Bono in LA Times...Top 10 Albums


[email protected]
Sun, 27 Sep 1998 15:13:22 EDT


This was in today's LA Times Calendar section, p. 70.

GIVE HIM BEATLES, BEE GEES AND PUBLIC ENEMY
Bono, U2

        The U2 singer limits his choices to bands and warns that his list is "far
from definitive."

1. The Punk Rock Album: (the Sex Pistols had the best singles; but I'll
choose) the Ramones' "Leave Home"
        "Edge and Larry were 14, Adam and myself were 16, when, after an argument
about the arrangement of our own songs, we conned an Irish national TV
producer that we had written 'Glad to See You' and 'I Remember You' [from that
album]...We got the TV show, switched the songs back to our own...Fame and
good fortune soon followed...viva la Ramone."

2. The Hip-Hop Album: Public Enemy's "Fear of a Black Planet"
        "Hip-hop is the most important movement in music since the Beatles...PE
guested with us in LA."

3. The Only-White-Folks-Doing-This category: the Beastie Boys' "Check Your
Head"
        "White rap's 'White Album'."

4. Great wordy album: Patti Smith Group's "Horses" and the Waterboys' "This is
the Sea"
        In rock, the word 'poet' gets thrown around a lot. Not here...I feel the
same about 'redemption'."

5. The Haircuts-So-Bad-They-Were-Ignored-for-Years category: the Bee Gees'
"Best of the Bee Gees"
        "Tunes and more tunes. It must have hurt to know you were that great and yet
not to be taken taken as seriously as say...progressive rock!"

6. The Seminal Album slot: The Pixies' "Doolittle"
        "Could have been 'The Velvet Underground' or the Buzzcocks' 'Another Music in
a Different Kitchen.'...I'll choose 'Doolittle,' a big influence on
Nirvana...the Pixies invented the high drama chorus-verse gear shift that was
such a hallmark of 'grunge.' Frank Black has a scream to wake the
dead...slashing songs, but not his wrist...paranoia without the self-pity.
And humor..."

7. Girls in Groups: "The Pretenders" and Hole's "Live Through This"
        "The Pretenders: tough-minded, tender-hearted. 'Brass in Pocket' was the
single of the year. Hole: advanced guitar sounds, a sense of pop to match her
man's but a better album than 'In Utero,' up there with 'Nevermind.' Both
women give a lesson in how to hold an electric guitar."

8. The Calls-to-Mind-a-Location Album: The Beach Boys' "Pet Sounds" and
R.E.M.'s "Automatic for the People"
        "Beach Boys: If I close my eyes, I can see Brian Wilson's sand pit, the West
Coast, the dad, the drugs, the genius. Joy is the hardest stuff to pull
off...in life, in art, in movies (Steven Spielburg), in music (Sly & the
Family Stone). The Beach Boys overcame the obstacle of major chords sounding
trite.
        "R.E.M.: Normally you can see the sun shining in their songs. I've never
been to Athens, Ga., but here it's raining. This blurred melancholia features
the greatest country crooner never to make a country record. Here R.E.M. are
a co-op, a four-legged table, a real band in that everyone's voice is heard
(this is more difficult than you think). R.E.M. have pulled off the
impossible, a giant group that doesn't appear so...Standout tunes."

9. The One-Person-Writes-the-Tune-but-It-Wouldn't-Be-the-Same-Without-the-Band
scenario: The Who's "Live at Leeds," the Smashing Pumpkins' "Mellon Collie
and the Infinite Sadness" and Oasis' "(What's the Story) Morning Glory?"

10. The Best-Pop-Group-in-the-World category: the Beatles' "White Album"
        "This category is opposed to the Best Rock Group category, which would have
to be the Clash's 'Give 'Em Enough Rope' (it's the only band U2 would not go
on after...) or the Rolling Stones' masterpiece 'Exile on Main Street.' The
Stones have the songs and were much better live, but in the studio...the
'White Album' is the one. I know it's all over the shop...It's a blueprint
for us at U2 HQ...experimental pop, metal soul, the blues. It's all there,
but it would mean nothing if you didn't care about the group and I guess I
still do."

"(P.S: If there was a 'black' album category, I would choose Nine Inch Nails'
'Pretty Hate Machine.' I know drama is achieved easily when painting in
black, and gothic is the flared trousers of the '90s, but something much more
extraordinary is going on here."

Hope you enjoyed that!

:), Liz



This archive was generated by hypermail 2.0b2 on Sun Sep 27 1998 - 12:15:05 PDT