U2 Rock Band or Guitar Hero ?

We heard about this a couple of times over, and well frankly we passed on a story just due to time. Now that  USA Today reports that U2 was very interested in starring in their own Rock Band game last year, but for some reason decided against it. We thought about it again and well after we watched this video we are sold on the idea.

Bono and the boys have seen the success of the of The Beetles: Rock Band, or what looks like to be success, lets see what happens around christmas time.

“We definitely would like to be in there, but we felt some of the compromises weren’t what we wanted,” Adam Clayton told USA Today. “That could change. I love the idea that that’s where people are getting music, and we’d love to be in that world.”

The group was concerned about their digital portrayal, and rightfully so, but when Harmonix pulled it off with The Beatles, they were quick to become enthused again.

“What The Beatles have done, where the animation is much more representative of them, is what we’re interested in, rather than the one-size-fits-all animation. We didn’t want to be caricatured.”

So what are your thoughts ? Do you think they have the catalogue of songs necessary to make it happen?

 

U2 Tampa Event Info

U2 360º World Tour
Opening act: Muse

October 9, 2009
7 p.m.
Raymond James Stadium, Tampa, Florida

Address/Directions:
Raymond James Stadium is located at 4201 Dale Mabry Highway North, Tampa, Florida 33607 (see directions)

Field Ticket Early Parking/Entrance ONLY:
For those with Field Tickets (General Admission/Red Zone), early parking opens at 7 a.m. in Lots 1/3 (off of Dr. Martin Luther King Blvd).
Field ticket holders should line up to enter the stadium at Dock A (near Gate A).

Parking Lots Open:
Remaining parking lots open at 3 p.m.  – Lots 2, 4, 6D, 8, 9, HCC, 11, 12 and 13.
No advanced parking pass sales, pay as you enter (see map)
No camping or overnight parking

Parking Prices:
Cars - $25 in Lots 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14 and HCC
Buses - $50 in Lot 8, 13 and 14
Limos - $50 in Lot 4 (as space is available)/campers-$50 in Lot 8, 13 and 14
Disabled - $25 parking is first come, first serve, Lots A and C

All Stadium Gates Open at 5 p.m.

Frequently Asked Questions:

Q: Are cameras allowed?
A: Yes, lens no bigger than 1 inch, no PROFESSIONAL CAMERAS

Q. Are chairs permitted?
A. No.

Q: Are video cameras allowed?
A: No

Q: Can I bring in food or drinks?
A: No

Q: What can and can’t I bring in the stadium?
A: Please review the Security Policies provided.
Banners/flags larger than 8.5x11
Flashlights/fluorescents
Inflatable items including beach balls

Q: Can I tailgate in the parking lots?
A: Yes.

Q: Where are the disabled elevators?
A: Enter disabled gates at A and C. Review additional information about Disabilities Services.

Q:  Will there be concessions and restrooms on the field?
A: Yes, or near the field

Q: Is re-entry to the stadium allowed?
A: No

Q: Where do I park?
A: See the parking map. Additional information is available on the Parking and Directions site

Q: Where are my seats?
A: View the seating map

Q: Where is the stage?
A: The 360-degree stage will be near the south end zone

Q: Will concessions and restrooms be available for early arrivals?
Yes, and in the tunnels at the rear of the field.

Q: Are paper tickets permitted?
A: Yes, if purchased from Live Nation or Ticketmaster

Q. What are the policies in your parking lots?
A. Please review the Security Policies

U2 blasts off at GA Dome

Atlanta - Just after “Beautiful Day,” four songs into a thunderous, nearly sold-out show at the Georgia Dome, Bono took off his sunglasses. Beads of sweat dotted his face –  a vein stood out in  his temple. “Thank you all,” he told the audience, “for helping us build this—madness.”

And then he gestured up. Above him, all around him was the 170-ton, four-pronged stage, looking like a metal claw from the Planet of Giant Robot Crabs.

