U2 360 Tour Toronto GA

The band has yet to produce any information on the GA process. We have come to learn that this may be the normal response for not only Toronto but the whole tour. The idea to leave each venue to produce their own GA rules and let the Band, Production Company, Tour Company all stay out of the loop. Lts not forget the last time the boys toured North America. Any way we have sources checking now. We expect to update later in the day. Of course we suggest you follow on twtter. - Cheers Dre

P.S. If you have photos, videos and you want to post them we have a secure drop box. You can leave your videos and photos with us until you get home. Our server and bandwidth rocks ( well of course it does)

The Unforgettable Fire

25th anniversary of their 1984 classic, The Unforgettable Fire, with an expanded reissue. Due out on October 27th via Island/Universal, the release will consist of b-sides, rarities, alternate versions, and previously unreleased songs, including “Disappearing Act” (a.k.a. “White City”), which according to Billboard, was only recently finished.

As for configurations, fans will be able to choose between a 180 gram vinyl album version, a standard re-mastered CD version, a deluxe double version with a 36 page bound book, and a limited edition super deluxe box set, which includes the two disc version, a 56 page bound book, 5 portfolio prints, and a DVD that will feature rare videos, concert footage and a “Making of” documentary of the album.

So for the real U2 fan expect that everything you would expect to be included to be. remember the reissued The Joshua Tree  in 2009 and War, Boy and October (2008)

Remember we had reported sometime back the the boys planned a follow up to No Line on the horizon due out sooner, which we can expect more tour dates. Our sources suggest all the way to the end of 2010. U2 PR train is leaving the station and its a rolling along. Full speed ahead !

U2 Search Tool

Just launched a brand new tool for the worlds greatest fans. U2 Fans we have teamed up with google to provide a U2 360 search tool that can be used with ease. Try the tool out today. Its been designed to search out all related U2 360 Tour news, videos, photos and stories. Yes if there is a story out on the net about U2 this tool can provide you the quickest links to all those stories you have been craving. No longer spending hours and hours searching. Try it today and share your feedback as we continue to build you the worlds greatest fan site.

Blackberry U2 Mobile

 Finally U2 loves Blackberry- Today via Blackberry Applications World you can download the feature. So here is what you need to know.

  1. U2 Mobile Application works on Blackberry

  2. Get the software via Blackberry Application World

  3. Or click on your blackberry Application World via the download tab.
  4. Once you down load review and agree to the terms
  5. It will setup in your download file - so move it to where you want to keep the icon.

Updated 6:30PM EST - So I had a chance to down the little U2 application to my blackberry bold and I will say OMG.

  1. Application name should be changed to promotional tool to sell CD’s and concert tickets.
  2. Videos are all available on U2.com - So whats the special deal ?
  3. Music, don’t think your going to get to stream U2 on your Bold. No way its just a clip.
  4. Photo’s are not anything you have not gotten a chance to see from all the U2 fan sites.

STAR Rating  **

So let us know what you think ? Share and post your comments here. - Also check back today with us we have a special treat for you. -

 

 

Global Horizons (Part III)

U2: Local Act, Global Horizons (Part III)  

By Justin Kavanagh | Tuesday, September 15, 2009  

U2 has reached a new generation of music lovers with its iPod and Blackberry campaigns — thus avoiding the fade into irrelevance usually suffered by aging rock stars. In the conclusion of his three-part series, Justin Kavanagh explores the performance art and marketing behind U2’s stage shows.

In the 1990s, U2’s stage sets embodied a new world order in which global consumers lived passively in 2-D.  Zoo TV was a mobile television station warning against the dangers of brainwashing by TV. Banks of screens subjected the audience to an onslaught of sensory overload with sound bites and advertising-speak. In the arena of marketing, U2 inverted the rules. The band received no payment for use of their 2004 single “Vertigo” in ads for Apple’s iPod.

 The 1997 PopMart extravaganza used an even larger wonderwall of imagery and illusion, crowned by a huge yellow arch to parody the age of mass consumerism.

The band embodied the parody, dressing as cyber-age Village People to stride cockily into the heart of another irony. They were the biggest band in the world — bigger now than Led Zeppelin — and they were caricaturing their own iconic stardom. Still, some in America assumed that the tour was sponsored by McDonald’s or Wal-Mart.

