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Those Numbers Mean Something
U2 begins their fourteenth album by counting to
fourteen in Spanish: Uno, Dos, Tres, Catorce!!
The numbers correspond to the U2
albums on which Steve Lillywhite worked as a
producer. And that's only one of the ways in which How to Dismantle
an Atomic Bomb symbolizes the completion of U2's stylistic
adventures and Bono's prodigal-son journey from innocence into darkness
and back again.
Granted, for the counting-theory
to make sense, you have to count U2's
Best-Of collections in the fourteen.
Otherwise, you'll be up all night arguing about what
else it might mean. (Many seem eager to claim that Bono just screwed up.
Which is entirely possible, but these recordings get checked by a lot of
ears before they're released, you know.)
But the line can indeed
represent other things. It wouldn’t be far off the mark to say
that the album starts out by taking the volume knob and turning it up,
all the way past ten to fourteen, thus one-upping the
old Spinal Tap joke. It would also make sense to say that
the jump from "tres" to "catorce" is an
appropriate intro to a song that’s about moving too fast and losing
balance in an off-kilter world.
Whatever the case, Bono’s count-off
launches an album that has U2 fans arguing even as they’re dancing
and playing air-guitar. You may love the album.
You may be disappointed. But there’s no
denying it’s one of the loudest, most forceful, and most radio-ready of
the band's sensational career.
Is it their best? Their
worst? A reinvention? A return to their roots? There
is no final answer. Most agree that it's on par with their best,
assuming that The Joshua Tree and Achtung Baby are the
peaks and that the 90s were an embarrassment. Personally, I'd
disagree--I would choose those two titles as the peaks and call the 90s
a fascination and courageous exploration, but that's a tangent. A
far more rewarding question is: What’s is How to
Dismantle an Atomic Bomb all about? What perspective do
Bono and Company have to share with us that
differs from previous records?
I’ve written this review twice. The first time came
after four listens to the album, all on my computer, or on Seattle radio
(which has been playing the whole album far too much for over a
week). It was, in general, a
complaint that U2 had lost their wanderlust. They'd
quit blazing new trails
for rock music. They now seemed content to merely sharpen their most popular
tools. But then I heard the album on “the big stereo” (an enthusiastic
plug here for the Sony Dream System) and it sounded like a completely
different record, meticulously produced to preserve layer upon layer of
pristinely recorded sound, capturing some of the band’s most vibrant,
energetic, and confident performances. And Bono's
lyrics, while occasionally clumsy and preposterous (as always), achieve
some powerful poetry, his metaphors intensely interconnected, so that the songs come
together as a cohesive vision. It may not be new territory, but they've
discovered some pretty impressive new peaks in the midst of familiar
scenery.
So I trashed the first review and started over.
The sound of U2 #14
How to Dismantle an Atomic
Bomb is, in short, nine songs in the classic U2 hit-single mode ...
grand, contagious, illuminated, sexy rock anthems that either start with
a bang and end with an emotional, euphoric finale, or start out
cautiously meditative and build to (of course) an explosive, euphoric finale.
The other two songs are more experimental: one, a brash and swaggering
rock ultimatum and the other a groovy Motown-tinted love song with
acoustic guitars and a heavy dose of Adam Clayton. But overall, it is,
as so many have said, U2 relying on their strengths, and sharpening the
best of what they've done in the past so that ... for the first time
ever, perhaps ... they've completed an album without any filler songs.
Pull three songs out of the middle, and they're every bit as strong as
the first three. On almost every previous record, you could bet that the
first four songs were the big ones, and the rest carried the subtitle
"and other stories." Here, every song is an event, everything worthy of
a place in their upcoming tour.
There's another difference: The
confidence with which they perform these songs. On Pop and
Zooropa and at least half of All That You Can't Leave Behind,
you can tell the songs were recorded while the ideas were still
young, still searching for their best manifestation. Later live
performances would show that the band had settled into them and trimmed
the fat. (For example, "Staring at the Sun" finally peaked as an
acoustic showstopper in the live shows.)On this album, it feels
like they've driven these songs several hundred miles already, and they
know how best to deliver them. Thus, they come out knowing the plays
they're going to run to get those touchdowns.
