~~~***U2 line up New Album***~~~

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  • Bathgate66
    Bathgate66 Posts: 15,813
    October 13, 2006




    Without revealing a source, our friends at U2achtung.com are suggesting
    "Window In The Sky" will be the title of the new U2 song to be included
    on the upcoming U2 18 compilation next month. Innaresting....

    http://www.u2achtung.com/01/news/news.php?id=2492
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  • cool just got the live vertigo dvd
    its great
    Some people have religion I have Pearl Jam.


    no more shows
  • LedZepFan
    LedZepFan Posts: 1,009
    cool just got the live vertigo dvd
    its great


    I got that dvd last year when it came out...blew my mind

    I recently got the Zoo TV dvd...now thats some wacky shit lol

    I can't wait to hear this new song, that's a cool title as well
    I've faced it, a life wasted, and I'm never going back again.

    Some die just to live.
  • Bathgate66
    Bathgate66 Posts: 15,813
    @U2, October 16, 2006
    Teresa Cook

    It was recently announced in the U.K. press that U2 have left Island
    Records for Mercury. Fans probably don't follow the business side of
    U2 very closely. Let's face it, this stuff isn't very glamorous and
    can get confusing. So how did U2 get from Island to Mercury records?
    First, this change really only affects the relationship between U2 and
    Island records, their label for the past 27 years, in the U.K. In the
    U.S., U2 left Island for Interscope in 1998. Throughout the rest of
    the world, U2 is marketed and distributed by Universal Music Group,
    the parent company of Island, Interscope, and Mercury.

    How did U2 get from Island to Mercury? Let's look back at where this
    all started.

    In March 1980, U2 signed their first contract with Island Records man
    Nick Stewart in the ladies restroom at The Lyceum Theatre in central
    London. U2 have frequently said they owe their career to Island and
    that its founder, Chris Blackwell, was instrumental to their career.
    Paul McGuiness in U2 by U2 said "Chris Blackwell was very smart, very
    worldly, a great ally for U2. He picked up on the intelligence of the
    band, and the commitment they showed. He quotes back to me something I
    apparently said to him in those very early days: `We're not in the
    record business. We're in the U2 business, which is different.' And he
    agreed – he saw the bigger picture."

    In 1986 Island was facing bankruptcy, record sales were in a slump,
    and Blackwell had leveraged the company to finance a new film
    production and distribution company, Island Alive. U2 was finishing up
    work on The Joshua Tree when they were told Island was in big trouble
    and couldn't pay the band money already owed to them which, according
    to Bill Flanagan's U2 At The End Of The World, was $5 million dollars.
    After some savvy decision-making, U2 agreed to bail Island out. U2
    entered into a deal with Chris Blackwell, loaning additional cash
    beyond the amount that was already owed them. In return, he repaid U2
    by increasing their share of the royalties and by returning ownership
    of U2's master recordings to the band. Blackwell sold Island Records
    to PolyGram in 1989. Blackwell stayed on as CEO of PolyGram's Island
    Entertainment division through 1997. Some reports claim Blackwell
    resigned; others claim he was fired.

    In the fall of 1998, Seagram purchased PolyGram and merged it into
    Universal Music Group.

    The Best of 1980-1990 collection would be U2's last release on Island
    in the U.S. and was credited to "Island, just off the coast of
    Polygram." Just after the Best Of release, reports began to surface
    that U2 would move from Island to Interscope in the U.S. Universal
    Music Group was going through a significant amount of downsizing in an
    attempt to make the company the largest and leanest music conglomerate
    in the world. Heading up that reorganization, in part, was Interscope
    President Jimmy Iovine, who produced both Rattle and Hum and Under a
    Blood Red Sky. The L.A. Times reported, "The band has a great
    relationship with Jimmy, so it's a natural evolution for U2." Other
    reports indicated U2 wanted stronger marketing and promotion campaigns
    and felt Interscope would deliver a bigger push than Island. Though U2
    remained on Island records in the U.K. and Ireland, the first U.S.
    release on Interscope was U2's All That You Can't Leave Behind.
    However, some of the early pressings were credited to
    "Interscope/Island Records."

