‘Spider-Man’ opens to mixed reviews

60 Minutes’ went behind the curtain to give the world a glimpse at “Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark” on the evening it opened on Broadway. So far the reviews from the preview performance have been mixed.

The musical which was frequently delayed and cost $65 million to stage features music from U2’s Bono and The Edge. Entertainment Weekly said the music “sounded terrific…or bombastic”.

The snippet from ’60 Minutes’ (see right) features footage of Bono powering through some songs that he co-wrote. It also has some shots of the amazing visuals and wire acrobats zooming around the theatre.

On Sunday night the opening preview, at Foxwoods Theater in New York, lasted 3 hours and 20 minutes and included some pauses due to technical difficulties.

New York Post critic slammed the show calling it an “epic flop”.

He said “At various points, overhead stage wires dropped on the audience, scenery appeared on stage missing pieces - and the show’s star was even left swaying helplessly over them midair during what was supposed to be the climatic end to the first act.”

New York Daily News’ review also mentioned the stops and said that a number of the audience left the performance.

However the fans on the ground, speaking to the newspaper seemed impressed. One gentleman said “It was really good…I was pleasantly surprised.”

According to WENN the show’s scheduled full dress-rehearsal was to cancelled on Saturday night so Sunday night’s preview was the first time the show had been performed in full on the stage.

It has taken nine years for “Spider-Man: Turn Off The Dark”, the most expensive Broadway musical in history, to become a reality. Here’s hoping that it pays off.



Zuckland Review

U2 360 Tour Auckland, NZBono must have been itching like crazy through those leather pants to get out on stage and sing last night.

It’s been seven weeks between tour legs on U2’s monster 360-degree tour as U2 stroll on to David Bowie’s Space Oddity.

And the first things a pent-up Bono hollers are drawn-out “kia ora” chants as he struts, skips and runs around the circular runway. And kia ora to you too, brother Bono.

Then, with his trademark serenading stance - squat, gesture, grasp the air and sing - they break into Beautiful Day.

It’s the first of a string of sing-a-longs. The Irish band’s original and raw anthem I Will Follow is next up, then Magnificent, Mysterious Ways, and an all-in fist-raiser in Elevation.

Bono also acknowledges New Zealand’s sombre mood and struggles for words to express the band’s condolences to the Pike River miners and the people of Greymouth.

So he says, “In Ireland we sing”, and launches into I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For, followed by the poignant One Tree Hill - written for New Zealander Greg Carroll, Bono’s roadie, who died in 1986 - which he dedicated to the “29 lost”.

As the song plays the names of all the miners are beamed onto the video screen in a touching tribute.

Earlier, support act Jay-Z also paid his respects to the Pike River miners, putting them alongside late hip-hop greats Tu Pac and Notorious BIG.

The big man of rap - who is the hip-hop equivalent of Bono if you like (although the rapper had darker shades when he came on during Sunday Bloody Sunday) - also got the party started with a set including hits Empire State of Mind, Run This Town, and Big Pimpin.

u2 360 Tour Auckland NZ But this was the U2 show and the claw stage is unlike anything to have landed in Aotearoa - it’s as if the aliens have set up camp in the middle of Mt Smart Stadium.

The giant claws arc out into the crowd, dwarfing them, but also drawing the masses in and making the set seem immense, yet intimate.

Then there’s the full-surround barrel-like video screen that becomes a cylinder like an inside-out kaleidoscope beaming everything from close-ups of the band to visuals of naked writhing bodies.

It’s testament to U2’s songs that the visual experience and scale of the production don’t overshadow the songs because tunes such as Where The Streets Have No Name and City of Bright Lights are powerful and chest-beating.



U2 Show Security

Gavin Pike is proud to be representing Rotorua on an international stage.

The social worker and security guard will be part of a Rotorua team providing security at U2’s New Zealand concerts.

The Irish rockers will be performing two shows at Auckland’s Mt Smart Stadium, with the first one tonight.

Mr Pike works for a Rotorua-based company called Venue Response Limited.

“There is about 40 of us going up to Auckland to do security for the show,” he said. “It is great to help out at such a high-profile event.”

Mr Pike said it was exciting to be a part of a big international show. “As far as I am aware, I will be providing on-stage security during the concert.”

He said this role could change if needed. “I will be helping with monitoring the crowd and containing issues that may present.”

