U2′s Bono asks Russia’s Medvedev to help beat AIDS

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Russia (Reuters Life!) - Russian President Dmitry Medvedev welcomed U2 frontman Bono to tea on Tuesday ahead of the group's first ever Russian concert, and the Irish musician asked for Russia's help in fighting AIDS.

"Taking care of people is not just what politicians do," self-proclaimed rock music lover Medvedev told Bono, adding that U2's music has united generations of people.

Their meeting on the sun-drenched veranda of Medvedev's summer residence on the Black Sea comes a day before U2 take to the Moscow stage for their first ever performance in Russia.

Earlier this month in Italy, U2 resumed their 360 Degree Tour following a two-month absence while Bono recovered from a back injury.

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Bono, sporting his trademark sunglasses and single earring, asked Medvedev to find a Russian firm to team up for his "Red" campaign, which raises money for the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.

Brands Nike, Microsoft, Apple and Starbucks have sold red products and donated part of the proceeds to the charity.

"Maybe you can find a Russian company, a Red Russian company, it's your color," Bono told Medvedev, an apparent reference to the red flags and stars used by the Soviet Union.

Medvedev said he would think how Russia, which experts say has at least one million people infected with HIV, could contribute to the Red brand.

The two men also shared jokes about their tastes in music, with Bono declaring: "I come here to cross the great divide between me, a Led Zeppelin fan, and you, the Deep Purple fan."

Medvedev, who has made much fuss of his devotion to the veteran British hard rock group, chuckled but replied in English that he also counted Led Zeppelin amongst his favorites.

Bono later said in a statement that he and the Kremlin chief had also discussed corruption as a means to ending poverty.

Since coming to office two years ago, Medvedev has vowed repeatedly to tackle Russia's endemic corruption, though analysts say they have seen very little change so far.

(Writing by Amie Ferris-Rotman)

© 2010 Thomson Reuters

Bono Takes Up Cigarettes Again

Bono admits he's started smoking cigarettes due to his back surgery. The rock legend blames his painful, often boring back surgery. Can Bono quit again?

Bono has restored his health since his recent back surgery that had him out of the music world for over two months. The U2 frontman missed out on their North American tour and Glastonbury Festival, but he's back and ready to rock.

'That's in the past now and I'm very much fit for the future. This band is like a family. I am the prodigal son. I would like to thank my brothers for their patience.'

With so much time on his hands, Bono not only took up smoking, but took time to write and enjoy delicious ice cream.

'One of the things you can do when you're lying down like that is to write, so I wrote. Lying motionless I also had time to think about the future, because I never think about the past. The other thing I did was to eat ice cream and I also started smoking again.'

A doctor told Bono to quit smoking in 90's due to a bad sinus infection. He started smoking again in 2003 and stopped until recently.

Even with his renewed smoking habit, Bono is still amazingly awesome. We can't help, but love him.

Terra USA/Marilyn Dominguez

© COPYRIGHT 2000-2010, TERRA NETWORKS, S.A/ OPERATIONS

Bono Back After Surgery, U2 Predicts Record Tour

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By Ian Simpson

TURIN, Italy (Reuters) - U2 frontman Bono burst back onto rock's center stage on Friday after a two-month absence for a back injury, as the Irish band resumed what its manager predicts will be the most lucrative concert tour in history.

U2 shook a packed Olympic stadium in the northern Italian city of Turin as Bono strutted, pranced, jogged and danced with little sign of being a 50-year-old rock star just 10 weeks off spinal surgery.

"I don't really know how to hold back, is the problem. You have to let the songs sing you at a certain point," Bono told Reuters just before relaunching the second leg of U2's 360 Degree Tour, so called because fans surround a giant circular platform.

U2 and Bono, who said he had done rehabilitation work for three to four hours a day, kicked off a rousing set with "Beautiful Day" and "Magnificent." They also played two new tracks called "North Star Acoustic" and "Glastonbury."

Bono thanked the cheering crowd for letters and emails he had received wishing him a speedy recovery.

"This band is like a family. It's a family business, U2. I am the prodigal son. I would like to thank my brothers for their patience," the leather-clad Bono told the crowd, referring to his bandmates.

POSTPONEMENT, MAJOR LOSSES

The singer underwent emergency back surgery in May after injuring himself. His subsequent rehabilitation forced the band to delay the North American leg of the tour until 2011.

