U2 show still echoes at Red Rocks

U2’s now-legendary Red Rocks show on June 5, 1983, had all the makings for a classic disaster.

The weather bordered on sleet and rain all day — hardly idyllic conditions for a video shoot that included countless cameras and three giant torches sitting atop the rocks.The promoters were in California until the afternoon of the show, and when they flew into a blustery Stapleton Airport, they called the mountain amphitheater’s backstage to see where the show had been moved.

But the band wasn’t about to move the concert.

“I asked them why they didn’t call me, and the people said, ‘The band wouldn’t let us, because they knew you’d want to move the show,’ ” retired promoter Barry Fey remembered.

“Then Paul McGuinness, their manager, got on the phone, and then Bono got on the phone, and then Chuck (Morris) and I headed home to change out of our sunny California gear into something much heavier before heading up to Red Rocks.”

As fans, local and abroad, mark the 25th anniversary of the legendary show — captured dramatically on video and record under the title “Under the Blood Red Sky” — record companies will also use the occasion as their opportunity to remaster the music on a CD (with a bonus disc), due in stores June 24, and finally release the remarkable performance on DVD, due in August.

The video, a venture among the band, their label and Feyline Concerts, captures the enduring image of U2’s early years. It was played heavily on MTV, and it’s been credited as the single piece of media that solidified U2’s reputation as an epic live band — and Red Rocks’ status as the world’s premiere outdoor amphitheater.

It was no accident that U2 chose Red Rocks as the location for their live video experiment, an outing that cost the band their life savings, they said at the time.

In the summer of 1981, U2 played two shows in Colorado, at Fort Collins’ Lincoln Center and Denver’s Rainbow Music Hall. The day after the Rainbow show, promoter Morris, working with Fey at the time, loaded the band in his Jeep for a field trip.

“I took them up to Red Rocks so they could see it,” Morris said. “I told them they were going to play there some day. But their second record wasn’t doing that well, even though it got great reviews, and they weren’t so sure. But I was. I drove them to the top. We walked down to the stage, and they were, like, ‘Oh my God, this is the greatest place we’ve ever seen.’ “

Years later, McGuinness was sitting in Fey’s office, setting up a partnership with the band, the promoter and the label, Island Records, to shoot a live video at Red Rocks. Everybody was happy.

Until the morning of the show, when the weather was so foul. A group of 15 or 20 hard-core fans sat in the front rows at Red Rocks under their ponchos, and around 10 or 11 a.m., Bono found his way to the catering room backstage, where he met Nancy May, who was running errands for Fey at the time.

“(Bono) was suddenly in the food room, and he said, ‘It’s really cold out there. Can we get these people some coffee and tea?’ I said sure, and we made it up, and then Bono went out and served the fans some coffee and tea. He was out there chatting over tea with 10 or 20 people, and we were like, ‘Wow.’ I’d never seen a rock star do that in all those years.”

The day progressed, and the weather worsened. Morris and Fey arrived, and Bono called a Denver radio station, telling his fans that the Red Rocks show would go on — but there would also be another indoor show the following night at the CU Field House in Boulder for those who didn’t want to brave the elements.

And after a short introduction from Fey, the show was on. Red Rocks, which holds nearly 10,000 people, was about half-full with 4,400 in attendance. The venue has never looked more mystical, alluring. Red Rocks was ready for its close-up.

“For years, when I told people in L.A. that I worked at Red Rocks, people would always say, ‘Did you see the U2 video?’ ” said May, now a production manager for the Denver Performing Arts Center. “When I went to Los Angeles to work for Dick Clark, everybody knew that video. And everybody knew Red Rocks because of that video.”

Looking back at the 25-year-old footage, it’s amazing how powerful it remains. The band couldn’t have purchased those kinds of special effects: The sleety mist softened all the edges, and the steam coming out of Bono’s mouth with each word gave the footage an otherworldly feel.

