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No Line On The Horizon (Ltd Edition Book CD+DVD)
 
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No Line On The Horizon (Ltd Edition Book CD+DVD) [Box set, Limited Edition]

U2 Audio CD
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (198 customer reviews)
Price: £14.21 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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U2 formed in 1978 after Larry Mullen pinned a 'musicians wanted' ad to the notice board at Dublin's Temple Mount School. Adam Clayton had discovered rock'n'roll as a thirteen year old, buying his first acoustic guitar and then talking his parents into buying him a bass guitar. 'It just sounded good to me. Deep and fat and satisfying.'
From the beginning, U2 were marked out by their passion. "A band… Read more in Amazon's U2 Store

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No Line On The Horizon (Ltd Edition Book CD+DVD) + All That You Can't Leave Behind + How To Dismantle An Atomic Bomb
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Product details

  • Audio CD (2 Mar 2009)
  • Number of Discs: 2
  • Format: Box set, Limited Edition
  • Label: Mercury
  • ASIN: B001O5W6CK
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (198 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 56,735 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

1. No Line On The Horizon
2. Magnificent
3. Moment of Surrender
4. Unknown Caller
5. I'll Go Crazy If I Don't Go Crazy Tonight
6. Get On Your Boots
7. Stand Up Comedy
8. Fez Being Born
9. White As Snow
10. Breathe
11. Cedars Of Lebanon

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

If you don’t already know what to expect from U2’s twelfth studio album then you’re either a goldfish with Alzheimer’s or newborn, and if that’s the case then there are probably much better places for you to start than No Line On The Horizon. However, for the rest of us this is everything it should be, even if it’s nothing you wouldn’t expect. The lead in single "Get On Your Boots" might have forgotten to pack a chorus and instead crammed in a bewildering mash of Nancy Sinatra, Cameo’s "Word Up" and Led Zeppelin in an effort to reignite the pop art dervishes in them that time washed down the creek, but it does actually get more singularly feisty with every listen. "Stand Up Comedy" is equally absurd ("Stand" by REM/"Love Spreads" by The Stone Roses/generic Red Hot Chilli Peppers in a light funk sandwich), but the album’s not all about them trying to prove their creative audacity. The title track vibrates with the mild threat of modernity and a chest-beating, loud-hailer bravado, "Moment Of Surrender" allows Bono to shed some passion over the measured, subdued backdrop and the triple of "Unknown Caller", "I’ll Go Crazy If I Don’t Go Crazy Tonight" and "Magnificent" make no bones about being classic U2, ringing chimes reverberating from The Edge’s guitar like endlessly reproducing embryos under the microscope; the kind of stuff that professional obsessives The Killers would, you know, kill for.--James Berry

Product Description

U2 No Line On The Horizon (2009 UK Deluxe Box Edition 11-track CD album - Produced by Brian Eno Danny Lanois and Steve Lillywhite sessions for No Line On The Horizon began in Fez Morocco and continued at the bands Dublin studio New Yorks Platinum Sound Recording Studios and Londons Olympic Studios. This bespoke boxset comprises of the limited edition 11-track enhanced CD album featuring the single Get On Your Boots [presented in a digipak picture sleeve]; a Bonus DVD containing Anton Corbijns exclusive film Linear; a 64-page hardback book and a Fold-Out Poster!)