    After U2 moved from Island to Interscope, Universal Music Group put
    the Island brand in the control of three divisions: one in the U.K.,
    one in the U.S., and one in Germany. In each territory, these
    companies were merged under umbrella groups. In the U.K., Island and
    Mercury merged to become divisions of Island Mercury Group. In
    Germany, Island and Mercury merged to become divisions of Island
    Mercury Label Group. And in the U.S., Mercury dissolved, and Island
    and Def Jam Recordings merged to become divisions of Island Def Jam
    Music Group. Island as U2 knew it was no more.

    Which brings us up to date, October 2006, U2 switches labels in the
    U.K. from Island to Mercury. U2 will remain under the same umbrella,
    since both labels are owned by Universal Music Group. Early reports
    are claiming the reason U2 have made the move is so the band can
    continue to work with Jason Iley, the former general manager of Island
    Records U.K. Iley left his position at Island in May 2005 after he was
    appointed managing director at Mercury. Since then he's been promoted
    to president. A report in the October 8th edition of The Independent
    said, "Their closest ally at the label, the former general manager
    Jason Iley, was appointed managing director of Mercury Records last
    year, and the band have now followed him there." A similar report
    posted on Virgin.net said, "U2 are keen to continue working with Jason
    Iley, who switched from Island to Mercury to become their President
    earlier this year…this is thought to have motivated U2's decision."
    Over the course of their career, U2 have shown incredible loyalty to
    their colleagues and business associates and this would seem like
    another demonstration of their loyalty.

    U2's first release through Mercury is believed to be The Saints Are
    Coming, a benefit single recorded with Green Day.
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  • they know what's the best for them!

    keep on rockin' guys
    First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win. - Mahatma Gandhi
  • Bathgate66
    Bathgate66 Posts: 15,813
    Associated Press
    October 17, 2006

    Bono Testifies Against U2's Ex-Stylist

    DUBLIN, Ireland (October 17, 2006) -- Bono testified once again
    Tuesday that an ex-stylist for U2 stole and tried to sell band
    memorabilia, including his iconic Stetson cowboy hat from the cover
    of the "Rattle and Hum" album.

    Bono was testifying at the start of an Irish High Court appeal over
    the band's 2002 lawsuit against fashion consultant Lola Cashman, who
    insists she received a range of gifts while advising U2 during the
    group's "Joshua Tree" world tour in 1987-88.

    Bono, dressed in a chocolate brown suit, took off his rose-tinted
    sunglasses in the dock Tuesday as he explained his sense of betrayal
    over Cashman, whom he described as an eccentric pain in the neck.
    Bono said he had picked the Stetson, not Cashman.

    "It's our stuff, she has it, and a lot more beside. We want out stuff
    back. We want her to stop selling it," he said.

    A lower Irish District Court ruling last year rejected Cashman's
    defense and ordered her to return all the items to the band, whose
    net fortune is estimated in excess of $800 million. The items in
    dispute include hoop earrings, pants and a sweater worn by Bono and
    nearly 200 backstage photographs taken by Cashman.

    U2 sued Cashman after she tried to sell the clothes and photos at a
    London auction house in 2002. She further angered the band with her
    2004 book, "Inside the Zoo With U2: My Life With the World's Biggest
    Rock Band."

    During her 2005 testimony, Cashman claimed that Bono had handed over
    the Stetson and other items while dancing backstage in his underwear
    following a concert in Phoenix.

    © The Associated Press, 2006.
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  • Bathgate66
    Bathgate66 Posts: 15,813
    WOOD AMAZED BY 'UNREAL' BONO
    2006-10-19

    Even RACHEL WOOD was blown away when BONO made his cameo appearance in
    new movie ACROSS THE UNIVERSE, because the U2 singer acted nothing like
    a rock superstar.

    The 19-year-old plays a young woman swept along by the world-changing
    1960s and much of the movie is accompanied by famous BEATLES tracks,
    and a host of stars including JOE COCKER and EDDIE IZZARD make small
    appearances.

    But Wood was most taken with Bono, because she never thought he would
    be so friendly.

    She tells MTV, "(That day) was really unreal for all of us. We were
    very surprised by how down-to-earth he was.

    "He didn't go run back to his trailer between every take; he hung out
    and talked with everybody."
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  • tybird
    tybird Posts: 17,388
    When did U2 go into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame?? For some reason, I don't remember that ever happening??