And they were just kids. The Edge still had hair, and you could hear his towering backup vocals waver as he nervously looked down at his guitar. Alternating between a little girl’s skip and a soldier’s march, Bono had never looked stronger. “This song is not a rebel song,” he said at one point, wearing a sleeveless shirt and looking like an ’80s movie star. “This song is ‘Sunday Bloody Sunday.’ ” The band’s 6-minute take on their beloved anthem was capped with Bono planting a white flag of truce in the crowd, and it’s one of the most iconic moments in rock history. And it was a Sunday.

“One person remarked that it was a religious experience, and it was,” said Greg Wigler, one of three professional photographers at the show. “The show was way beyond anything I’d seen before.”

Fans agreed. “Under a Blood Red Sky” is the all-time best-selling recording in the U.K. Fey jokes that he recouped his investment very quickly.

“But had it been another 78 degree day, it would have been just another concert,” Fey said. “Instead it was an amazing concert. You knew you were seeing some kind of history. I stood alone at the side of the stage, and my feet were locked. I couldn’t go anywhere.”

Morris calls it “one of my finest hours of promoting.”

“The way Bono played with the crowd, getting all into the audience, and the way the fire looked up on the sides with the rain coming down, and everyone was freezing, but they couldn’t care less. In my long career, nothing has come close to that.”

A popular rumor every other summer is that U2 is coming back to Red Rocks. But for 25 years now, that’s been nothing but a rumor.

“I can’t speak for the band on something like that,” Morris said. “Would I love it? Absolutely.”

Added Fey: “I asked them many years ago, ‘You wanna give Red Rocks another try?’ They said, ‘Absolutely not.’ And you can’t blame them. They couldn’t do anything that would be comparable to that. This is the 25th year, and I asked them if they wanted to do it again. But you can’t duplicate that. You’d be foolish to try and duplicate that. It would be like going to Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman and saying, ‘Hey, let’s shoot “Casablanca” over again.’ “

By Ricardo Baca, Denver Post Pop Music Critic

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Bill Carter and His New Book

Tonight I was fortunate enough to attend a book reading/signing with Miss Sarajevo director Bill Carter. U2 fans will remember him as the guy who organized the satellite link-ups from the Bosnian War to the Zoo TV tour, and the author of Fools Rush In, which recounts that part of his life. His new book, Red Summer, [...]

Covering U2

The David Cook “ISHFWILF” cover got me thinking - what do you think is the best U2 song covered by another musician? My vote - Mary J. Blige’s version of “One.” A close second is Cook’s cover. I feel that in both of these cases, the cover version matched, if not surpassed, Bono’s vocals on [...]

Looking for Photos: 1990 and 1991

Just received an email from Sarah at Omnibus. She tells me they’re a bit short on photos from 1990 and 1991 for U2 - A Diary.

Do you have any good ones? If so, please contact me right away!

Thanks!

Penn (with Bono) brings Australian aid film to Cannes

American Idol Final - U2 Connection

My local FOX affiliate reported last night that finalist David Cook will perform “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For” during tonight’s competition. This marks the second time a song Bono wrote has been used on the show. Last year, “American Prayer” was performed during the Idol Gives Back episode. If you’re wondering how U2 [...]

Becks to join Bono on expedition up mount Kilimanjaro

ANI,

Soccer star David Beckham is ready to scale new heights by trekking up the highest peak in Africa, to help raise funds for childrens charity Unicef.

The 33-year-old has been asked by U2 front man Bono to join him on an expedition up Mount Kilimanjaro, and despite his busy schedule Becks is absolutely set on making the climb.

According to a source, the climb would be something outside of Becks normal comfort zone, but the footballer is determined to make the climb up the 19,340 ft. snow-capped peak.

He was a bit uncertain at first but he found out, like many celebrities before him, that Bono can be very persuasive, The Sun quoted the source as saying.

No date has been set as yet because David is very busy with his LA Galaxy commitments.

There is also the insurance situation to iron out but he is absolutely set on doing it, the source added.

Kilimanjaro is a volcanic peak in northeast Tanzania, and it will take 48-year-old Bono, ex-Man Utd hero Becks and West Ham keeper Robert Green, six days to scale it.

