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The Rev. Bono (A critic finally calls this phony out)
Chicago Sun-times ^ | May 9, 2005 | JIM DEROGATIS Pop Music Critic

Posted on 05/09/2005 10:15:56 AM PDT by Chi-townChief

Wearing a mock fascist uniform and goose-stepping around the oval catwalk jutting from the stage at the United Center on Saturday, the first of U2's four sold-out shows here, Bono repeated an odd little chant during an encore of "Zoo Station": "We put on a show / We do the business / But this is not / Show business."

Yes, it most certainly was, and it was every bit as phony, bombastic and manipulative as a Britney Spears concert, the Republican National Convention or a televangelist's miracle-working dog and pony show.

As a fan who's seen the group a dozen times and who ranks 1992's Zoo TV tour on the short list of the best concerts I've ever experienced, U2 has never seemed as pointlessly pretentious and preachy.

The group scrolled the text of the first few articles of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, adopted by the United Nations in 1948, over its giant video screens and encouraged concertgoers not to flick their lighters but to hold up their cell phones, then text-message their contact info to the band's hunger-relief charity program. This assumed, of course, that people had money left to donate after spending as much as $168 plus service fees for U2 concert tickets.

Bono did his famous crucifixion moves, as well as dropping to his knees and striking his familiar "hands bound above my head" pose. This time, he gave the latter a new twist, sporting a blindfold to evoke images of the prisoners at Abu Ghraib prison.

The 45-year-old front man's hubristic sins went on and on -- there was a facile routine about how Christianity, Judaism and Islam are all "true" (with Buddhism and other religions conspicuously absent from the list), speeches about how "we" can end poverty in Africa, and boasts about how world leaders take his calls. Still, while he was the most obnoxious presence, it would be wrong to single him out as the only offender.

Guitarist The Edge, bassist Adam Clayton and drummer Larry Mullen Jr. gave their silent approval while providing the music that served as background and afterthought for all of this speechifying, and they did so in a rote, autopilot fashion that created a disturbing contrast between the impassioned windbaggery and the passionless rock 'n' roll.

The songs from last year's "How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb" gained nothing and only seemed more contrived in concert. "Love and Peace or Else," which opened the show; "Yahweh," the penultimate track before the encore; "Sometimes You Can't Make It on Your Own," the song that pays homage to Bono's departed dad, and "Vertigo," the hit brought to you by Apple's iPod -- all were rote, leaden, formulaic imitations of sounds that U2 has done much, much better in the past.

This especially was evident as the new material was juxtaposed with undeniable classics such as "An Cat Dubh," "New Year's Day" and "One," which retained their inspired brilliance no matter how much pomposity surrounded them, providing the evening's few highlights. As for the nadir, it came midway through the two-hour set with an especially soggy four-song montage of "Sunday Bloody Sunday," "Bullet the Blue Sky," "The Hands That Built America" and "When Johnny Comes Marching Home."

If you missed the point, it was this: AMERICA'S WAR IN IRAQ IS BAD. But ever the politician averse to alienating any demographic, Bono, sporting a stars-and-stripes leather jacket as one of several costume changes, followed that none-too-subtle declaration by reminding us to "support the troops."

With the exception of its startlingly innovative Zoo TV tour and its "Achtung Baby"-era shift toward postmodern irony and fearless reinvention, this band always has had a problem with grandiose flag-waving -- literally. During my first U2 concert in 1981, I rolled my eyes when Bono hoisted a giant white banner. And as documented by the concert films "Live at Red Rocks" (1983) and "Rattle and Hum" (1989), speeches and chest-thumping theatrics always have been part of the show.

The difference is that the music was once fresh and powerful enough to make even the most over-the-top gestures seem justified. "We're greedy, and we want to push boundaries," Mullen told me in an interview two weeks ago, as if one justified the other. At this phase in U2's career, minus the boundary-pushing, it's hard to see past the greed.

The majority of people at the United Center, it should be noted, seemed thrilled with Saturday's performance. I'm not attempting to change their minds or invalidate their experience, but to pose the question of whether U2 lived up to its own potential. In the end, this is just one disappointed fan's review, and as stated in Article 19 of the U.N.'s Universal Declaration of Human Rights: "Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression."

U2 performs at the United Center again tonight, Tuesday and Thursday. On Saturday, its set began at 9 p.m., following a mediocre opening performance by the Kings of Leon, New Wave Southern rockers who simply aren't ready for the arenas.

Bono, ever the politician averse to alienating any demographic, criticized America's war in Iraq, then urged fans to "support the troops."