    All the world will be your enemy, Prince with a thousand enemies, and whenever they catch you, they will kill you. But first they must catch you, digger, listener, runner, prince with the swift warning. Be cunning and full of tricks and your people shall never be destroyed.
  • Bathgate66
    Bathgate66 Posts: 15,813
    tybird wrote:
    When did U2 go into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame?? For some reason, I don't remember that ever happening??



    you're kidding, right ?



    :confused:



    heres you go : ( one of the best induction speeches, ever ) http://forums.pearljam.com/showpost.php?p=3359559&postcount=26
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  • tybird
    tybird Posts: 17,388
    Bathgate66 wrote:
    you're kidding, right ?



    :confused:



    heres you go : ( one of the best induction speeches, ever ) http://forums.pearljam.com/showpost.php?p=3359559&postcount=26
    I knew that I felt stupid asking it......I guess that I don't really pay attention to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.
    All the world will be your enemy, Prince with a thousand enemies, and whenever they catch you, they will kill you. But first they must catch you, digger, listener, runner, prince with the swift warning. Be cunning and full of tricks and your people shall never be destroyed.
  • Bathgate66
    Bathgate66 Posts: 15,813
    2005

    http://www.rockhall.com/hof/inductee.asp?id=2348

    Inductees: Bono (vocals; born May 10, 1960), The Edge (guitar; born August 8, 1961), Adam Clayton (bass; born March 13, 1960), Larry Mullen Jr. (drums; born October 31, 1961)

    From the beginning, U2 has been a band on a mission. With each album and concert, the Irish quartet has endeavored to create music of lasting worth and substance. At various points in their career U2 have been not only the most popular band in the world but also arguably the most important - although success in their own minds is purely conditional on the caliber of their work. “We had no interest in being the biggest if we weren’t the best,” guitarist Dave “The Edge” Evans told Rolling Stone in 2004. “That’s the only way being the biggest would mean anything.”

    U2’s best work - which includes War (1983), The Joshua Tree (1987), Achtung Baby (1991) and All That You Can’t Leave Behind (2000) - stand out as true classics in the rock canon. Bono’s high-profile work for causes like Third World debt relief and U2’s participation in such historic rock-for-charity events as Live Aid and Amnesty International’s Conspiracy of Hope tour in have made them something of a beacon for positive change in the world of music.

    Ultimately, what’s set U2 apart is the visionary passion of vocalist Paul “Bono” Hewson and the group’s music, which mixes rock’s visceral energy with artful atmospherics. U2 has been hugely popular in its first quarter century, yet they’ve remained a supergroup with an idealistic sense of purpose. Having risen to prominence in the early Eighties - a time when the iconic status of rock stars was routinely challenged by skeptical punks and New Wavers - U2 managed to become a stadium-filling phenomenon without sacrificing credibility.

    Moreover, they’ve been given to periodic reinvention, as evidenced by their passage from the politically themed anthems of War to the more ethereal musical landscapes of The Unforgettable Fire (1985), and from the earnest soul-searching of The Joshua Tree to its radical and irreverent successor, Achtung Baby. Underneath it all, they’re remained true believers. As Bono told USA Today in 2000, “There is a transcendence that I want from rock… I’m still drunk on the idea that rock and roll can be a force for change. We haven’t lost that idea.”

    That idea has been a motivating force from the outset. U2 formed in 1978 when drummer Larry Mullen posted a note on a bulletin board looking to form a band. The group members - Bono, The Edge, Mullen and bassist Adam Clayton - attended Mount Temple High School in Dublin, Ireland. They derived influence from the guitar-driven minimalism and do-it-yourself aesthetic of such punk-rock peers as the Ramones and Sex Pistols. Yet they also aspired to the more serious, message-laden music of songwriters like Pete Townshend and Bruce Springsteen. Early in 1981, with its debut album only months old, Bono confidently predicted a place for U2 in rock’s upper echelon. “Even at this stage, I do feel we are meant to be one of the great bands,” he told Rolling Stone in 1981. “There’s a certain spark, a certain chemistry, that was special about the Stones, the Who and the Beatles, and I think it’s also special about U2.”

