No Line on the Horizon (CD) ~ U2 (Artist) Cover Art

No Line on the Horizon (CD)

By: U2 (Artist)


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Track Listing

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DISC 1 for No Line on the Horizon (CD) Album By U2 (Artist)
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
 


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Review

Rolling Stone (p.72) - 5 stars out of 5 -- "The Edge takes one of his few extended guitar solos at the end of 'Unknown Caller,' a straightforward, elegiac break with a worn, notched edge to his treble tone....'Cedars of Lebanon' ends the album much as 'The Wanderer' did on ZOOROPA, a triumph of bare minimums..."
Spin (p.73) - "U2 still inspire flashes of elation, awe, and yes, hope like no other rock band....The title-track opener masses the Edge's guitar and synth tracks into a dense whir and swirl amid gurning polyrhythms..."
Entertainment Weekly (pp.70-71) - "NO LINE ON THE HORIZOON is an eclectic and electrifying winner, one that speaks to the zeitgeist the way only U2 can and dare do....The record's instant classic is its penultimate track, 'Breathe,' a stomping, snarling rumination..." -- Grade: A-
Q (Magazine) (pp.94-95) - 5 stars out of 5 -- "The first part of NO LINE ON THE HORIZON contains the U2 of wide-open spaces, of sweeping mountain valleys, and of Edge's signature chiming guitar lines....The best U2 album since ACHTUNG BABY. With time, it may prove to be better still."
Mojo (Publisher) (p.96) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "The result is a collage of several kinds of classic U2 albums, one that has the beauty of their panoramic '80s Eno/Lanois recordings plus the synthetic experimentation and dalliance with pop merriment which revolutionized the band's modus operandi from ACHTUNG BABY onwards."
Blender (Magazine) (p.58) - 5 stars out of 5 -- "'Moment of Surrender' is the high point -- seven minutes of Bono in gospel mode, lost in the late-night city, questing for salvation and finding it in Adam Clayton's bass. The Edge fleshes out the yearning with some piercing crazy-diamond guitar."
Clash (magazine) (p.106) - "Drenched in The Edge's sky-scraping guitar solos, Bono's operatic vocals, and Eno and Lanois' ambient, textured production effects....A record that is trademark U2 -- playful, soulful, stadium-slaying and decidedly heavy at times."
Record Collector (magazine) (p.102) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "Smart one-liners pepper the album....Musically eclectic at every turn, the title track is swathed in the staccato guitar figures Franz Ferdinand have recently monopolised..."

Title Note

Includes 24 page booklet.

U2: The Edge (vocals, guitar, piano); Bono (vocals, guitar); Adam Clayton (bass guitar); Larry Mullen Jr. (drums, percussion).

Personnel: Danny Lanois (vocals, guitar); Brian Eno (vocals, synthesizer, programming, loops).

Additional personnel: Terry Lawless (piano, Fender Rhodes piano, keyboards).

Audio Mixers: Declan Gaffney; Danny Lanois; Richard Rainey; C.J Eiriksson; Carl Glanville; Cenzo Townshend.

Audio Remasterer: John Davis.

Recording information: Olympic Studios , London.

After spending the 1990s experimenting with electronic music and returning to arena-ready rock during the first few years of the 21st century, U2 stakes out territory somewhere between those two points on 2009's NO LINE ON THE HORIZON. Enlisting its go-to production trio of Brian Eno, Daniel Lanois, and Steve Lillywhite, the Irish quartet seems intent on crafting a quirkier companion piece to HOW TO DISMANTLE AN ATOMIC BOMB, and they succeed with restless tracks such as "Get on Your Boots," which sounds like "Vertigo" hijacked by T. Rex, and "Stand Up Comedy," a wiry number that lets the Edge cut loose with barbed guitar lines. Some of most striking songs on HORIZON are the ones that venture farthest from U2's comfort zone, as on the surprisingly weighty title track, a tune that counterbalances its nearly industrial heft with a high-pitched keyboard melody, and, of course, Bono's soaring vocals. Although HORIZON is willfully less accessible than BOMB or ALL THAT YOU CAN'T LEAVE BEHIND, it's no return to ZOOROPA-level obtuseness either, meaning that U2 fans will find plenty to admire here even if it doesn't hit them with the immediacy of the group's signature anthems.