Beckham is meanwhile developing a role as a charity figurehead after going to Sierra Leone as a Unicef ambassador in January.

© 2008 Asian News International.

Bono asks Beckham to climb Mount Kilimanjaro

David Beckham is set to climb Mount Kilimanjaro.

The soccer star decided to undertake the gruelling six day climb to raise money for children’s charity Unicef after being asked by U2 frontman Bono.

A source close to the LA Galaxy player told Britain’s The Sun newspaper: “The 19,340ft peak is a bit outside of David’s normal comfort zone but he is absolutely set on making the climb.

“He was a bit uncertain at first but he found out, like many celebrities before him, that Bono can be very persuasive.

“No date has been fixed yet because David is very busy with his LA Galaxy commitments   but he is absolutely set on doing it.”

The 33-year-old football hero could also be joined by another British soccer star, West Ham goalkeeper Robert Green, as he climbs Africa’s highest peak in north-east Tanzania.

David previously teamed up with Bono at the Live 8 concert in 2005 when he introduced British singer Robbie Williams.

- BANG! SHOWBIZ

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U2 move album sessions to France

Eze, FranceU2 soundman Joe O’Herlihy has revealed that following a stint in
Dublin’s Windmill Lane Studios, the band are set to do some warm
weather recording overseas.

“I’m heading out to France to begin working with them on it,” Joe
tells hotpress.com. “They decided they needed a few rays while they
were working on the new songs. But things are in full swing working
towards a new album. We’re hoping to have something in the can come
September/October. We’ll know in the next couple of months how things
shape up but that’s what they’re aiming for. All things being equal
they will more than likely tour in 2009. They love it. It’s their life
and it’s what they do.”

Joe has more to say about U2, The Undertones and his beloved Cork in
the next issue of Hot Press, out on Thursday.

- Hot Press

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Bono Reads Poetry … When?

This isn’t in the book. (sigh) Anyone have a clue when/where this was recorded? (Warning: F-bomb early on)

The hair looks like Elevation-era Bono to me. What’s that logo in the upper right? RAI — that’s Italian TV, right?

Any clues greatly appreciated!

(Found via Dave)

Ali Hewson: ethics girl

Not for Ali Hewson the traditional rock chick’s pursuits of shopping and partying. Bono’s wife is far too busy raising a family and worrying about saving the world. Could she also be an Irish president-in-waiting, asks Justine Picardie

There was a time when one might have expected a meeting with a rock star’s wife to be attended by a certain amount of mayhem - temper tantrums and trashed hotel rooms, perhaps, or at the very least a retinue including a drug dealer, masseuse, hair stylist and personal astrologer.

But the softly spoken 47-year-old woman sitting opposite me in a suite in Claridge’s is anything but the cartoon version of a hell-raising, hard-drinking rock chick; she is wearing a black calf-length Comme des Garçons skirt with a Victorian bell-sleeved blouse; raven hair neatly brushed, porcelain skin unadorned by make-up.

She is, in fact, very much her own woman - Ali Hewson rather than Mrs Bono - and as such it is not wifely duties that have brought her to London today, but a meeting with her business associates in Nude, a thoroughly modern, impeccably ethical skincare brand. And, as befits her role as a long-term environmental campaigner, she has travelled here from her home in Dublin not by private jet but by scheduled airline, and she won’t be partying in the suite tonight, but returning in time to see her four children before they go to bed this evening.

When I arrive she is concluding a conversation with two of the aforementioned business associates - Bryan Meehan, the Irish entrepreneur who set up Fresh & Wild (and is therefore a major player in the green business world), and Julietta Dexter, the founder of the Communications Store, one of this country’s most effective and influential PR companies. They make a formidable trio (backed up by Christy Turlington, who also has a say in the company, having tested each and every one of the Nude products) and, as a result, the range has none of the hippy-dippiness that has sometimes been an ingredient in organic skincare.

