Let’s face it:
There are plenty of reasons to hate U2.
I mean, sure, there was a time when they were so cool that only cool
people liked them. Then, there was the
time when they were so HUGELY popular that EVERYBODY liked them. That was a LONG time ago, though. Since then, they’ve given us the HUGELY
pretentious “Rattle & Hum” album, the HUGELY weird “Zooropa” album &
tour, the even weirder “Pop” album & tour and then the HUGELY experimental
“No Line on the Horizon” album after we had just gotten used to them being good
again on “All That You Can’t Leave Behind” and “How to Dismantle an Atomic
Bomb”. That’s not even to mention (even
though I am) Bono’s pompous attitude and in-your-face holier-than-thou
politics. I think the best reason to
hate them, though, is that they gave everybody in the world a copy of their
latest album. No, wait…that doesn’t make
sense. What the hell am I talking about
anyway? Oh yeah…last year, U2 released
their best album ever & gave it away for free and millions of people got
totally pissed off at them for it. Wow. I just read that back and it still doesn’t
make sense. I’ll bet you’re thinking the
same thing. I’ll bet it’s for a
different reason, though. I’ll bet you’re
sitting there wondering how I could say that “Songs of Innocence” is
U2’s best album. It is, though. Seriously.
First of all, let me just say that I know that it’s a
widely-accepted fact that “The Joshua Tree” is U2’s best album. I don’t think I’ve ever even heard an
argument to the contrary. I mean, to
date, it’s sold in excess of 25,000,000 copies worldwide and was
single-handedly responsible for catapulting the band from “critical darling” to
“biggest band in the world” status.
Along the way, it undoubtedly became the soundtrack to millions of
lives, earning a place in the hearts of those same millions FOREVER. I get it.
Here’s the thing, though:
I wasn’t a U2 fan in 1987. In
fact, I never even bought a U2 album until 2000 when “ATYCLB” came out. Now, that’s not to say that I didn’t like
U2. I liked a lot of their songs. I liked “New Years Day” and “Pride (In the
Name of Love)” and “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For” and “Angel of
Harlem”. I just didn’t like them enough to
buy the albums…because I wasn’t a U2 fan.
I was just a guy who liked some U2 songs. It wasn’t until I heard “Beautiful Day”
post-Y2K that I was actually moved to buy a U2 album. I was hooked after that, though. By the time “HTDAAB” was released, I had gone
back and purchased their entire catalog…and I’ve bought everything they’ve
recorded since then.
My point is: I
have absolutely no sentimental attachment to “The Joshua Tree”. It’s a great album. For years, I considered it their 2nd
best after “War”. But I didn’t own it in
the eighties. It’ll never mean as much
to me as “Rio” or “Thriller” or “Born in the U.S.A.” because it wasn’t there
for me when I was growing up. It’s just
a really good album that I bought as an adult and appreciate for the really
good album that it is. That means I can
be completely objective when I say that their latest album, “Songs of
Innocence”, is better.
Again, I know that statement is going to sound
blasphemous to some. Hear me out,
though.
There are, basically, three kinds of U2 albums: post-punk, soul and experimental. While everything the band records has a
degree of raw energy, soul and experimentation, each of their albums leans
primarily in one direction more than the others. For example, the band’s first three albums,
“Boy”, “October” & “War” would fall into the first category. There was an angry, youthful energy that
drove even the slower songs on those records.
It was undeniable and exciting.
It’s what drew millions to them in the first place.
However, with “The Unforgettable Fire”, the band would
reach a new plateau. That’s when they
found their “soul”. No more were they
angry, young men. They had matured, and
with that maturity came a new wisdom.
They weren’t fighting the world anymore – they were coming to terms with
it…and embracing it, even as they tried to make it a better place. That soul would carry them through their next
two albums, “The Joshua Tree” & “Rattle & Hum”, as well.
As the nineties dawned, the band wisely lightened up a
bit. That’s when their experimental
phase began. “Achtung Baby”, “Zooropa”
& “Pop” were clearly not “your father’s U2”. The quirkiness of those songs was
accompanied by a circus of a live show, during which they pretty much poked fun
at themselves. Commercially, there were
as many valleys as peaks, but they did succeed at getting the pretentiousness
monkey off their backs…and AB is regarded by many as one of their absolute best
albums.