Mr Pike said he had worked at several music concerts, but U2 was definitely the biggest act.

“We worked at a show when a gangsta rapper came to Rotorua. We had to do weapon checks and the removal of gang patches,” he said.

“This show would have a completely different atmosphere and those are issues we wouldn’t expect to deal with.”

As security guards, the workers didn’t get to see the show but Mr Pike said there would still be a good atmosphere at the stadium. 

One Tree Hill tribute to Pike River miners

Even the biggest concert of the year acknowledged the sombre mood of the nation.

U2’s Bono said the band felt privileged to be here especially at a time when hearts were aching and so raw.

Struggling for the right words to convey his condolences for the people of Greymouth, he said: “People deal with grief in all sorts of ways. In Ireland, we sing”.

Bono then launched into “I still haven’t found what I’m looking for”.

The names of the 29 mining victims scrolled across the screen as the band played “One Tree Hill”, a song penned for New Zealander Greg Carroll who was the band’s roadie.

Opening act Jay-Z also paid a rap tribute to the miners saying “they will always be in our hearts and they will always be forever young.”

The start of the 4th leg of the 360 Tour has begun in Auckland. The show was 4 years later after rehearsing a couple of days to shake off the holiday the boys arrived ready to play.

The setlist featured the debut of One Tree Hill and Scarlet Earlier Bono talked about the Pike River mine disaster with all 29 names displayed on the screen. Scarlet’s performance was the first of the October album leaving POP to be out so far.  Pretty much the setlist remained the same as most of the tour a couple of changes and positioning.

U2: 'We're still in the driving seat'

Scott Kara talks to U2’s Adam Clayton about how the band has evolved and why the game’s not over yet. This story published in the New Zeland Press - 

Bono describes him as “wildly and mentally endowed” with the “sartorial swagger of the Brat Pack”. He’s the Clark Gable - think Rhett Butler in Gone With The Wind - of the biggest band in the world.

Well, that’s what Bono reckons anyway. To us mere mortals, however, Adam Clayton is simply U2’s laid-back, cruisy and ever-so-stylish bass player.

Following a friendly reminder from his assistant, he calls me 25 minutes late from New York on Sunday morning (New Zealand time).

“Hi Scott. It’s Adam,” he says cheerily. He asks what the weather’s like.

It’s glum but it’ll be beautiful for their two Auckland shows (the first of which is tonight), I tell him.

“It better be or we won’t come,” he chuckles.

There’s some small talk about rugby, since the All Blacks have just played Ireland.

“Is it appropriate to ask who won?” he asks politely.

The All Blacks, but it was a typically determined Irish effort.

“It’s a bit too brutish for me. I’m more of a cricket fan,” he offers. It’s perhaps not surprising he likes the gentlemen’s game, considering he and bandmate The Edge were both born in England rather than being of pure-bred Irish stock like drummer Larry Mullen jnr and Bono.

“Actually, I don’t particularly like the cricket, I like the clothes,” he laughs.

So it turns out Bono’s sartorial observation is right.

Clayton, the man, is also friendly, forthcoming, and understated. The thing is, he’s almost pathologically modest.

“What comes across on stage is a pretty honest depiction of the way I see things,” he says. “I think people understand I don’t take all of this too seriously. It [being in U2] is something you get up and do every day and life carries on, regardless.

“But it’s an amazing thing to have grown up with your mates for 30 years,” he says, before reverting back to the most absurd understatement, “and to have made more than a good living out of it.”

Not that the 50-year-old is dismissive of what U2 have become since forming in Dublin in 1976 when 14-year-old Mullen put out a call on the school noticeboard for musicians to join a new band.

Back then, Clayton “was an unhappy teenager and music was the thing that always calmed me”. He admired The Who’s bass player John Entwistle, was into punk, and about to discover the funky delights of black music and rhythm and blues (“when bass gets funky, that’s when I get interested”).

These days, even though he’s rolling in it and feeling quite relaxed, he still has the same hunger and passion for music.

“There is some essential truth within music. You know, when you see a great band or a great singer you’re dealing with something irrefutable. And I’ve always followed that and still consider music in that way, and try to get to that moment where people reveal something that’s more powerful than feeling it.

