MASSIVE AUSSIE SHOW

BUSY, busy, busy. Under a giant claw/spaceship/kid’s-toy-on-steroids stage set, in a stadium filled to the nosebleed seats and the inner circle pulsating with energised fans, empty seconds rarely appeared.

Across two hours and 24 of their own songs, U2 managed to slip in lyrical, musical or visual references to the Beatles and David Bowie, AIDS and Sarajevo, INXS and Frankie Goes To Hollywood, family death and African debt, Bob Geldof and Aung San Suu Kyi, Kanye West and Amazing Grace, Oprah Winfrey and Amnesty International. Oh yes, and office Christmas parties.

Too much? Now it is true that total stimulation has been the U2 method since their early ’90s reinvention of the stadium show as audio-visual immersion. Sometimes it has been a treat, sometimes it has been a distraction and sometimes, as in the first of their Sydney shows four years ago, it has been the saving grace in an unbalanced set. But what is striking this time around is how, despite the fixed-to-mega settings of everything, they have balanced the message and the medium so well.

Most of the extracurricular material was fleeting or lightly handled, earnestness was kept to a minimum (though that’s hardly the worst sin a band can commit) and the in-the-round nature of the stage meant that there was at least an illusion of some intimacy.

Of course intimacy is relative when 80 per cent of us had to watch with one eye on the stage and one eye on the screens, but a charged Bono and the only slightly less sparky Edge seemed more engaged with the songs and in turn the audience than they have been in years.

Even Larry Mullen jnr (who took a walk around the split stage playing congas) and Adam Clayton (wearing more sparkle than a bogan school formal dress) were giving out, not just looking in.

In a show roughly broken up into half-hour segments surprises came with both the old, the return of a neatly thrilling I Will Follow early in the first 30 minutes of guitar rock power and drive, and the new, the reinvention of the weakest song from their most recent album, I’ll Go Crazy If I Don’t Go Crazy Tonight. This song was done as some kind of house-infused disco number which, in the third rock-as-dance section, segued neatly into bursts of Relax and Two Tribes.

There was not as much time for contemplation or variation (I would have liked to hear superior new tracks such as Cedars of Lebanon and Fez and cheekier old ones such as Lemon and The Fly) and Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me, Kill Me still doesn’t sustain attention no matter what flashing doodads are deployed, but this was U2 in form. Fine form.



U2 fails to Sell Out 2nd Show

They are one of the biggest rock bands in the world, but Sydney has served up a shock to U2 - their second show, last night , has not sold out. Check out the setlist details.

More than 2200 $40 tickets - the cheapest for the Irish band’s 360 tour - are unsold for concert at ANZ Stadium. Limited tickets are also available for more expensive seats, promoter Michael Coppel said.

He said that may be because the unprecedented number of concerts this summer has saturated the Sydney entertainment market.

Mr Coppel, who is bringing other popular musicians such as Linkin Park, Katy Perry and Rihanna to Australia, said he has “never seen the Australian market this busy”.

“Seven national tours that have gone on sale in the last five days,” he said, naming Justin Bieber, Santana, Lionel Richie and James Blunt.

“I think it reflects the fact that when they [U2] toured last time, when their tickets went on sale, there were very few other concerts on sale.

“When they toured this time, they were the last big show of the summer to go on sale, and there was substantial sales already to Bon Jovi, and the Eagles, and Leonard Cohen and Muse and a range of other shows.

“Obviously everybody’s business is slightly affected because we only have a limited amount of people.”

Mr Coppel said one of the reasons that rival promoters had scheduled their concerts all around the same time was that each of them was busy working on their own projects and weren’t aware of what their competitors were doing until they reached the promotional stage.

“Every promoter, if they are honest, would say ‘I didn’t realise it was going to be this busy. Suddenly there are 22 on the market.’”

The cluttered calendar was expected to free up by next winter, as it usually does, and as promoters reassess the number of acts they are bringing in to Australia, he said.

“Hopefully it will be a little less frantic in the summer next year.”

 



U2 rocks ANZ stadium

IT WAS all about the music, that “space station” of a stage and celebrity shout outs, when U2 opened their Sydney shows at ANZ Stadium last night.

Oprah was in the house, so was Nicole Kidman, Kanye West and Bob Geldof - who was name checked just before Bono dedicated “Stuck in the Moment” to his late friend Michael Hutchence.

For the past two decades, the Irish band have consistently raised the benchmark for the concert experience, successfully using technology to dazzle their audience and refuel their reputation as stadium rock gods.

No matter how many YouTube clips or photos you have seen of this massive contraption which anchors the myriad video screens, lights and speakers to broadcast the action, you will be in awe of The Claw once inside ANZ Stadium.