But if the medium was super-sized kitsch, the message remained uniquely subversive for a rock band. The Pop album asked aching questions about the absence of Jesus in the modern world. The lyrics had Bono “looking for to fill that God-shaped hole.” “Mofo” remains the darkest song in the U2 repertoire, a breathless scream for identity, for the love of a dead mother and ultimately for salvation of the soul. This was music and theater of the absurd so loaded with role-play and risk that it seemed bound to confound.

PopMart defied every cliché about rock ‘n roll by exposing its excesses under megawatt illumination. “Let’s go to the overground” was the band’s creed in the 1990s, a stance that challenged the standard rock star pose of embracing an illusory underground community. And yet, the band has stayed connected to worldwide audiences in a way that transcends the years and the sheer scale of these shows. At a 2005 concert in Chorzow, 70,000 Polish fans organized a massive mosaic flag in red and white for the early 1980s anthem “New Years Day.” The song was U2’s response to the communists’ brutal crackdown on the Solidarity trade union in December 1981.

“Mofo” remains the darkest song in the U2 repertoire, a breathless scream for identity, for the love of a dead mother and ultimately for salvation of the soul. The Poles’ act of flash-mob solidarity was organized by Internet and text messaging. This show of viral techno-savvy demonstrated U2’s success in attracting newer audiences and in connecting generations.

By the new millennium, the band had given their blessing to Apple’s iPod and the BlackBerry. In the arena of marketing, too, they inverted the rules. The band received no payment for use of their 2004 single “Vertigo” in ads for Apple’s iPod. Instead, they rode the popularity of the portable media player to bring their music to a new generation.  Likewise, the current single and tour have been widely previewed on U.S. TV and Internet ads for BlackBerry. Typically, the campaign inverts the standard artist/product endorsement routine — its tagline is “BlackBerry Loves U2.”

But if the band — or the brand — has charmed the world, their hometown often remains curmudgeonly in its begrudgery towards U2’s success. A 2006 decision to move part of its business to the Netherlands, in order to lessen its Irish tax burden, brought allegations of tax-dodging. Bono argued that Ireland has long sought to attract international investment in its financial services sector, but now cried foul when an Irish entity decided to make a similar investment abroad.

The Edge also defended the band’s global approach to finance. “[W]e do business all over the world, we pay taxes all over the world and we are totally tax compliant,” he said. But once again, it was Bono, as spokesman for the earth’s poor, who drew the real heat for what critics label as his hypocrisy.

If the band — or the brand — has charmed the world, their hometown often remains curmudgeonly in its begrudgery towards U2’s success.

Broach the topic in any Dublin pub these days, and you’ll soon hear a searing critique of the multi-millionaire behind the DATA and ONE campaigns. These initiatives aim, respectively, to combat poverty and HIV/AIDS in Africa, and to increase U.S. government funding for international aid programs.

Bono, if present, would defend his work for Third World debt- and hunger-relief on practical terms. He has been quoted as saying, “If you look into it, you think, ‘This guy works two-and-a-half days a week at this, not being paid for it, and at cost to his band and his family, and doesn’t mind taking a kicking.’” For all the local criticism, the band have always lived in Ireland, employed locally and invested in hotels, nightclubs and properties in Dublin. Their success has also driven the establishment of a thriving music industry. The city’s next big thing won’t want for local inspiration — and Dublin now appears on the back of most European Tour t-shirts.

The U.S. tour

In terms of spectacle, there now seems no limit to U2’s ambition. This year’s show takes place within what can only be described as a spaceship. How far can you take us, Bono? This is rock’s largest ever stage set: a 164-foot high, four-legged “claw” in centerfield. It gives stadium-goers from all sides open views of the band. A conical screen hovers above the stage. From this huge multimedia shrine, U2 will beam their gifts of sound and vision to the faithful. Onscreen, U2 will project to the masses their positive propaganda for a better world. In Europe this summer, crowds heard a message from Bishop Tutu and watched recent scenes of protest and repression from Iran. In place of the crank phone calls, Bono called up the captain of the space station to ask for the view from above… the state of the world through the eyes of God, perhaps?

At a 2005 concert in Chorzow, 70,000 Polish fans organized a massive mosaic flag in red and white for the early 1980s anthem “New Years Day.” And what of their music from outer space in 2009? Few bands of their vintage play anything but oldies on such tours, but U2 climb aboard their space-age magic carpet to explore new boundaries. They will open with four songs from the new album, No Line on the Horizon.

The encore promises to reveal a band that still treasures “vision over visibility,” in the words of their most visible frontman. U2 will invert Oscar Wilde’s famous artistic creed about living in the gutter but looking at the stars. In the new song “Moment of Surrender,” Bono takes a crawl through the gutter in the persona of an alcoholic confessing his sins.

