Re: thoughts on u2


Robbie Robinson ([email protected])
Sat, 26 Dec 1998 22:45:24 -0800


> chris borman ([email protected])
>
> do you think the 'popmart' video was better than 'zoo tv'/why?
> what do you think u2's next album will sound like?

Well, here's one answer:

PLASTIC BONO BAND

Bono is the greatest rock'n'roo showman on earth.

U2
PopMart: Live from Mexico City

Doh. Just when we'd eased ourselves back into nodding appreciation
of Old U2, here comes a reminder that the New U2 are much better.
It's a concert video, but in U2's hands, such a mundane item is
transformed into an essential adjunct to the multimedia U2.com
experience.

It usually means a concert with some cameras at it. But U2 gigs
already have cameras at them. U2 gigs, that is, since Zoo TV in
1992, which, compared to the PopMart tour in 1997, was a doodle
on a napkin. This, as they use to say on Tiswas, is the stuff.

Some stadium bands (The Rolling Stones, Bon Jovi) tackle the form's
yawning void by having bouncy castles onstage and their lead
singers running from side to side for two hours like the cricketing
dad on The Fast Show. Not U2. PopMart - and whether you went or
not, you'll know the drill: half a McDonald's arch, big lemon, huge
cocktail stick, fuck-off olive - manages the deft trick of
involving the audience in its own spectacle. It's as if 70,000
Mexicans with the sleeves of their denim jackets rolled up have
come to the same diner.

This intelligently-choreographed video - shot by David Mallett at
the Foro Sol Autodromo, December 3, 1997 - captures all the songs
(24), costume-changes(three), lights(umpteen), and spectacle(one),
about which, ironically, there is nothing ironic: this is pure
rock'n'roll theatre.

Some late news just in: Bono is the star, always captivating with
his funny old gait - a wounded dog crossed with Robin Williams as
Popeye - and a master of ceremony, whether playing bull to Edge's
matador on a jetty or (yes!) getting a girl up onstage for Old U2
emotional relief As a nod to their own history, I Will Follow is
faithfully preserved, and Sunday Bloody Sunday acoustically revived.

Elsewhere, dressed like Elvis as a UN chemical weapons inspector,
U2 are what pop will be like in the future. If we're lucky.

***** (that's a big ol' five red star rating they gave it - the
highest possible)
by Andrew Collins
In the January 1999 issue of Q. That's a big ol' important British
music magazine ;-)

Bye, bye
Robbie

P.S. Oh yes, I did like the PopMart more because there was a lot
of seriously vulnerable emotional nakedness there without the
protective irony. I really like the irony of the Zoo TV show,
but I always tend to come down on the side of naked emotionalism:)
I also think the one huge screen was a better idea because it gave
them a really large canvas to work with and what was on that
canvas for two hours was a moving work of art that could almost
exist seperate from the concert. I could see a live album being put
out on DVD with what was on the big screen and just the songs.
It would take a little fine tuning and filling in some blank spots
when they had the screen off, but I think it would be possible.

As for what the next album will sound like, jeez, I doubt that U2
knows for sure yet. From every past report I've read, U2 goes where
the spirit leads them and it can change direction several times in
the making of an album :)

Robbie



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