Yet another striking thing about
this album ... it's the first U2 album I can think of where the
strongest run of songs happen in the middle instead of at the beginning.
They've always seemed to come at you with the songs they feel are
strongest and then offer the more exploratory songs later. This time,
the thing just builds and builds.
Let's look at the songs, and
what's going on beyond their shiny, searing surfaces.
Eleven Songs
There are several recurring
themes that run through the album:
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The world is off-balance and
going wrong.
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The more you see of it, the
harder it is to see anything clearly, so hang on to the innocent
perspective of a child as long as you can.
-
True, faithful, unwavering
love ... not just between a man and a woman, but between a father and
a son, between a mentor and a child, between one nation and another
... is the only way to preserve innocence in the midst of it.
-
If we survive at all, it's
because of God's blessings.
-
So the proper response is to
share the blessings we've been given rather than hoarding them, to
kneel, and call on one of God's many sacred names, in what little time
we have left.
This is an older, wiser U2, the
grownup looking back at the boy and at the reckless adolescent, and
smiling sadly. At the same time, it's a band that knows their days are
numbered, that can see the end coming, and that are ready to start
framing their phrases as fatherly ... perhaps even grandfatherly
... advice.
VERTIGO
The first single, "Vertigo,"
places second only to "Elevation" as the most
unapologetically fun U2 song ever. It feels like Edge's guitar
dream come true, a riff as catchy as "The Fly" and "Mysterious Ways" yet
running at a hundred miles an hour. The song's so fast, it's like he's
daring Bono to keep up. And then it explodes into a chorus that sounds
like a tribute to the Ramones. Here, it's clear that Bono has
rediscovered the voice of his younger self, and he's hitting notes he
shouldn't be able to at his age.
It's about a state of mind in
which you're confused between serving your thoughts and your feelings.
The world is tilting, and "though a feeling is so much stronger than a
thought, your mind can wander." In what might be a literal jungle, but
sounds more like a nightclub, the singer is clinging to quiet reminders
of faith, like a crucifix necklace worn by a temptress. He
bemoans the things he wishes he didn't know, until, at last, he cries
out to his Everlasting Teacher to teach him how to kneel. And so the
framework for the whole album is set up. The prodigal son, U2's central
character through the narratives of Achtung Baby all the
way through Pop, is back, and he's at the end of his rope.
He knows who to call for help and he's ready to complete the journey.
MIRACLE DRUG
This song is the closest thing
to a "cookie-cutter U2 song" on the album, a meditative verse that
builds to a ramp-like bridge and a chorus that launches us into a huge,
roaring anthem. Larry pounds the drums like it's his last night on
earth, and Edge is in full Achtung mode here.
It's sung by someone, a
caregiver or a mother or a friend, who stands over a dying man calling
upon God and upon the tools God has given us ... reason and science ...
to find some way to save him. And yet, it is the observer who is changed
by the experience. He (or she) sees "the songs" in the dying person's
eyes, and swears off the dissatisfying pursuits of romantic love in
hopes of finding something more fulfilling, a "miracle drug" that just
may be an expression of faith in the resurrection, an affirmation of the
power of love.
Leave it to Bono to give us a
song of heroism and hope from trying to take a trip inside the head of
his paraplegic friend who reportedly inspired the song.
SOMETIMES YOU CAN’T MAKE IT ON YOUR
OWN
"Sometimes You Can't Make It On Your Own"
is cut from the same cloth as "One," a classic U2
power ballad that builds to "With or Without You" or "Kite"-level
intensity, blending all of the band's strengths into a monument to
Bono's relationship with his father, who died in 2001. It details many
of their intimate exchanges, the fights, the similarities, the need they
have to love each other even to the bitter end.
You can tell this is, to Bono,
one of the most important songs of his life. "It's you when I look in
the mirror ... Can you hear me when I sing? / You're the reason I sing /
You are the reason why I have the operas in me."
LOVE AND PEACE OR ELSE
In one of the album's two most
experimental tracks, "Love and Peace Or Else" distinguishes itself as a
song of rock-star swagger, with a guitar line as macho and arrogant and
obscenely brusque as anything they've ever played. It is, quite frankly,
hilarious. And with lyrics that fit the bill, Bono boils all of his
poetry down to big, heavy slogans, until the song collapses on itself at
the end with Bono repeating (somewhat unfortunately) "Where is the
love?"