    They debuted with a three-song EP, U2-3, in 1979 and built a word-of-mouth following in their Irish homeland as a live band, U2 signed with Island Records in 1980. Their debut album, Boy, included the popular track “I Will Follow,” the first of many U2 anthems. The basic elements of the U2 sound - The Edge’s jittery, effects-laden guitar; Bono’s soaring, unrestrained vocals; Clayton’s solid, anthemic bass lines; and Mullen’s offbeat, hypnotic drums - were already in place at this early juncture. Boy was produced by Steve Lillywhite, who would help shape the group’s unique sound on the next two albums as well. Experimental twists would become part of U2’s modus operandi, but that core structure has remained their sonic signature.

    U2’s moody second album, October, reflected the difficulty of reconciling their religious beliefs with their rising fortunes as rock stars. They even considered disbanding. In the end, U2 decided to put their collective voice to use raising consciousness. On War they focused their energy and honed their message, raging over the strife-torn modern world - specifically, the sectarian strife in their native Ireland - in such testaments as “Sunday Bloody Sunday” and “New Year’s Day.” War has been termed “a powerful fusion of politics and militant rock and roll” and even the band called it “a positive protest record.” Bono referred to “Sunday Bloody Sunday” as “a song of hope and a song of disgust,” and Mullen noted it was “the first time we ever really made a statement.”

    With this album, U2 vaulted into a class with the impassioned, topical likes of the Clash and Bruce Springsteen. “Sunday Bloody Sunday” gave U2 their first #1 hit in the U.K., and the album entered the U.K. charts at #1, appropriately enough, on St. Patrick’s Day. War reached #12 in the U.S. and was their first album to go platinum.

    U2 followed War with Under a Blood Red Sky, a live album recorded in Colorado, Boston and Germany. Between Bono’s onstage fervor and the band’s rousing majesty, U2 built up a monumental head of steam as a live act. Bono would wave a large white flag - symbolizing a flag “drained of all color” - during their show, symbolizing the “one world” concept he believed in and advocated. Under a Blood Red Sky, released as an album and video, consolidated U2’s strengths and closed a chapter on the remarkable first stage of their career.

    Their fourth studio album, The Unforgettable Fire (1984), saw U2 move toward a more ghostly, cinematic sound. The group selected Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois as producers, and the results were more abstract and experimental than previous albums. The key track was “Pride (In the Name of Love),” a pacifistic anthem inspired by the life of Martin Luther King, Jr. U2 toured heavily in its wake, headlining arenas and stadiums and performing one of the most memorable sets at Live Aid in July 1985.

    In March 1987, U2 released The Joshua Tree, an album that captivated, inspired and united the rock and roll audience like no other (save Bruce Springsteen’s Born in the U.S.A.) in the Eighties. Both thoughtful and powerful, it was preoccupied with spiritual survival in a barren, conflict-ridden age. Giving rise to a pair of #1 singles - “With or Without You” and “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For” - The Joshua Tree topped the charts for nine weeks. It went on to win a Grammy for Album of the Year, and Rolling Stone judged it the third best album of the Eighties. The Joshua Tree has sold more than 15 million copies worldwide and in 1995 qualified for diamond certification (10 million sold) in the U.S.

    The accompanying world tour gave rise to Rattle and Hum, a concert film and double album that mixed live and studio material. Among other things, the project revealed the group’s fondness for American roots music, as when they collaborated with blues guitarist B.B. King on “When Love Comes to Town.” Drafting on The Joshua Tree’s formidable coattails, Rattle and Hum also went to #1 (for six weeks) and spun off a pair of hit singles, “Desire” and “Angel of Harlem.”

    The Joshua Tree elevated U2 to superstar status but also provoked one of the most radical musical detours by a major rock band. At the end of the decade, Bono stated that U2 planned to “go away and dream it all up again.” True to his word, U2 came together in Berlin in late 1990 to record Achtung Baby, a brazenly experimental about-face that Bono has described as “the sound of us chopping down The Joshua Tree.” Triggering a creative renaissance, it marked U2’s effort to undercut its own sense of seriousness and joint the postmodern party. To a degree, they deliberately went from iconic to ironic (although “One” ranks with their most heartfelt songs). Coproducer Brian Eno referred to “the scope of its inspirations: psychedelia, glam, R&B and soul” and characterized it as “a long step taken with confidence.”

