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Zooropa [VINYL]
 
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Zooropa [VINYL]

U2 Vinyl
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (26 customer reviews)

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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.'
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Product details

  • Vinyl (2 July 1993)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Island
  • ASIN: B00004TFOX
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  Audio Cassette  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (26 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 249,214 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

Zooropa is almost perverse in the way it subverts every expectation we've ever had of U2. The world's most serious rock band releases an album of advertising parodies, Prince imitations, girl group tributes, taunts of rich girls and straightforward love songs. The album opens with the title tune, a vision of a near-future Europe that finds its common culture in advertising slogans and synth programs. As Bob Dylan once did with "Like a Rolling Stone", U2 takes aim on "Daddy's Gonna Pay for Your Crashed Car" at a spoiled rich girl who discovers her life of privilege has sapped all her strength. Bono's vocal has a Dylanesque sneer, but the Edge's guitar and Mullen's percussion create the sounds of a snarled traffic jam and Clayton's in-your-face bass line throbs like a migraine headache. By contrast, "The First Time" is the most genuinely romantic track U2 has ever recorded. The most surprising and most pleasurable tracks on the album, though, are a pair of R&B infatuation numbers, "Babyface" and "Lemon". Nothing better serves overextended rock stars than a return to the music's origins at the sock hop. The results aren't always fully satisfying, but they do reveal an unglimpsed, unexpected side to one of the world's most celebrated, most ambitious pop acts. --Geoffrey Himes

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
26 of 30 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
Quite why this was so derided on its initial release (and still, to some extent, today!) is beyond me. This was U2 sounding like the biggest band in the world, eons away from the tired stadium act of the Rattle & Hum LP/concert-film/clothing-range/etc, which postured towards trad-Americana, but with none of the soul (instead, sounding hollow and conceited)... this, on the other hand, was U2 sounding fresh and exciting, referencing the music of the time, with acts like Disposable Heroes, the Happy Mondays and My Bloody Valentine, not to mention the edgy music being produced by their post-punk peers, with bands like Talk Talk and Depeche Mode both producing self-consciously weird albums with Laughing Stock and Violator, respectively.

So, we had U2 doing likewise with the landmark Achtung Baby, which remains their greatest album... though, for all intensive purposes, it was still the Joshua Tree, just with more layered and modernised production. Zooropa on the other hand is the first step towards the alien-U2 landscape that would be further developed on the Original Soundtracks album; a record so 'out-there' they had to release it under a different name (The Passengers). This was a band that had little in common with the group that had released such earnest, political, new-wave stuff like Bullet in the Blue Sky, I Will Follow and Sunday Bloody Sunday, & instead, produced music that was self-aware, ultra-post modern and seemed to be taking the p*ss out of the whole idea of U2 as a franchise ("...be all that you can be"). Understandably, the fans and critics of the time wrote the whole thing off as an arty-self-indulgent exercise, criticising U2's decision to experiment with dance rhythms and techno production and generally, missing the point of the whole endeavour, entirely.

It seems stupid to think of this now, with Zooropa prefiguring Radiohead's similarly elating trek into the realms of ambient, experimentation, with albums like Kid & Amnesiac... though, there too, we saw a public furore, all because music critics seem to think all modern rock bands should sound like Coldplay & Keane. Yawn!! Still, U2 were pushing the boundaries in 1993 and the world seemed a better place. Don't believe me? Just sit back and pop this record on and force yourself to put aside all reservations you have about U2 doing anything other than All That You Can't Leave Behind, & just listen. Then, when it's all over, go back to the start and listen again. This is intoxicating stuff, filled with tight rhythms, bold instrumentation and soaring lyrics. The production too, from Flood, Eno & the Edge is great, sounding positively futuristic for 1993 standards, and still holds up exceptionally well, over a decade on.

Listen to the opening of Zooropa to see what I mean; with the three producers creating a real Dark Side of the Moon moment, with distorted sound-scapes, white noise, breaks from commercials and a rising bass. It picks up where Achtung Baby left off, with emotional lyrics fusing with advertising slogans and really shows U2 as still, perhaps the most pretentious band in the world, but certainly having fun with it. Babyface continues this with the sound of the opening, as beautiful as any U2 ballad that came before, with Bono's vocals fitting the instrumentation perfectly, before the whole things shifts and pulsating keyboards and Adam Clayton's bass emerges, as the chorus "babyface, babyface, slow down child... let me untie your lace" becomes a sort of mantra. Numb was the single, and takes off around a dirty-guitar loop, with lots of synthesised back-beats devised by Eno going on around it. The Edge even raps over it, in a way that seems like a joke, until Bono's fat lady, soul-singer backing vocals come in... (suggesting Lou Reed's Satellite of Love, which is incidentally, back in the charts with a disco beat!).

Speaking of which, Lemon is post-industrial, loved-up U2 techno soul in all it's neon glory, with the band creating a really funky back-beat for Bono to sing nonsense lyrics over the top of. At almost seven minutes, it remains the album's centre piece, and is a great deal of fun if you can buy into Bono's disconcerting vocals, sounding almost like Van Morrisson on classic track, Linden Arden Stole the Highlights. It's all fairly throwaway and has a touch of the novelty about it, until the Edge and Eno come in on backing vocals and breathe the refrain "man paints a picture... a moving picture, through the light projected he can see himself up close" which is one of those beautiful, transcending musical moments that are so very rare in our days of homogenised pop. The next track, Stay (Faraway, So Close), was used in Wim Wenders' sequel to his angels film, the Wings of Desire, and sound absolutely stunning... up there with other great U2 ballads like With or Without You, One and If God Should Send his Angels. It's probably my favourite U2 song of all time, with Bono's most heartbreaking lyrics ("stay... with the demons that you drowned, stay... with the spirit that you found, stay... and the night would be enough...").

The following tracks all continue the same formula, being both edgy and experimental, but also conforming to that trademark U2 emotion and intensity. Daddy's Gonn'a Pay for Your Crashed Car finds the group sampling the fanfare from Lenin's Favourite Songs and a loop from MC900 ft Jesus, which is quite audacious, whilst The First Time is more of that bleak, almost spoken-word stuff. However, the band leave the most bizarre construction till last, with closing track The Wanderer, which could have been a gay disco anthem... which is shocking really, trying to imagine the punters at the G-A-Y shaking it to the dulcet tones of the late, great Johnny Cash! Still, that said, Bono's infamous backing-vocals don't help matters much, fusing, as they do, with an electronic-muzak take on an old country and western theme, which tows the line between sublime genius and high camp. It's all great fun though, and is followed by a brief silence, then a short burst of ambient white noise (very Motion Picture Soundtrack!), which brings the record to a close in a way that could just about be described as perfect.

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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
Zooropa, in my opinion, is an album that marks an interesting milestone in U2's career. It seems as though by 1993 they'd grown tired of their existing successful 'straight-rock' formula and wanted to experiment and diversify with some new and more modern and different ideas.

Zooropa is a mixture between conventional U2 instrumentals and dance/synth effects. With the exception of a few, more conventional, ballad style tracks that wouldn't have been out of place on Achtung Baby (Stay (Faraway, So Close!)), this album is essentially a chillout album complete with weird synthesized sounds and vocals.

This formula works but is so fundamentally different to U2 of old that it is hard to know quite how to react to it. My own impression is that though this album is very easy to listen to, it is better to listen to when you want music to chillout to. I can't see myself playing it as regularly as U2's earlier material and ATYCLB - dance music is not one of my favourite musical genres but it is that genre to which Zooropa essentially belongs.

