Stage Set, Band Arrived, Ready 2 Rock !

The band is touring South Africa as part of its 360 Degrees Tour that was launched in 2009.

After the Sunday gig at FNB Stadium in Johannesburg the 22-time Grammy Award-winning band will move to Cape Town to perform on February 18.

Tickets went on sale in October and by yesterday 101,000 had been snapped up. The stage will allow all fans at the 11,0000-seater stadium to have a clear view of the group.

The stage, designed by Willie Williams, who has worked on 10 productions with the band, was built by Belgian company Stageco. It is 24,7metres high and can support up to 180tons.

The steel stage also includes a cylindrical video screen, that weighs 54 tonnes.

Launched in support of the group’s 2009 album, No Line on the Horizon, the tour won the Billboard Touring Award for highest grossing tour in 2009 and last year.

The group, which is led by Bono, was formed in Dublin (Ireland) in 1976 and has sold more than 150 million records.

Big Concerts Big Trouble

The South African Roadies’ Association says it will picket U2’s show at Johannesburg FNB Stadium Feb. 13 because it claims that several firms associated with the gig are employing racist policies.

E-mail correspondence seen by Pollstar indicates SARA chief Freddie Nyathela believes a picket may be the only way his members can draw attention to their cause.

Nyathela sent an open letter Feb. 4 to the numerous sponsors and service providers associated with U2’s South African shows.

It named promoter Big Concerts, production house Mushroom Productions, labour broker Running Crew and numerous companies in the Gearhouse Group as being companies that have failed to involve black production staff when top acts visit the country.

“The South African Roadies Association intends to mount a picket backstage at the U2 Johannesburg concert venue during U2’s visit to South Africa, to highlight the travesty and affront that such sponsorship and service use support of untransformed companies represents,” the open letter said.

It also attacked telecoms company 8ta, a major sponsor of the U2 dates, and hospitality service provider Warwick Events for being involved with the shows. Both companies are otherwise said to have strong commitments to skills transformation and employment equality.

It wasn’t possible to get comment from U2 manager Paul McGuinness or agent John Giddings at press time.

The threat of a picket is just the latest turn in what The Sowetan called Nyathela’s “silent but raging war.” Copies of the correspondence between the SARA chief and most of the rest of the South African live music business suggests he’s been anything but silent.

Big Concerts chief Attie van Wyk, whose company is promoting the U2 shows with Live Nation, has already had to take legal action because Nyathela openly accused the firm of racism.

Van Wyk and Gearhouse managing director Ofer Lapid deny that their decision not to use SARA crew is based on racist grounds, pointing out that at least half of their workers on any given show day are non-white.

In the last four months, Nyathela’s outbursts have also angered Technical Production Services Association chairman Robbie Blake, after he’d offered to mediate between SARA and the various live music companies.

Blake offered to set up a meeting between all sides and would have scheduled it for January, but that wasn’t soon enough for Nyathela and their correspondence appears to have come to a vitriolic end just before Christmas.

Nyathela looks to have failed in his attempt to set up a skills session between his members and U2’s crew.

The act, which hasn’t played South Africa since 1998, is also playing Cape Town Stadium Feb. 18.

The Johannesburg venue has already had its own production hiccup as last week it was discovered that thieves made off with all its power cables. The FNB released a statement assuring punters that the problem would be rectified long before show day.

Big Concerts has also rescheduled the Kings Of Leon shows that were postponed because drummer Nathan Followill needed surgery on a torn shoulder. The act will play Johannesburg and Cape Town in October.

Duals Track List

In a email to U2.com club only members the Fan Club-only CD track list was released. 

Here’s the full list:

  1. “Where The Streets Have No Name” / U2 and Soweto Gospel Choir
  2. “The Wanderer” / U2 and Johnny Cash
  3. “Falling At Your Feet” / Bono and Danny Lanois 
  4. “Miss Sarajevo” / Passengers and Luciano Pavarotti
  5. “Slow Dancing” / U2 and Willie Nelson
  6. “The Saints Are Coming” / U2 and Green Day
  7. “Sunday Bloody Sunday (Live from Auckland)” / U2 and Jay-Z
  8. “One” / U2 and Mary J Blige
  9. “When Love Comes To Town” / U2 and BB King
  10. “Stuck In A Moment You Can’t Get Out Of (Live at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame)” / U2 and Mick Jagger
  11. “The Ballad Of Ronnie Drew” / U2, The Dubliners, Kila, A Band of Bowsies
  12. “I’m Not Your Baby” / U2 and Sinead O’Connor
  13. “Stranded (Haiti Mon Amour) – Hybrid Mix” / Jay-Z, Bono, The Edge, Rihanna
  14. “Drunk Chicken / America” / U2 and Allen Ginsberg
  15. “Amazing Grace” / U2 and Soweto Gospel Choir

 

Thieves Stallout U2 in SA

Officials blame thieves for power problems at South Africa’s main World Cup stadium, but the stadium manager promised Friday the lights will be on in time for a U2 concert.