All that colour and movement is happening above your head but at ground level, moving bridges and catwalks on what Bono calls a “space station” stage, allows Bono, The Edge, Adam Clayton and Larry Mullen Jr to get closer to fans who have remained steadfastly loyal for 30 years.

Describing the production as intimate - as everyone seems determined to do - is a stretch. There is nothing intimate about a concert in a stadium with 60,000 people.

What makes the U2 360 experience communal, is the music itself.

For all the bells and whistles they employ to thrill you, in the end it is all about the songs.

When you go to a U2 concert, you want to sing and Bono knows that, constructing a set with plenty of crowd karaoke moments and the ubiquitous “wave your mobile phones in the air like you really do care” trick.

“Beautiful Day” is always a triumph, “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking” pushes the crowd volume to 11, “Sunday Bloody Sunday” received a Jay Z-assisted twist and the lost single “Magnificent” finally gets its due in the live arena.

U2's Bono named Dubliner

Irish rock singer Bono has just been nominated Dubliner of the Year. The U2 singer, no stranger to awards, claimed he was blindsided but delighted by the title and said being named Dubliner of the Year was the perfect way to wrap up a banner year for the Irish band.

Dublin is a state of mind and a place. What’s being a Dub? I don’t know, but I am one and proud of it through and through. The messy head, all the earnest conversation, our spunkiness and punkiness, our sense of fun, the self-deprecating over-confidence.

“We are so many contradictions. Dubliner of the Year crowns a great year for me and the band, not everyone’s experience I know. I’m feeling very blessed and grateful, and deep down in my gut, I know this city has what it takes to be a world-beater once again. It already is, in my head.”

Paul Trainer the Editor of The Dubliner, the publication behind the award,  told the press that Bono was the natural winner for the 2010 title.

“Bono has inspired many of the articles we have published over the last ten years. Wherever he goes, he takes a bit of Dublin with him and in the last year he has taken our city to every corner of the earth. He is a Dubliner who makes us proud to be The Dubliner,” he said.

Fellow Dubliner Danny O’Donoghue from rising new Irish band The Script praised his hero as a success story which should be celebrated.

“Bono has got what most musicians search for all there life, heart. His belief changes others. He made it possible for Dubliners to dream, to think ‘what if?’ His belief and drive as a Dubliner got him to where he is today and we all need to be reminded that we drink the same water. So I congratulate Bono and say well done, keep flying the flag for Dublin and Ireland,” he said.



Curfew Ends U2 Show !

U2 360 Tour / Bono Curfew Ends U2 Show before “Moment of Surrender” was performed strict curfews of 10:30 PM local time struck before the band could start MOS.  The boys closed the should with “WITH or Without You” the first time MOS had not closed this tour. The boys were off the stage by 10:28 PM Local time.  Other setlist changes can be viewed from our rolling setlist list

Fears of a full-blown sci-fi convention soon took over as the band hit the stage with David Bowie’s Space Oddity blasting over the speakers.

But any thoughts that U2’s mind might not be on the here-and-now were quickly erased as the band launched into their anthem for living in the moment All that You Can’t Leave Behind’s Beautiful Day.

It was an inspired start and one that got the crowd on side early, the audience a slave to Bono’s every thrust and fist pump.

Bono ended the song by trailing off into a short take of In My Life - a nod to the 30th anniversary of John Lennon’s death, on this very day three decades ago.

By the end of the night he had sung snippets of Rain, Dear Prudence, All You Need is Love and Stand by Me as well as replaced the lyrics to the band’s ode to Martin Luther King, Pride (In the name of love) to honor the slain Beatle - “1980, December 8, A shot rings out in a New York sky…”.

It was a touching moment and a reminder Bono is capable of shining the spotlight on others with as much intensity as he hogs it for himself.

When he does grab the crowd’s attention he has them in the palm of his hand, hamming it up along the band’s circular runway, mugging for the camera, taking photos of audiences members on their phones, as well as dragging one lucky woman up on stage to dance with, sing to and lean his head on her lap.

He even delivered a nod to Brisbane’s suburbs before one track, name-checking West End, the Valley and Paddington.

With any stadium show there are plenty of distractions and U2 360° had distractions like few others - the massive 72-foot screen pumps out fluid animation synchronised with the live sound and the light show on stage is truly awesome.

But there was little danger the decadent stage - what Bono affectionately referred to as “the spaceship” - would steal the show.

What mechanical monstrosity could overshadow a set list which contained flawless takes of Where the Streets Have No Name, City of Blinding Lights, Walk On, I Will Follow and Mysterious Ways?

No Line on the Horizon is the band’s commercially under-looked new album and two of its finest cuts were on show last night - Magnificent and Moment of Surrender.

Both tracks seamlessly fitted in with the classic material, a fact which hopefully inspires more fans to give the record another listen.