    Recorded in Berlin, Achtung Baby sold more than 10 million copies worldwide and set U2 on a course for the Nineties. It and the discs that followed - Zooropa (1993) and Pop (1997) - form a kind of triptych. The group embraced the messy state of the war-torn, media-saturated world with a grim sense of celebration, as Bono created a handful of devilish alter egos - including “The Fly” and “Mr. MacPhisto, the Last Rock Star” - for the stage. Zooropa, an adjunct and coda to Achtung Baby, was recorded in Dublin during a break between legs of the Zoo TV tour.

    On Pop, U2 delved into electronica - loops, samples, beats - without reservation. Some of that album’s material actually got worked up from jamming with DJs. Pop was the group’s most cutting-edge album to date. U2 were no longer “the world’s loudest folk band,” which is how Bono described the group’s Eighties persona in hindsight. Instead of mourning the ruins, they were now dancing in them.

    In the Nineties, U2’s live shows served as oversized spectacles. Their Zoo TV and PopMart tours were among the most ambitious ever undertaken. They played to more than five million people on the former outing alone. PopMart, which followed Pop’s release, satirized rampant consumerism with a set designed to look like a “giant, sci-fi disco supermarket.” A hundred-foot high golden arch, fifteen-foot mirror-ball lemon and twelve-foot stuffed olive were among the oversized stage props. The group and its 200-member crew dragged 1,200 tons of equipment from gig to gig. It was truly over the top, which was exactly the point. If Zoo TV was “the Sgt. Pepper of rock tours,” than PopMart was its gaudy Graceland.

    Not surprisingly, after spending most of a decade making their point - which might be described as "defeating the devil by singing his song” - U2 got back to basics. Their first album of the new millennium, All That You Can’t Leave Behind (2001), was a return to the classic U2 sound, warm and open-hearted in a way that recalled The Joshua Tree while at the same time streaked with the sort of textures and accents they’d mastered in their adventuresome Nineties spree. All That You Can’t Leave Behind topped the charts in 32 countries and won seven Grammys, including Song of the Year for “Beautiful Day.”

    Late in 2004 they continued on this path with How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb, which yielded the heady hit “Vertigo” and contained some of Bono’s most personal lyrics. In a sense, the album brought U2 full circle, returning them to the autobiography of Boy. Yet in the years between those albums they’d grown from teenagers to adults, inevitably losing friends and relatives along the way. Bono suggested that How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb album could have well been titled Man.

    While much had changed, important things remained the same: U2 comprised the same four musicians, still holding fast to principles and making inspirational music a quarter century after their humble beginnings in a Dublin high school.






    Copyright © 2005. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

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  • tybird
    tybird Posts: 17,388
    I actually feel better that it was just last year, and I did not know it.......I still wish that they or the record company would re-master the first four albums.....at least.
    All the world will be your enemy, Prince with a thousand enemies, and whenever they catch you, they will kill you. But first they must catch you, digger, listener, runner, prince with the swift warning. Be cunning and full of tricks and your people shall never be destroyed.
  • Bathgate66
    Bathgate66 Posts: 15,813
    BONO'S WIFE ALISON HOSTS CHARITY T-SHIRT LAUNCH

    19 OCTOBER 2006

    When it comes to fighting world poverty, Bono and his wife Ali Hewson
    make quite a team. The pair were in London this week to promote their
    fashion label's ONE t-shirts, profits of which will go to workers in
    the African country of Lesotho.

    The philanthropic U2 frontman, real name Paul David Hewson, was the
    picture of pride as he wrapped his arms around Ali who was hosting the
    launch party in exclusive department store Harvey Nichols. And the pair
    were in no shortage of homegrown and international celebrities to help
    highlight their cause.

    Heath Ledger and Michelle Williams were among the A-listers who had
    modelled the t-shirts for a series of black and white photos, while Sex
    And The City's Kim Cattrall joined former 007 heart-throb Pierce
    Brosnan and actress Patsy Kensit for Wednesday's star-studded soiree.

    The black and white t-shirts are made by Edun – the socially conscious
    clothing brand created by Ali, her rocker husband and New York designer
    Rogan Gregory – as part of the Make Poverty History campaign. They cost
    £28, £7 of which will go to the Apparel Lesotho Alliance To Fight Aids
    to provide education and medicines for factory workers and their
    families.
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  • Jammin909
    Jammin909 Posts: 888
    tybird wrote:
    I still wish that they or the record company would re-master the first four albums.....at least.

    Come on, it's U2. They will then re-remaster the remastered copies...