U2 began the tour in Barcelona in June 2009.

The band's manager Paul McGuinness said Bono had trained hard to get back to performing and the band had done some recording during his recovery.

"That's a process that goes on all the time," McGuinness told Reuters. "The doctors are very confident. They certified him fit to perform. It's really a very short time for a spinal injury."

U2's tour is widely expected to be a strong point in a weak concert season hit by low sales.

"This tour by the end of this year will be the biggest grossing music tour by anyone of all time," McGuinness predicted. "And we will still have another 30 shows next year, 20-30 shows next year."

He added that the group would probably gross somewhere between $650-700 million by the time the tour ended in 2011.

That would top the record $558 million generated by the Rolling Stones' 2005-2007 Bigger Bang tour, according to music industry publication Billboard Boxscore.

McGuinness said that rescheduling the North American tour had brought "enormous" complications.

"It was extraordinarily difficult to reschedule these events, because it's an outdoor show. But very few numbers of people have asked for refunds, and most of the shows were sold out."

He said the band had lost around $15 million as a result of the disruptions, half of which was covered by insurance.

(Reporting by Ian Simpson, writing by Mike Collett-White)

Copyright 2010 Reuters News Service. All rights reserved.

U2 Announce Return to the Stage in Homemade Video

"I'm going to be fighting fit next summer in the U.S.," Bono tells fans

By Rolling Stone Magazine

In late May, the biggest rock tour in history hit a speed bump: Bono underwent emergency back surgery in Munich for a compressed sciatic nerve that forced U2 to postpone the summer leg of their mammoth 360° Tour and cancel their headlining spot at Glastonbury. After nearly two months, the band has broken its silence in a homemade video shot by drummer Larry Mullen Jr., in which all four bandmembers give fans the good news: Bono is healthy, the band is in the studio, and U2 will be back in American stadiums in the summer of 2011.

Look back at three decades of U2, onstage and off.

Revealing he's "very well," Bono says he's "feeling strong, feeling confident, and I am ready, rebuilt by German engineering -- better design I'm told." The 360° Tour, originally scheduled to launch June 3rd in Salt Lake City, Utah, will now kick off May 21st, 2011 in Denver. Bono's swift recovery is permitting the band to play its summer 2010 dates in Europe as scheduled, beginning August 6th in Turin, Italy. All tickets previously sold for the North American tour will be valid at the rescheduled performances, and additional dates and cities will be added to the current 16-show itinerary.

"I actually wanted to apologize for the trouble that this injury has put you all through," Bono says, acknowledging that purchasing concert tickets and making travel plans is "a very big deal" for fans the band doesn't take for granted. "Thank you for standing by us in our hour of need." He adds that the serious back injury, which struck the day after his birthday, was "not a lot of fun for me," but the forced rest proved inspirational: the band has written "some great songs" they've been recording -- the video is shot in a studio -- and "might be playing them onstage."

Check out all of U2's appearances on the cover of Rolling Stone.

Before the camera turns to Bono, Mullen jokes that the Edge has "been quite promiscuous recently," a reference to the guitarist's surprise Glastonbury guest spot alongside Muse. "You don't want to sit idly by, so I got out there to see what the singing talent is like," the Edge says. "But you know the funny thing, it just wasn't the same. ... we've got the best singer and he's looking very well right now."

In a statement, U2's manager Paul McGuinness said rescheduling all the shows in the exact same stadiums "hasn't been easy," thanking the venues and sports teams for helping facilitate the process. As Rolling Stone previously reported, the 360° Tour requires $750,000 a day in overhead, a 170-ton stage, 200 trucks and more than 250 speakers. "Above all, we want to thank the U2 fans for bearing with us," McGuinness said. "They're the best and the band wants to get back to where they belong, surrounded by their audience."

