U2 fans will have more flavors of crazy then they'll know what to do with 'em.
The Irish arena-rock outfit drops its "I'll Go Crazy If I Don't Go Crazy Tonight" single Sept. 22 from Interscope Records. The six-song collection includes the single version and mixes by Fish Out of Water, Dirty South, and three different mixes by Redanka.
"I'll Go Crazy" first appeared on the band's latest, this year.
Over the next few days we will be testing the site. Please visit all of the links click everything and provide us feedback via twitter.com/u2tourfans ( Direct Message Please ) also if you got this link you have been invited to see the site prior to launch. Yes, its very buggy and has errors. We are working thru them. This is why we ask you to not share anything- if you want to email us direct please do web beta at u2tourfans dot com - Thanks
I was not an obvious contender. I was actually pretty shy in school. My defence mechanism was to be the class clown. I remember getting into a lot of trouble for being disruptive, and I was brought in front of the headteacher, who said: “What’s going to happen to you? What are you going to do when you grow up?” And I said: “Well, I’m obviously going to be a comedian.”
From an early age I didn’t buy into the value systems of working hard in a nine-to-five job. I thought creativity, friendship and loyalty and pushing the boundaries of what was acceptable was much more interesting.
The longevity of U2 is primarily based on the friendship of four men who have grown up together. Four men who respect and support and love each other. We won’t let each other fail.
It’s very confusing when fame comes early on in your career. You get a little bit bent out of shape in terms of what’s important. Fame is like the dessert that comes with your achievements — it’s not an achievement in itself, but sometimes it can overpower the work.
I really enjoy the privileges of fame now. It opens doors and allows you to meet people, and you’re in control. When fame first happened I didn’t feel in control, and it closed doors to me.
I stopped drinking 12 years ago, and it was time. I’d had enough of drinking, drugging and nightclubs. It was a difficult decision to change my life, and it took a while to reprogramme, but I’ve no regrets at all. I’ve enjoyed every bit of my life. I’ve had the best of it both ways.
My greatest achievement is managing to cope with four fingers and four strings.
I feel there is a lot more to achieve. In the first 20 years I was functioning on instinct and attitude and rawness, and now I know what I’m doing and can apply those skills in a different way. It’s no longer about attitude and rawness, but it’s about sophistication and understanding.
In a loving relationship, as an expression of freedom and fantasy, I think sex is very important.
I don’t think I would ever try and repeat U2. I’d be very happy when U2 came to whatever end, and there is no end, really. But I would be happy to move on. It’s a very fast world, and a quieter world would be welcome.
Final thoughts:
Today we have selected Pride. Remember that you are one man, come in the name of love. America is just around the corner. Fans are ready, Stories yet to be filed, Videos yet to be shot, all in the name of music.
Its Sunday here in the US and we are collecting our thoughts for the week ahead. The stories last week have been around the NFL and U2. You can read them here. Why not spend some time looking around the site today and reading those past stories you missed.
We have a new sponsor, which we think fits very nice with our site. If your flying to the next show, check them out. We have opened our FACEBOOK link up to expand the group. We just launched a poll over to the left. Let us know what you think. As for our thoughts. Just check out the video. Cheers - Remember we totally supported by our sponsors, sign up and follow us via twitter, or youtube
Whats up for next week. Trucks are rolling..............
Remember the company Light & Sound Design (Now Named PRG) they originally furnished Willie Williams with the crew and equipment. For 360°, a total of 196 of PRG’s new Bad Boy hybrid luminaires are being used for both effects lighting and regular applications as part of Williams’ design.
Outputting a blinding 48,000 lumens, the unit was specifically designed to be the first true stadium-application moving light, opening up a new range of possibilities for leading-edge show designers.
After watching U2’s opening show, Mickey Curbishley, PRG’s president of global touring, told me: “It’s the first time I’ve seen the Bad Boy working in the environment that it was designed for. Conventional moving lights wouldn’t have been able to deliver this level of power and there’s no other light that could do this job.”
At times, the Space Station’s membrane has a sinuous, veiny look that suggests it’s part of a living organism. This illusion is created by gobos projected by a bank of seven Bad Boys behind the mix tower, while the high platforms project on to the back and sides.
