U2: No Line on the Horizon
Posted: Fri Mar 06, 2009 8:59 pm
Completely unrelated to werewolves, and it's not even the genre of choice for a lot of you, but I have got to mention it, as it's absolutely brilliant, a work of art that lives up to the high expectations one might have from the band that gave us The Joshua Tree. The deluxe version of the album comes with a link to a music video art film of the songs, and there are several super-deluxe versions that also include a coffee table softback or hardback magazine-sized book.
The album is one of the most cohesive and unified of U2's works in a long time; they definitely worked hard to polish this one up, putting time and their hearts into it. The music is very solid, at once evolved and quentissentially U2ish. Adam Clayton and Larry Mullen, Jr. deliver powerful, primal rhythms, while Bono and the Edge paradoxically deliver at the same moment an enlightened, metaphysical transcendence. If you splurge enough for a version with the art film "Linear," you are treated with a right-brained, dreamlike journey across France and Spain by motorcycle, interspersed with a fair share of both Jung and Freud. And, yet, as esoteric as all this may sound, it's still catchy tunes that are every bit as fun as pop radio.
It's top notch U2, and that is pretty darned hard to top. If by now they still haven't found what they're looking for, it's probably not there anymore.
The album is one of the most cohesive and unified of U2's works in a long time; they definitely worked hard to polish this one up, putting time and their hearts into it. The music is very solid, at once evolved and quentissentially U2ish. Adam Clayton and Larry Mullen, Jr. deliver powerful, primal rhythms, while Bono and the Edge paradoxically deliver at the same moment an enlightened, metaphysical transcendence. If you splurge enough for a version with the art film "Linear," you are treated with a right-brained, dreamlike journey across France and Spain by motorcycle, interspersed with a fair share of both Jung and Freud. And, yet, as esoteric as all this may sound, it's still catchy tunes that are every bit as fun as pop radio.
It's top notch U2, and that is pretty darned hard to top. If by now they still haven't found what they're looking for, it's probably not there anymore.