For Sale: One Used Stage

U2 are to sell off the 29,000-square-foot steel ‘claws’ they used to create the stage on their ‘360 Tour’.

Tour director Craig Evans tells Billboard.com, “It’s certainly our intention to see these things recycled into permanent and usable ventures. It represents too great an engineering feat to just… put it away in a warehouse somewhere.

“We are in discussions to send them (parts) into different places around the world and have them installed as permanent venues. Some major events have shown interest in these, from four different continents.”

Reports suggest The Claw could be used as part of the London Olympics opening ceremony next year.

The run of shows - which have spanned across three years - are due to come to an end on July 30 in Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada, and rather than just let structures sit in a warehouse the group and their management intend to sell them off.

“We’re now in discussions to send them into different places around the world and have them installed as permanent venues. Some major events have shown interest in these, from four different continents and we haven’t even really put the word out yet.”

U2’s ‘360 Tour’ is the highest-grossing concert tour of all time, with ticket sales totalling over $700 million and it requires 120 lorries to transport its 50-metre tall sound system, stage and lighting rig making it the most expensive tour to hold.

Guitarist The Edge - who played the Glastonbury Festival with his bandmates Bono, Adam Clayton and Larry Mullen last weekend - previously admitted the rockers will never be able to go on a bigger tour.

He said: “We’re actually at the limit, the absolute limit, when you consider the economics and the practicality of transportation. We’re really as big as we could ever get.”

 

God is in the House with 65K Fans

Sunday, 65,000-plus U2 fans spilled into Spartan Stadium in East Lansing, faces aglow with anticipation, at last face to face with the gigantic stage setup tagged “The Claw.”

Perfectly assembled and poised to house the grandest stage spectacle to caravan the globe, “The Claw,” in person, did not disappoint. Among the bells and whistles of the Bono-envisioned stage: oversized ornaments that lit up the dark sky, a 360-degree ramp that extended into the audience and circled the inner stage and a brilliant LED video screen.

Such a platform might have overpowered a weaker band. But not U2. At 8:47 p.m., the mythical members of U2 slowly, confidently strutted on stage, one by one, until Bono finally walked to the middle of the round at 8:50 p.m., sporting a black leather jacket suited only for a rock star, black pants and his trademark Bono shades. The crowd exploded, almost in disbelief the day was finally here. Crying fans, beach ball-bouncing fans, fans who had road-tripped from Canada, fans who had jetted in from Europe, fans of every age — all united to experience the highest grossing tour of all time. It all happened one year after the originally scheduled concert date.

Three decades in, the men of U2 embraced the stage with the self-assurance of a cast of characters at the pinnacle of their sport. They stood energized and alive. They carried grace and style. Drummer Larry Mullen, guitarist The Edge and bass player Adam Clayton instantly created a wall of sound that nothing could conquer, working as one unified, mesmerizing whole. The Edge’s guitars were near-hypnotic: soaring, emoting, melodic. Carefully placed solos sang and seared through the cool air. Bono, of course, is the original rock ‘n’ roll frontman. He beckoned the crowd to join in and unite with U2’s swoons and sentiments.

At its finest moments — and there were countless — the concert brought back that thrilling, heartfelt post-punk of U2’s early days, whether it was the sweeping, inspiring “Elevation,” the yearning “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For,” the swirling, spiritual “One,” or the hair-raising “Vertigo.”

During the set, Bono devoted “Beautiful Day” to Arizona congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, victim of a shooting in January, and her husband, astronaut Mark Kelly. He sent out “Walk On” to Burmese opposition politician Aung San Suu Kyi, and later in the song, Amnesty International volunteers circled the stage holding candles with the Amnesty symbol.

Though counter-intuitive, the massiveness of U2’s 360-degree stage successfully created an aura of intimacy, even in a giant football stadium. At times, it felt as if it was just the band and its music. After Sunday’s show, there is little uncertainty that U2 is truly able to bring people from every corner of the glove together for a moment of — in the words of Bono — “love and peace, peace and love.”

U2 at Spartan Stadium Need To Know

Parking: Campus lots will open at 3 p.m. Sunday, with most charging a $20 per-vehicle fee. There is no fee for the commuter lot at Mt. Hope Road and Farm Lane, though shuttle service to the stadium will be $5 per person.

Surface lots and garages in downtown East Lansing will charge rates of $1.50 per hour. A parking map can be found at CityofEastLansing.com.

Stadium entrance: Fans can queue up starting at 7 a.m. Sunday, though securing a good spot is relevant only if you’re holding a general admission field ticket.

Gates will open at 5:30 p.m., about 90 minutes before opening act Florence and the Machine takes the stage. (U2’s two-hour show is scheduled to start at about 8:45 p.m.)

