most connection with its audience. Despite the stadium shows and the immense stage structure, the band insists that this time, the set up has created perhaps a greater intimacy with fans than the group has enjoyed in the past. They are literally surrounded by fans.

"The staging itself is something we've tried to do for a long, long time. The idea of playing 360 – it's never been done successfully, ... where everybody gets good sound and good visuals, and we managed to achieve that, I think," says Mullen, who, like the rest of his band mates, is affable and thoughtful as he talks about U2 backstage at "SNL."

"The thing about U2 has always been its audience, and in this environment, I think the audience is so important, and the reaction is so important," he says.

On tour, U2 can best gauge fan reaction to the new material. Last month at the cavernous Gillette Stadium near Boston, it was almost as frenzied and passionate as the reaction U2 gets for its classics. A roar came from the crowd as the band opened the show with "Magnificent," and the energy kept building as U2 performed four more new songs, including "Get on Your Boots."

"Judging by the reaction to the album, live, I feel like it has really connected," The Edge says. "There's a lot of records that make great first impressions. There might be one song that gets to be big on the radio, but they're not albums that people ... play a lot.

"This is one that I gather from talking to people. ... Four months later, they're saying, 'I'm really getting into the album now.'"

U2 is still hustling to promote the CD. When it was released in March, the group did "Good Morning America" and an unprecedented five-night appearance on "Late Show With David Letterman." More recently, U2 appeared on "SNL."

"I love to see an outsized band like U2 behaving like they're in the kindergarten and just doing what you do with your first album – taking it to the market, setting up your table, selling your wares, selling it out the street corners, giving out fliers," says an animated Bono, breaking into a wide grin behind his trademark sunglasses. "I think selling out is when you stop believing enough in your music to put yourself out to explain it to people."

U2's Blackberry partnership includes an application that allows users to download the CD and photographs, liner notes and more.

Yet the band is also careful not to be too unwieldy when it comes to attempting new avenues to promote its music.

"We're trying to do everything we can on that front without having to change what we're about artistically: The music stays sacrosanct," The Edge says. "We are much more focused on being the best than being the biggest."

And that means perhaps making the kind of album that doesn't guarantee hits but does guarantee surprises and new ideas, which "No Line" has delivered.

"The biggest danger for a band like U2 is accepting that you've reached a certain age, and, therefore, you can just actually sit back," says Mullen.

"That's not what we signed up to do. We want to make relevant, great music, and Bono has said numerous times, 'One crap album and you're out,'" he adds. "We've avoided it so far."

___

Eds: AP Television Writer David Bauder contributed to this report.

___

On the Net:

http://www.u2.com

Even while maintaining its status as one of the few musical acts that can still fill stadiums, U2 is struck by how quickly its world is changing – musically and politically. Charismatic front m...
Even while maintaining its status as one of the few musical acts that can still fill stadiums, U2 is struck by how quickly its world is changing – musically and politically. Charismatic front m...
Around the Web:

U2.com > Welcome

Report Corrections
 
Comments
301
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo
Post Comment

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Next › Last » (9 pages total)
photo

I'm astonished to read this. It took some weeks to warm up to the album, but I love it, I think it's far better than "How To Dismantle", and it's great from start to finish.

That said, the industry's definitely different. Hope this isn't a no-no, but an article was posted here:
http://www.politicalgroove.com/showthread.php?t=16500 where you can *see* changes in the music industries (articles & their original writers are all acknowledged in that thread: it's much easier to see it there, than it is following the links from the original article... most people seem to skip those).

I hope U2 continues to make music the way they always have (and that's an understatement).

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:26 PM on 10/24/2009
- Saddler1 I'm a Fan of Saddler1 7 fans permalink
photo

Do all of their songs still sound the same?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:59 PM on 10/24/2009

And I was one of the lucky few to be standing less than five feet away from the ramp. Oh my! What an experience that was!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:38 PM on 10/24/2009

The only way to sustain the album concept is for artists (and record company execs) to stop putting fillers in their albums so that the buyers always feel that they're getting their money's worth. That said, No Line is not such a bad CD, IMO.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:36 PM on 10/24/2009
- voltage356 I'm a Fan of voltage356 17 fans permalink
photo

I would like to know how much money Ireland has contributed towards the fight of AIDS in Africa.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:36 PM on 10/24/2009
- GoDogGo I'm a Fan of GoDogGo 31 fans permalink
photo

The simple reality is that we don't live in an album era anymore. Singles are the marketing medium and unlike most other U2 albums, this one doesn't have a clear "leader" of a hit. Not a bash, it's just the nature of songwriting sometimes.

Besides, a lot of U2 fans have reached an age when buying music tapers dramatically and the bad economic times means the rest have cut back. Teens are the commercial force in the industry and I don't think they relate to an older rock band in quite the same way others do.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:26 PM on 10/24/2009
- SaintZak I'm a Fan of SaintZak 22 fans permalink

I'm a huge U2 fan, and have been from the very beginning. But they're getting old. It happens. They're best days are behind them. Achtung Baby and the Zoo TV tour was the peak.

