Product Details
No Line On The Horizon (Ltd Edition Book CD+DVD)

No Line On The Horizon (Ltd Edition Book CD+DVD)
U2

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Track Listing

  1. No Line On The Horizon
  2. Magnificent
  3. Moment of Surrender
  4. Unknown Caller
  5. I'll Go Crazy If I Don't Go Crazy Tonight
  6. Get On Your Boots
  7. Stand Up Comedy
  8. Fez Being Born
  9. White As Snow
  10. Breathe
  11. Cedars Of Lebanon

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #10448 in Music
  • Released on: 2009-03-02
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Formats: Box set, Limited Edition
  • Dimensions: 2.52 pounds
  • Running time: 58 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
If you don’t already know what to expect from U2’s twelfth studio album then you’re either a goldfish with Alzheimer’s or newborn, and if that’s the case then there are probably much better places for you to start than No Line On The Horizon. However, for the rest of us this is everything it should be, even if it’s nothing you wouldn’t expect. The lead in single "Get On Your Boots" might have forgotten to pack a chorus and instead crammed in a bewildering mash of Nancy Sinatra, Cameo’s "Word Up" and Led Zeppelin in an effort to reignite the pop art dervishes in them that time washed down the creek, but it does actually get more singularly feisty with every listen. "Stand Up Comedy" is equally absurd ("Stand" by REM/"Love Spreads" by The Stone Roses/generic Red Hot Chilli Peppers in a light funk sandwich), but the album’s not all about them trying to prove their creative audacity. The title track vibrates with the mild threat of modernity and a chest-beating, loud-hailer bravado, "Moment Of Surrender" allows Bono to shed some passion over the measured, subdued backdrop and the triple of "Unknown Caller", "I’ll Go Crazy If I Don’t Go Crazy Tonight" and "Magnificent" make no bones about being classic U2, ringing chimes reverberating from The Edge’s guitar like endlessly reproducing embryos under the microscope; the kind of stuff that professional obsessives The Killers would, you know, kill for.--James Berry

CD Description
No Line On The Horizon is U2's twelfth studio album, and follows the massive success of 2004's How To Dismantle An Atomic Bomb. The first single from the album, "Get On Your Boots", may be an all-out rocker akin to previous successes like "Vertigo", but the remainder of the album sees the band diversifying in ways similar to their Zooropa days. It is inescapably a U2 album, though, so Bono's vocals still speak of injustices personal and global, and The Edge's guitar work continues to be both feathery and metallic in equal dose. As far as continuing the band's lengthy career goes, No Line On The Horizon is simultaneously a crowd-pleaser and musical step forward.

This box set version includes the digipak format of No Line On The Horizon, DVD of Anton Corbijn's exclusive companion film Linear, 64 page hardback book, plus a fold out poster.


Customer Reviews

No Line on the Horizon4
U2 are one of those bands that have such a fan base so as to merit my review irrelevant, for no matter what I or anyone else says it will not make any difference to the fact that YOU ARE GOING TO BUY THIS. I wouldn't worry too much if I were you because, in short, this album is superb. More of a "complete" album I would say than some of their recent albums, and certainly ticking all the boxes that make U2 what they are - one of the world's greatest bands. No, no, deny it all you want, but U2 are monumental for what they do, and only a fool would discriminate them for their success.

Moving away from the format of single after single of tap-your-feet-along-to-the-beat-please kind of music, U2 have produced a wonderfully vibrant collection of songs that create a whole - rather then the odd stand out track surrounded by misplaced jargon. It's not that U2's recent releases have been poor; it's just that they weren't quite up to the standard of previous classics Achtung Baby and The Joshua Tree to name but a couple. The songs here fade from one to the next with graceful precedence, and the album as a whole is a joy to listen to. By no means perfect, however, I did find the production a little heavy at times - probably just my own personal opinion (I have a thing for raw production), but not surprising given Brian Eno's presence at the helm of production, as well as others.

This is an album that will not disappoint, whether you like U2's heavier stuff or their more fragile pensive stuff, it's all here together in one perfectly arranged slice of delight that flows from the disc to your brain with delirious brilliance. I can't recommend it enough - but I doubt I really have to: you will buy this.

Excellent return for my favourite group!5
As a U2 fan for over 25yrs I have learned to expect the unexpected from Bono, Edge, Adam & Larry--and this album does not disappoint! NLOTH is just chock filled with songs that leave an imprint on the mind.I find myself humming 'Moment Of Surrender' while at work, I wake up with 'Magnificent' infusing me with adrenalin and I itch to sing 'Stand Up Comedy' and 'Breathe' at Wembley in August!