Customer Reviews for "No Line on the Horizon (CD)" by U2 (Artist)

Average Customer Review
4 out of 5 stars ( [1 customer review

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
4 out of 5 stars Thankfully, no line on U2s "Horizon", February 23, 2009
By BF Azure
You could be forgiven for initially doubting U2s mettle behind their latest work, No Line on the Horizon, if based only off of lead single "Get On Your Boots". While as thick and gritty as any previous U2 lead, it does a miserable job of representing the collective it ushers in on U2s first effort since 2004s How to Dismantle An Atomic Bomb. Unlike its predecessor, this album is not immediately friendly, familiar, or easy to stomach. Indeed, its the challenge of stepping back into the ring for more that makes the sometimes heady lyrics presented here resonate. The opening stanzas of a stunning opener, "No Line on the Horizon", bring shadows of their most glorious moments, with Bono exploring more space vocally than he has in a decade and hitting notes not heard since he paraded around stadiums worldwide wearing white makeup. It is a glorious track, and one quickly swallowed by another steamroller of sound, "Magnificent", a furiously paced rocker that would be tragic to not see daylight as a single. U2 then go into the murky country of heartache and reflection with a combined 13 minutes of pure emotion. "Moment of Surrender" wanders over a sea of ambient loops and brings Bono back in grizzled, reflective form before a set of verses seeming more confessional than confrontational- a welcome return to the dark human profiles explored during some of the greatest moments of Achtung Baby and The Joshua Tree. Although "Unknown Caller" may seem a bit much on the surface, what with mentions of "rebooting" oneself and entering a password, it too is still pretty enough to be loved. While the tinkering and meticulous perfectionism of producer Brian Eno and his longtime U2 collaborator, co-producer, and musical ambassador Daniel Lanois seems to have paid immense dividends on establishing an ethereal and dramatic mood on the albums front half, the midway point serves as a welcome reprieve and obvious shift. Admittedly, the sound on songs such as "Ill Go Crazy If I Dont Go Crazy Tonight", "Get On Your Boots", and "Stand Up" is undoubtedly conventional- but the content is packaged with little surprises in a way not expected from the U2 of this decade. Bum notes that seem to fit. Searing guitar bits that almost seem accidental. Napoleon making a cameo in the lyrics. The band seemed to instinctively guess the listener would need a breather, and welcome the ironic Bono we all know and love (a hallmark of some and the best, and worst, U2 moments). It should be unsurprising, then, that the return of Enos input on "Fez/Bring Born" brings almost instant reminders of the forgotten innovations U2 architected on their oft-maligned Passengers Original Soundtracks Vol. I record. Breather over. Streaking in with an almost circus-like loop and excerpts from "Boots", it then shifts shape midway to a choppy, thumping rock number that again sees Bono stretching his place within the instrumentation. Followed by the expressive and delicate "White As Snow", it becomes obvious that No Line holds exactly the two elements missing from U2s successful yet largely forgettable previous two outings- depth and experimentation. The optimistic and valiant "Breathe", which sees enormous walls of sound carpeting Bonos rat-a-tat lyrical delivery, is initially trying, without question (considering mention of "juju men" and "cockatoos"). But somehow, the band arrives just in time to bring everything into a mellow fusion. It isnt always perfect, or smooth, but it succeeds magnificently in framing the pieces into a whole. Closed out by the dark, somewhat confusing "Cedars of Lebanon", featuring Bono as a man on his last legs in the middle of a war zone issuing prophecies he only wishes he had learned before the fatal blow ("be careful of your enemies, cos they will define you"), I was left to do something I havent done after previewing a record in years- think. Of all the themes U2 have explored in the finest moments of their expansive sonic pantheon: from innocence lost on Boy and October peace and inner passion on The Unforgettable Fire America, hope, and longing on The Joshua Tree and the frailty and absurdity between love and lust on Achtung Baby, the one theme seemingly left to chronicle was that of reconciliation and the human condition. Taken in that context, No Line is the perfect bookend- sophisticated, complicated, and above all else, dense in a way that is ambitious even by U2 standards. By refusing to settle, and by reclaiming the stance of (mostly) humble narrative storytellers instead of shouting into the megaphone as rocks resident chiefs, Bono and U2 have reminded us of what has kept them so enduring, and more importantly, relevant over the 30-plus years of their career. Hardly any band emerges as adventurous on their twelfth offering as their first, but somehow, its been achieved. And bested.

Related Products
"Passengers: Original Soundtracks Vol. I" "Achtung Baby" "The Joshua Tree" "The Unforgettable Fire" "U2: The Best Of, 1990-2000"




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