It was those three experimental albums that allowed the
band to finally regain their soul, so to speak, on 2000’s “All That You Can’t
Leave Behind”. The overall sound was
again more organic with simpler arrangements on gospel-tinged songs about love
and loss. It was a welcome return to
glory and fans showed their delight by snatching up almost as many copies of it
as their previous two albums combined. They
would continue along that same path on the follow-up, 2004’s “How to Dismantle
an Atomic Bomb”, although they would let their post-punk roots show, at least
to a degree. Unfortunately, they would
be back in mad scientist mode again five years later with the disappointing “No
Line on the Horizon”.
That brings us to last year’s “Songs of Innocence”. One part post-punk, one part soul and one
part experimentation, the record that Rolling Stone called U2’s most complete
album is the first on which the band displays all three parts of their musical
psyche equally…and the results are fantastic.
Nowhere is this more evident than on the opening track “The Miracle (of
Joey Ramone). The song kicks off the
record with a grungy guitar riff reminiscent of HTDAAB’s “Vertigo”. But, whereas the band holds the pedal to the
metal throughout the latter, they wisely stop on a dime on the former for a
heartfelt chorus as powerful as that of their very first U.S. Top 40 hit thirty
years earlier.
“Every Breaking Wave” follows suit with a soulful verse
that builds to a powerful chorus. Bono’s
ragged delivery is perfectly juxtaposed against the slick keyboard riff that drives
that section of the song. It’s edgy,
passionate and, at the same time, innovative…plus, it’s damn catchy.
And it doesn’t end there – the band fires on ALL
cylinders on EVERY SINGLE SONG. There is
NO filler here. Somehow, this band that
has been around for almost 40 years manages to play ear candy like a punk band while
weaving in enough unexpected musical flourishes to sound as cutting edge as
anything on Top 40 radio…and all while Bono passionately wails lyrics that only
a starving 20-year-old living in his van should be able to write. It’s astonishing, really…but that wasn’t even
the true litmus test.
After listening to this album non-stop for 2 weeks, I was
ready to rank it comfortably behind “War” and “The Joshua Tree” as the band’s
third best…but then I did something that changed that. I went back and listened to their older stuff. That’s when I realized that my mind had been
playing tricks on me. Every time I
listened to SOI, I was reminded of U2’s earlier albums. Several songs on the album were very
reminiscent of TJT. However, when I went
back and listened to that album, I realized that the new songs are better. Take away the nostalgia of that classic album
and there’s really no comparison.
“California”, “Cedarwood Road”, “Raised by Wolves” and “Iris” (which
Bono wrote about his mother who died when he was 14) are actually better songs
than pretty much everything on TJT.
The same was true when I listened to “War”. Ever the contrarian, I had always insisted
that it, not TJT, was U2’s best album. I
stuck it in the CD player and listened from start to finish. It’s a great album. It’s one of their best…but it’s simply not
their best. “Volcano” and “This is Where
You Can Reach Me Now” do what it does better. Once again, I was astonished – just as astonished as you probably are right now.
Now, let me qualify what I’m saying before you call me an
idiot. I’m not saying that the 11 songs
on “Songs of Innocence” are U2’s best eleven songs and that every other U2 song
ranks somewhere behind them. What I’m
saying is that, as a whole, this album has everything that every other U2 album
has all packed into one album. If you
like young, wild, pissed-off U2, this is the album for you. If you like older, preachy, pretentious U2,
this is the album for you. If you like
old, crazy, weird U2, this is the album for you. It’s the all-purpose U2 album…if you’re a U2
fan. If you disagree, then there’s a
chance that you’re not really a U2 fan at all – you’re just a guy (or girl) who
likes some U2 songs. Some really OLD U2
songs.
So, let go of the past and give this “new” album a fair
shake. Don’t tell me you don’t have
it. I know you do. Every damn body in the world has it. U2 made sure of that.
By the way, I hope you enjoyed the videos I included in
this week’s blog. I felt that I needed
to feature every song on the album in order to state my case, so I literally
searched for hours to find a good visual representation of each song. Three of them were official videos produced
by the band and one was a live performance.
The other seven were fan-made.
Thanks to all of these filmmakers for demonstrating their passion for
this music by creating some amazing art.
I sorta feel the same way about Sting. Police had some good songs. Then Sting went a little funny in the head, musically and politically.
ReplyDeleteI guess maybe it gets a little boring being the biggest rock star in the world and they feel the need to "shake things up". Lol. Bruce Springsteen, Don Henley and Jackson Browne come to mind, as well, unfortunately. Luckily, U2 seems to be back on track, musically.
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