Vatican’s rock top-10: Beatles, U2, Pink Floyd

VATICAN CITY — The Vatican newspaper has come up with a “semi-serious” list of 10 essential rock and pop albums, including works by the Beatles, U2, Michael Jackson and Pink Floyd.

The list was offered in a tongue-in-cheek article Feb. 14 as an alternative to the music of Italy’s biggest pop music festival, which was to begin two days later. The “10 albums worth taking to a desert island” were listed in the chronological order of their release:

* “Revolver” by the Beatles, described as more innovative than any of their successive albums.
* “If I Could Only Remember My Name” by David Crosby. Its songs used experimental musical forms to express an “existential fragility,” the article said.
* “The Dark Side of the Moon” by Pink Floyd, which the newspaper called an “amazing” and eminently enjoyable milestone in the history of rock music.
* “Rumours” by Fleetwood Mac, which the article said mixed the sounds of blues, pop and country.
* “The Nightfly” by Donald Fagen of Steely Dan. A niche album, but “brilliant and ironical,” according to the Vatican newspaper.
* “Thriller” by Michael Jackson. The article described this album as “the masterpiece of the king of pop” and said its original approach went against the stereotypes of black music.
* “Graceland” by Paul Simon, who used South African music with his own to create a multiethnic album that marked the birth of “world music,” the newspaper said.
* “Achtung Baby” by U2, a disk that stands out for its music and lyrics, and remains a symbol of the ’90s, it said.
* “(What’s the Story) Morning Glory?” by Oasis. The group picks up the great tradition of the Beatles, but with a harder edge of punk and rock, it said.
* “Supernatural” by Carlos Santana, seen as an avant-garde mix of blues, soul, salsa and rock.

The article ended by explaining why it left Bob Dylan off its list. While acknowledging his “great poetic vein,” it said Dylan’s greatest fault was to have inspired a generation of amateur singer-songwriters who have “severely tested the ears and patience of listeners, thinking that someone might be interested in their tortured meanderings.”

- John Thavis, Catholic News Service

U2’s ‘The Nude Interview’ with Dave Fanning June 25th 1987 (audio)

The boy’s spin their favorite record’s alongside Dave Fanning and take phone call’s on RTE radio. As the interview progresses, the band members strip down to their jockey’s and laugh it up all caught on the air.

Two songs of interest was played:

Lost Highway (Hank Willams) starts at about 9 minutes into the clip and Puppy Love (Donny Osmond) located at the 1:07:40 mark.

Read accounts of the interview from Pimm Jal de la Parra book U2 Live: A Concert Documentary

Other link resource: U2Interview

Jim DeRogatis: U2 are a-holes

As if there was any doubt remaining at this point, Jim DeRogatis makes it plainly obviously how much he hates U2 in this interview about the worst rock movies ever. Discussing Rattle and Hum, the Chicago Sun-Times music critic says:

I’m not saying it’s dishonest. It absolutely shows what they are. They are big, superstar rock stars full of pretension. But for the same reason I have no desire to sit through Saw VII—because torture porn makes my stomach hurt—so does Rattle & Hum. [Laughs.] U2 are assholes, the movie shows them as assholes, but that doesn’t make it any fun to watch.

I’m blogging about this mainly because DeRogatis (and his Chicago Tribune-based friend, Greg Kot) is a powerful voice in music journalism, and he has a history of trashing U2 (Kot does, too) over the years. Though I should mention that DeRogatis gave No Line On The Horizon a generally positive review.

At some point, probably next time U2 plays Chicago or when they release another album, there’ll be more trashing going on and fans will wonder why. Everyone’s entitled to an opinion — indeed, DeRogatis gets paid for his — but it’s important also to know the inherent biases people have.

This is a post from the @U2 blog.

Jim DeRogatis: U2 are a-holes

U2 not playing O2 or Docklands.

Following recent comments by U2 Promoter Arthur Fogel, all U2's European tour dates have been announced.