Category Archives: U2

12 Days til U2

I am absolutely stoked that the U2 concert is upon me. My wife bought me a ticket for my birthday and it has been hanging on my refridgerator door since March. We are 12 days out. I logged onto Ticketmaster to see if any more GA tickets had been released but as of right now the concert is still sold out. I came across another ticket site that had a handful of tickets at crazy prices. None of the seats listed were as good my seat and the lowest price they had was a pair of tickets at $325 a piece. They were nose bleeds (Section 303, Row BB). I’m glad that I got my ticket when I did. I’ll fly out to Dallas next Thursday evening and the concert is Saturday night. I’ll get to see some old friends so it should be an awesome weekend.

I didn’t get a chance to mention the Conan apperance. U2 did a great job and they were so funny. I loved The Edge performing in the “In the Year 2000” sketch. Classic.

Edge: In the year 2000, U2 will reveal that the Edge wears a knit cap to take people’s attention away from… Bono’s crap sunglasses.

Even funnier were the few nights after when Conan aired the U2 Secrets sketch. This sketch featured the band giving video confessions in a dark room. It looked like they were being interrogated. The “secrets” were hilarious. My favorite were these two:

Bono: I mean, we didn’t get into rock ‘n’ roll for the money. We got into rock ‘n’ roll for the things you can buy with the money.

and…

Edge: Bono hits us. (Looks around) Sometimes really hard.

If you are a U2 fan then you would have loved the show. If you aren’t a fan of U2 or Conan, I’m sorry this probably wasn’t very funny. I have left a few links below. One is the ticket site with insane prices (my ticket would probably sell for over $400) and the other 2 links are from @U2 featuring some more of the “U2 Secrets.” Enjoy. I hope you have a great day. Peace.

Link to Tickets
U2 Secrets 1
U2 Secrets 2

The Irish Been Coming Here For Years

Feel Like They Own the Place

What kind of U2 fan would I be if I didn’t mention the fact the they are taking over the Conan O’Brien Show tonight? Taking over the show!!! Sweet! According to some people at the taping they were asked to make sure that they could be at the taping for at least 2 hours in case the band wanted to keep playing songs. How awesome is that?!?!?! Apparently, Conan was walking the waiting line goofing off, asking trivia, and taping segments for the show. I am going to try and stay up in order to watch it but I’m on East Coast time. Conan will come on a wee bit later than I’m used to. Who knows, Conan tonight and Nobel tomorrow. We shall see.

A Snowball’s Chance in Nobel

According to Billboard.com:

Music icons Bob Geldof and Bono are among U.K. bookmakers’ tips to win the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday (Oct. 7), alongside more orthodox candidates like campaigners against nuclear arms and a peace broker for Indonesia.

Experts are divided about whether the secretive five-member committee would dare to broaden the scope of the $1.3 million award in 2005 to honor Geldof or the U2 lead singer, who have campaigned for years to ease hunger and poverty in Africa.

Sweet.

Link

Warm-Up Act

In about 15 min, I will throw off the chains of my desk and get into the car with my beautiful wife and drive like a madman to the city of Atlanta. This evening’s performance is merely a warm-up act. Yes, Tonight begins the last leg of my journey to the U2 concert in Dallas next month.

I’m a bit overdramatic. (Give me a break, I’ve had my U2 tickets for almost 8 months. When will October get here?!?!?!)

Coldplay is performing tonight in Atlanta, GA. I AM STOKED!!! I have been rockin’ X & Y for the last few months. I am eagerly anticipating hearing “Fix You,” “The Hardest Part,” “A Message,” and “Kingdom Come” live and in person tonight. I’ll post a full review in the coming days. Hopefully, I’ll have some pictures to go along with the review as well.

Peace. Felker Out.

Downloading Vertigo

Last week, Pearl Jam annouced that it would begin offering official concert downloads only hours after each gig on their website for about $10. Concievably, a fan could go see a show on Tuesday night and be working out to the audio Wednesday afternoon on their iPod. As a Pearl Jam fan I am excited about this new chance to hear this great live band, well, live.