It is, believe it or not, a song about the Israeli/Palestinian
conflicts and all of the age-old religious grudges that cause so many
killings. Hardly a new subject for U2, and expressed in the most
heavy-handed way they've ever served up. In its memorable,
glam-rock-stomp brashness, it earns its place on the album, but it's
disappointing that they didn't come up with a more satisfying
conclusion.
CITY OF BLINDING LIGHTS
This one's for those who love
the arena-rock glory of "Where the Streets Have No Name." Structured
with Edge's piano-note punctuation marks (the album's most annoying
motif), those accelerating guitars of The Unforgettable Fire
build and build until the song feels like a joy ride through New
York at night with the top down. The chorus was tailor-made for a crowd
of thousands to chant together: "OH. YOU. LOOK. SO. BEAUUUUUUTIFUL.
TONIIIIIIIGHT."
It's possible that this song
could even replace "Where the Streets Have No Name" in the set
list for the upcoming tour. Emotionally, it covers some of that
territory.
And yet there's some clever
wordplay: He's declaring the beauty of the city, even though its lights
are blinding and he's losing his own vision ("The more you see, the less
you know..."). And yet, the effects of aging haven't taken "the boy out
of this man." He's still curious, still ambitious, still full of dreams,
despite the cost. Where "Vertigo" showed him sick of the jungle, here he
seems to remember what he loves about it all.
ALL BECAUSE OF YOU
One of the album's highest
highlights, "All Because of You" may be the
most confidently performed rock single of U2's career. It has the
careening guitar motif of "Even Better Than The Real Thing," and messes
it up a bit with some raw Rolling Stones energy. And here comes Bono's
first song of adoration to God, one of several tracks that distinguish
this as the band's most blatantly religious album since October.
This is the song in which the
Prodigal Son seems to embrace his father at last. He gives credit for
anything good in his life to the one who blessed him with life. And in
my favorite lyrical trick on the album, (no, not the way Bono rhymes
"voice" with "tortoise"), Bono refers to God by the name the Almighty
gave himself ... "I AM." It's easy to miss that, but reading the lyrics,
you'll see how each verse builds to this chorus:
"All because of you
All because of you
All because of you
I am."
In one sense, he's saying
"Because of you, I (Bono) yam what I yam."
In another, he's saying,
"Because of you, God (I AM.)"
Take off your shoes, folks. He's on holy ground.
A MAN AND A
WOMAN
My personal
favorite song is the only one that relies on acoustic guitars. I like it
primarily because it's U2's boldest stylistic move on this record ...
it's a song that doesn't sound like U2. This bluesy tribute to true love
and marital fidelity, clearly a tribute to his wife Ali, shows Bono in
peak condition, and allows Adam Clayton and Larry Mullen, Jr. to take
the spotlight more prominently than they have in a while. It's a nice
break from the fire and intensity of the rest of the record. It also
employs some of Bono's most artful and moving lyrics about love ever.
CRUMBS FROM YOUR TABLE
"Crumbs from Your Table" should
be sung, or at least read, to every church in the world. It's from the
"Big, Soaring, Angst-Heavy Anthem" file, like "Acrobat" or "Kite," and
this time Bono's laying down the law for the people of God, asking them
to give up their brutal legalism ("With a mouthful of teeth, you ate all
your friends....") because they're alienating themselves from the people
they're supposed to serve. I couldn't help but think of how many
powerful talents have been driven from the church because they were
either exploited or condemned. I think of Bob Dylan and Sam Phillips.
But ultimately, it's Africa that's on Bono's mind. He wants "to
believe," and clearly he already believes in God, so here he must want
to believe in the power of the church. But he's waiting for evidence
that we ourselves will follow Christ's example and give some of the
riches he has given to us. "I'm waiting on the crumbs from your table."
A masterful, necessary, and
brutally honest song.
ONE STEP CLOSER
Returning again to his father's
deathbed, Bono reflects on those final steps, approaching the kingdom.
He feels his own age, as the future is "getting away from" him; "I can
see the taillights glowing ... Can you hear the drummer slowing?"