But, as Hewson makes clear, Nude lives up to its green promises, with recycled (and recyclable) pots and biodegradable packaging, right down to the non-toxic, water-soluble inks. ‘We have to maintain the integrity of the brand,’ she says. ‘That is the first requirement.’ Meehan nods his head. ‘It was Ali who insisted on the packaging,’ he says. ‘We could have done it cheaper, but it had to be distinctive.’

Spend a little time in her company, and you begin to realise that Ali Hewson has a quietly distinctive way of getting things done, not only with Nude, which was launched last year, but also its sister company, Edun, an ethical clothing company established in 2005 that has been at the forefront of bringing Fairtrade into fashion. Thus, for all the gentleness of her demeanour, Hewson is also a force to be reckoned with, possessing the strength of character that has doubtless played a part in the success of her marriage to one of the most famous men on the planet.

They are generally regarded as having an unusually stable relationship - surviving an industry notorious for wreaking havoc on marital life - that has remained rock-solid for over three decades, since they met at Mount Temple school in Dublin, when Ali was 15, and Bono (who had already shed his real name, Paul Hewson) just a year older. ‘He was my first real boyfriend,’ she says, and when I ask her if she ever wanted to go out with anyone else she laughs and shakes her head. ‘He’s enough man for any woman.’

Clearly, U2 was part of their lives from the very start. ‘It was 1976 that we got together - the same year that the band formed. I saw their first gig, in our school gym.’ By 1982, when the couple married, Bono was already a fledgling rock star, with a touring schedule that kept him away for months at a time; a pattern that continued after the birth of their four children, as he conquered the globe, while she stayed at home.

‘There is something to be said for those periods apart,’ she says. ‘It’s a great way not to take someone for granted. Mind you, according to him, when he gets home after being on tour I just keep trying to tidy him up. When he climbs up on the kitchen table at 11 o’clock at night to play a gig, I have to tell him, “I’m not 60,000 people!” But it’s never boring, that’s for sure.’

As a way of life, it might seem to be a world apart from her own upbringing - her father worked nine to five in the electrical trade, her mother was a housewife, ‘we were a good Protestant family, just the two children, me and my older brother’ - but there are similarities. She remains very close to her own parents, who live nearby and have helped look after her children (’There’s no one better than your parents - you can trust them to love your children just as you do’), and says she can’t imagine a different kind of marriage to the one she has: ‘I’ve never lived in any other way.’

Not that she put her own life on hold while her husband travelled the world: she studied for a degree in politics and sociology at University College Dublin, sitting her finals two weeks after the birth of her first child, Jordan, in May 1989 (the couple have two daughters, now 19 and 16, and two sons, aged eight and six).

‘When I got pregnant with Jordan I thought, “Oh, God, she’s due in May,” which was ten days before my finals. So I could have been in labour during my exams. And it was my first baby - I had no idea what to expect. But a very wise woman said to me - when I was fretting about whether to put off my exams - “You’ll have an unbelievable sense of calm when you have a baby. The hormones kick in, and you’re breastfeeding, and you’re actually very relaxed.” I took her at her word, and it worked out. I did really well.’

But before you begin feeling annoyed at Hewson’s apparently effortless take on motherhood, she adds, ruefully, ‘I had two exams together on the last day, I’d had no sleep, and I couldn’t get home to feed the baby, so I had to express my milk in the car. I drove to the furthest end of a car-park, expressed the milk, and had to throw it out of the window. There was nowhere to store it. Anyway, when I tried to drive back for the exam, the car wouldn’t start. So I had to get out and run. I was five minutes late. I read the exam question - it was an essay question on moral philosophy - and everything went black. I literally couldn’t see the paper - my vision had gone. I had to try to write what I thought was in a straight line. I think it was caused by dehydration and lack of sleep. But it was my best exam! Sadly, I haven’t had a brain cell since I had children.’

Those who know her well do not agree, citing her ability to grasp crucial political issues at the same time as responding on an emotional level. The Irish broadcaster and U2 biographer Eamon Dunphy, has said, ‘The best thing about Bono is Ali. She is calm and rational and able to see beyond individuals to policies.’

