(This post was first published on the U2MoL Golb at 3rd of February, 2007.)
I saw the video of Window in the Sky at YouTube in the middle of December, and the video got me thinking. I was able to, not for the first time, and certainly not for the last time, express a feeling I have had for quite some years by now; I do not recognize U2 anymore. Window in the Sky gave a sample of a style of music that has almost nothing left of what I think characterized the U2 I have been so fascinated by for so many years — I bought the first album, Rattle and Hum, in 1989.
I am sitting and listening to So Cruel and it has quite some in common with Window in the Sky, e.g. Bono’s long oooh-sounds, but Window in the Sky, and How To Dismantle an Atomic Bomb before that, has a much smoother finnish, it seems to lack a certain spark, an internal anger, an involvement and a commitment. There is involvement in both HTDAAB and Window in the Sky, but the longing for actually be performing the song, the music, has diminished. I seriously doubt that I will buy the next album by U2 as I am seriously disappointed by HTDAAB (it is the record that I have played the least number of times — maybe not even 15 times!) and after have been listening to Window in the Sky am I just more convinced of which path I will walk. The path away from U2. I have bought every studio album U2 has made so far without hesitation and now I know that I will listen to the next album before I will consider whether to buy it or not. Considering what kind of website I have built, this is quite a step…
U2 is extremely good musicians, but I think that Bono has realised that he can make the world a better place much easier and with a much higher chance of succeeding by talking to the leaders of the world, instead of singing about it in front of thousands of fans (many of whom won’t get it anyway). Has he discovered that music cannot change the world? That music can make people aware of an injustice but to really make a difference you have to talk to the politicians?
Personally, I think that Pop belonged to the ”old” U2, where the music where to only thing that really mattered, that it was the vessel and the channel for any message they wanted to be communicated, that the music where the tool with which Earth would be moved — remember what Bono said during Popmart about their dread at the thought that the corporate monster might eat them? Popmart was about eating the monster before it could eat them, but I think that the monster devoured them (before or after Popmart, I do not know) and Bono has really not yet understood it. All That You Can’t Leave Behind marked a change in Bono’s approach to their music. Up until then, Bono had always been singing in a dialog with the listener; he had been aware of a listener and he has had a message for him or her, and where directing it toward the listener. But from All That You Can’t Leave Behind a change came, he is more singing to himself, he is looking down on the floor and hoping that someone will listen and hopefully hear that there is a message. The message is as strong as ever but the lyrics is not any longer the main tool for changing the world, it is the lobbing with politicians that really pays off. The new style of music is much more humble in one sense, it seems like they are asking are you listening to us?, maybe this humbleness was what they couldn’t leave behind?
All That You Can’t Leave Behind where a change in their music, very much like Achtung Baby, but this time I think it went for the worse. I still listen to U2′s music, all pre-Pop, but it becomes all the more infrequent. Why should Bono be reaching out to his fans at a concert and ask them to make a difference when he can speak to the world leaders at Davos and try to make them change the world — it is by our leaders where the real power lies. It doesn’t matter what you want to accomplish, sooner or later you have to go to the politicians and ask them to make some decision, and Bono has found out that the leaders now listens to him. I think that we will see Bono’s political message and U2′s music will start to drift apart, maybe we will see the same thing as happened with Midnight Oil where Garrett decided to leave the group to become a full time politician? The difference between U2 and Midnight Oil is that the latter worked on a local scale while U2 work on a global scale. I don’t think that Bono will join any political party, his cause is far too global for working for a single political party in one country. The music still fuels U2 and will continue to do so, but the anger that drove October and War, the social commentary of Achtung Baby and the pleading for understanding in Pop won’t come back in my opinion. It would be a much more laid back commentary in the future albums, where Bono comments and sings about his causes but does not use his music to influence the audience and make the audience to write to their politicians. The change is good for the AIDS-stricken in Africa, but not for us.
There are thousands of bands in the world, some of them ought to be good, and I can live without U2, Africa cannot.