On the other hand, the sea of standing-room souls with general admission tickets on the floor of the Dome, the select few in the Red Zones (who bid for tickets to get at stage front) and the rest of us, packed to the Dome’s rafters, holding up cell phones like Bic lighters, had a strangely intimate connection to the four performers in the middle. This was due to many things, among them the in-the-round stage design, which lifted speakers and other hardware out of the way, and gave Bono, drummer Larry Mullen Jr., bassist Adam Clayton, and guitarist the Edge walkways and bridges to bring them right into the middle of the crowd.

It was also due to that determination to make a connection that is the hallmark of a U2 concert. While the show – and its seven-story accordionated video screen — was eye-poppingly huge, the emotion behind the performance was all human scale.

U2 moved between the human and the gargantuan through 22 songs (including five encores), kicking off the show with “Breathe” and “Get on Your Boots,” from the new album “No Line on the Horizon.”

The crowd was attentive to the new songs, but arms began punching the air when Bono told them to use their “Southern church voices” and the Edge launched into “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For,” from 1987’s “Joshua Tree.” Bono brought the band’s volume down, and let the audience sing the first verse.

“We’ve got old songs, we’ve got new songs, we’ve got songs we can barely play,” said Bono after a delicate duo version of “Stuck in a Moment You Can’t Get Out Of” with the Edge on acoustic guitar. “We’ve got a spaceship,” he added, referring to his futuristic stage. “But it’s not going anywhere without you.”

Liftoff was achieved with “Vertigo,” the Edge’s hammered, chiming strings abetted by the shouted “Hello! Hello!” from the audience. Then with a shift of mood, the disembodied heads of the Brothers U2 nodded from the screen, as sequencers chugged through their techno remix of “I’ll Go Crazy if I Don’t Go Crazy Tonight.”

The pacing of the concert made room for small moments and larger gestures. During “Sunday Bloody Sunday” the Hoberman video screen broadcast images of the protests in Iran. With “Walk On” the band invited a host of volunteers to step out on the circular catwalk surrounding the stage, each holding up a paper mask showing the face of jailed Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi. It was a sweet and somewhat strange gesture.

Just before the first encore Bishop Desmond Tutu’s face looked out from the video screen and spoke to the audience, congratulating them for their help in buying drugs to treat AIDS and malaria in Africa. (U2 concerts have raised millions for those causes.

We have been getting interesting reviews from you the fans that have attended the show last night. We reviewed all of the comments and based on your feedback the show was considered to be graded as “B” and Muse ‘C”. The feeling we have been getting is that the new CD (yea Album) has not been much of a rally cry for new fans. Long time fans had to replay the CD a couple of times before the embrace of what was termed by the group as new direction. A departure from our expectation, a journey of growth to which one must take once or twice in their life time. Bono screamed out to the audience “Don’t forget about us” seem to say hey we all have to take a journey and sometimes its better go with a friend. U2 wants you to ride along.

Sources: Atlanta

Hola Atlanta

Atlanta U2 Fans tonight we are about to launch our 360 view from your view. Yes we have selected 20 people from around the stadium to send live as it happens updates to our photo collection. The people selected are just like you fans, from all age groups. Remember to follow us on twitter.com/u2tourfanns  for real time updates.  Thank you Atlanta for making us feel so welome.

The Atlanta Stage on Twitpic

U2 Atlanta Fans use Marta

Atlanta Fans, a few days ago we reported that tickets had still be available. That seems to not be the case anymore. Most fans have waited long enough, held on to their cash and now have sold out the Atlanta show. ( Appears to be the case insiders stated)
Avoid what happened in NC. You can ride MARTA there and avoid rush-hour traffic that will likely back up the connector. You can park your car at several of the MARTA stations and ride in.  Best bets for MARTA parking include Inman Park, West End, Lindbergh Center, Dunwoody or North Springs (see the MARTA rail map).

 

Boston U2TOURFANS Staff 2009Once on the train, exit at either the W1 Dome or W2 Vine City stop on thewest line. If you are coming from the north or south rail line, you’ll need to transfer trains at the Five Points Station and follow the signs to the Westbound platform .  If you get off at W1, the Dome has its own exit at the far western end of the platform .  Or if you get off at W2 Vine City, merely walk down Rhodes Street when you exit the station.  General Admission tickets will enter the Georgia Dome through Lower Gate C only — at the West Plaza on Northside Drive, which will be nearest the W2 Vine City station.