If you’ve got a field ticket, you must enter through the stadium’s north tunnel. Other ticketholders may enter through any gate except H.

Alcohol ban: No open alcohol is allowed outdoors on campus, but tailgating without alcohol will be permitted. Officials say the alcohol ban will be actively enforced Sunday.

Off-campus restaurants and bars in downtown East Lansing will be open for business, and many will feature Sunday specials for concertgoers.

Other prohibited items include: Bags and purses of all sizes, bottles and cans (including water), banners and signs, umbrellas and video cameras.

For a full list of stadium policies, go to http://special.news.msu.edu/u2.a

Police ready for U2 concert

For the first time in more than a decade, Spartan Stadium will be hosting a concert event, leading many local police to stress the differences between this event and a typical football Saturday.

This Sunday, U2 will be making their long-anticipated trip to East Lansing to perform, and MSU police Sgt. Florene McGlothian-Taylor emphasized for concertgoers to be aware of the area.

“Football fans are familiar with the university, they’re familiar with the ordinances and policies,” McGlothian-Taylor said. “Most of the people that are coming to this area (on Sunday) are unfamiliar with the university. I think it will be very important for people to come early.”

Because of the tens of thousands of people expected to be in attendance, the MSU police has teamed up with the Meridian Township, Ingham County and East Lansing police departments to make sure there aren’t any problems, McGlothian-Taylor said.

East Lansing police Capt. Kim Johnson estimated the department will have 25 officers working at major intersections to improve the flow of traffic, as well as inside the stadium itself.

The construction on campus is expected to make things difficult for commuters, with the closure of Harrison Road requiring travelers to use Exit 76 on US-127, Kalamazoo Street, and Exit 110 on I-96, Okemos Road, instead of Exit 9 on US-127, Trowbridge Road, McGlothian-Taylor said.

Finding a spot to park for football Saturdays often is difficult, and Johnson said the expectation shouldn’t be any different this Sunday.

“Parking is at a premium sometimes, but people find their way around and find legal places to park,” Johnson said. “People do park illegally, so we’ll have staff on hand to answer any calls.”

One option for concertgoers is to park for free in Lot 89, the commuter lot, located on the corner of Farm Lane and Mount Hope Road, and pay $5 to ride a shuttle to the stadium, McGlothian-Taylor said.

Assisting the officers at the arena will be 110 Greencoats, security volunteers who will aid in crowd management, said David Oslund, an MSU police officer currently assigned to the special events unit.

The Greencoats are asked to work any concert with more than 1,000 people attending, so Oslund doesn’t expect this event to be markedly different from other events they’ve covered.

“All the concerts at Breslin (Center) over the last 15 years have had Greencoats at them,” Oslund said. “The biggest new policy we have is that there’s no bags allowed in the arena, and that’s from a security and safety standpoint.”

Though fans are allowed to bring water bottles to MSU football games, in compliance with Live Nation Entertainment Inc. policy, water bottles, or bottles of any sort, will not be allowed into the arena, McGlothian-Taylor said.

The East Lansing Police Department recognizes that, because of the nature of the event, it’s likely loud music and noise will be affecting people in the city. Instead of calling the police, Johnson asked citizens to exercise patience.

“We’re expecting some noise complaints, just from the concert itself, so we’re asking people to be patient,” he said. “Enjoy the opportunity we have for a concert to come to this community, which is good for us.”

Glastonbury Set List and Review

Last night U2 left their comfort zone of the highest-grossing tour in history to play to their toughest audience yet at the UK’s Glastonbury music festival.

In front of a crowd who are traditionally suspicious of ‘stadium rock’, it could have gone either way.

But U2’s debut performance at Worthy Farm turned into a triumph last night as the Bono & Co crew abandoned their 360 tour setlist to perform a ‘greatest hits’ package, which when you’re U2 is some songbook to draw on.

But with so much material to choose from, inevitably there were disagreements about how to approach their headlining slot.

“There were an awful lot of opinions,” said drummer Larry Mullen. “Everyone had a view about how it should go.

“There were the ‘Where The Streets Have No Name’ camp and the more subtle approach, the ‘Achtung Baby’ dynamic approach, where you build slowly.

“Then there were those who thought we should open with ‘40’ (from U2’s 1983 album ‘War’). We went through a number of combinations.”

