LA Times Reports MJ has passed -

We are U2 Fans, however we are music fans too. Today's the music world has lost one of the greatest artists of all time. Our thoughts and prayers go out to his family and music fans around the world. We will fade to black for 24 hours to honor Michael Jackson the king of pop.

Pop star Michael Jackson was pronounced dead by doctors. (LA TIMES wide release report)

Thursday News from Nou Camp in Barcelona

Looks like the band is getting an early start on rehearsals today. A couple of photos have been taken and posted. Not really much else. We are just counting down to Tuesday. We may elect to chill for 24hrs and come back around on the weekend. Or we may post some thoughts about some re-mix stuff we heard. Comments always welcome.


Stop picking on the rich said Larry


U2 drummer Larry Mullen believes rich and successful people are being unnecessarily humiliated when coming in and out of Ireland, describing this as "part of a new resentment of rich people in this country".

"We have experienced [a situation] where coming in and out of the country at certain times is made more difficult than it should be - not only for us, but for a lot of wealthy people," he said. "So it wasn't personal. It was to do with the better-off being sort of humiliated."

Mullen was speaking in Howth the day before the Irish Sunday Independent exclusively joined U2 in Barcelona last week as they convened for final rehearsals for their world tour and to see for the first time the phenomenal 360-degree stage they have built.

There are exclusive interviews with all four of U2 in this week's Irish Independent.

U2 Barcelona Show down to the wire

As for songs from the new album, I love that the title track is on there. I was hoping for “White as Snow” or “Stand Up Comedy” to make an appearance. I’m also a little disappointed “Sunday Bloody Sunday” wasn’t chosen. I know they do it all the time, but it’s still such a great song. But I’m so intrigued that they pulled out “Angel of Harlem”. I’m going to both New York shows so I’m keeping my fingers crossed they perform it there.

What does everyone else think? Rants or raves (Remember way back in the day we named the site Rants and Raves)about this rehearsal list? Which city are you seeing the band in? I can’t wait for October to roll around!

Before we get to far ahead of ourselves, we do have some new sponsors that would like to give major Thanks and Shoot outs to. Of course you can show some love by visiting and of course purchasing something.

  1. Wolfgangs Great U2 videos, Posters and more.

  2. Napster: Get chances to listen to some U2 songs.

  3. I/denti/tee: Check out the cool tees and get some free iTunes

  4. Apple: Need I say more ? You can download the whole U2 Collection








Rehearsals wrap up with yet another set list

Rehearsals wrapped up last night and here's a look at the set list. Remember we will be bringing the most current information from the tour thanks to our fans.

If God will send his angels
Drowning man
Sometimes you can't make it on your own
Sometimes you can't make it on your own (snippet, linked with) / Bad (incomplete)
Walk on
Walk on (instrumental)
Desmond Tutu speech
Ultraviolet
Where the streets have no name
Unknown song, reportedly sounded like chords from Seconds
I'll go crazy if I don't go crazy tonight (remix)
Pride (in the name of love)
(break)
Breathe
No line on the horizon
Get on your boots
Magnificent
Beautiful day
I still haven't found what I'm looking for
In a little while + Rocket man (snippet)
Unknown caller
The unforgettable fire + Strangers in the night (snippet)
City of blinding ligths
Vertigo
I'll go crazy if I don't go crazy tonight (remix)
Pride (in the name of love)
MLK
Walk on
Where the streets have no name
One
Ultraviolet
With or without you
Moment of surrender

What Has 4 Legs, in the Round?

