Friday, April 10, 2009
Found:
Sasha Frere-Jones contemplates the timelessness of U2's music in this New Yorker post.
Some interesting bits:
"The band’s first (but not its sole) legacy is its sound, easily identified within a few bars: a high, chiming guitar figure, usually simple in structure but fleshed out by the ringing of open strings and the doubling effect of a delay unit; a charging, near-military beat and bass line stretched out with a little extra swing; and singing that is defiant and loud and slightly weird."
and:
"Yes, the band’s most famous member is the least technically gifted, and the most influential, the guitarist David Evans, a.k.a. the Edge, is the least likely to pipe up in public."
Her article further cements my belief that the band's detractors are wrong to judge “No Line on the Horizon” the way they are doing. Hmp.
(photo from TheNewYorker.com)
Labels:
music talk,
The New Yorker,
their posts,
U2
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