    (I am looking forward to the special 3x5 picture included with the limited edition re-remastered copy)
    The less you know, the more you believe.
  • Bathgate66
    Bathgate66 Posts: 15,813
    SECOND SINGLE: 'WINDOW ON THE SKY'

    October 20, 2006


    "Windows On The Sky" will be the second single on U2's upcoming U2 18
    Singles compilation which is due out next month. Confirmation comes
    from a promotional one-sheet which can be seen on U2Achtung.com. (use
    the link below) These promo sheets are sent out to record and retail
    stores to help the stores plan their order and promotional efforts for
    the release. The one-sheet also indicates that a video for "Window On
    The Sky" will be released later this month.

    see the promotional one-sheet at http://www.U2Achtung.com >>


    see the promotional one-sheet at U2Achtung.com >>

    http://www.u2achtung.com/01/news/actuimages/u218promo.jpg
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  • Bathgate66
    Bathgate66 Posts: 15,813
    SNEAK PEEK: 'THE SAINTS ARE COMING'
    October 23, 2006

    Thanks to our friends at U2tour.de for pointing out two brief (one
    minute) clips of the music video for "The Saints Are Coming" on
    U2.com. You can watch in either Quicktime or Windows Media.

    Quicktime: http://www.u2.com/video/media/q_H_U2GD_30.mov

    Windows Media: http://www.u2.com/video/media/w_H_U2GD_30.wmv
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  • Bathgate66
    Bathgate66 Posts: 15,813
    TMZ.com
    October 24, 2006

    ONE Issue Brings Stars Together

    ONE: The Campaign to Make Poverty History, is launching a new PSA to
    ask millions of American voters to help fight global AIDS and extreme
    poverty.

    The spot features Matt Damon (who also narrates), Julia Roberts,
    George Clooney, Don Cheadle, New England Patriots Quarterback Tom
    Brady, singer songwriter Toby Keith, Alfre Woodard, faith leaders
    Pastor Rick Warren and Bishop Charles E. Blake and Democratic and
    Republican Strategists Mike McCurry and Jack Oliver.

    "This is a first step in a long-term effort to start making the fight
    against global AIDS and extreme poverty part of the election
    conversation and Americans can be part of that by joining ONE.ORG,"
    Damon says.

    The ONE campaign is a growing grassroots movement of over 2.4 million
    people and 90 of the nation's leading relief, humanitarian and
    advocacy organizations (including DATA, CARE, Bread for the World,
    International Rescue Committee, Save the Children and Oxfam America)
    working together to fight the global emergency of AIDS and extreme
    poverty.

    This new ONE PSA premieres all across the Internet today including
    AOL.com and AOL Video, running through November 6.
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  • Bathgate66
    Bathgate66 Posts: 15,813
    No vertigo as U2 high rise plan is refused
    October 27, 2006

    ROCK group U2's apartment development seems unlikely to contribute to
    an outbreak of vertigo.

    Dublin City Council has dashed their dream of three 10 storey blocks
    worth €36m near the Ferryman pub at Sir John Rogerson's Quay in
    Dublin's south docklands.

    This is their own property and is not to be confused with the 35 storey
    tower, on the top of which they will have a new recording studio, that
    is being developed by the Dublin Docklands Development Authority at
    Britain Quay on Grand Canal Harbour. U2's own project, was to consist
    of three 10 storey blocks.

    Despite being only a third of the height of the U2 Tower, the council
    felt that U2's own development would be "visually obtrusive in the
    skyline location and would read as an excessively bulky, squat and
    visually inelegant response to the development of the site. The
    council's planners also felt that it would have a "significant negative
    impact on the amenity of potential residential occupiers and of
    adjoining properties."

    With views directly onto the River Liffey the cheapest two-bedroom
    apartments could have been expected to sell for over €500,000 while the
    three-bedroom penthouses could fetch well over €1m.

    Now the rock band could well decide to follow the route of an
    increasing number of developers and appeal the refusal to Bord
    Pleanala. On average the Bord gives the green light for as many as one
    in four appeals made by applicants who are refused by their local
    planners.