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Customer Reviews

198 Reviews
5 star:
 (89)
4 star:
 (45)
3 star:
 (27)
2 star:
 (18)
1 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (198 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

25 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars So close..., 8 Jun 2010
By 
Breavman "Chris" (Somewhere in Britain) - See all my reviews
This review is from: No Line On The Horizon (Audio CD)
This is coming at you from what you would call an old school, hardcore fan. I have followed these Fair City chancers around the globe and even lived in their home town for five years...rubbing shoulders with them from time to time whether it be at The Olympia, Patrick Guilbaud's or the late great Lillie's Bordello. So I do consider myself an authority and a keen watcher from afar. A real fan speaks truthfully with realism. Ya gotta see their bad and good. Too many starry eyed, born again christian Yank fans treat them like they do their own flag- with blind patriotism. No band always makes the right move, the best song, the best album. The bombast and the soundbites can wear thin across the years oh Cuban heeled one. Alas, I digress...the album in question.
As the title says- So close...yet so far. This could have been one of the greats. The atmosphere and cover art of No Line set us up for something deep and melancholic. The title track sent the hairs up on the back of my neck and I got very, very excited. Bono has to try just that little bit harder for the upper register these days, but he's still got it. (Please stop when you don't...do not do a Billy Idol or Bon Jovi. Not that they are in your league.) Magnificent is just that, trademark uplifting U2. Some might say, not this again...I say spot on. Moment of Surrender- just as beautiful. What you must understand here is they are setting a mood. A very good one. We are heading for Classic Album territory here. Unknown Caller...yes! Yes! Love the intro...build, build harmonies. Thank-you Eno! My god this is going to be up there with some of their very best...nooooo! The next track marks the demise, the near miss, the big mistake. You just had to try for the single didnt you boys. Larry why didnt you speak up, reign the B man in? Eno you knew better didnt you? You tried to warn them. And bloody 'Boots'. I can't quite put my finger on why this is so incredibly dire, so very crap...it just is. Trying too hard again lads...you were onto something superb and you wrecked our buzz. Stand up Comedy. Again more of the same. You are not the Stone Roses. Actually, it is Bono cramming far too many naff lyrics into a fairly good tune that ruins this one. We don't need to hear about your ego...we've been hit on the head with it for 30+ years! I know you love the sound of your own voice but stop ooohhingg over every bit of nice playing Edge hits! He must get so annoyed with you at times. Sigh. Fez, ok excellent right back on track. Beautiful song. We are now back on the original mood that you lads set. White as Snow. Not my favourite ballad...I just think you are losing touch with the lyrics a bit B. What are you trying to tell us? What is this storytelling? I am not feeling the honesty. Something feels funny. The weakest of the good tracks, but not horrible and at least you are still on the right vibe. Hell, it may grow on me. Breathe. Yes! Edge you are sublime, Bono spot on, A & L a sweet groove. Great song. I might have gone a bit more minor with the chorus after the tone you set and the lyrics there are a bit weak after the verses but I'll forgive you. Cedars. Nice music. Cotinuity of atmosphere. Bono where are you at? Is it just me? I am not feeling you. Too much money for too long? Is the view too gilded from San Remo? Is the mist too thick up Killiney Hill. Come back.
Ok. A critical review. I love you no less. I bought the special edition box set. I flew to Dublin to watch you at Croker. I am doing the back stage catering at Glasto for god's sake. (Bloody 50 year old rock stars and their back spasms!) You have been with me since I was a messed up teen...'Boy' spoke for me, to me. I have spent thousands on you so I have a right. You missed the mark and you were on the right track. It is no secret that you struggle with final track listings/first singles. If you had led with Magnificent and a different video...hindsight, eh? I am certain that their were a lot of arguments and struggle with this, (look how long it took) Eno should have had final say. Your George Martin for a reason.
So there you have it. In any other hands a solid four stars, because it is you boys I dock a star for those three middle songs and Bono's often vague, grasping, unsure and unusually insincere lyrics. Have you run out of imagery, clever couplets? Yes, there are few great words...'I was born to sing for you', thank-you, but too much didnt work.
Wow. If anyone actually reads all this they deserve a medal. Still the best band around, arguably the best ever and the greatest show on earth. Bring on the next one. Long may your voice last Bono, you aint getting any younger and sort your freakin' back out! I am going to be trudging in the mud at Glasto for no reason now...
Signed,
A true fan
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Too much makeup, 14 May 2010
This review is from: No Line On The Horizon (Audio CD)
Try as I might, I cant find any reason to listen to this again. Its had a few go's with healthy gaps inbetween to deliver some kind of sonic reasoning to my ears but it seems positively devoid of any musical and lyrical substance. I mean, Sexy Boots, and as a single!! Talk about an insult to my intelligence.