 Also, be advised that the following items are prohibited:
* Video or audio recording devices
* Cameras
* Laser Pointers or Glow Sticks
* Balloons or inflatable balls of any kind
* Backpacks or large bags
* Blankets, sleeping bags or folding chairs
* Weapons or fireworks
* Noise-makers, air horns, instruments, whistles or bells
* Skateboards, scooters, bicycles or “heelies”
* Banners or flags on poles
* Coolers, cans or bottles
* Food or beverage


North Carolina Fans Disappointed

Days after the show  disappointed U2 fans were still horror-struck by traffic so snarled that dozens abandoned their cars on Wade Avenue(N.C), ducked behind trees to use the bathroom and wept openly as the music played without them.

U2TOURFANS FAN 2009The concert Saturday night at Carter-Finley Stadium is being ranked among the worst traffic jams in Raleigh history, and concert-goers trapped in cars for four hours coming and going have piled on blogs to complain about shoddy planning.

Brad King of Winston-Salem never even parked. He spent three-plus hours driving from his parents’ house in Durham, watching the bathroom-goers and the crying fans stuck outside, before he spotted the stadium several songs into U2’s set and decided to eat his pair of $50 tickets.

“We could clearly hear the music through the sunroof,” he said. “I thought, ‘Who’s to say we don’t spend five hours getting out of here?’ I don’t want to get home at 5 in the morning. So we turned around.”

The Cow man can cheer you up. Or make you wonder if your date dressed up like a cow would you still go to the show. In this case hum maybe we would.

 

 

Notice to FTC: We have not taken any gifts to report this story.

U2 goes from peaches to oranges

Tampa fans will be getting a double dose of U2 this weekend, The boys from Ireland will be playing Raymond James stadium. Consider it a mile stone, its the 10th concert in Tampa. They first played Tampa in 1981. Does anyone remember a sports bar called the “End Zone” In 2005 Bono referred to “The Beginning Zone is more like it.”

U2TOURFANS STAFF 2009 DL True U2 fans remember the days when U2 was the opening act. !982 for the October tour U2 opened for J.Geils Band at Curtis Hixon Hall and came back the next year to be the headliner.  Right around 1985 U2 became the hottest band around the world. The Unforgettable Fire tour was a sell out at 11,200.

Now the sell out venues at 100K and invest millions of dollars for their fans. The opening torch has been handed to Muse for the Tampa show. Expect this to be the who’s who event of Tampa. Already  private parties have been popping up all around the venue.

It Might Get Loud

The second dose The release of It Might Get Loud is finally adding a Tampa movie theater to its tour.  The movie will open on October 9th( yes the same day as the concert)  only at the AMC Veterans.  The documentary piece explores the history of one of the greatest instruments ever invented…the electric guitar.  The flick opened in mid-August but is slowly tuning into more cities.

It might get loud press release 2009The film by Davis Guggenheim, will highlight the careers of Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page, U2’s The Edge, and White Stripes axe-grinder Jack White.  All give their candid input on the guitar and how they crafted their styles.  It Might Get Loud is being billed as a tribute piece to the electric guitar, but has insight on techniques from many other well-known guitarists.  Tons of footage from the above mentioned and others is captured in the movie.

 

U2TOURFANS: Normally we stay away from becoming the news story. However with all that has been going on over the last three months we have yet to really Thank you the fan for visiting and supporting our reporting team. Over the last couple of months we have increased our viewers by some unbelievable numbers. What we have come to find out about our readers was pretty amazing. We report the facts, stories that interest your our views and of course the fan. We have given you the reviews good and bad. Most all you have enjoyed th straight talk. We had 1 Million visitors over the last 30 days. Our viewers come from everywhere. We have watched our social media fan grow. On behalf of our team, a big Thank you goes out to each of you.  We have a busy week ahead concert in GA on Tuesday and then off to Tampa, nine more shows to the end of this leg. 