As you may recall, rumors began swirling at the begining of the year that U2 was going to do this in conjuction with Apple and iTunes. The first leg of the Vertigo tour came and went. No concerts on iTunes. The 2nd leg has come to a close without a downloadable concert as well. In 2 weeks, the boys return to North America for the 3rd leg of the tour. Will they offer downloadable content hours after each show? I’m not getting my hopes up.

U2isAble over at @U2 has written a great post about this. They believe that a U2 fan would be willing to pay upwards of $20 to be able to download concerts. This fan would. I completely agree that a copy of the show is better than “an overpriced T-shirt any day of the week.” At the “Elevation Tour” I paid $30 dollars for a shirt and would have gladly taken a board recording of that concert instead.

Go and read the article. It is well worth your time if you are a U2 fan.

Again, hats off the Pearl Jam. It’s a shame they couldn’t stop the monster that is Ticketmaster but at least they still have their fans at heart

A Nobel Man

Bono is in the running for a Nobel Peace Prize again. The U2 frontman works on behalf of the poorest of the poor. He has been instrumental in helping 3rd world countries gain ground over debt, disease and unfair trade. The announcements will be made in October.

For more information on The Nobel Prizes and how Peace Laureates are chosen, you can click here.

Dear Norwegian Nobel Committee,

Please, get up off your knees… and make Bono your next Peace Laureate!

Sincerly,
The World (well, not quite the world. How about just me.)

Via

Walk On Revisited

I just picked up the revised edition of Walk On: The Spiritual Journey of U2 by Steve Stockman. Right off the bat I noticed the added thickness and beautiful blue cover. There stands Bono dressed in black leather staring into the sky. The audience, with thier hands raised, look like they stepped right off a Hillsong worship album. Church is underway.

I was not planning on reading the book until school started in the fall. Alas, I could not resist.

I am in Searcy, AR for an administrator’s confrence. This is where I went to university. I spent most of my time in a small coffee shop called Midnight Oil instead of studying. I believe in not letting school get in the way of one’s education! So, instead of heading back to my hotel I stopped in for old time’s sake.

I pulled out my iPod and listened to Elevation as I read the foreward. Written by Steve Beard, the forward contained a couple of great nuggets.

(U2’s) lyrics unfold a world beyond the things that can be merely seen and rationally grasped. The music is not a simplistic mish-mash of yummy lyrics about skipping with Jesus through the fields of daisies. Instead, their songs wrestle with pain and frustration without catering to hopelessness.

Stockman does a tremendous service to those who follow Jesus, as well as those who aren’t traveling the path. To those who count themselves among the faithfull, Stockman will help you open the eyes of your soul to intellectually and spiritually engage the music that touches the deepest part of what it means to be human. To those who do not consider themselves believers, this book will go a long way in helping explain why U2’s music seems to scratch an unidentifiable itch. (xiii)

That’s all for now. I’m in the middle of listening to Boy as I prepare for chapter one. Go pick up this book!

It can change the world inside your head…

In my inbox this morning was the following article via Relevant’s 850 Words Newsletter It is written by Steve Stockman, author of Walk On: The Spiritual Journey of U2. The revised edition of the book is in stores today. Enjoy this great article.

As the author of Walk On: The Spiritual Journey of U2 and a pastor who has studied and preached from the U2 canon for more than 20 years, I’m often asked to speak about the band.

I have noticed that after my most recent talks on U2 here in North America, there are less questions about whether the band members really are Christians. That suggests to me that people are beginning to listen and discern instead of getting hung up on whether the music is “Christian.” However, there is still something suspicious in the evangelical psyche that is still not quite sure of how to view the world’s biggest rock band. One of the most frequently asked questions from these recent talks has been, “But how much do you think U2 has changed things?”