“I think what is interesting,” he continues, “is that rock ‘n’ roll was kind of invented as a teenage art form, and in some ways people diss whether or not you can continue to be relevant as you get older. I would say my experience, and the band’s experience, is that age has nothing to do with it - it’s about the quality of your ideas and how you execute them. I think we’re still very much in the driving seat now.”

That “good living”, as Clayton describes it, comes from having sold more than 150 million records, being one of the biggest touring bands around and having, in Bono, music’s ultimate statesman and crusader.

“He’s crazy, charismatic, and intelligent. It’s a specific job being a frontman and a lead singer and I think we’ve got one of the best.”

Even in an age of plummeting record sales, with the 360° tour, in support of latest album No Line On The Horizon, U2 could just be bigger than ever.

The band have embarked on some large-scale tours in their time, including 1992’s Zoo TV in support of Achtung Baby and the elaborate PopMart tour of the late 90s, but they don’t get bigger and more technically ambitious than the 360-degree staging and audience configuration of the current stadium tour.

With its giant, claw-like centrepiece and the cylindrical video screen, it is immense and revolutionary. “It’s probably our first stadium tour where we’ve had to learn how to make it work,” says Clayton.

While the set list for the tour includes all the band’s big songs, like Where The Streets Have No Name, Pride (In The Name Of Love), and Vertigo, Clayton says they are also playing a few new songs, as well as some surprises like The Unforgettable Fire, the title track off their beautifully ambitious, yet underrated, 1984 album, which was a highlight of the 360 Live At The Pasadena Bowl DVD released earlier this year.

“The shows are kind of interesting because not only is the band playing really well - we’re really settling in nicely now - but we’re now being brave enough to add in some new songs along the way. It’s a bit of a first and, I have to say, it’s a bit risky to be playing new songs to a stadium full of people. But it seems to go across pretty well.”

Brave? Risky? You’re in U2, man.

“Well, that’s true. But there are things that you don’t do and one of them is, when you’re playing shows to very large amounts of people, you don’t give them anything that means their attention will wander. You’ve got to have all the bells and whistles or they’ll go and get a hot dog. You can do it in a club or an arena because you can lose them for a song and you can pick them back up again, but in these bigger settings it is risky.”

These new songs, he says, could be the start of a new, fresh period for U2. Clayton believes U2’s albums can be grouped into cycles. So 1980’s raw, impassioned debut Boy, 1981 follow-up October, and the anthemic and revolutionary War from 1982 were formative records.

Clayton describes as “a convulsion of adolescence” in the notes of the 20th anniversary collectors’ edition of The Joshua Tree. The next three albums - the The Unforgettable Fire, the mega-selling Joshua Tree (1987) and, arguably the band’s best album, Achtung Baby (1991) - were where U2 found their true identity.

“When I think of [those three records] I see one of our great creative runs as a band, a series of albums which represent the ‘core values’ of U2,” he says.

After Achtung Baby - “industrial, underground and noisy” - they got even more experimental, dancey and electronic in focus on Zooropa (1993) and Pop (1997).

The latter, believes Clayton, started out being more mainstream but was taken over by the influence of the British dance music scene, which comes through on lead single Discotheque. It’s arguably the band’s weakest album - yet given its shot at doing something different, it’s hardly a dud.

The band’s next phase signalled the start of the current era, a return to a more classic and traditional U2 sound.

“We really wanted to bring it back to being a band again. We stripped it back down to reveal what a good band we had and that really was All That You Can’t Leave Behind. We decided consciously to go back indoors and play indoor concerts because at an indoor concert you don’t need to have as much production value and you can pretty much be on stage and do it with the music alone.

“That cycle continued through How To Dismantle An Atomic Bomb and on No Line On The Horizon, which although it sounded like a band that had grown, we were still very much working in that stripped-down format, and it’s probably the end of another cycle.”

The band are working on new material at present and the next album will be different again.

“It is quite a fresh area for U2 to be working in. I don’t think it’s going to sound like familiar U2 territory at all. The creative process is always exhilarating and fun, because you can go as far as you like.”

And that’s all he’s saying about the new songs until they play them live - so pick your moment when you go and get that hotdog.

By Scott Kara

Live from Auckland

Back so soon? It’s only been four years - and one new album - since U2 last played in Auckland.