Rescheduled 2011 U2 Tour Dates:
May 21 - Denver, CO @ Invesco Field (formerly June 12, 2010)
May 24 - Salt Lake City, UT @ Rice Eccles Stadium (formerly June 3, 2010)
June 1 - Edmonton, AB @ Commonwealth Stadium (formerly June 23, 2010)
June 4 - Seattle, WA @ Qwest Field (formerly June 20, 2010)
June 7 - Oakland, CA @ McAfee Coliseum (formerly June 16, 2010)
June 17 - Anaheim, CA @ Angels Stadium (formerly June 6, 2010)
June 18 - Anaheim, CA @ Angels Stadium (formerly June 7, 2010)
June 26 - East Lansing, MI @ Spartan Stadium at MSU (formerly June 30, 2010)
June 29 - Miami, FL @ Sun Life Stadium (previously Dolphin Stadium) (formerly July 9, 2010)
July 5 - Chicago, IL @ Soldier Field (formerly July 6, 2010)
July 8 - Montreal, QC @ Hippodrome (formerly July 16 ,2010)
July 9 - Montreal, QC @ Hippodrome (formerly July 17, 2010)
July 11- Toronto, ON @ Rogers Centre (formerly July 3, 2010)
July 14 - Philadelphia, PA @ Lincoln Financial Field (formerly July 12, 2010)
July 20 - East Rutherford, NJ @ New Meadowlands Stadium (formerly July 19, 2010)
July 23 - Minneapolis, MN @ TCF Bank Stadium (formerly June 27, 2010)

Copyright 2010 Rolling Stone

Bono to return to stage in weeks – McGuinness

By Aoife Anderson, Herald.ie

BONO will be back on stage in a matter of weeks despite his recent emergency surgery, according to U2's manager Paul McGuinness.

The Irish rocker (50) was operated on after becoming temporarily paralysed -- forcing the band to cancel the start of the US leg of their 360° Tour and their headline slot at Glastonbury.

An optimistic McGuinness told the Diary: "He's making a full recovery. The doctors told me he's going to be fine. It was serious surgery but we expect him to make a full recovery. He's pretty fit."

McGuinness said there was no reason to believe the tour's massive stage production had anything to do with the singer's injury.

"It's a big stage to run around, but no," he said. "I'll be very relieved when I see him running around the stage again. The European leg of the tour starts in Turin on August 6 and that has not been postponed.

"Rescheduling the American leg is quite difficult because it is an outdoor show; we can't do it in the winter because it's the northern hemisphere.

"So what we're doing now is trying to seek availability of the buildings that we had already pretty much sold-out, so we're getting availabilities and routing a coherent tour for next summer in the US and Canada. We've nearly done it so I hope we'll be able to announce that shortly."

McGuinness insisted the rest of the band hasn't been enjoying an impromptu holiday while Bono recovers.

"No not really, they're doing some work and planning to do some recording. It never stops really," he said.

- Aoife Anderson

© Herald.ie 2010

Bono recovers in France with Lance Armstrong

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By Cahir O'Doherty, Irish Central

Just weeks after his emergency surgery, Bono is recovering at his luxury villa in the French Riviera - with a little help from friends, including bike racer Lance Armstrong.

Whilst the north American part of U2's tour is on hold, Bono spends his days meeting pals for lunch in Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat restaurant (he drove himself there).

'Lunch with an old friend,' Armstrong tweeted on Thursday, posting a photo of himself with the Irish rocker in front of a very scenic backdrop.

Bono, who is still looking quite tired, is pictured holding a wine glass and has his arm around Lance's pregnant girlfriend, Anna Hansen, while Lance holds their son, Max.

The Irish rock star, who was released from a Munich hospital on May 25, has to spend at least eight weeks doing physical rehabilitation, which has put the skids on the North American leg of U2's 360 world tour. The dates will be rescheduled for 2011.

In 2009, U2's tour grossed just shy of $110 million, making it the year's most profitable show.

Bono: If U2′s 360 Degree tour flopped it would have been bad news

By Buzz Brady, Irish Central

Bono, who is at home recovering from major back surgery and has postponed his North American tour this summer, admitted that the band took a big risk using a futuristic spider-like stage in their 360 Degree tour.

The band created a stage that allowed viewing opportunities from every angel of a theater or stadium and spent millions of dollars in doing so.
Bono said: "Had it flopped on the first night, we would have been in some deep doo-doo.

"Think about a rock show in 360 degrees with the scale of a gigantic action film, except you're moving location every few days. You're building a whole city, then knocking it down, putting it into trucks and moving. It's quite something.

"You've got to try and give the audience, at the very least, something they've never seen before, or, maybe more importantly, something they haven't felt before."

Bassist Adam Clayton said that although the band agreed on the futurama stage it was Bono's brainchild.

He told The Sun newspaper: "It was Bono's vision, he's that kind of performer. I think the rest of us would be happy to stand on an old beer crate but he's the person working the stage."