Last November, PRG’s Robin Wain arranged to hire Wembley Stadium in order to demo six Bad Boys to Williams who immediately saw that it was the first true stadium moving light which, crucially, can be read through a video screen and allow creative gobo use in conjunction with bright LED displays.
Williams himself told TPi: “It is an astonishing piece of kit and its success is due to them starting with the application. The colours are very good [the vivid green and blue for ‘Sunday Bloody Sunday’ and ‘One’ have amazing depth] but I was shocked to find it doesn’t do colour mixing. However, I understand why they went in favour of output because when you’re in a situation like this, output is number one.
“I knew I’d be lighting the audience to some extent but instead of just washing them I wanted to do things with break-ups, gobos and some movement. I must say that I have banned the Bad Boy name from the lighting tower. Great light, appalling name! We feel more comfortable calling it the VLI as a tribute to the Vari*Lite and the Icon, although Jake still refers to them as nodding buckets!”
In fact, the Bad Boy could well be the love child of the Vari*Lite and the Icon, as it takes the best lensing and mechanical features from each. In addition to the optical clarity that comes from using high-quality lenses, the Bad Boy features also include smooth, fluid control of focus, zoom range of 8:1 (7° to 56°), and imaging thanks to high-speed servo motors and full-field 0 to 100% dimming.
It was designed with energy efficiency and carbon footprint standards in mind which, given the number of non-eco friendly aspects of the tour in general, is no bad thing.
In Barcelona, history came full circle when Rusty Brutsché, one of the original Vari*Lite design team, watched the opening show of the 360° tour with Curbishley.
It was in this city that he saw Genesis début the first VL rig and herald a new era. On a balmy night, 28 summers later, it was a virtual re-run of the past as Brutsché saw the Bad Boys — co-designed by himself and fellow VL original Jim Bornhorst — burst into life.
AND MORE FIXTURES... Lighting requires a 12-14 hour load-in and as lighting associate Alex Murphy told me, his boss knew exactly which fixtures he would use for each song and how he’d use them.
Another role of one of the set cranes is to position eight Zap Technologies Big Lites in a circle on the roof of the structure.
PRG Mbox Extreme media servers feed the 1,200 Barco FLX-60 pixel modules that are implanted around the edges of both stages and the bridges. The video content team created special graphics that are sent to these LEDs.
Fog and haze machines get a workout on this tour. During the rehearsal fluid, the team were consuming 42 litres of fog fluid a day. Murphy commented that they are travelling with a full truckload of machines, including “Europe’s stock of Jem Roadies” and several Hazebase units.
Trying to call so many followspots with a Spanish translator for some of the bigger numbers was very stressful, according to Murphy.
There are 12 Lycian M2 long-throws in the trusses and 13 Strong Gladiators on all the high platforms, plus seven of the new Novalight Nova-Flower 2kW flower effects, supplied to PRG by Lightfactor Sales. The Nova-Flower features in ‘If I Don’t Go Crazy’, performing a larger-than-life, spinning disco effect.
All lighting equipment including power and data distribution is being supplied through the PRG Global Touring Group. A complete truss package — including PRG’s new BAT low profile truss support for followspot chairs — is also part of the deal.
And just as it seems that every lighting trick in the book has been pulled out of the hat, Bono returns to the stage for the encore, wearing a black leather jacket designed by Moritz Waldemeyer, featuring 240 lasers that extend the singer’s every move all the way across the audience.
So I was looking over the videos that best displayed the lights and the feel as well as what 90,000 fans would think. I found City Of Blinding Lights -with its driving bassline, delayed guitars, soaring rock ballad vocals and spine-tingling tremolo piano all add up to something rather too predictable. Yes, it's an accomplished and pristine production and seem to blend in with the lights.
The change was necessitated by the rescheduling of the New York Jets football game on Sunday September 27, 2009 from 4:15pm to 1pm out of respect for the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur, which starts that evening. Yom Kippur is the holiest day of the Jewish year.