U2'S SATURDAY SET LIST

"Love and Peace or Else," "Vertigo," "Elevation," "An Cat Dubh," "Into the Heart," "City of Blinding Lights," "Beautiful Day," "Miracle Drug," "Sometimes You Can't Make It On Your Own," "New Year's Day," "Sunday Bloody Sunday" / "Bullet the Blue Sky" / "The Hands That Built America" / "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," "Running to Stand Still," "Bad," "Pride," "Where the Streets Have No Name," "One." Encores: "Zoo Station," "The Fly," "Mysterious Ways," "All Because of You," "Yahweh," "40."

mailto:jderogatis@suntimes.com


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Illinois
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To: My Favorite Headache


I wasn't being sarcastic. They still sell out Arenas and the live shows and dvds they release sell millions.


41 posted on 05/09/2005 8:09:12 PM PDT by College Repub
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To: Rummyfan

Yes.

Releases:
http://theskyiscrape.com/song_menu/albums.php?type_id=1

Sales:
http://www.red-mosquito.de/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=2096&highlight=ten++yeild+yield+jeremy+alive+daughter+dissident+binaural+yeild+yield+single+video+theory
(2nd or 3rd message)

They've sold nearly 600000 records this year and sold 1.2+ million live albums in 2003


42 posted on 05/09/2005 8:16:02 PM PDT by College Repub
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To: AppyPappy
Bono lost me when he traipsed around Africa with then Secretary of the Treasury, Paul O'Neil begging for American tax dollars to throw down the rat hole called Africa. They are a nation rich in natural resources and they piss them away with fascist dictators, constant civil war, radical Islam, communism, etc. etc. We could help Africa just as much by taking a billion dollars and setting it on fire. No amount of money will every make Africa prosper until they have free market capitalism and representative democratic republics across the continent. U2 has good music. I will never buy one of their albums because Bono is a socialist.
43 posted on 05/09/2005 8:18:45 PM PDT by SALChamps03
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To: College Repub

Their live shows are amazing and always unique. No elaborate set or lip synching or same setlist. Each show is 100% different from the last. They go through usually 100+ unique songs of theirs and about 20-45 covers per tour that they mix in. Here's the breakdown on the 2003 world tour

http://pjvault.com/stats2003.html

All shows (just about) sell out. See them sometime. They're amazing live.


44 posted on 05/09/2005 8:26:51 PM PDT by College Repub
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To: College Repub

You are high.

The last 3 Pearl Jam releases have barely gone Gold if even that. Riot Act was a complete commercial flop as was No Code and dozens of their live discs failed to even reach the 100,000 copy mark.

They suck and we are not talking about sucking slightly...we are talking porn star sucking here. They stand for lyrically everything FR members for the most part stand for and all Republicans in general. I find absolutely nothing inspiring about Eddie Vedder's whining like it is 1992 and he is on some kind of ego trip.

Try and throw those numbers at someone who is not informed. Pearl Jam might still sell out a few shows here and there but that is only because they have a cult following ala Rush who is another band that averages about 10,000 people per-show and sells about 4-500,000 albums each time they have a new one.

This millions crap is the mid-90s...and those days are LONG gone my friend.


45 posted on 05/09/2005 10:34:23 PM PDT by My Favorite Headache ( "I think she did too much coke, ahh you think so Doctor?")
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To: College Repub

I meant to add they stand AGAINST everything Freepers and Republicans stand for.

You can't name a Top 5 list of things Pearl Jam and Freepers have in common and are for politically.


46 posted on 05/09/2005 10:35:59 PM PDT by My Favorite Headache ( "I think she did too much coke, ahh you think so Doctor?")
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To: College Repub

Just went and checked and I am right...none of their studio albums have gone platinum in years. Live On 2 Legs was a double live cd set and each unit sold counts as 2 cd's sold. So that makes it technically that 500,000 copies of it were sold although it is certified as a million due to the 2 cd rule.

Binaural is Gold, Lost Dogs is Gold, Riot Act is Gold...their DVD's sell well..around 300,000 copies of Live At The Garden....again NOT millions.


47 posted on 05/09/2005 10:40:59 PM PDT by My Favorite Headache ( "I think she did too much coke, ahh you think so Doctor?")
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To: Billthedrill
I miss Da Ramones.

Gaba gaba hey!

(Elvis Costello & the Attractions, too)

48 posted on 05/09/2005 10:49:00 PM PDT by dread78645 (Sarcasm tags are for wusses.)
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To: Ragtop
I was at the concert. The reviewer left out an important point. Bono dedicated the song "Running to Stand Still" to the troops. There was some intended irony.
49 posted on 05/17/2005 8:29:18 AM PDT by bicyclejoe
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