On the postponement of the North American tour, manager Paul McGuinness said, "Our biggest and I believe best tour has been interrupted and we're all devastated. For a performer who lives to be on stage, this is more than a blow. He feels robbed of the chance to do what he does best and feels like he has badly let down the band and their audience."

© Copyright 2010 IrishCentral LLC. All rights reserved.

Profile: Bono – With or without him?

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By Claire Prentice, Scotsman.com

IT'S NO fun growing old when you are a rock god. It's a young man's game jumping from platforms, punching the air, and belting out your songs of rebellion and hope.

Until this week, Bono seemed to be holding back the years pretty well. The lead singer of U2 and global ambassador for good causes has kept his weight in check and the wrinkles at bay, even if his hair does look suspiciously black.

But last week, the 50-year-old global superstar was rushed into hospital in Munich for emergency spinal surgery, after suffering severe compression of the sciatic nerve while preparing for the next leg of U2's tour. Hospital spokesman Dr Muller Wohlfahrt said Bono's prospects for a full recovery were "excellent".

Though the prognosis is good, it's too late to save the tour. Sixteen US dates have been cancelled, and Damon Albarn's band Gorillaz have stepped in to replace U2, who were scheduled to headline at Glastonbury. Bono, who must recuperate for two months, said he was "heartbroken".

The accident is a rare intimation of mortality for a man who bestrides the stadiums of the world like a rock colossus. Even in the company of other rock stars, Bono is in the super league. His wealth is estimated at £480 million. He has the telephone numbers of presidents and prime ministers on speed dial. He uses his music as a bully pulpit to chastise the materialism of the West and champion the cause of Africa. He has parlayed his global celebrity into moral authority, a talent which has seen him nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize and receive an honorary knighthood from the Queen.

Bono has become the embodiment of a cause; U2 the vehicle for his vision of social justice. But it hasn't made him universally popular. According to childhood friend and rock critic Neil McCormick, "(Bono]'s not down-to-earth, he's got a big head, and he's got a big heart and he's a big guy who is doing an amazing thing out there."

He has been criticised for using his campaigns to feed his rampant ego. In a 2005 New York Times article, Paul Theroux dismissed a group of stars including Bono as "mythomaniacs, people who wish to convince the world of their worth". Many, including some African charities, have accused Bono of making Africa dependent on international handouts instead of working with grassroots organisations.

So is Bono pompous, sanctimonious and self-indulgent? Or is he a global philanthropist and visionary who has harnessed his fame and vast wealth to do enormous good?

The real answer may lie in the days before he became Bono. He was born Paul David Hewson in Dublin in May 1960, the second child of Bobby Hewson, a Catholic, and his Protestant wife, Iris. When Bono was just 15, his mother died of a brain aneurysm suffered while attending the funeral of her father. The loss of his mother was a seminal experience which recurs in a number of U2 songs. Bono didn't get on well with his father. Later Bono said: "His whole thing was, 'Don't dream - to dream is to be disappointed'. That was really what I think was his advice to me... I was only ever interested in big ideas, and not so much dreaming but putting dreams into action."

At his muti-denominational comprehensive school, Mount Temple, Bono became friends with Larry Mullen, Adam Clayton and Dave Evans (The Edge). In 1976 they became U2. Alison Stewart, whom Bono married in 1982 - they have four children - was also a schoolmate, and the name Bono stuck in the 1970s, after a friend nicknamed him "Bono Vox", from the Latin for "good voice". Today, not even his oldest friends and family call him Paul.

In the early 1980s, when U2 were poised for world domination, Bono reportedly nearly quit the band over fears that the lifestyle was not compatible with his Christian faith. But he overcame his doubts and, by October 1983, U2 had secured their first UK No 1 album with War, which spawned two hit singles. In July 1985, the band played Live Aid at Wembley Stadium. For Bono it was the perfect meeting of global humanitarian dream and global audience.

Since then U2 have sold more than 150million albums and won 22 Grammy Awards, more than any other band.

As the awards and hit albums stacked up, Bono transformed himself into a star of another sort. Now he rubs shoulders with presidents and Popes, handing out praise (he described John Paul II as "a street fighter and a wily campaigner on behalf of the world's poor") and condemnation. In 2004, Bono famously described Tony Blair and Gordon Brown as the John Lennon and Paul McCartney of the global development scene. He turned up at the world economic forum at Davos, spoke at a Prayer Breakfast with George W Bush in Washington DC, was personally invited by Blair to speak at the 2005 G8 Summit at Gleneagles, and gave a video message to the 2009 Tory Party conference.

