Tuesday, March 3, 2009

U2 Way

Manhattan street has a name: `U2 Way' celebrates Irish rockers

NEW YORK - This street does have a name — U2 Way.

To celebrate U2's weeklong gig on CBS' "Late Show With David Letterman," a block-long stretch of West 53rd Street was temporarily renamed after the veteran Irish rockers on Tuesday.

"Somewhere south of Duke Ellington Way and north of Joey Ramone Place we find ourselves," said lead singer Bono. "And we're the band where the streets have no name."

The four band members joined Mayor Michael Bloomberg and City Council Speaker Christine Quinn in unveiling the "U2 Way" street sign on Broadway across West 53rd Street from the Ed Sullivan Theater, where Letterman's show is taped.

Scores of fans cheered from behind police barricades as Bloomberg presented each U2 member with his own copy of the sign.

"Edge just said this is the first time he's been seen with a street sign and not been arrested," quipped Bono, referring to guitarist The Edge.

U2 is on "Letterman" all week to promote their new album, "No Line on the Horizon."

"The boys are in town for a weeklong stint with the king of late night, David Letterman," Bloomberg said. "And it's a historic event for late-night television right here in the capital of late-night television."

U2 has sold tens of millions of records, and Bono has become a leading crusader against poverty and disease in the developing world. Tuesday's event at least temporarily adds the band to a musical map that includes Duke Ellington Boulevard in Morningside Heights and Joey Ramone Place in the East Village.

Bloomberg thanked all the band members for their humanitarian work and added, "No wonder everyone in the city including me considers these four Dubliners honorary New Yorkers."

Bono, wearing his trademark wraparound glasses, was equal parts raffish rock star and policy wonk. He praised Bloomberg's substantial philanthropic efforts to improve public health.

"The Anopheles mosquito kills about 3,000 children every day, of malaria, and his work in Johns Hopkins down there is really important work in ridding the world of the Anopheles mosquito," the singer said.

Bloomberg has given tens of millions of dollars for medical research at The Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, his alma mater.

Band members posed for photos in the frigid sunshine and said they considered New York their second home.

"I was hoping for Larry Mullen Circle," said drummer Larry Mullen Jr. "But I'll do with U2 Way."

"Edge just said this is the first time he's been seen with a street sign and not been arrested," quipped Bono, referring to guitarist The Edge





Sunday, February 22, 2009

Here's the Video

Pretty cool video....kinda futuristic.... kinda interesting content!!


Monday, January 19, 2009

No Line On The Horizon
Hear their 1st single release for the album..."Get On Your Boots"!!

Go to:
http://goyb.u2.com/?utm_source=Publicaster&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=EMLU2COS_20090119_single_annoumcement_GetOnYourBoots

Here's the full tracklisting:

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

Sunday, December 21, 2008

'No Line on the Horizon'

24.11.2008
'Not Like Anything We've Done Before'

'It doesn’t sound like anything we’ve done before and it doesn’t really sound like anything that’s happening at the moment...' Edge has been speaking from the studio to Mojo Magazine about how the album is coming together.

18.12.2008
'No Line on the Horizon'

No Line On The Horizon, the new studio album from U2, will be released on Monday 2nd March 2009.

Written and recorded in various locations, No Line On The Horizon is the group’s 12th studio album and is their first release since the 9 million selling album How To Dismantle An Atomic Bomb, released in late 2004.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

A Morning Playlist

This morning over waffles, my ipod shuffled to a Coldplay song, and Jeffy asked if it was the same sad song we listened to the other day (a song on the radio). Apparently, any song that says, "hurt you" or has a slightly melancholy feel to it is a sad song, and Jeffy will have none of it.

So he asked for a "happy and exciting" song. Okey dokey.

First, I tried Mysterious Ways. At first it was a hit, but then, nope. That one says, "It's alright," perhaps implying that something seems wrong. So it's a sad song. Too bad. Such potential.

Next, I went to the old fall-back, Jeffy's favorite potty training song, Vertigo. He said that was great, except it wasn't exciting or happy, just a normal song. What the? I don't know what this kid wants of me! Plus, then we had to have all sorts of discussion about if he said "Jesus" or not in the song. I told him she was wearing "CHEESES" round her neck. In case she gets hungry, you know? I didn't feel like having the discussion about religion in rock songs . . . or on jewelry.

I browsed some more and found Trip Through Your Wires, which is one of my faves. Jeffy said it sounded like a cowboy song, which apparently is ok, but not quite exciting. Bono does do all sorts of whooping in it . . . oh, how I love whooping.

Then I tried I Will Follow, thinking he might think it was cool about running away and following and whatnot, but at that time, the kids got bored, finished with their waffles, and they left without a single word about my hard-chosen song for them.

So, I started thinking, what are some good kid-appealing U2 songs? I ought to make Jeffy a playlist. I doubt Love is Blindness will make the cut. Or pretty much anything from Pop. Any ideas?

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Monday, July 7, 2008

U2 on Cold Case

Does anyone watch Cold Case? I watch it now and then while exercising and whatnot. They have old murder cases that have yet to be solved from a different year each episode. To get you in the mood, they always play songs from that year, or at least that time period during the flashbacks. It's always fun to see how the music fits in with the story and the time. Pretty cool.

So, imagine my delight when hearing Beautiful Day during the opening scene of a murder case from 2002. Imagine my excitement when I realized that they were ONLY playing U2 songs throughout the entire episode! Then imagine my confusion when suddenly they were playing Window in the Skies . . . in 2002? Hmmm . . . I decided they cared more about following the story than the actual time period of the music this time. Or maybe they just think we're all dumb. Here are the songs I heard them play:

Beautiful Day
Window in the Skies
Bad
Running to Stand Still
MLK
Stuck in a Moment
With or Without You
Sometimes You Can't Make It On Your Own

Of course, the murder centered around drug addiction, and so we have here several songs that fit perfectly with that theme. So even though they used a span of over 20 years for their "period" music, at least it fit the storyline, which I hear is all the rage now for Cold Case. It sure made it fun for me!