June 21, 2009

Source: New York Times

Alice Rawsthorn

What do you want when you go to see your favorite band playing in a stadium? To hear the music clearly? To see the musicians, even if it's only on a screen because you're in a cheap seat at the back? For them to feel so comfortable on stage (their every Spinal Tappish whim assuaged) that they play spectacularly well? To forget that you're watching them with tens of thousands of people in a place where a ball is usually kicked around?Whoever designs the set has to deliver all of that — and more. As every extra day on tour costs money, the set must be installed and dismantled as quickly as possible, and shipped in the fewest possible trucks. The process also needs to be idiot-proof because most of the crew are hired locally and will only build it once. Financially it's a huge gamble, because the design concept is signed off on before a single ticket is sold.The bill for U2's latest gamble is the $150 million it will cost to keep the band's 360 tour, which starts June 30 in Barcelona, on the road for 18 months. On past tours, U2 has adopted the conventional approach of building a stage at one end of the stadium. This time, the band will perform on a circular stage and runway in the middle. Perching above on four spindly legs will be a steel colossus bearing the lighting, speakers, cables and a giant conical video screen. Looking not unlike an alien sea monster, it is 50 meters high, or about 165 feet, weighs 390 tons and packs away into 180 trucks. (U2 is buying carbon offsets, but no one embarks on a rock tour with a clear eco-conscience.)"Everyone who sees it says that it looks like something different," said Willie Williams, who has worked with U2 since 1982 and co-designed the set with the architect Mark Fisher, a veteran of Pink Floyd and Rolling Stones tours. "Tintin's rocket. The War of the Worlds. Cactus. Octopus. Claw. Whenever it started to look like something, Mark and I would push it in another direction. But it does look as though it has escaped from a giant space aquarium."Rock tours weren't always so flashy. The Beatles performed at New York's Shea Stadium in 1965 on an open stage for a record 56,000 people, very few of whom could see or hear the band. It wasn't until the mid-1970s that bands like Yes and Pink Floyd introduced more sophisticated sound and sets. Like other acts emerging from the late 1970s punk movement, U2 spurned such theatricality for its first stadium shows in the late 1980s.Theatricality took over on the 1991 ZooTV tour, which was conceived by Mr. Williams and Mr. Fisher, in his first U2 project, as a dazzling satire of media culture with giant video screens. The 1996 PopMart set was even wilder. Parodying consumerism, it featured a huge lemon (from which the band had to escape by ladder in one show when it jammed), McDonald's "golden arches" and a gigantic L.E.D. screen. "At the time it was completely new, but every show looks like ZooTV or PopMart now," said Mr. Williams. "We had to move on, and do something that would feel more powerful to the audience."Playing in the round appealed. It is the best way of creating an illusion of intimacy in a crowd of up to 90,000 people, and will release some 20,000 extra seats in the space usually occupied by the stage. But it hadn't seemed feasible for U2 before. How do you build something strong enough to support so much kit without blocking the audience's view? The floating opera stages constructed on Lake Constance at Bregenz in Austria convinced Mr. Williams that it was technically possible. Stylistically, he was inspired by the four-legged arched structure of the 1961 Theme Building at Los Angeles airport. He sketched his ideas for Mr. Fisher to interpret.Ever since he studied under Peter Cook, co-founder of the avant-garde architecture group, Archigram, in the 1960s, Mr. Fisher had wanted to create a portable tensile structure (that's archi-jargon for one with a flexible shape). The 360 set was his chance, and he clad the steel in a tensile fabric originally developed for Formula 1 motor racing. Green in daylight, it will reflect whatever color of light is shone on to it at night. The result evokes Archigram's fantastical 1964 project, the Walking City, which "strolled" around on teetering legs. It will not only give the audience a clear view of the band, but of one another across the stage, which doubles as the roof of a building that houses U2's instruments and the dozen technicians looking after them.The audience will also see live footage of the show on the conical screen. From ZooTV onward, screens have been the phallic symbols of rock tours. The entire stage of Nine Inch Nails' 2008 tour was an interactive screen of images generated by the band's movements. U2's new screen consists of 500,000 pixels mounted on interlocking panels. It will sit still for most of the show, then stretch downward, distorting the images as the panels fragment.It will take a day to install the screen, stage and kit at each stadium. As the steel structure requires four days, three versions have been commissioned. While one is in use, another will be under construction at the next venue and the third in transit, to squeeze as many shows as possible into the tour."Our work is all to do with the logistics of building a very large piece of technical infrastructure in a very short time, and to make something interesting out of it," said Mr. Fisher. "Why do people go to shows like this in the digital age? It's for the huge collective experience, the social and spatial and memories. This set will contribute by creating a massive sense of anticipation and delivering an amazing kinetic performance." (c) New York Times, 2009.