The spectacular sltaging for the U2 360° tour requires up to 2 days to disassemble. The original 4:15 PM game time scheduled by the NY Jets provided enough time for the band to load out the set. The change to 1 PM was logistically impossible for U2. In order to accommodate the New York Jets, the NFL and out of respect for U2 and Jets' fans of Jewish faith, U2 agreed to move their show rather than pursue other options.
Fan Reactions still coming in. Loud and Clear (513) 360-TOUR
Fans have to change their plans. This is patently absurd. This is not a Wednesday night concert in Cleveland. It is a Friday night concert in New York and I and many others are flying in from out of town and have already booked plane tickets. Just as all of us of different faiths occasionally have to make choices, it is not appropriate for this late breaking change to affect so many people who have planned ages in advance to come to new york that friday. Shame on U2 for not standing up stronger for their fans.
So, yeah. 50-thousand plus having to at least change plans. How many are going to lose money from prior reservations, air fare etc? I’m no attorney, but why wasn’t this caught and or avoided months ago.
With few regional Stadium shows they have to realize people are traveling hundreds or even thousands of miles to see them. A Friday to a Wednesday is a huge switch.
Out of respect? Sure.
I’m out over $100 for a non-refundable hotel room Friday night. I guess I’m lucky I don’t have airfare though. Seriously, would it be so horrible for a football game and Yom Kippur to overlap a few hours?
The God I know is not short on Cash, are you ?
This is especially ridiculous for a league who consistently plays games on CHRISTMAS DAY to make a schedule change out of respect for Yom Kippur.
unreal…. how they don’t take into consideration 90,000 people have to change their plans. i used to love everything about U2 but that has changed over the years. There is a huge difference between a Friday gig attached to a weekend and a Wednesday gig.
We thought about sharing some of the comments, we do not support any hate messages, or messages that suggest any actions of harm to any person, or persons. Yes, we understand your anger over this. However its really an issue beyond control of any one person. As for those of you with tickets, well you have a choice pay the 100.00 to change your flights, sell your tickets on craigs lists, eBay or stubhub.
This has been a week filled with headlines. We have posted all the stories and videos for your review on line. We have launched a couple of new features. As you may know already.
The featured launch today is the music store. The complete collection of U2 items can be found via the U2 Tour Fans Music Store. The Unforgettable Fire
New to U2 ? Well it could be possible.The discography of the Irish rock band U2 consists of twelve studio albums, seven live albums, five compilation albums, fifty-eight singles, and seven extended plays (EPs). The band consists of Bono (vocals and guitar), The Edge (guitar, keyboards and vocals), Adam Clayton (bass guitar) and Larry Mullen, Jr. (drums and percussion). They formed in 1976 when the members were teenagers with limited musical proficiency.
U2's success as a live act was greater than its success at selling records until The Joshua Tree was released in 1987, which helped to increase the band members' stature "from heroes to superstars". U2 responded to the dance and alternative rock revolutions, and its own sense of musical stagnation by reinventing themselves with the 1991 album Achtung Baby and the accompanying Zoo TV Tour. Similar experimentation continued for the rest of the 1990s. Since 2000, U2 has pursued a more traditional sound that retains the influence of their musical explorations. U2 first received Grammy Awards for The Joshua Tree in 1988, and have won 22 in total since, tying U2 with Stevie Wonder as contemporary artists with the most Grammies.
U2 will perform on Wednesday, Sept. 23, at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford instead of the previously announced Friday, Sept. 25, date for their 360 Tour.
The group will still play its originally scheduled Thursday, Sept. 24, show.
The date change was caused by the rescheduled Jets NFL game on Sunday, Sept. 27, from 4:15 p.m. to 1 p.m. that day out of respect for the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur. The original game time provided enough time for the U2 to take down its staging.
Arthur Fogel Live Nation Tour promoter said "We have tried everything we could to work the production logistics to be able to get out of the stadium for the earlier game. But its just not possible."
Tickets for the Sept. 25 show will honored on Sept. 23. Refunds will be available through the point of purchase.
Visit www.U2.com for more information.
Giants Stadium is on Route 120 in the Meadowlands. Call 201-935-3900 or visit www.meadowlands.com for more information.