Its like they all met at the studio on a set date and crashed out an album. Then handed it to the producer hoping he could make it interesting. Whilst he's given it his best shot, he didn't have much to work with. Bonos lyrics have become too obtuse and try hard for my liking and the edge hasnt really brought any intersting material to the party either on this occasion. Leaving Larry and Adam to apply backbone to what was always destined to be a rather floppy animal.

In my opinion they need to put all the electronic gizmos in to the cupboard for a while and get back to basic songwriting again. And it wouldnt hurt if Bono could share a little soul rather than aim to be controversial or world savior.
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars None Too Many Clouds..., 9 April 2010
By 
N. Messenger "njmessy" (Hong Kong) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: No Line On The Horizon (Audio CD)
This is a really enjoyable album to listen to... and yes I am a U2 fan but seriously few bands these days (or at least the few I get the chance to listen to) put out records which incorporate such a diversity of sounds and moods among a handful of songs.
So just a few points, negative ones first.
The first track 'No Line On The Horizon' sounds like a song which should have found a home on a B-side rather than as an opener to a new album. It sounds so subdued, as grey as the album's cover art (could that be the intention?) It's been well over a year since the record's release and still this song fails to interest me a great deal.
'Moment Of Surrender'...I love the keyboards, the layers of sound here, a Radiohead-like tinkle starting it all off and also I love the big Edge guitar solo...but honestly the song itself?
It sounds like a return to 'If God Will Send His Angels' (from the otherwise great 'Pop' album) which is one of, if not the weakest ballad-type song U2 have ever recorded. And 'MOS' does not improve upon it at all (apart from aforementioned keyboardy bits and guitar adventure)! It does however sound like the perfect song for Bono to bring to some global event stage where he can be joined in the sing-along by the music world's nobility, all emoting for the salvation of each and every one of us. It is a song that does not know if it wants to be rock or soul or gospel. There are great songs that can pull off a mix of all three genres...alas this is not one of them.
Asides from these two I think the rest of the record is more or less top notch stuff, the highlight for me being 'Unknown Caller.'
I listened to this song three or four times before I even bothered to concentrate on the vocal at all. I was just hooked by the instrumentation, entranced by the looping guitar melody. Near the end of the song the guitar explodes out of this into quite an awesome solo. An epic and mesmerising piece of music; I think one of the most beautiful pieces U2 have ever released.
To follow this with 'I'll Go Crazy If I Don't Go Crazy Tonight', which is just quintessential, chiming, sugary U2 pop had me dancing around the house thinking that, 'Yeah, they are the greatest band in the world!'
And 'Magnificent'...what hilarious fun that is! It sounds just like the song that U2 would write if they were to parody U2. It is like a dose of U2-distillate!
OK, to bring this to a close: 'Fez' is a looser, floatier construction of a song and it makes you think that there really is a lot of Brian Eno floating around on this album isn't there? But good stuff nonetheless, a nice nod to the wonderful 'Zooropa.'
'Breathe'...I love the way Edge's guitar accelerates to the close of the solo but whenever I hear the chorus I always think of Oasis's 'Acquiesce'...does anyone else get this too?
And finally 'Cedars Of Lebanon' brings this album (and this review) to an end. There is some effective usage of samples on this track and I also like the return to the pattern of bleak, haunting songs closing U2 albums (think 'Love Is Blindness' on Achtung Baby', 'Wake Up Dead Man' on 'Pop')
Isn't it funny? Once you write one of these reviews you want to go off and listen to the thing reviewed don't you? Is that why we do it?
Bye for now.
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