    Donal Buckley
    For the ones who had a notion, a notion deep inside
    That it ain't no sin to be glad you're alive
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  • Bathgate66
    Bathgate66 Posts: 15,813
    Bono and the Edge: Off the Record, Preview of New Series Hosted by Dave
    Stewart, Debuts Nov. 24, Exclusively on HBO
    Thursday October 26, 1:58 p.m. ET
    Show to Feature Top Music Stars Telling Their Stories in Intimate
    Conversations

    LOS ANGELES, Oct. 26 /PRNewswire/ -- HBO viewers can get a preview of
    the new late-night series hosted by Dave Stewart next month when BONO
    AND THE EDGE: OFF THE RECORD, spotlighting the singer and guitarist
    from U2, debuts FRIDAY, NOV. 24 (11:00 p.m.-midnight ET/PT). Featuring
    top music stars from a wide range of genres in intimate conversations,
    the show will reveal the stories behind their songs. The series will
    kick off its regular run in January.

    Other HBO playdates: Dec. 5 (9:00 p.m.) and 18 (10:15 p.m.).

    HBO2 playdates: Nov. 26 (11:30 p.m.) and 29 (10:30 p.m.), and Dec. 9
    (4:00 p.m.) and 13 (7:00 p.m.).

    Each edition of the new series will be shot before an audience of
    fellow musicians and fans, and spotlight performers from the worlds of
    rap, rock, soul, folk, punk, country and blues. Artists will be able to
    tell their stories in an uncensored environment, citing the songs and
    performers who influenced them on their journey, as well as breaking
    down their own songs, while drawing on music videos, concert footage
    and even home movies.

    Host Dave Stewart is one-half of Eurythmics, along with Annie Lennox;
    the duo's hits include "Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)," "Here Comes
    the Rain Again" and "Would I Lie to You?" In addition to writing
    numerous songs with Lennox, he has also written with Mick Jagger, Bono,
    Sinead O'Connor, Bryan Ferry and Jon Bon Jovi, among others. Stewart's
    producing credits include Jon Bon Jovi, Bob Dylan, Eurythmics, Aretha
    Franklin, Mick Jagger, Tom Petty and Ramones. As a performer, his
    latest project is the band Platinum Weird.

    One of the show's executive producers is Jimmy Iovine, who is chairman
    of Interscope Geffen A&M Records; among the company's artists are Dr.
    Dre, Gwen Stefani, U2, Eminem, Sting, Beck, 50 Cent, No Doubt, Mary J.
    Blige, Sheryl Crow and the Black Eyed Peas. As a producer, Iovine's
    credits include hit albums by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, U2,
    Eurythmics, the Pretenders, Stevie Nicks, Bob Seger and Patti Smith.

    Executive producer Howard Klein is an executive producer of "The
    Office" and was an executive producer of HBO's "Carnivale." Executive
    producer Jonathan Prince was the creator and an executive producer of
    the series "American Dreams."

    The executive producers of BONO AND THE EDGE: OFF THE RECORD are Jimmy
    Iovine, Gene Kirkwood, Howard Klein, Jonathan Prince and Dave Stewart;
    co-executive producers, Polly Anthony and Mark Farrell.

    ___________________
    @U2
    http://www.atu2.com
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  • Bathgate66
    Bathgate66 Posts: 15,813
    POTENTIAL 'U2 18' TRACKLISTS
    October 27, 2006


    Our friends at U2tour.de have done a little investigation and digging
    into the current "Hunt the Lyrics" game that U2.com is sponsoring, and
    based on the lyrics being used in the game, they believe the tracklist
    for U2 18 Singles will be:

    1. Beautiful Day
    2. I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For
    3. Pride
    4. With Or Without You
    5. Vertigo
    6. New Year's Day
    7. Mysterious Ways
    8. Stuck In A Moment You Can't Get Out Of
    9. Where The Streets Have No Name
    10. Sweetest Thing
    11. Sunday Bloody Sunday
    12. One
    13. Desire
    14. Walk On
    15. Elevation
    16. Sometimes You Can't Make It On Your Own
    17. The Saints Are Coming
    18. Window On The Sky

    It's important to note that this is not official, just an educated
    guess at this point. Meanwhile, UK retailer CD WOW has this partial
    track listing posted, which has one song not on the above list -- "I
    Will Follow."

    http://www8.cd-wow.com/detail_results.php?product_code=1047464

    If nothing else, all of the speculation should contribute to the
    ongoing debates about what should be on the album.

    read the story (in German) at U2tour.de >>

    http://www.u2tour.de/news/article3032.html
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