G
Gurtholfin
Guest
Re: USCHO Music Thread 2: Rock On, Amigo.
I appreciate you posting this as I now understand better where you're coming from on this band.
I nearly wore out my vhs of Live at Red Rocks. Still have it though. LOVE the performance of Surrender from that show.
I understand where you are coming from though and I felt the same for quite some time - essentially turning away from and hardly listening to the defining band of my teen years. (the Dead would become the defining band of my college years
)
Slightly different from you is that I saw Achtung Baby and the Zoo Tour as the highlight of their career to that point - and probably still. Something in that collection of songs - I had gone through a soul crushing breakup a year or two before - connected very strongly for me.
The way they were presented in the shows too - probably the best arrangements of Bullet>Running ever (J-tree songs re-imagined) and the Can't Help Falling after Love is Blindness... I remember Bono saying "Let's get go to Vegas and get married... for a while..." before starting Can't Help Falling at the Madison show and I understood exactly what he was getting at - that many relationships are doomed to fail no matter how they start. It was all so perfect for me and really resonated.
I guess I had matured and appreciated that their lyrics had grown along with me and better reflected what I was currently going through. I was no longer the kid who got fired up over Irish car bombings or depravities in Central America because Bono got fired up over them.
Then came Popmart and Bono acting the most ***-clownish of his career and I was on to jambands anyway and a whole new scene and lifestyle. See ya ***-clown! No more U2 for me for almost 10 years - I thought their new songs sounded bland and had very little desire to go back and hear the old.
Anyway... there are several bands that I feel the same way that you feel about U2. The Cure and REM are two bands that I only like up until about 1985-87ish and have never gotten into their later stuff. I realize that others have continued to follow them and like the new stuff like I enjoy U2's. I can't hear in their newer stuff what drew me to their earlier stuff. It's all good - just not for me.
I understand what you're saying about the joy of a song like A Day Without Me (funny to think of "joy" in a song about suicide, but it has it) being missing from their newer stuff, but I'm trying to think of any band that has maintained that boyish enthusiasm into their 30s or beyond.
For me, the joy is still there, it's just different and shaded by the years passing and the performers growing and getting on in life.
That's the great thing about music - we all pull from it what we need and none of us are wrong.
It's funny coz if I were pressed today to name an all-time favorite band - which is something I don't do coz I'm not 16 anymore and don't see the need for such absolutes - I'd have to say U2 although it would only be by a hair over probably 8 or 9 other bands instead of the wide margin that it was back in the 80s.
6 or 7 years ago they would have simply been a favorite band from my youth. Funny how it can come full circle.
Funny, cause I can't listen to any U2 beyond Achtung Baby. In fact, their more recent stuff has so turned me off to U2 entirely, that i can't even listen to their older stuff anymore. And I was as big a U2 fanboy as there could ever have been for their first five albums.
I'll take something like this any day over their later period stuff. It's structurally simple, maybe even amateurish, but it's got a passion, a freshness, a joy, that i find missing from their newer stuff.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=epAeGB0Tecg
I appreciate you posting this as I now understand better where you're coming from on this band.
I nearly wore out my vhs of Live at Red Rocks. Still have it though. LOVE the performance of Surrender from that show.
I understand where you are coming from though and I felt the same for quite some time - essentially turning away from and hardly listening to the defining band of my teen years. (the Dead would become the defining band of my college years
Slightly different from you is that I saw Achtung Baby and the Zoo Tour as the highlight of their career to that point - and probably still. Something in that collection of songs - I had gone through a soul crushing breakup a year or two before - connected very strongly for me.
The way they were presented in the shows too - probably the best arrangements of Bullet>Running ever (J-tree songs re-imagined) and the Can't Help Falling after Love is Blindness... I remember Bono saying "Let's get go to Vegas and get married... for a while..." before starting Can't Help Falling at the Madison show and I understood exactly what he was getting at - that many relationships are doomed to fail no matter how they start. It was all so perfect for me and really resonated.
I guess I had matured and appreciated that their lyrics had grown along with me and better reflected what I was currently going through. I was no longer the kid who got fired up over Irish car bombings or depravities in Central America because Bono got fired up over them.
Then came Popmart and Bono acting the most ***-clownish of his career and I was on to jambands anyway and a whole new scene and lifestyle. See ya ***-clown! No more U2 for me for almost 10 years - I thought their new songs sounded bland and had very little desire to go back and hear the old.
Anyway... there are several bands that I feel the same way that you feel about U2. The Cure and REM are two bands that I only like up until about 1985-87ish and have never gotten into their later stuff. I realize that others have continued to follow them and like the new stuff like I enjoy U2's. I can't hear in their newer stuff what drew me to their earlier stuff. It's all good - just not for me.
I understand what you're saying about the joy of a song like A Day Without Me (funny to think of "joy" in a song about suicide, but it has it) being missing from their newer stuff, but I'm trying to think of any band that has maintained that boyish enthusiasm into their 30s or beyond.
For me, the joy is still there, it's just different and shaded by the years passing and the performers growing and getting on in life.
That's the great thing about music - we all pull from it what we need and none of us are wrong.
It's funny coz if I were pressed today to name an all-time favorite band - which is something I don't do coz I'm not 16 anymore and don't see the need for such absolutes - I'd have to say U2 although it would only be by a hair over probably 8 or 9 other bands instead of the wide margin that it was back in the 80s.
6 or 7 years ago they would have simply been a favorite band from my youth. Funny how it can come full circle.
Last edited: