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No Line On The Horizon
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No Line On The Horizon
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MP3 Download, 27 Feb 2009
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Vinyl, 22 Feb. 2019
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Product details
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- Product Dimensions : 14.4 x 12.9 x 1.09 cm; 110 Grams
- Manufacturer : Island
- Item model number : 5261797
- Original Release Date : 2009
- Label : Island
- ASIN : B001O0EQ5U
- Number of discs : 1
- Best Sellers Rank: 11,442 in CDs & Vinyl (See Top 100 in CDs & Vinyl)
- Customer reviews:
Product description
Product Description
No Line On The Horizon is U2's twelfth studio album, and follows the massive success of 2004's How To Dismantle An Atomic Bomb. The first single from the album, "Get On Your Boots", may be an all-out rocker akin to previous successes like "Vertigo", but the remainder of the album sees the band diversifying in ways similar to their Zooropa days. It is inescapably a U2 album, though, so Bono's vocals still speak of injustices personal and global, and The Edge's guitar work continues to be both feathery and metallic in equal dose. As far as continuing the band's lengthy career goes, No Line On The Horizon is simultaneously a crowd-pleaser and musical step forward.
This standard CD version includes No Line On The Horizon in a jewel case, along with a 24 page booklet.
Review
Like all of U2's best work there's a schism at the heart of their 12th studio album. It's the polarity between the hedonistic and the profound; the thin line between the general and the particular: rock and a very hard place. Their very lucrative humanitarianism may stick in the craw of many, but this skill allows them to make important points about all our lives while never forgetting to move our collective booties.
Much of No Line On the Horizon examines the state of the planet from the viewpoint of victims and witnesses. White As Snow sets a traditional air beneath a tale of an Afghanistan where, ''only poppies laugh under a crescent moon''. World citizenry is reflected in uber-cool, William Gibson-style lyrics on Breathe (''16th of June, Chinese Stocks are going up, And I'm coming down with some new Asian virus''). Only in Unknown Caller's dreadful ''Force quit and move to trash'' lines does the hi-tech metaphor card get overplayed.
There's plenty to rejoice about here. Not only is old mucker Steve Lillywhite back at the desk on several tracks, resurrecting the days of War, but the Edge's guitar also returns to the glory days on the title track as well as the hilariously titled I'll Go Crazy If I Don't Go Crazy Tonight; with the echo pedal set to 11. Add to these the massed ''oh, ohs'', and this at least feels like a classic; even if a lack of obviously hummable tunes makes it more of a grower than an instant hit.
The symbiotic relationship with Brian Eno (and Daniel Lanois) seems to have reached the point of imperceptibility. From the musical box sprinkles on the chugging title track to the midway palate cleanser FEZ-Being Born's cut-up first half, the touch may be light but it's now as much a part of their sound as Larry's rattling toms or Adam's one-note runs.
Get On Your Boots sounds unnervingly like U2 doing a Muse impersonation. Not necessarily a bad thing but, as on Pop, it sounds odd when U2 sound like followers rather than leaders. But it would be unrealistic to expect a band at the wrong end of a 30-year career to be as lithe as they once were.
There are at least two classics here. The closing Cedars Of Lebanon is a beautifully weary tale told by a journalist in the Middle East; while conversely Stand Up Comedy is a rowdy, grand gesture urging you to ''stand up for love'' as only U2 can. It also contains one of Bono's greatest lines in "stop helping God across the road like an little old lady''.
It seems that faith is what still drives these men: the faith in music to convey an important message and faith in the power of faith itself. But overall No Line On The Horizon proves that U2 really still have faith in themselves. --Chris Jones
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TRACK LISTING
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
9. White As Snow
10. Breathe
11. Cedars Of Lebanon
I like it in many ways. Taken individually, a lot of the tracks are impressive. Despite many people appearing to disagree, “Unknown Caller” is a favourite of mine, and similarly, I enjoy the “Subterranean Homesick Blues” feel of “Get On Your Boots”. The title track is instantly accessible, as is “I’ll Go Crazy If I Don’t Go Crazy Tonight” and “Stand Up Comedy” has a killer riff. “Fez” is interesting with its echoes of David Bowie’s “Berlin” phase. “White As Snow” is rather beautiful. “Breathe” has a staccato feel and a nice keyboard/guitar interplay with a good hook chorussy bit. Bono does go on about a “Ju Ju Man” and Chinese stocks and shares and Asian viruses” in a paranoid Paul Simon-esque lyric though. I do like this one, however. “Cedars Of Lebanon” is one if those classic sparse bass and drum backed U2 slow burners to end things off, for the next four years. A very evocative song though.
I have to admit to enjoying it, surprisingly, when giving it my full attention. Although there is a “same-iness” to listening to it in full, the stodgy feel I mentioned earlier, there is a way it just sort of insinuates itself into your consciousness. Dear me, I am beginning to sound like Bono.
I guess my main point is that it is easy to dismiss these later period U2 albums as lazy product from multi-millionaires whose mojo left them long ago. Not so. Give it a chance, as I did, however late. It is a good album. Maybe in a few years, I’ll listen to “Songs Of Innocence”.
U2 at their best, plus a very clean pressing, is all any vinyl-head could ask for.
Regards Ian
FSK ab 0 freigeben.
I like it it was very good and so nice.
Thanks Amazon.
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