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U2 - No Line On The Horizon

U2

No Line On The Horizon
[Interscope; 2009]

Posted by Sean Highkin on 03 March 2009

Links: U2 | Interscope | Lala album stream

This isn’t the first time U2 has been in a situation like this. Twice now have Bono and company found themselves the biggest band in the world as they hit a wall, and twice now have they broken out of such a slump with one of their very best albums. The electro-soul of the band’s 1991 high-water mark Achtung Baby was a much-needed rethink after the bloated, half-live soundtrack album Rattle and Hum found them drowning in their own popularity, unsure of where to turn. Nearly two decades later, U2’s twelfth studio album and first in five years, No Line on the Horizon, comes following two albums—2000’s All That You Can’t Leave Behind and 2004’s How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb—that saw the band playing it overly safe, with some decent songs but no real sense of urgency. And while No Line isn’t a radical stylistic reinvention like Achtung, it does show a band reenergized and back in control.

The difference between No Line on the Horizon and U2’s previous reinventions is that the big shifts here are not in style as much as substance. It’s virtually impossible at this point for U2 to sound like anyone but themselves, and No Line sounds like a textbook U2 record. The big departure from U2’s recent work here is in the quality of the songs. The 11 tracks the group have crafted here (with the aid of longtime collaborators Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois, the duo responsible for many of U2’s finest albums, including The Joshua Tree and Achtung Baby) are some of their prettiest (“White as Snow”), poppiest (“I’ll Go Crazy if I Don’t Go Crazy Tonight”), grungiest (“Get On Your Boots”), weirdest (“Fez—Being Born”), and most majestic (“Magnificent”). Melodically, No Line on the Horizon is U2’s most satisfying album since 1997’s underrated Pop. Stylistically, it is their most interesting since 1993’s even-more-underrated Zooropa. And song for song, it is U2’s strongest and most consistent set of material since Achtung Baby.

Most importantly, U2 sound like they’re actually enjoying themselves again. Bono sounds his loosest in two decades, flirting with a dangerous falsetto on “I’ll Go Crazy if I Don’t Go Crazy Tonight,” ranting about loose electricity and taking in strangers in an almost Dylanesque half-spoken stream of consciousness on “Breathe,” and pulling out some ‘80s-style woah-woah-woah’s on the title track. He turns in his most powerful vocal since “One” on the jaw-dropping, gospel-tinged seven-minute epic “Moment of Surrender.” The Edge takes a rare honest-to-goodness solo on No Line’s standout track, the atmospheric, strangely uplifting text-message rallying cry “Unknown Caller.” His recent filming session with Jimmy Page and Jack White (for the upcoming David Guggenheim film It Might Get Loud) echoes through “Stand Up Comedy,” the funkiest U2 song since “Mysterious Ways.”

What No Line on the Horizon lacks in radical experimentation it makes up for in sheer strength of melody. The album is loose but never tossed off, joyous but never gratuitously so. U2 sound on No Line like they believe in themselves again, and as a result it is that much easier to believe in them.


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3 Comments For This Post

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  1. Muldfeld Says:

    Very nicely written, Sean. I can’t wait to listen to the new album in about 2 weeks, when I’ve finished my paper and copies of the boxset finally come to Canada! I know I can trust your opinion for deriding the last 2 albums. NME gave “How To Dismantle an Atomic Bomb” 9/10, but the new album only 7/10, so I got worried.

  2. Cesar Says:

    Excellent review, excellent album, Muldfeld you can trust in Sean , this thing is much better than All that, and How to …, much much better, and respect to the NME review…, if they rated How to dismantle …, higher than No line, then you can’t trust in these moron people…, Instead, see these most accurate ratings:

    Q mag – 5 stars !
    Rolling Stone – 5 Stars
    Blender – 5 starts
    Mojo – 4 stars
    Uncut – 4 starts

  3. Jude Says:

    This review is so refreshing, if only for the fact that Sean Highkin doesn’t spend the first 10 paragraphs expounding his opinion on Bono’s personality or his extra-musical activities. So many U2 reviewers feel like they need to tell their audience where on the hipness scale they stand by opining on Bono’s supposed self-rightousness et al. It’s about the music and the songs.

    Though in other albums (Unforgettable Fire, Joshua Tree, AB) there are some songs much stronger than the strongest song on No Line, i have to say No Line is the only album i don’t skip any songs. They are ALL very very good and/or great. (Of course, this may change in the years to come…but right now, i can’t foresee how.)

1 Trackbacks For This Post

  1. onethirtybpm » Blog Archive » U2 Announce Dates for World Tour Says:

    [...] European and North American dates for their 2009 world tour in support of their new album, No Line on the Horizon. The tour, entitled “U2360″ because of its innovative 360-degree setup, will kick off [...]

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