Bono has spawned more acronyms than a government department. Alongside the charitable brand RED, there is ONE - the Campaign to Make Poverty History, socially conscious fashion line, EDUN, and the campaigning organisation DATA (Debt, AIDS, Trade, Africa).

But no matter how much the artist puts back, there are allegations of hypocrisy. RED was slammed for not giving enough money to Africa. Elsewhere his careers as a rock performer, philanthropist and environmentalist seem in conflict.

For a man who wants to save the environment, Bono has a mighty big carbon footprint. He once paid more than £1,000 to have his lucky black stetson flown from Dublin to Sydney. U2's 360 Degree tour earned $109m (£75.3m) in 2009, but the enormous cost of the set (£30m to build the stage alone) and the environmental impact of 200 trucks transporting it around the world was condemned by many, including former Talking Heads frontman David Byrne.

Critics also charge that he could do more to pay his own way. Bono and his bandmates were criticised in 2007 for moving their business out of Ireland after the Irish government introduced a new tax-free cap. The move saved U2 an estimated $30m in avoided taxes.

As the global frontman endures his enforced bed rest, flicking through magazines, sipping barley water and eating grapes, will he be fermenting some global philanthropic scheme, or will he take time to reflect on the intimation of mortality which has stopped a voice in its tracks and revealed its owner to be all too human?

© 2010 Johnston Press Digital Publishing

Why Bono’s bad back could cost U2 millions

Huge sums of money, plus bragging rights as the most popular live act of all time, rest on the speed of a certain 50-year-old's recovery, writes BRIAN BOYD

Irish Times

NOW THAT U2'S North American tour has been postponed because of Bono's back surgery, it's time for all involved to start totting up the cost. "U2's daily tour overhead spend is $750,000 [€950,000]," says an Irish music-tour insider. "Bono's back has put them out of action for two months. They're insured for show postponement, but that's not the full story. The set-up costs of the three Claws they use was phenomenal. They don't need this, their insurance company doesn't need this and the global touring economy doesn't need this. It's not just the show day; it's the three of four days before setting up the stadium, one day stripping it down after, the 200 trucks, the drivers, the security, the merchandising people, the drinks and food people, the programme sellers, costume, make-up and hundreds of other people. U2 would have over 100 permanent touring personnel and an extra 200-300 working personnel at each local venue. It's the hotels, the flights, the food vouchers. It's like a small country coming to a standstill."

Arthur Fogel, chief executive of U2's concert promoter, Live Nation, says of the 360º tour postponement: "There's no question this is monumental."

A million tickets had been sold for the band's North American leg, in July and August, now put off to allow Bono to recuperate from his back surgery in Munich last week after injuring himself during rehearsals. The band are looking at 2011 for the rescheduled dates.

Of severe annoyance to the band is the fact that there was also a high-profile Glastonbury Festival appearance (their first) at the end of June - their spot has now been taken by Gorillaz - for which the band had written a song.

The European leg of the tour, from August until October, is still officially on, but it will depend on the singer's recuperation. The emergency surgery was needed "to avoid further paralysis", said doctors after Bono developed severe compression of the sciatic nerve, along with a ligament tear and a herniated disc.

"He won't want reminding that he just turned 50 last month," says a source. "He has been throwing himself around stages for over 30 years. He's up there as the frontman for two and a half hours a night, and he's not one to do things by half measures. This is a very serious injury and sounds like it could be the result of cumulative damage. How things play out will be interesting. This is showbiz - hundreds of millions of dollars rest upon a 50-year-old man's back disc."

All focus now will be on whether the singer is fit for the European tour. (There are no Irish shows this time around.) Bono may not climb up speaker stacks any more (something that always concerned other band members), but he still flings himself around a fair bit. As the focal point for 80,000 people each night, a certain degree of showmanship is required. People close to him say there is no way he will appear on stage without being able to give it "the full-on Bono treatment".

The band train hard before going the road, but in the months off between legs of the tour they can let themselves go a bit. This back injury was caused by Bono trying to get himself into shape for two months of touring after several months off.