U2 heads to the Georgia Dome

U2 performs Tuesday, Oct. 6 at the Georgia Dome.   There are still some tickets left for the 7pm show, and if you are planning to go, you can ride MARTA there and avoid rush-hour traffic that will likely back up the connector.

You can park your car at several of the MARTA stations and ride in.  Best bets for MARTA parking include Inman Park, West End, Lindbergh Center, Dunwoody or North Springs (see the MARTA rail map).

Once on the train, exit at either the W1 Dome or W2 Vine City stop on the west line. If you are coming from the north or south rail line, you’ll need to transfer trains at the Five Points Station and follow the signs to the Westbound platform .  If you get off at W1, the Dome has its own exit at the far western end of the platform .  Or if you get off at W2 Vine City, merely walk down Rhodes Street when you exit the station.  General Admission tickets will enter the Georgia Dome through Lower Gate C only — at the West Plaza on Northside Drive, which will be nearest the W2 Vine City station.

 Also, be advised that the following items are prohibited:
* Video or audio recording devices
* Cameras
* Laser Pointers or Glow Sticks
* Balloons or inflatable balls of any kind
* Backpacks or large bags
* Blankets, sleeping bags or folding chairs
* Weapons or fireworks
* Noise-makers, air horns, instruments, whistles or bells
* Skateboards, scooters, bicycles or “heelies”
* Banners or flags on poles
* Coolers, cans or bottles
* Food or beverage

 

U2’s much-anticipated appearance on NC State's campus

RALEIGH - U2’s much-anticipated appearance on NC State’s campus today will not only mark the end of Carter-Finley Stadium’s 11-year hiatus from holding special events, it will also bring more than 1,500 temporary jobs to workers.

U2TOURFANS FILE PHOTO 2009“We’re in this for one reason and one reason only – to boost the economy for the university and the city of Raleigh,” said Ray Brincefield, assistant athletics director for outdoor facilities at NC State. “It’s a great thing to be able to use our football stadium to aid the local economy.”

“Our mission was to employ people who would otherwise not have a job for that week,” he said. “There’s no cost to the athletic department or the university, and no tax dollars are being used to bring this show to Carter-Finley Stadium.”

Beginning the evening of Sunday, Sept. 27, hundreds of workers have been on hand, waiting for football practice to end so they can begin to cover the Wayne Day Family Field turf with a state-of-the-art aluminum decking specifically designed to protect the integrity of the field’s infrastructure – drainage, communications and irrigation systems, and more.

Then, beginning on Monday, workers began to bring in U2’s elaborate, in-the-round stage setup, which –- when assembled -– will soar vertically at heights parallel to Carter-Finley’s upper seating decks – or higher. Brincefield got a first-hand look at the construction on a recent trip to Massachusetts, where U2 sold out Boston’s Gillette Stadium.

“It takes about three days for hundreds of laborers and steel workers to erect this lighting and sound structure that will go over the stage – six cranes and 25 forklifts running all the time,” he said. “It’s pretty impressive.”

While construction is taking place, Brincefield will be on hand, working with Live Nation staff on pre-, concurrent-, and post-concert logistics. For example, the Carolina Hurricanes hockey club opens regular season play at the adjacent RBC Center on Friday, Oct. 2 – “production day” for the U2 crew.

“It’s really important for us to get out in front of everything and talk about logistics because nobody’s stadium – or situation – is the same,” he said. “ Their production areas, offices, their catering, lay-down yard, where they’ll park 128 tractor-trailers… all those things have to be laid out on a map before they even arrive.”

As the show draws closer, Brincefield and his staff will be putting in longer hours, supervising the installation of phone and data-access lines, merchandise locations and corporate sponsorships. All the while, the 12-person staff will ensure that the rest of the university’s facilities continue to run like clockwork.

“Hosting this concert is a really big deal for us, and it’s a huge changeover from football.,” Brincefield said “That being said, we’re certainly not going to cancel next week’s soccer match, or fall baseball because of this show.

“We’re going to have all of those things and make them work,” he said. “We just have to be wise with our time. When the lights go out at Carter-Finley stadium each night, that’s when we’ll leave.”

NC State also said that the giant concert will highlight NC State and U2 lead singer Bono’s shared passion for environmental issues.

