Review: U2: No Line on the Horizon
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You can read my review of No Line on the Horizon at http://treblezine.com/reviews/3020-U2_No_Line_on_the_Horizon.html

U2
No Line on the Horizon
Iinterscope
2009
Can you believe that it's been 18 years since U2 released Achtung Baby? It seems that U2 have been overshadowed more by the mystique of that Baby than any other album in their recent canon. Achtung Baby was the album that Bono claimed was the sound of U2 chopping down the Joshua Tree. Yet U2 has seemingly been cursed creatively since then? The band has gone through a successful string of albums, sales wise, but something has been missing. What I've been craving from U2 is a return to their unique, unbridled devotion to transform the sound of popular music with their dynamic sound. Since then, U2 have written some terrific songs but Baby was the album that signaled a change for the band away from pop sensibilities into the experimental depths of a lyrical canvas filled with painful darkness void of true love. To me, U2's dramatic legend has been unfinished since the notes of "Love is Blindness" faded out on my favorite U2 album.
"I haven't been with a woman, it feels like years/ thought of you the whole time, your salty tears…" are the lyrics reflecting lyrics recalling the aches of Achtung you can hear in No Line on the Horizon's finale "Cedars of Lebanon." Even in this war torn epic, Bono has yet to give up his search for the light of amor: "They're not at the beginning but when your story ends…." It seems like U2 has left me hanging there, waiting for their story arc that started back in 1991 to have a fulfilling dénouement.
My Moment of Surrender occurred during the third song of New Line on the Horizon. My wish finally came true throughout the sound of this post modern gospel gem. With Bono's heartfelt vocal I heard the light. The first great song on the album was written not only by Bono, The Edge, Adam and Larry, but for the first time in their history, producers Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois get songwriting credits. You can hear it in the rays between rhythms. There's this new dimension to the U2 sound thanks to Eno and Lanois. It's subtle but you can feel it in the beats. It's in the cello in the mix below the organ and hand claps. And I can't forget Edge's bluesy guitar riff that lifts "Surrender" to a blissful conclusion.
There's a musical depth within the songs of Horizon, a maturity that's been missing from most of the last few pop sensible albums released by these Irish music pioneers. There's nothing wrong with a pop song like "Beautiful Day" or rocking out to "Vertigo." We dig a little of these styles but what made me a U2 devotee was their dive into substance-layered beauty within the canvas that we cherish in some of my favorites like "Running to Stand Still," "Love is Blindness" and "Stay (Far Away, So Close)." The classic dichotomy within U2's classic sound of taking complex themes with sonic simplicity is what made them one of the most innovative bands of our generation.
This is what I have rediscovered within U2 and the new post-modern songs of their No Line on the Horizon. Listen to the first single "Get On Your Boots." The song goes through so many changes rhythmically, something that The Beatles did so brilliantly in the sixties and Radiohead with "Paranoid Android." That's what makes "Boots" such a revolutionary punk song. They captured the punk spirit without imitating it like they did in "Vertigo." Not only do The Edge, Adam and Larry play incendiary rhythms but Bono's lyrics in "Boots" are… wait for it…legendary. "Boots" is a "Fly"-like song about love in this age of socio-political uncertainty. "You don't know how beautiful you are" is global call to arms for all of us let our hair down and feel sexy. Just remember when Bono sings "I don't wanna talk about wars between nations," it's a signal to turn down the rhetorical lights and feel the love again.
If Achtung Baby was the sound of the clock striking midnight of a broken affair, then Horizon is the dawning of a resurrected love—"It's not if I believe in love but if love believes in me/ oh believe in me." Those simple lyrics from "Moment of Surrender" reflect the essential theme of No Line on the Horizon. It's this transcendental exploration of the heart that U2 has been searching for since Achtung Baby. Songs like "Magnificent" with lyrics like "Only love can make such a mark and only love can heal such a scar" reflect U2 reflecting the lyrical antidote to those songs like "So Cruel" that ached with betrayal. Why did it take so long to get over the pain from those reflective melodies? The answer is in the lyrics to "I'll go Crazy if I Don't Go Crazy Tonight": "A change of heart comes slow…We're gonna make it all the way to the light."
Adding another layer to their lyrical heart are the beats in between these quixotic melodies. Horizon showcases the band expanding their rhythmic pallet with atmospheric soundscapes layered with the help of Eno and Lanois. You can feel Eno's experimental flourishes in "Moment of Surrender" and "Fez-Being Born." Lanois can be heard with his trademark guitar and tender productive tones in the very eloquent "White as Snow." Listen for both of their reflecting backing vocals harmonizing throughout the halls of these breathtaking horizons.
I am not trying to dismiss any of the albums that came between Achtung Baby and No Line on the Horizon. All That You Can't Leave Behind holds a personal place for me in my corazon. It came out when I first lived by myself in my first bachelor apartment in New Orleans. That was the soundtrack of my rebirth. But there's something about Baby that makes it my favorite U2 album and the record of theirs that I keep coming back to. It's the vivid sound and the timeless feeling within the heartbreak of Achtung that reigns supreme. But I've been waiting 18 years for the cure and finally Horizon has distinguished Baby's blues.
Those hits from Pop, Behind and the Bomb may have been memorable but to me they were lacking the emotional depth found within the confines of the beautiful melodies of No Line on the Horizon. Just like your favorite novel or a film you have to watch over and over again, Horizon calls for repeated re-visitations. For every listen you will discover something you may have missed your first spin, fans of Behind may notice similarities in the "Walk On"-esque guitar part in Horizon's "Unknown Caller." U2 have finally come full circle with an album worthy of their legacy. Get ready to surrender to beauty in U2's post-modern treasure that you will need to savor over and over again.
Adrian Ernesto Cepeda
03.04.2009







Comments (6)
amazing review... and i coudlnt agree with you more about "unbridled devotion to transform the sound of popular music with their dynamic sound" and how thats been kinda lacking during the hits they've put out the past couple of years. this is a bit of return to the old U2. magnificent and moment of surrender are incredible songs, but somethign is still missing on this album - a sense of connectivity/cohesiveness for one song to the other and just to how shitty everything in the world is. only moment of surrender does a sense of the shitty times come across in the music. great album, and i'd recommend to anyone, but somethings missing. U2 still have an epic monster in them it's just not this one.
There's a new one coming out next year. I heard that some of the best songs from the Horizon sessions are still in the can , so good that Bono said the next one due in 2010 already has a title and it's callef Songs of the Ascent. Calling it a more "meditative and reflective kind of work." In the realms of Miles Davis Kind of Blue. I'm counting the days.
awesome review!!!!
Wow, that was a phenomenal review! I've never been terribly into U2, but started getting into them more when HTDAAB came out. They really are one of the great acts of this generation as well as the last.
Later,
Fail...Burn
You clearly don't get "Beautiful Day."
Great review -- I like this new record, too. There are some outstanding songs.
For me, the strange thing about U2 albums is that I like them when they come out, but after a few months, they don't come out of the sleeve again. I don't know if they get overhyped and overplayed or I just want to move on. The exception is October -- I just love that record.