What is particularly frustrating for the band is that this tour is perhaps their most significant ever. They've never spent as much money assembling a stage configuration as they have on the Claw, and they were prepared to go substantially into the red on the tour before seeing any profit.

With their latest album not selling as well as it could have, the tour has exceeded expectations. It was the most profitable tour of last year, but in this, its second year, it was supposed to resolve a long dispute over who is the most popular live rock band of all time.

U2's Vertigo tour (2005-2006) sits in second place as the highest-grossing music tour. Just ahead of it lies The Rolling Stones' Bigger Bang tour (2005-2007), which grossed $558 million. The Stones, though, played a lot more dates than U2. So far, the 3600 tour has grossed $311 million. Without Bono's back injury it would have easily grabbed the prize.

Guinness World Records (and bragging rights) will have to wait. But for the still intensely competitive Bono, having U2 make another piece of music history will be motivation enough to accelerate the recuperation process. For a few months, though, there is a line on U2's horizon.

© 2010 irishtimes.com

Rest may elude Bono at his Dublin home

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An American in Ireland, by The Yank, Irish Central

Bono might be returning home to recover after his back surgery, but rest might be harder to come by.

I have sympathy for Bono, suffering with his bad back. I'm sure if I was 20 or so my reaction to Bono's injury would be something along the lines of, "What's that old guy doing anyway, trying to behave like a young rock star. He's lucky he can still stand at the microphone." But, I'm in my mid 40s and can fully understand why Bono doesn't want to give up yet. Who wants to be old?

The media says Bono will do his recuperating in his home on Killiney Hill in south County Dublin. What better place? It's beautiful there. Tremendous views looking out over Killiney Bay from Bray to Dalkey and Dalkey Island {photo}, with its medieval church and 19th century Martello Tower.

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I went for a walk in that neighborhood earlier in the week . It's just a perfect place. So quiet that the predominant sounds are the birds in the trees and the sea crashing off the rocks below. And, at the moment many of the roads around Bono's house are closed to traffic due a to a rock slide in the area, making it seem even more secluded.

If you have to recover from serious surgery, Killiney Hill is probably about as good any place I can think of. Except for Bono's house right now.

Bono was clearly not anticipating spending a lot of time at home over the next few months, what with his hectic tour schedule (the tour he was training for when he got hurt). He was probably figuring he wouldn't be home much before Christmas. His wife and children probably arranged to be away a lot too.

Why do I think that? Because Bono, as as a lot of people would do, decided to get some work done around the place while he was away. From the looks of it, he's getting a lot of work done. From what I could see his house is one big building site. I'm not certain, but I think Bono and his wife must be getting a whole new top floor. The house suddenly seems a lot more visible than it used to be and there's scaffolding all around the top.

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Oh, and there's a huge crane looming over the house, doing the things cranes do, making the noises cranes make. And based on the number of what looked like workmen's cars parked on the road outside Bono's gate I would guess his house is crawling with workers too.

Will they leave him alone? Probably will, actually. That's how Irish people generally are. Still, life in a building site is hardly going to be stress free. I don't care who you are or how much money you have, the sound of things crashing around, the sight of workmen spilling cups of coffee or bags of cement in your house is hardly the recipe for a restful recovery. Bono might do well to reconsider coming home to get over his surgery.

© Copyright 2010 IrishCentral LLC. All rights reserved.

Bono surgery bad for U.S. concert biz

But enforced rest could be boon to U2

By Steve Chagollan, Variety

The decision to postpone U2's U.S. concerts until next year because of Bono's back surgery not only has affected the bottom line for concert promoter Live Nation and the organizers of the Glastonbury Festival, where U2 was scheduled to headline in late June, but could make a significant dent in the 2010 concert business overall.

"When you have an act like U2 (touring), it greatly inflates the (year's) revenues," said Gary Bongiovanni, editor-in-chief of Pollstar.

The Irish rockers, whose shows have become huge in scale, were the top draw in the U.S. last year, accruing $123 million in gross receipts, according to Pollstar. They were the only act to top the $100 million mark (Springsteen finished at No. 2 with $94.5 million) despite playing only 20 dates. The shows also contributed to an overall 12% boost in concert revenue ($4.4 billion) over the previous year and a 14% hike in attendance (73 million).