Please welcome Daniel Lanois.
Lanois rejoins the band he loves and provides some haunting pedal steel
effects, turning one of U2's simplest songs into a ghostly, hushed, and
haunting piece. Bono can write songs like this in his sleep, so it's not
a particularly impressive melody. But the lyrics are refined and the
production makes it all worthwhile. You've just got to turn it up to
really appreciate it.
ORIGINAL OF THE SPECIES
In one of the album's two slight
miscalculations, Bono turns in another Rolling Stones-style rocker that
strains his voice and our patience. At this point in the album
there have been so many euphoric highs, it's hard to feel thrilled about
another one, especially with the awkward "doo-doo, doo-doo, doo-doo"
section in the middle.
The song sees Bono taking the
pose of an older man, a counselor to a young woman (some say it's
dedicated to Edge's god-daughter), reminding her not to try to grow up
too fast, but to hang on to her innocence. I think the band
miscalculated the proper tone of this song. It should sound, well,
fatherly, not like a swaggering rock star flaunting his own attitude.
Sure, Edge is great, and on its own this song could be a radio single
highlight. But here, beauty would have been more effective than
intensity.
YAHWEH
A DJ on Seattle's alternative
rock station The End (107.7) introduced this song a week early by
saying, "I'm not sure what this song's really about. But I'm gonna play
it for you because it has a funny title: 'Yeah, way.' Bono, he's always
singing funny sounds and makin' things up. And so I guess he just called
the song, 'Yeah, way!'" That guy's probably still trying to pull his
foot out of his mouth somewhere.
"Yahweh" is a suitable
conclusion, if not quite as distinct as a song with this title should
be. Even more regrettably, it copies U2's own lyric pattern for "Do You
Feel Loved?" from Pop, with verses that run variations of
"Take (this/these) (heart/shirt/hands) ...." But it's still a profound,
moving, uplifting prayer, buoyed along on joyful guitars, and the
promise that after all of this darkness and pain, a new world, a new
life, a clean and redeemed new existence will be born.
And so we wrap up with a glimpse
of the coming redemption, and that element that is so hard to capture
musically: joy. We arrive at Bono's final appeal: That God cause our
hearts to break, because only through being broken will we come to know
Christ's brokenness and his love for us, and only through being humbled
will we be led to give of ourselves to those in need.
UNTIL NEXT TIME...
And where do we go from here?
Ahhh, why bother wondering. U2
have never given us reason to doubt their judgment, really. Sure, many
have questioned their judgment, but that was because they wanted the
band to stand still and put out replications of their earlier successes.
Thankfully, they refused, following the Spirit along mysterious ways,
into brave new worlds of sound and adventure and experimentation.
Without those journeys, those discoveries, their loyal and attentive
listeners would have missed out on glorious highs, and today we wouldn't
be hearing the confident, experienced band we've got on this album.
The fact that U2 is closing in on 30 years together is remarkable, and the fact that
they're as talented and as focused on excellence as ever sets them
apart from ... let's face it ... every other band on the planet and
perhaps in rock history. The Beatles couldn't last this long,
and they never connected with our hearts the way U2 does because they
never realized their need to appeal to a higher power for help. The
Rolling Stones stopped writing cutting-edge, relevant rock ages ago.
The Who ... where are they? R.E.M.'s Reveal was a revelation,
but their latest, Around the Sun, might as well be filed
under "Elevator Music." We'll see Stipe and Friends soon on a PBS
special for a nostalgic, middle-aged, sit-down crowd; they'll go the
way of Sting now. U2 have proven that great bands don't have to burn
out early (Nirvana), break up into solo careers (The Beatles), crumble
under unhealthy habits (The Rolling Stones) or fade away slowly (R.E.M.).
They've burned oh so brightly, and apparently, will continue to do so.
Until 2001, U2 took the road less traveled by. With All
That You Can't Leave Behind, and now again with
How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb, it feels like
they've changed their minds, that they're trying to turn back the
clock and take the road most predictable.
I prefer U2 the trailblazers.
But I'm more than content to accept whatever they choose to offer
at this point, because I trust them. And what we've got here is the best
rock and roll album of the year.
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