Complete Setlist -

  1. Even Better Than The Real Thing
  2. The Fly
  3. Mysterious Ways / Independent Women (snippet)
  4. Until The End Of The World
  5. One
  6. Jerusalem (snippet) / Where The Streets Have No Name / All You Need Is Love (snippet)
  7. I Will Follow
  8. I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For / Movin’ On Up (snippet)
  9. Stay (Faraway, So Close!)
  10. Beautiful Day / Rain (snippet)
  11. Elevation
  12. Get On Your Boots / She Loves You (snippet)
  13. Vertigo / Garageland (snippet)
  14. Sunday Bloody Sunday
  15. Bad / Jerusalem (snippet)
  16. Pride (In The Name Of Love)

  17. Encore(s):
  18. With Or Without You / Love Will Tear Us Apart (snippet)
  19. Yellow (snippet) / Moment of Surrender
  20. Pretty Vacant (snippet) / Out Of Control

    Part of U2’s success is that Bono knows how to play the role of rock star with all the panache it demands.

    And Glastonbury was no different, with the band’s singer breathing new life into some of U2’s best known hits as if he were singing them for the first time.

    At his side, The Edge delivered the distinctive chiming guitar sound that has become the signature of U2’s music.

    Although logistics meant the group couldn’t bring their now famous stage ‘The Claw’ to Glastonbury, they did have some strong visuals representing different parts of their career, from War to Zoo TV, to light up the vast stage at Worthy Farm.

    However, violent scenes broke out in the crowd as a protest against the the band’s tax status was foiled by security guards.

    As Bono and his bandmates took to the Pyramid Stage, activists from direct action group Art Uncut inflated a 20ft balloon emblazoned with the message “U Pay Your Tax 2”.

    But as the campaigners tried to release it over the 50,000-strong crowd, a team of 10 burly security guards wrestled them to the ground before deflating the balloon and taking it away.

    Campaigner Stephen Taylor said: “U2’s multi-million euro tax dodge is depriving the Irish people at a time when they desperately need income to offset the Irish government’s savage austerity programme. Tax nestling in the band’s bank account should be helping to keep open the hospitals, schools and libraries that are closing all over Ireland.”

    aThere had been confusion the previous night when some protesters turned up to what they mistakenly thought was an anti-U2 gathering in Glastonbury’s Pilton Palais Cinema Tent.

    However, ‘Killing Bono’ turned out to be a screening of the 2010 film comedy based on the memoirs of Bono’s schoolmate Neil McCormick rather than a meeting of plotters.

    Watching U2 last night among the massive crowd were thousands of Irish music fans who had travelled over for the festival.

    Some, like Bono’s old pal Gavin Friday, came to watch U2 but many others came to see the hundreds of other artists who are performing at Europe’s biggest music festival over the weekend.

     

    * Snippets checked via U2gigs

    Glastonbury Festival Welcomes U2 debut

    U2 will make their first UK festival appearance since the early 1980s later when they headline Glastonbury.

    The Irish stars had been due to play last year but were forced to cancel after singer Bono injured his back.

    Coldplay will headline the Pyramid Stage on Saturday. Beyonce follows in husband Jay-Z’s footsteps on Sunday.

    Emma Coupland, from Boston, Lincs, at a muddy Glastonbury with friend Holly Wilson, said: “As we’re under 30, we don’t really like U2.”

    Ms Wilson added: “They may play some of the old classic songs but we’re not really excited about U2, and I haven’t heard from anyone that is to be honest.”

    Rock veterans U2, who have interrupted a tour of the US to fly in for their performance, face protests during their set by a group who have accused the band of a “tax dodge” in Ireland.

    Deluxe Editions of Achtung Baby, Zooropa Coming Soon

    U2’s Achtung Baby marks its 20th anniversary this year and the Irish rockers are planning to release a deluxe edition of the album to celebrate. The 1991 album also will be paired with U2’s 1993 release, Zooropa, in a special edition box set, according to Rolling Stone – via Slicing Up Eyeballs.

    “There will be multiple formats,” said U2 manager Paul McGuinness. “If you pile a lot of extra material and packaging and design work into a super-duper box set, there are people who will pay quite a lot for it, so you can budget it at a very high level and pump up the value.”

    The plan is for each album to be issued on its own and that the set will include bonus audio and video material from U2’s ZOO TV concerts.

    Last month, it was reported that the band members were filming footage for an Achtung Baby documentary with It Might Get Loud’s Davis Guggenheim.

    80,000 Welcome U2

    The next time the Ravens win a game at M&T Bank Stadium, they should be so lucky to get the kind of response four 50-something Irish guys got there Wednesday night.

    Thousands of fans - the stadium estimated some 80,000 - welcomed U2 for their first regional show in two years like Bono and company had just ended the N.F.L lockout.

    Billed as the record-setting spectacular to beat all concert spectaculars, U2’s 360-degree tour employs the latest advancements in live entertainment, including a moving, four-legged stage that looked ripped from “Close Encounters of the Third Kind.”