The long-running 360 Tour (which began in June 2009) with a reported per-city overhead of $750,000 and advance ticket sales of 1 million in North America for the latest leg, was supposed to land in Anaheim on June 6-7. But with Bono's recovery expected to take at least eight weeks, the band will skip the 16 Stateside shows scheduled to culminate in New Jersey's Meadowlands Stadium on July 19. Instead, the band will immediately segue into its European trek, beginning Aug. 6 in Turin, Italy, once Bono is mobile.

"This is probably the most rest we'll have had in decades," noted the Edge on U2's website.

In a strange way, the layoff could benefit a band that had already blown through the country late last year armed with new material (the 2009 LP "No Line on the Horizon) that might not seem as fresh this time around. "It may work to the band's advantage to put a little distance between the dates," Bongiovanni said.

Also, the Edge had indicated on U2.com that the band was looking forward to introducing some songs from its planned "Songs of Ascent" collection when its back up and running. "The ultimate proving ground for a tune," he said, "is to play it live."

© Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc.

Bono Back Fears

The Sun

BONO feared spending the rest of his life in a wheelchair when he finally sought treatment for his dodgy back, his best mate and U2 bandmate THE EDGE revealed last night.

The singer suffered a slipped disc in Germany last week while dancing during a rehearsal for the next leg of the band's tour.

The Edge said: "Luckily he did realise, when he could no longer walk, that he needed to go to the doctor.

"Had he not done anything about it, it could have been serious and possibly permanent.

"He just overdid it and hurt himself.

"He was clearly in shock about the implications of the injury."

Happily, the strummer reckons that time off the road, including the cancellation of the band's Glastonbury headline slot next month, will have benefits.

He added: "This is probably the most rest Bono will have had in decades. Knowing him, he'll want to take some short cuts and get ahead of himself."

© News Group Newspapers Ltd.

U2′s Edge Says Band Will Resume Tour This August

by John D. Luerssen, Spinner

U2's the Edge has issued a video update his band's plans for the rest of 2010 following Bono's emergency back surgery last Friday. Although the singer's injury and recovery has forced the postponement of the group's US tour until sometime next year -- not to mention its first-ever Glastonbury performance -- the band does intend to keep its European touring commitment for later this summer.

"I guess sometime in August we'll be doing a preproduction period somewhere in Europe to open the tour in Turin," Edge explained in a video from New York City, first posted on U2.com. The guitarist affirmed that the group's overseas trek will indeed get underway in Italy on Aug. 6 after Bono undergoes a lengthy rehabilitation for what Dr. Muller Woflfahrt diagnosed in a band statement as "severe compression of the sciatic nerve."

As for Bono's condition, Edge says he was working hard in preparation for the North American tour. "Maybe he just overdid it without realizing it," Edge added. "Had he not done anything about it, it could have been very serious and possibly permanent."

As for the Glastonbury cancellation, Bono said in a statement, "'I'm heartbroken," adding, "We really wanted to be there to do something really special -- we even wrote a song especially for the Festival."

Although until just a few days ago, the band was ready to head back on the road, Edge revealed that he has since quickly shifted gears and is now using his time creatively. "For the record, I'm already back at work on songwriting for the next U2 record," he said. "When we do get back out there we'll be in top condition and raring to go. That's our focus now."

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U2: ‘Bono’s back injury could have been permanent’

The Edge speaks about frontman's back troubles

NME

U2's The Edge has said that frontman Bono's recent back injury could have resulted in permanent damage if it had not been treated when it was.

On May 21 the singer underwent back surgery in Munich, canceling 16 US shows and their Glastonbury headline slot - with Gorillaz now stepping in to take their place on June 25.

Speaking in a video message on the band's website, U2.com, the guitarist said it was a good thing that his bandmate saw a doctor in time.

"He [Bono] was clearly in shock about the implications of the injury," The Edge explained. "We talked about what this meant and we're dealing with it now."

He added: "Maybe he just overdid it and hurt himself. Luckily enough he did realise at a certain point, I think when he could no longer walk, that he needed to go to the doctor. Had he not done anything about it, it could have been serious and possibly permanent."

He went on to joke: "This is probably the most rest he'll have had in decades. Knowing him again he'll want to take some shortcuts and get ahead of himself. But, really, from what I understand it's important he does this in a methodical way.

"This is not a cancellation of the [US] tour, it's a postponement. We'll be back and it'll be bigger and better than ever. I'm already back at work on songwriting and working on stuff for the next U2 record. We are intending to play some new songs live [later in the year]."

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