Hence her long-term activism - including spearheading a campaign to send 1.5 million postcards from the Irish people to Tony Blair, highlighting the risk of radioactive pollution from Sellafield drifting across to Ireland - and her involvement in charities to help the child victims of Chernobyl. In a neat illustration of her ability to make the personal political, she asked her husband to donate the substantial proceeds of the U2 hit single, Sweetest Thing - a song he wrote for her as an apology for forgetting her birthday - to the Chernobyl Children’s Project.

‘I know how I want to try and live my life,’ she says, when I ask what motivates her campaigning. ‘I know I don’t want to leave any darkness behind me. I think we should all have a responsibility not to affect other people in a negative way. It starts with your children - you see how trusting they are, so small and so innocent. That’s why I got involved in the Chernobyl project, because of what happened to the children there.

‘Similarly, I realised that Sellafield is just across the water, and it’s useless, pointless - pumping all that low-grade radioactive material out into the sea, not admitting to the leaks they have. The Sellafield reprocessing plant is downwind of us. If there was an accident - well, I’ve seen the results of Chernobyl, I’ve been to Belarus and the Ukraine, where they got 90 per cent of the fall-out. There are no nuclear plants in Belarus - but radiation fall-out doesn’t stop at national borders.

‘There are no borders, and there ain’t no compensation. And when you see the children there - they’re just so vulnerable. Their thyroid absorbs the radioactive iodine. So you have all these children in Belarus who have had their thyroids removed, but with no medication to help them to continue to grow, because they can’t afford it. And some of them are having the operation in the wrong circumstances - it’s just wrong, all of it is wrong.’

As she speaks, her voice remains calm, but her impassioned conviction is evident, just as it is on the subject of Africa; in particular, the need for trade as well as aid, which is the credo behind Edun (and therefore why the company uses African organic cotton, and manufactures in Lesotho, redistributing its profits to the local communities).

‘Africa had six per cent of the world trade in the 1980s, which has dropped to two per cent now. If they were to gain back one per cent of world trade, that’s the equivalent of $70 billion dollars a year, which would be twice what they get in aid. That’s why we had the idea of trying to do something in Africa that would put our money where our mouth was - to actually make a difference by developing Edun.’

Such is her heartfelt fluency and faith in the potential for change that you can see why there are a number of commentators in Ireland who are speculating that Ali Hewson might be a realistic candidate for Irish president. When I put the idea to her she sidesteps it gracefully by saying, ‘I can’t speak Irish properly - and that’s a requirement - but I wish I could. Though my husband always said he wouldn’t move into a smaller house or walk behind me!’

What about in ten years time, I say? Surely she could learn Irish by then? ‘That may happen! It would be a huge honour. I think Mary McAleese is a great president, and Mary Robinson was a great president. You know when you see a woman coming into a position that was previously held by a man, that they will take the job on…’

She looks me straight in the eye as she speaks, with her steady, level-headed gaze, and as she does so a picture comes into my mind of Mr Ali Hewson, walking a few paces behind his wife, Her Excellency the President. Perhaps he’s still humming Sweetest Thing, but she’s looking good centre stage, taking her turn in the spotlight.

- Telegraph Media Group Limited 2008

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AKA: U 2 Can Be Paul McGuinness

My 10-year-old son bought this computer game for himself yesterday: I just wanna know if there’s a multi-player mode so I can pretend to be Willie Williams.

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340x.jpg

Though it is taking away from valuable record making time, it's only up the road from the band's studio. So a night off to Cannes with Sean Pean it is then.

Leave your captions after the jump.

Caption This

340x.jpg

Though it is taking away from valuable record making time, it's only up the road from the band's studio. So a night off to Cannes with Sean Pean it is then.

Leave your captions after the jump.

Bono on the Late Late Show May 30

This blog indicates that Bono will be among the featured A-listers to appear on the finale of the Late Late Show, which will also feature dancers competing for Ireland’s spot in the Eurovision Dance Contest. Let’s hope they don’t ask the celebs to dance along…