    It’s been joked that for a band as bombastic as this one, a stage that big was needed to contain all of their egos, mostly Bono’s. But the spacious arena, as big as a small club, allowed for maximum showboating, and for the band members to pull off pyrotechnics that would have been difficult at 1st Mariner Arena, where they played the last time they were in Baltimore in 2001.

    Over two hours, The Edge got to sing directly above fans, thanks to the moving stage; other band members strolled the circular stage within reaching distance of the spastic crowd, got the stadium to sing along several times - most memorably on “I Will Follow” - and Bono got to show off some favorite Bono-isms, grunting, wearing a glow-in-the-dark jacket, and plugging his favorite political causes.

    An ambitious show to say the least, it also featured cameos from, incongruously, Desmond Tutu and Gabrielle Giffords’ husband. Now on its second year, the 360-degree tour confirmed why U2 is still among the few headliners that can sell out stadiums.

    The setlist stayed close to what the band’s been playing at other recent concerts, straying only at a few key moments. Over all they played some 24 songs, with all but a couple of their albums represented, going as far back as “Boy” and up to their most recent outing, “No Line on the Horizon.” “Achtung Baby,” “The Joshua Tree,” and “No Line” had the most numbers in the show. The British band Florence and the Machine opened the show.

    The band walked on stage at 8:56 p.m. to David Bowie’s “Space Oddity,” strutting out from underneath the stadium like a bunch of gladiators in tight jeans. Though they looked huge on the video screens, from where I was sitting on row 11, section 151, they looked like bendable action figures. At least one woman near me brought binoculars.

    As everyone pulled out their phones to take pictures, a clad-in-black Bono barreled through “Even Better than the Real Thing,” from 1991’s “Achtung Baby.” He kept going with six more songs that were each over 20 years old. Undercutting the solemnity of the first few songs was a helicopter flying overhead advertising strip club Scores.

    Bono strapped on a guitar on a muscularly remade “The Fly,” which also featured some of The Edge’s shredding and vocal accompaniment. At that point, it was hard not to be envious of the crowd directly in front of the the stage, who looked ecstatic.

    The rest of the stadium only nodded along politely, but they started to move on “Mysterious Ways,” a love song that was blown up here into a stadium anthem, and where Bono and The Edge took their first stroll around the circular stage and walked over the moving bridges.

    By fifth song “I Will Follow,” it was already nightfall and the enormous stage was the only source of light in the stadium, surrounded like a supernova by the thousands of flickers of light from peoples’ cell phones. On “Get Your Boots On,” Bono showed how, despite his self-serious star-with-a-conscience public persona, he knows how to play the role of rock star with all the panache it demands. He never did take off his tinted sunglasses at all.

    Bono introduced the next song by saying The Edge would be channeling Frank Sinatra, which suggested perhaps they’d do Bono’s remake of “That’s Life.” But instead they sang “Stay” as a slow, almost acoustic song.  The band got Mark E. Kelly to introduce “Beautiful Day,” which, tailor-made for this kind of setting, sounded excellent.

    “Elevation” had the crowd near the front practically moshing. “Miss Sarajevo” showed off another genre where U2 is unassailable, the heartfelt power ballad.

    The concert hit its stride around 10 p.m., when the band played “Vertigo,” maybe because it’s one of their most recognizable recent songs and maybe because the alcohol from the afternoon tailgaiting was finally making a difference. “Sunday Bloody Sunday,” was certainly the night’s emotional peak, milked here for all its possible relevance by being played over news images of the Arab Spring.

    The Bono-isms started to rear their ugly head by then. He dedicated “Scarlet” to Aung San Suu Kyi, the Burmese political dissident, a gesture that was only politely applauded for the crowd. Maybe they didn’t know who she was? Not to worry. U2 helpfully provided an introductory blurb. “One” was introduced by Desmond Tutu. During the encore Bono both sang “Amazing Grace” and later thanked another kind of god, Live Nation, for organizing the show.  Fifty-year-old Bono also sprayed the audience with water and wore a jacket that shot off lasers on “Ultraviolet.”

    But there were great moments to compensate for those that were cringe-worthy.  “Moment of Surrender,” dedicated to Clarence Clemons, was moving and “Where the Streets Have No Name” was undeniably beautiful; without a doubt, the concert’s highlight.

    Bono’s stated goal was to shrink the stadium and turn it into a little club, a difficult rask when your singing from a metal, 200-ton arachnid. But for the Baltimore crowd, a majority of whom had likely not seen them in years, a stadium packed with thousands of like-minded fan did just fine.