It is an interesting question and one that needs to be asked on a wider scale. In a world dominated by the arts in general and music in particular, how much impact does it all have? Can music really transform things? Do the arts have a function other than simply to dress or decorate the culture? The traditional approach within the Church has been to minimize any positive contribution that the arts can make but, in a bizarre contradiction, publish books about the bad influence rock music has on our youth. For many years, the cinema was an anathema, and many people grew up without televisions. The obvious reason was that these things could transform for the worse, but no one ever looked at their power for the better.

Marshall McLuhan, the great Canadian expert on the media, once said, “Anyone who thinks there is a difference between education and entertainment doesn’t know the first thing about either.” Another common phrase that people share with me at the end of a lecture is, “I have been listening to U2 for years and had no idea that there was anything Christian about them.” My immediate concern is not so much that they have missed what U2 has been all about but what other stuff has been sneaking into their brains unawares. Entertainment is packed full of education—not all of it good—and without discerning minds we could be falling for all kinds of poisonous lies conforming us to the pattern of this world.

In the same way, we need to begin to recognize that education that is bland, no matter how sharp it is on truth, will be blunted without an entertaining aspect to its presentation. Immediately there are those who will question my belief in the truth and the power of God’s Word to accomplish all that God intends for it. So let us ask ourselves about God’s truth and about how He communicated the Word to His people. Even a casual look at the Scriptures will show that God has always had similar views to McLuhan when it comes to education, entertainment and art.

The range of art forms used by God to share His truth is all encompassing. From the artwork of creation through stories, poetry, songs, literature, parables as well as dramas lived out and recorded—all topping the twists, turns and emotional involvement of any Hollywood blockbuster—God used the arts. Indeed, how closely related the education and entertainment are in the Scriptures might lead us to McLuhan’s most famous phrase, “The medium is the message.” In terms of Scripture, both are certainly intrinsically linked.

The use of the arts thus becomes a biblical model and mandate. Whether it was David playing music to soothe the soul of Saul or the prophets using poetry or drama to rage at the people of God or Jesus using parables to bring in the radical thinking of a new kingdom, these art forms made their impact and transformed things. For the last few hundred years, modernism has made the means of communication more objective and left the need for the arts outside the place of learning. Something has happened in the last 20 years to bring the subjective back with a vengeance. This is not some new heresy but simply the end of the systematic blip. The arts are back—more important than they have been for some time and as important as they should always be.

So does U2 change things? That’s a silly question. All entertainment does. None of it is neutral. Bono himself said recently, “Music can change the world. It can change the world inside your head; it changed my little bedroom when I was a kid. And it can change the world.” The U2 frontman is a believer. He has belief in many things. In the current Vertigo tour, Bono has been speaking of his belief that the people at the concerts can make a difference. He has been encouraging them to join the ONE campaign, wear their MAKING POVERTY HISTORY wristband and phone presidents and prime ministers and anyone in political power. Bono even exerts a belief in these shady politicians, never doubting that they want to do what is best in making poverty history but need public swell of opinion to help them achieve it. And, of course, his belief in God has fired his prophetic rage to be involved in these issues and also leads him to believe that miracles can make the seemingly impossible, possible.

This quote from Bono is a confession of his belief in the power of music and art in this process. Anyone who has been at a Vertigo concert will readily confess to the inspirational energizing spirit for good that wells inside your heart, soul and mind during and after the concert. Here are guys who entertain but are very much aware of the need to educate. Have they changed things? Profoundly in this one life of mine, but in the next year we might find that the entire world saw poverty become history. Don’t underestimate their contribution.

As U2 adds Live 8 to its European tour dates, hoping to squeeze London into the afternoon of their Vienna gig, can we believe that music and art have any power to change things? I think the answer is a resounding “yes.”

What an amzing thought. Not that U2 can make a difference but that anyone can. Sure, Bono uses his stage (literally) to speak about important issues that are close to his heart but, what about your stage? Your office? Your coworkers? What is burning a hole in your heart? Do those around you know you deepest longings? Make a difference. If 4 friends from Dublin matter, so do you!

Note: Don’t forget that Friday is “White Band” day in honor of the ONE Campaign. If you don’t have a white wrist band pull a Chris Martin and write on your hand or use tape around your wrist.