The theft of power cables in the area around Johannesburg’s FNB Stadium led to fluctuations in supplies that can damage generators and other equipment, stadium manager Jacques Grobbelaar said Friday. City Power spokesman Sol Masolo said his utility had asked police to investigate a case of cable theft in the matter.

Cable theft, widespread in South Africa and elsewhere, is likely to increase with recent global copper price rises.

A national soccer league game scheduled for Saturday at the stadium had to be canceled to allow for repairs before the U2 concert, Grobbelaar said.

Grobbelaar said U2 is expected to draw 98,000 fans, making the Feb. 13 concert a bigger event than the World Cup final, when the stadium hosted about 94,000 people.

U2's 'claw' arrives at Soccer City

The large, four-legged steel structure named the “claw” holds the sound system and video screen.

“The stage set features a 360-degree configuration… this unique design affords fans the opportunity to surround the entire stage as it has no definite front and back,” said Stadium Management SA chief executive Jacques Grobbelaar.

“Johannesburg is about to be gripped in “U2 fever” in anticipation of the build up to the concert, to be held on Sunday, February 13,” he said.

“The event is set to rock the city [and] preparations are well underway.”

A massive crowd was anticipated and management was preparing to host die-hard fans who would camp overnight in the surrounds of the stadium.

“For us this is extremely exciting to be hosting a global band of this stature and we have launched additional hospitality seat tickets in the Gold Club to accommodate all the U2 fans,” said Grobbelaar

Build it and they will come !

“There is no stadium big enough in Atlantic Canada so we will build one and they will come,” he said in a statement. “The impossible will become possible. Moncton will host the last North American U2 360 Tour date and it promises to be the biggest and greatest entertainment spectacle in Atlantic Canada history.”

Iconic rock band U2 has confirmed it will play an outdoor concert at Magnetic Hill in Moncton on July 30.

The Moncton concert is the last date on U2’s North American tour and is the first time the band has played in Atlantic Canada.

“The Moncton show is set to be the final date of the U2 360 Tour in North America and we’re really looking forward to bringing this now legendary 360 production into Atlantic Canada for the first time,” said Paul McGuinness, U2’s manager, in a statement.

The Moncton stop will have a special appearance with Montreal’s Arcade Fire. As well, the band Carney will open for U2.

Moncton Mayor George LeBlanc said the city is honoured to have U2 play at the outdoor concert venue, which has already hosted major bands, such as the Rolling Stones and AC/DC.

“To host one of the biggest bands, on one of the biggest stages, as part of one of the biggest tours for their final North American date is an honour,” LeBlanc said in a statement.

The concert stop in Moncton will also see some changes to the Magnetic Hill concert site.

Donald K Donald, the concert promoter, said there was no venue in Atlantic Canada big enough to hold the concert, so they are altering Magnetic Hill to fit the band’s stage.

“There is no stadium big enough in Atlantic Canada so we will build one and they will come,” he said in a statement.

“The impossible will become possible. Moncton will host the last North American U2 360 Tour date and it promises to be the biggest and greatest entertainment spectacle in Atlantic Canada history.”

Ticket prices will go on sale on Feb. 8 and range from $29.50 to $275. The general admission tickets are $65.

It wasn’t long after speculation started last week about U2’s pending concert date started that hotel rooms in southeastern New Brunswick started filling up.

A standard room is now going for more than $200 and some hotels are charging $379.

Along with the Rolling Stones and AC/DC, the Eagles and Bon Jovi have also played outdoor concerts at Moncton’s Magnetic Hill site.

U2 New Album Release Due in May

Paul McGuinness has reiterated that U2 is planning to have a new album out in May, in time for the North American leg of the U2 360 tour. 

Amazon.de – the German branch of the electronic commerce company – has listed the as-yet-untitled effort to come out on May 27.

No other details were available at press time about the release date.

The Irish band have been working with Black Eyed Peas star Will.i.am and David Guetta on their follow-up to 2009’s ‘No Line On The Horizon’.

In December, Will.i.am said that songs he had recorded with U2 had “blown” people away when he previewed them at a party last year.

Meanwhile, U2’s Bono and The Edge are currently putting the final touches to the broadway adaptation of Spider-Man

South Africa More Tickets

Additional tickets now available for next month’s shows in Johannesburg  on February 13th and Cape Town on February 18th.

‘The U2 360° Tour is ready to roll into South Africa, and now that the production has been set, promoters Big Concerts and Live Nation have announced that the sight-lines in both venues are even better than anticipated and as such a selection of excellent tickets starting at R401 have now just been released.

Tickets in both cities are still available through Computicket (www.computicket.com or 083915800).  In addition a few select hospitality packages are still available through Warwick Hospitality on 011.385.9879.