Track highlights include Lemon, Dirty, and the two ballads of the album - the aforementioned Stay (Faraway, So Close!), and the haunting finale, The Wanderer.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
By RJS TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Audio CD
This is the only U2 album that I own and I sometimes wonder if Bono (a.k.a. God) and co. actually feature on it - it is so far removed from their over earnest and flag waving sound of the 80s and it even makes their reinvention on 'Achtung Baby' appear tame. For 51 minutes and 16 seconds, they sound like a band reborn. They loosen-up and God, for the most part, steps down from his pulpit and the result is a five star classic.

Originally conceived as a stop gap EP, the sessions went so well that this album resulted. Rush released with minimal fanfare in the summer of 1993 this is a U2 album for non U2 fans, even more so than the aforementioned 'Achtung Baby'. For the most part The Edge's traditional guitar sound takes a back seat and the band and their producers (Brian Eno and Mark "Flood" Ellis) plug in the synths and EXPERIMENT. Opener 'Zooropa' is an epic song of three parts - after a two minute faded-in intro, the songs kicks in at a mid tempo pace and then somersaults at the 4 minute mark and veers off in a totally different direction. God turns in a fine falsetto vocal delivery on 'Lemon' as the synths and keyboards are used to good effect with some cool beats - its U2, but not as you know them. Even the one song that sounds most like U2, 'Stay (Faraway, So Close!)', is ridiculously sublime and God sings it perfectly. Elsewhere there are plenty of electronic beats and some great bass (particularly on 'Some Days Are Better Than Others') and Johnny Cash puts in a solid vocal performance on album closer 'The Wanderer' (a song that U2 wrote and then realised that only Johnny Cash was qualified to sing it). Heady stuff indeed.

In summary this album was, by U2's standards, recorded at a rapid pace and probably for that reason alone it sounds like nothing they've recorded before or since. Musically, they followed a similar route on the follow-up 'Pop' but it lacked the originality and spontaneity found here. Recommended.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
The world's most depressing disco
I would agree with the reviewers here who suggest this is an album that never got it's due. Before cult bands like Wilco and Death Cab for Cutie were supposedly subverting... Read more
Published on 6 July 2009 by J. Jenkins
A New Direction...A Great Sound
Zooropa, alike Actung Baby, represented a new direction for U2 in my opinion. Much needed after Rattle and Hum which I felt portrayed that the band were trying to desperately hold... Read more
Published on 15 Jun 2009 by Mr. J. M. J. Milling
Excellent quality
The cd was delivered very quickly and was in excellent condition. I would highly recommend this seller.
Published on 28 Mar 2009 by H. Rooney
One of the best
Yes, many fans of the first hour don't like it. Yes, it's different from The Unforgettable Fire and, to a lesser extent, Achtung Baby. Read more
Published on 7 July 2008 by Sirio
The neglected gem of U2's career
Admitedly its pushing it a bit to say a band U2's size can have a neglected gem although due to the weight of the previous album I think Zooropa has a claim to this dubious title. Read more
Published on 30 Jun 2008 by R. Thomas
Imperfect but with some amazing highs
As the 90s progressed U2 continuously tried to experiment and change their style as much as possible, so much so that it's hard to believe that in just 10 short years they had gone... Read more
Published on 6 May 2008 by Shorty11857
U2 Zooropa
What an album - this is the album that got me into U2. Prior to release, Radio 1 played a number of tracks from the forthcoming album and the radical techno/synth slant left me... Read more
Published on 13 Dec 2007 by Mr. Harvie P. Gemmell
Chris' Zooropa Review
Hi, i'm new too Amazon, just bought "The Complete U2" on itunes so i'm writing reviews on all the U2 albums. Read more
Published on 5 Jun 2007 by Christopher Jackson
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i cant beleive that when i began discovering u2 that i totally neglected to even consider giving their 90s stuff a shot. Read more
Published on 16 May 2006 by Francesco Bonfanti
Album for the experimental man
This U2 album is in many ways a transitional record. U2 were in the middle of their Zoo TV tour when they went to dublin to write a short EP and came away with a full album.

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Published on 27 Jan 2006
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