Their Best Album in 15 Years5
It must be hard being in U2. You've got everything in the world - more money than God - and can play stadiums at the click of your fingers. But what you want, you can't always get, even if you have all the money in the world. You can't buy credibility. And you can't buy genius.

When Bono's not busy flicking the V's at photographers behind pink sunglasses as he mingles with war criminals, sometimes, he gets to do his day job : musician. It's actually embarassing sometimes, as he tries to combine Jesus with Jim Morrison. Especially on the early parts of The Vertigo Tour, as he flubbed his lines and forgot the words whilst charging $200 a ticket.

When Bono's busy doing his job, that is, playing and singing music, he's certainly capable and far beyond the average. U2 have always tried, always strived, always hoped to be more than they were, always pushed the boundaries of technology and art. When it would have been easy and lucrative to pump out another dull stadium rock LP to diminishing returns, they went all weird and produced their meisterworks "Achtung Baby" and "Zooropa". A decade later, they took a step in another direction with "All That You Can Leave Behind". And whilst at the time they said they were re-applying for the biggest band in the world, they mistook biggest for best. And everyone knows biggest is not always best. An aircraft carrier makes for a rubbish yacht.

Meanwhile, U2 are one of the few bands of their age and legacy that seem absolutely determined not to fall into what I call "Rolling Stones" syndrome. U2 are always pushing forward. They don't make lazy, bloated albums of crud as an excuse to prop up a money-grubbing tour, they don't tour and not play anything off the new record, and they don't constantly prostitute their talents in sponsorship deals.

Unfortunately, there is a latter year U2 template that they often seem to revert to : the music they record now just doesn't have the bite it used to - "Unknown Caller" and "I'll Go Crazy if I Don't Go Crazy Tonight" are exactly the type of songs that U2 do in their sleep : chiming chords, mid paced drum tempos, a fluid bassline, and Bono singing about something/anything that sounds like it makes sense and doesn't, all coiled around a keyshifted chorus following The Pixies quietLOUDquiet template, and a backing that is immaculately crafted and thus, sanitised. It's been a long time since I've heard a new U2 song and been absolutely stunned by it. It's very good, well crafted, artistic, and they clearly mean it, but it sometimes doesn't grab the soul with the urgency and necessity of desperate art. This record is overthought, and underfelt.

Yet, and make no mistake about it, "No Line On The Horizon" is the best U2 album in fifteen years. I've always gravitated to the weirder stuff, where U2 were out there in the stars, doing whatever they wanted and without an eye on how it would well. It opens with the off-chord, coiled title track, which is Zooropa-esque, that grows and repeats itself with a mantra. It's probably the best single song they've done this decade. After that comes "Magnificent" : designed to open stadium shows across the world, it is exactly what it says on the tin. It's a sleek beast, like a jet taking off, an uncoiled beast with Bono almost doing autobiography and a backing that propels it to instant U2 classic status. If you like U2, that is.

That said some of the lyrics are a little alienating. Whilst most of the world is trudging to work, Bono is writing about the Bay of Cadiz and setting sail and the Atlantic Sea. Thankfully there are no pious preaching moments but that does not mean the album is not without its moments of dry humour. Make no mistake, this a wordy album, long meditations on the world, life, and the nature of a man. "Every beauty must go out with an idiot" is a fabulous line.

As is, the somewhat telling (in "Stand Up Comedy") :
"Stand up to rock stars / Napolean is in high heels / Be careful / Of small men with big ideas"

If anything, the album is a step sideways, from the recent, and more conventional, that is to say, frankly oft boring stadium rock of their last few albums to a reflective, self-aware, slightly leftfield path. The material is still recognisably U2, but a five year gap between albums should produce better material than this. And if they really have recorded 50-60 songs, are these the best they can do thus far? There are rumours of a second LP due shortly, which I await with bated breath.

The strangest thing is from here, U2 can do anything and go anywhere, and yet seem content to peek their heads only slightly out of a comfort zone and produce two types of song, big, stadium anthems occasionally and smaller, more reflective grooving ballads that search the universe known and unknown for a secret and an answer that cannot be found. Their songs are always searching, going somewhere, reflecting on where they've been and where they're going.

It's good, and certainly far better than any band of their age, vintage and wealth needs to be, but it's not great. Maybe over time it, like some of the other U2 albums, will unfold glories and mature over time. For now though, "No Line On The Horizon" is an intelligent, crafted, but slightly dull record that sees U2 hinting towards a return to their past creative high points. I suppose if the world has to have a biggest band in it, then you can do an awful lot worse than U2.