Despite the “War of the Worlds” spaceship stage, it is the band’s ability to relate to a crowd on a human level that still makes a U2 concert an extraordinary experience.

In Washington this week, the song “Walk On” will bear witness to the courage of Aung San Suu Kyi. It will shine a light onto the mendacity of her incarcerators in Myanmar. A line of local volunteers will walk onstage, each wearing a mask with the face of the incarcerated Burmese opposition leader.

“Walk On” echoes one of the world’s great soccer anthems, “You’ll Never Walk Alone.” Its message of hope for finding one’s way home in the world resonates with every crowd. It’s a simple human message, best delivered in person by fellow-travelers. Wherever you are in this world, you’re not alone…Walk On.

Spaceships may offer us the view from the gods, but at ground level it is local acts that lead to global change.  And when the 49-year-old Bono walks onto his spaceship stage this September, I’ll think of the young singer from Dublin asking all those years ago, “Have yous far to go?”

Editor’s Note: This is the conclusion of a three-part series on U2. Read Part II here.

Just feeling U2's next show

Monday night the band all rested up from two days in Chicago, opening the North American tour they head off to Toronto for a show on 9 /17. They have switched planes at this point a retro fitted Air Canada Airbus A320-211 C-GQCA (msn 210) in the colors of the Irish rock band U2 with “ThreeSixtyAir” titles.

The tour is in support of the group’s 2009 album “No Line on the Horizon”.The U2 360° Tour is named after the 360-degree staging and audience configuration it uses for shows, which U2 claims is “the first time a band has toured in stadiums with such a unique and original structure.” Previously AC decorated A320 C-FPWE for the U2 Vertigo Tour.

Twitter: We have had some fans ask us who else they can follow via twtter for show updates and news. We have tons of references the best way would be to see who follows us and start following them.  The whole idea for U2TOURFANS was to create a place to exchange the fan experience. We really don’t mind sharing the tweets or the information. In fact it makes the experience that much better.

1000MIKES: Yes you asked and we do have channel we will offer the use of the channel to a different fan for each show. Yes we plan on using it as well. However we all know how long batteries last. We of course use a Blackberry Bold *AT&T and LG ZEON

YouTube: Our channel of course can be found via U2TOURFANS we try to post videos within 48hrs of the show, however that does depend on many factors ( too boring to talk about)

 Chicago Show: Mixed feelings. I guess the highlight was Blue Room.It debuted live during the main set, 14 years later. Fact: This ws the only second Passengers song that U2 has ever played live.

 The Process:  We have been working on a couple of stories. Bottomline it comes down to time and interest. We take your feedback and we look for the story. Most of you have asked for the tour news, such as how many trucks, how do they tour the US ( bus, plane ) All of those details. One item everyone has been asking for we have not choosen to share. “Techincal Rider” this is really something that should remain with the Band and the venue. 

Review Chicago Sunday

Bono singing ’Chicago’ in the introduction to Magnificent, with the audience, unsurprisingly, in seventh heaven. ’One for the money, two for the show, where are we in the world… Union Street.’

The second show a chance to win over the Chicago news. The band was rehearsing “Your Blue Room” earlier in the day and they did not disapoint. For Your Blue Room, widely agreed to be among the most beautiful tracks the band have ever written, released on the 1995 album Original Soundtracks when the band recorded as Passengers with Brian Eno


It debuted live during the main set, 14 years later.

Fact: This was the only second Passengers song that U2 has ever played live. Adam did not have his spoken verse rather it as done by te astronauts (International Space Station) pre-recorded from the first show.

Couple of points

  • During “One” a few of the vocals, missing
  • Elevation was mixed into a couple of songs
  • Unknown Caller was incomplete, mixed in a some of Breathe

The band had some other changes, most of the tweeter comments said while the flow was different it fe

lt little like a start and stop. This joint was jumping for Elevation, while Until The End of the World and Stay, another couple of songs which have been played sparingly to date, also had 65,000 people lost in the music. ’Green light, Seven Eleven/ You stop in for a pack of cigarettes/ You don’t smoke, don’t even want to/ Hey now, check your change….’ And if the suit of lights for Ultraviolet is making a name for itself, welcome to the steering wheel microphone swinging low from high up in space station - now with added LED’s.

Most will agree its an amazing show. Song selection is key we wonder what you thought ?

Videos posted on U2TOURFANS channel - Credits to twitter followers, and wide news release.