U2TOURFANS FILE PHOTO 2009 NC State chancellor Jim Woodward said the university is delighted to host U2 not only because of the band members’ talent, but also because of their collective character and community-minded approach to performing and serving people around the world – a mindset similar to that possessed by NC State students, faculty and staff.

‘“U2 always has been tenacious and focused on and off stage,” Woodward said. “They make a difference – musically, socially, economically – and NC State is proud to be a part of that.”

As they have been at the Wolfpack’s first three football games this season, WeRecycle bins will be distributed throughout Carter-Finley Stadium during the U2 concert. The program, which began in 2003, is regarded as one of the nation’s premier stadium recycling efforts.

Fans turned in three tons of recyclables during NC State’s win over Gardner-Webb on Saturday and, with an increased stadium capacity to almost 64,000 for the U2 concert, it’s possible NC State fans could set a single-day recycling record at the stadium later today.

“We hope to never have an event at Carter-Finley Stadium without recycling,” Brincefield said. “This program continues to grow – we have had some great corporate sponsors and have been able to expand from inside the stadium to outside, then into Vaughn Towers and the suites as well.”

Following the performance, Live Nation Global – the concert promoter – will replace the Carter-Finley turf at their own expense, returning the field to ideal playing conditions in advance of NC State’s home matchup with Duke on Oct. 10. Concerns about potential issues with the turf were alleviated through careful planning and consultation with Live Nation executives, as well as NC State agronomics experts and the football coaches and staff.

But admittedly, replacing the field’s playing surface mid-season is a less-than-ideal scenario, Brincefield said.

“Coach O’Brien is a great guy with a lot of experience, and we didn’t make any of these decisions without him being involved,” Brincefield said, of concert discussions that dated back to mid-March. “We were able to make him feel comfortable that during the Duke game, nobody would even notice that we had this show the week before, so he was comfortable with us going through with this concert.”

Prior to U2, the last performers scheduled to play Carter-Finley Stadium were George Strait and Jimmy Buffet in 1998. However, recently completed stadium renovations put Carter-Finley on par with some of the best and biggest outdoor facilities in the country, and opened a window of opportunity for promoters to inquire about the stadium’s availability for performances.

For example, U2 has booked shows at grandiose facilities like Pasadena, California’s Rose Bowl and the Dallas Cowboys’ brand-new stadium in Texas, and selected Carter-Finley over other regional possibilities such as Charlotte’s Bank of America Stadium – home to the Carolina Panthers – and Chapel Hill’s Kenan Stadium.

“One of our big talking points in the spring was that not only have our people’s donations and the stadium renovations paid off for our football program, but it’s paid off on a world level that a company like Live Nation Global would contact us and we would have the ability to turn them down – and they would continue to contact us,” Brincefield said.

“That says a lot – not necessarily for me and my staff, but for the alumni, faculty, staff and students of this university, our Wolfpack Club members and the construction teams that built that we have we have – a place that we can be proud of and one that is in demand.”

That doesn’t mean that Carter-Finley Stadium will be the next live-entertainment hotspot, hosting concerts on regular basis, Brincefield said.

“We’ve barely cracked open the door to being a host for special events – our mission is for our student-athletes,” he said. “No matter who calls or who shows up, no matter what kind of offer they bring, it starts and ends with our student athletes and we’ll work from there.

“If it’s a situation where we can make something work, then we’ll look further into it,” he said. “We’re not going to be this cracker-jack bunch that opens the doors to everyone just to make a little bit of money – that’s not our mission, and it never will be.”

In fact, in their line of work, the single thing that makes Brincefield and his staff the happiest is if they go completely unnoticed.

“We’ll probably all have shed 10 to 15 pounds and have worked so hard that we won’t know which way is home, but if we leave Carter-Finley Stadium on October 10 and nobody has noticed anything but the game play – nobody says anything about the field – we’ve done our jobs,” he said. “That’s how and why we exist.

“Besides, I don’t know if I can take the stress of tearing out turf and putting in turf right in the middle of the season again,” he said with a laugh. “There’s already a lot to do and we haven’t even started the process yet.”