Miss Sarajevo was a heart-wrenching highlight, Bono tastefully handling Luciano Pavarotti’s operatic bridge, while In a Little While was heart-warmingly sweet, especially with footage of an astronaut from the International Space Station singing the lyric about a man taking a rocket ship into the sky at the songs climax.

An unreleased song, North Star, received an airing but the most obscure choice of the night was a brief run through October’s Rejoice as Bono paid tribute to recently released Burmese political prisoner Aung San Suu Kyi.

With representatives of Amnesty International walking candles out on to the stage, Bono made it clear he would not be rejoicing for long with more than 2000 political prisoners still detained in the country.

Following a short break Bono returned to a darkened stage looking like an extra from Tron.

Wearing a laser suit with a bright red glowing microphone, he led the band through one of Achtung Baby’s finest cuts which previously had little more than a brief live outing on the Zoo TV tour - Ultraviolet (Light My Way).

They followed with crowd favourite With or Without You which had the audience singing like an English football crowd before the band said their goodnights to the strains of Elton John’s Rocket Man.

The spaceship had landed but it was a typically life-affirming and out-of-this-world flight.



U2 360° Heading To Chile

Live Nation Global Touring  today confirmed that U2 will return to Chile. The U2 360° Tour will visit Estadio Nacional in Santiago  on Friday March 25th, 2011 and special guests on the night will be Muse.

Tickets will go on sale to the general public on December 16th and  to Entel customers paying only with CMR Falabella cards on Monday, December 13th and Tuesday 14th via Ticketmaster.

 U2.com subscribers can enter a special advance PRESALE  beginning this FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10th at 10am (local) and running until this SUNDAY, DECEMBER 12th at 5pm (local).

Subscribers will be emailed ahead of this presale with details of timings.

U2 Brisbane Review

It was a beautiful night for U2 fans as the heavens smiled on the Irish supergroup, keeping the rain at bay last night for the first of their two shows at Suncorp Stadium, in Brisbane.

While the band’s 360 Degrees tour is a ”rain, hail or shine” extravaganza that delivers even in a deluge, the crowd of 45,000  some of who had camped outside the venue since Tuesday night to secure a front-row spot  were counting their blessings with just some early drizzle.

The spirit of John Lennon loomed large as Bono performed Stand By Me in honour of the 30-year anniversary of Lennon’s death before dedicating In the name of love to him as well.

Bono captivated the crowd and one woman in particular who he pulled up on stage, serenading and dancing with her during a sweet version of In a little while.

The set list was peppered with old and new hits… I will Follow, Mysterious Ways, Vertigo, Where the Streets have No Name, Elevation, Ultraviolet and so on.

With a massive catalogue there was always bound to be the odd song missed out (no Desire, Even Better than the Real thing, New Years Day) but how much can you cram into 2 hours and 15 minutes?

Bono got the gig of to one hell of start praising his Brisbane fans.

“Allow us to let us kiss your arse for one moment. Thank you for the life you’ve given us.”

Bono strutted around the stage, his natural domain with the Edge and Adam Clayton more than happy doing the occasional lap as well.

A brief sprinkle of rain was all we got, enough though for a mechanical umbrella to deploy and cover drummer Larry Mullen Jnr. Yep, this stage has got it all.

The importance of this day 30 years ago when John Lennon was murdered was not forgotten with Bono paying tribute to the singer.

You knew all the words, all the songs (perhaps fumbling through of the lyrics of the newer ones) and the crowd was in fine voice.

Bono appeared to have a couple of blips, at one point tearing out his ear piece and on another occasion losing his voice momentarily during With Or Without You.

A criticism? Hmmm….It should have finished one song earlier… With or Without you would have been perfect but, not unlike the monstrous stage they just had to go that one step further.

Full Set List

  • Return Of The Stingray Guitar
  • Beautiful Day
  • I Will Follow
  • Get On Your Boots
  • Magnificent
  • Mysterious Ways
  • Rain (snippet)
  • Elevation
  • Until The End Of The World
  • I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For
  • Stand By Me (snippet)
  • North Star
  • Pride (In The Name Of Love)
  • In A Little While
  • Miss Sarajevo
  • City Of Blinding Lights
  • Vertigo
  • Thunderstruck (snippet)
  • I’ll Go Crazy If I Don’t Go Crazy Tonight
  • Two Tribes (snippet)
  • Sunday Bloody Sunday
  • Scarlet
  • Walk On / You’ll Never Walk Alone (snippet)
  • One
  • Dear Prudence (snippet)
  • Where The Streets Have No Name
  • All You Need Is Love (snippet)
  • Ultra Violet (Light My Way)
  • With Or Without You
  • Moment of Surrender