That matches the interval between their 1989 and 1993 visits. Back then, between the earthy, earnest Lovetown tour - one of the biggest this country has ever seen - and the extravagant Zoo TV shows, the band not only reinvented itself musically but reconfigured how bands of their stature played stadiums.

Tonight, 40,000 of us get to see if they’ve done that again.

Last year’s No Line On The Horizon album is possibly the last in a back-to-basics trio which started with 2000’s All That You Can’t Leave Behind and 2004’s How To Dismantle An Atomic Bomb.

It’s also achieved a fraction of the sales of U2’s other noughties albums, possibly due to a lack of any definitive hits.

But it’s easy to imagine Horizon tracks like the stomping Get On Your Boots causing the same sort of excitement down front that earlier-generation noisy anthems did.

And the ballad Moment Of Surrender should have the cellphone-as-cigarette-lighter-waving brigade out in force.

So this time U2 have something to prove. But they also have a very big platform to do that from.

All the visual evidence suggests that the “Claw” stage of this 360° tour is a great leap forward from the 2006 shows, which didn’t exactly lack for spectacle or whiz-bang production.

Of course, U2 and New Zealand go back a long way. Local fans were early adopters of their early albums. Then there was One Tree Hill, the song written after the 1986 death of Greg Carroll, their Kiwi stage manager.

Clayton says Auckland - and New Zealand - are still special for U2 to visit.

“The connection with Greg, and the affinity with Greg and our history with your country is strong. As well as that I think it’s that kind of special bond that two island cultures have with each other. In the early years, when we were spending a lot of time touring America and Europe, when we came down to the Southern Hemisphere there was something very reassuring about landing in New Zealand. We always have fun here, we get on with the people very well - and the crowds are fantastic.”



U2's rehearsals in Auckland

Thursday begins the 4th leg of the 360° Tour with the 1st of 2 shows in Auckland. The boys held rehearsals earlier today at Mount Smart Stadium.

They have been doing 2 a day sessions, “we have been on holiday time to shake that off “The early session featured Sunday Bloody Sunday, Walk On and a complete run thru of Boy Falls From The Sky.

The second rehearsal the band focused on the main setlist and a couple of extras.

  1. End of In A Little While
  2. Miss Sarajevo
  3. Boy Falls From The Sky
  4. City Of Blinding Lights
  5. Vertigo
  6. Crazy Tonight / Relax (snippet)
  7. Sunday Bloody Sunday / Get Up Stand Up (snippet)
  8. Scarlet
  9. Walk OnOne Tree Hill
  10. Ultra Violet
  11. Boy Falls From The Sky
  12. Edge plays the intro to Where The Streets Have No Name

Well that’s all for tonight – The show begins tomorrow. ( really its today in NZ)

Sourced: U2GIGS for Setlist and snippet -

U2 Landed in NZ

U2 has landed - and wasted no time in tweeting about the New Zealand experience.

Guitarist The Edge has posted a photo of One Tree Hill on his Twitter account two days before the Irish rockers play the first of two shows at Mt Smart Stadium.

The band has a connection to the Auckland landmark - One Tree Hill is the title of their 1987 single written after the death of Bono’s New Zealand-born assistant Greg Carroll.

Concert promoters and record label representatives are keeping the band’s movements a closely guarded secret.

However it is understood the rockers arrived on Monday morning on an Air New Zealand flight.

The last time U2 was here, in 2006, members stayed at the $25,000-a-night Great Mercury Island estate, owned by Sir Michael Fay, and were choppered to Auckland for concerts.

The private island, off the coast of the Coromandel, give guests access to two homes, 12 beaches and a private chef.

Other favoured Auckland accommodation for the rich and famous include Wells Bay lodge on Waiheke Island - with the required helicopter pad and $750-a-night suite at the Hyatt Hotel for each of the four musicians.

Supporting act Jay-Z has also arrived in the country but it is not known if his wife, singer Beyonce Knowles, is with him.

The rapper’s entourage was spotted renting a fleet of luxury Audi vehicles, celebrity watch websites said.

Last night, crews were putting the final touches to the 590 tonne stage set complete with the “claw”, a 50m three-legged structure.

The band’s 360 Degrees Tour, one of rock’s highest grossing productions, involves 250 personnel as well as local crews at each venue.

More than 50,000 tickets sold in less than an hour for the Thursday night show but there are some still available for Friday.