I was lstening to Dylan's Live 1975, The Rolling Thunder Review (bootleg series) the other day. Incredible. His best days are past him as well. It's supposed to be like that. New things evolve, The problem is that there's nothing new coming up to take the place of U2 and Radiohead. I've been trying really really hard to sift through alot new music, but there's not much. It's all processed now, even the stuff that's supposed to be edgy. ,

I'm glad U2 can still fill the stadiums, they've earned (same as the Stones). It's no disgrace that they've lost their potency after this amount of time. The disgrace is that the music business has be destroyed to the point where a successor isn't even possible.

I know all about the new forms music is becoming available, but the sad part is the format is more important than the art now.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:38 PM on 10/24/2009
photo

Impassioned fans are a thing of the past.

The media has moved from genre-based "products" to lowest common denominator garbage for the fickle.

That and I bought U2's latest album. There's only one good song and it's about getting a chick to take her boots on... it caters to the LCD factor too. :)

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:41 PM on 10/24/2009

Maybe they're having problems 'cause 'get your boots' was like a bad, bad parody of a U2 song. These guys are bloated-rich beyond belief (google a picture of the Edge's Saudi-style yacht!). The song, the album, suck. Pathetically-bad lyrics, flaccid, flatulent music. They blow. And once, they were gods... C'est la vie - everything gets rancied eventually.

Radiohead were the new U2. Brilliant, creative, edgy. Now they're getting kinda lame too.

Then again, my Soul Coughing CDs STILL sound cutting edge!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:31 AM on 10/24/2009
- BikeFreak I'm a Fan of BikeFreak 31 fans permalink
photo

Totally in agreement with ya!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:29 PM on 10/24/2009
photo

Well the world may be changing but the quality of U2's music isn't...thankfully. Still a great band.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:45 PM on 10/23/2009
- learntofly I'm a Fan of learntofly 224 fans permalink
photo

Absolutely.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:04 AM on 10/24/2009
- cgracec I'm a Fan of cgracec 15 fans permalink

The new album was amazing. But dropping Get On Your Boots was a huge mistake because it was a mediocre song (my least favorite song, in fact) in the otherwise excellent album.

The reason why U2 is not getting played on radio stations and attracting more attention is because tweens are fueling the popularity of atrocious personalities such as Miley Cyrus and Lady Gaga whose songs are full of meaningless lyrics and simplistic musicality.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:46 PM on 10/23/2009

BEST SONGS EVER - Your Blue Room - Heaven and Hell

Don't follow the band so much but LOVE the music - esp from Achtung Baby onwards. IMO NLOTH does what the band says they wanted it to do but I miss the smoky, close your eyes and lose yourself sounds of the previous releases.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:35 PM on 10/23/2009
- mikeodd I'm a Fan of mikeodd 4 fans permalink

Like their musical progenitors of global awareness The Clash, U2 will always attract haters like bees to honey...
With that said, people really are missing out with NLOTH. "Breathe", "Magnificent" and "Stand Up Comedy" are among the most unapologetically dynamic songs they've dropped since Achtung Baby.
"Get on Your Boots" was indeed a bad choice for a first single though. All the new songs got a lot of love at their recent Giants Stadium show. Not only that, U2 also upped the ante against themselves by having the ridiculous­ly-prolifi­c MUSE open. Regardless Bono & Co managed to rise to the challenge by dusting off the back wall with rarities like "Blue Room" and even celebrated The Boss' 60th B-Day by rocking a more-than -respectable rendition of "She's The One".
U2 are a mainstream rock band. Get over it. So were The Beatles.
If its indie you want, go listen to Gorilla Biscuits, Neu! or Rocket from the Crypt.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:19 PM on 10/23/2009
- CapableOne I'm a Fan of CapableOne 6 fans permalink
photo

There's a trend here... U2 ha t e rs... Obama ha t e rs... what's with all the h a t e people?

"restart and reboot yourself... you're free to go..."

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:18 PM on 10/23/2009
- deluk I'm a Fan of deluk 14 fans permalink
photo

I'm so relieved that Bono has spoken to Obama. I can go to without worrying about world poverty, global warming, that nasty Burmese regime (is that a fashionable cause this week?) and Armageddon.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:19 PM on 10/23/2009
- DogTown I'm a Fan of DogTown 9 fans permalink
photo

Dear Bono....Our President has many more problems than addressing your pet issues!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:47 PM on 10/23/2009
- nibblybits I'm a Fan of nibblybits 14 fans permalink

It is somewhat hypocritical that Bono uses tax shelters to avoid paying his share (well-documented) yet lobbies countries to spend taxpayer money for his causes. No argument that those causes are more than worthy (poverty in Africa) but it would help his message tremendously if he put his money where his mouth is.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:52 PM on 10/23/2009
photo

Yuppers. Like I said in my previous response above, about his whining that the US can only spend so much... he really needs to put his money where his mouth is. Instead of his foot.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:44 PM on 10/24/2009
- Rictracee I'm a Fan of Rictracee 108 fans permalink
photo

i aggree..

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:35 AM on 10/24/2009
- BikeFreak I'm a Fan of BikeFreak 31 fans permalink
photo

Exactly!

Thank you

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:28 PM on 10/24/2009
Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Next › Last » (9 pages total)

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect