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Am I the ony one who thinks this month's Word Magazine articles about U2 were rubbish?

knasil's picture

Yuk! These articles stink… It is so bad I don’t know where to begin. Take the stereotypical rock star: starts young, forms a band, annoys everybody, makes a couple of great drugs-and-alcohol fuelled albums, makes millions, marries supermodel, makes bad album, gets reviled by the music press, spends his money in superfluous over-the-top luxury, checks several times into rehab, beats a couple of paparazzi, spends night in jail for some stupid crime (beating a policeman or shoplifting being favoured), keeps spending not-so-easy-anymore money, makes a couple of over-the-top and pretentious albums, appears alongside all sorts of famous people most of whom know nothing about music, divorces one supermodel after another (not after battering some of them), wears a hat or a bandana to conceal that he’s losing his once trademark hair, plays Glastonbury alongside people who are 20 years younger for the last time, his overspending catches up and he dies poor and alone from an overdose in a cheap hotel, family scrambles for money only to find out there are only debts, younger bands play tributes and make covers of his two only worth-remembering songs, Mojo and Word magazines dedicate some lines to him. The end.

This is the standard. All future rock’n’roll artists should try hard to do the same. Some even get serious and kill a prostitute or sexually abuse a child. It’s part of life. It’s what you have to do to belong to that immortal club of rock stars. However, when somebody does different he gets a treatment like the one Bono received from The Word this month… C’mon guys! For every issue surrounding Bono there are several interpretations, one being that he is a pretentious prat with messianic delusions, a manipulator in search of fame and another that he genuinely believes that he can change the world by talking to decision-makers and just does that. Your journalists have unanimously gone for the cynical option, even when there is plenty of proof of the second one! Let’s see some examples of the distilled poison I had to read today:

Page 84: “Compared to that of some other short male rock stars I won’t mention, his overcompensating desire to be noticed…”
Oh yes, the guy is short and wants to be noticed. So what! He’s a rock star for God’s sake!

Page 87: “Bono’s charisma can be attributed largely to his glasses”… What! Would anybody dare to say this about John Lennon (who wore the most iconical glasses in rock history)? What a lot of rubbish. They guy wears shades, full stop. His charisma has to do with his enormous capacity to charm people (mentioned in the previous article) and with the fact that the guy WRITES good songs with lyrics that reach people, which seems not to be worthy a mention anywhere in the magazine. The strangest thing about this musician is that nobody mentions his music.

And here your magazine gets serious:
Page 88: Bono gets accused of the hideous crime of being successful!! Because he was Ireland’s best export he “choked” Irish music because every band wanted to be like U2…. What!!!! Would you seriously agree that the Beatles “chocked” rock music because of the success they had in America made every teenager in the world want to write songs like Lennon and McCartney. What a piece of rubbish argument. I never heard something more stupidly poisonous than that. On page 89 he committed another hideous crime by being in between David Trimble and John Hume, what an arrogant git he is… sneaking in the middle of the hard working politicians to get some credit for the agreement. Nobody cared to suggest that there might have been the politicians who longed to be seen near a cultural icon that could actually talk to younger people? How biased and ill-intentioned you have to be to write an article like that!

The last bit of the article is actually the (poisonous) cherry at the top.

Page 89: “people hate him for flying his hat first class and for carting his stage set in 120 vehicles”. He is a rock star for God’s sake. Would you ever get it? For him paying a first class ticket is like for you and me paying a first class post stamp. He lives in another dimension where money becomes meaningless. A demonstration of how living in rich limbo can affect your senses comes from the multitude of MPs asking for stupid expenses last month. At least Bono’s money comes from you and me willingly paying for his CDs and concert tickets, not from the taxes.

Page 89: “Bono can’t sing” well, if Bono can’t sing I would like to know of any mega-rock-band leader who actually can. That would be a matter of taste and the fact that the guy is still selling his music after 29 years speaks about the ignorance of the rock music public who keeps buying his music. In fact people are ignorant and rock music journalists should decide who gets into the hall of fame and who doesn’t. That would be a much fairer world wouldn’t it… we would be all listening to properly sanctified bands sitting still on our chairs.

Page 89: “It’s not right to criticise a dog for not being a horse”…Has this woman ever heard punk rock music? Has she ever heard rock music? Where does she live, in Pavarotti’s cuckooland? Is she a Bell-Canto music teacher found frozen in the Italian Alps? I don’t’ believe you even consider printing opinions like this. What a patronising piece of rubbish!! I have never felt so angry with a stupid article in my whole life. I am subscribed to The Word magazine in the hope that your editor spares me rubbish like this... Please!!

Page 91: “Celebrity politics tend to be a total failure” Not a mention here of the Jubilee foreign debt cancellation initiatives of 1996 and 2000, of the Make Poverty History campaign, the One campaign, the End Malaria campaign and loads of others that are not only raising interests in issues that have been around for years but actually channelling money from rich people to poor. No one knows if celebrity politics work. No one will know for a few decades. To assume to have the answer is at least ignorant and patronising.

Page 91: “…after his ludicrous pronouncement, by far the most grandiose of the day…” Paraphrasing Martin Luther King seems to be a capital sin in the music business. Then we need to start shooting cartloads of people. Name me a musician that has not made a public statement in favour of world peace! Hey man, may be this guy Bono needs to support the far right and fund the BNP to be really accepted by your magazine. Why do we judge him by a completely different standard than any other star?

I am no U2 fan, I am not a staunch Irish catholic, in fact I am an atheist who believes religiosity actually harms charitable work. I n fact I always mistrusted famous people who engage in celebrity politics… I may not agree with his politics, but to treat this man the way you magazine is treating him and by extension, to all of us who buy his music and attend his concerts is just plain wrong. I doubt it very much that you will even react to my concerns unless other people join me and ask for a fairer view of the man. I think you readers deserve better.

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Uuuuuuurrrh2

For what it's worth, I saw U2 at the Marquee Club in 1980, just as the initial buzz was out. At the end of the set me and my mate it agreed they were a bunch of boring, pretentious twats who would fade into oblivion within the next three weeks.
Okay, so I was wrong on the second point, but they've never given me a reason to question my original judgement on the first.

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Rotherhithe Hack | 4 July 2009 - 12:57pm

You are Neil McCormick...

...and I claim my £5.

While I own some U2 records, I dislike Bono because he affects to campaign for the poor while living the life of a tax exile.

You may find the 'U2's biographer doesn't like THE WORD's U2 cover story' thread to be of interest.

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Paolo Meccano | 4 July 2009 - 1:26pm

No I am not

Anyway, I feel flattered since English is not even my first language!

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knasil | 5 July 2009 - 8:23pm

Good grief!

How long did writing that tirade take you? And how many people will actually take the time to read it all? You'd be far better off making your point more succinctly.

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Johan | 4 July 2009 - 1:29pm

Some did didn't they...

I spent the whole saturday morning. In fact I had nothing better to do here in Barcelona.

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knasil | 5 July 2009 - 8:25pm

Yes,

there's not much to do in Barcelona, one of the world's greatest cities!!

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Johan | 5 July 2009 - 8:38pm

Well...

it is one of the world's greatest cities... but when you live here and it's 35 degrees you prefer to stay at home writing blogs about Bono, he he.

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knasil | 5 July 2009 - 8:59pm

I'll be succinct

Great magazine,shite article on U2.How's that?

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Doug B | 4 July 2009 - 1:36pm

Way off the mark,

actually. I thought the article was up to the mag's usual high standard.

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Johan | 4 July 2009 - 1:39pm

Awful article

The most 'phoned-in' article i've seen in The Word. The final nail for me so won't be renewing the subscription next month.

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Gareth | 4 July 2009 - 2:24pm

Uncut

Has been doing these lazy articles a lot and is why I will not ne renewing my subscription with them.I only hope this is a one off.Frankly it was just bad page filling.

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Doug B | 4 July 2009 - 2:43pm

i rather enjoyed the articles

Didn't think they were any less thoughtful than most other Word pieces

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Dave Holley | 4 July 2009 - 3:53pm

[deleted]

I'm not really the sort of person to come online and slag peeps off, but reading the original post that's the word that comes to mind. An awful lot of time and energy taken up by being angry at a pretty ordinary article. Frankly while I can find it in myself to admire your passion for U2 I think there are more important things to engage with in life than a bunch of midget tax dodgers.

So yeah: [deleted].

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SimonL | 4 July 2009 - 4:56pm

*cough*

This might be an appropriate moment to remind people of our posting guidelines. This forum exists as a place to offer different opinions, and we don't expect for a moment for people to agree on everything - or indeed anything - but we do ask that you remain polite and friendly to each other at all times.

http://www.wordmagazine.co.uk/faq#posting_guidelines

Thanks.

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Fraser Lewry | 4 July 2009 - 5:03pm

Apologies

I find I can't edit my original post. It's simply too hot here right now. My fingers got a little carried away.

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SimonL | 4 July 2009 - 5:43pm

Thanks

I've done it for you.

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Fraser Lewry | 4 July 2009 - 5:45pm

Really, no passion at all...

Just some free time to write...

Besides, if this article was ordinary I would have stopped buying this magazine ages ago.

There are lots of rock stars who live a millionaire life and do nothing about improving the lives of others. It is simply not their job! But why throw bullshit at the guy who does different? OK, critisize him but be fair... The examples I cited were way off the mark.

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knasil | 5 July 2009 - 9:00pm

Haven't read it yet. Still a great band though.

See earlier post for proof...

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Uncle Wheaty | 4 July 2009 - 5:06pm

A U2 Fan Writes...

The article was interesting. It seems to be fairly balanced between "pro" and "anti" pieces, even if the some of the pieces slagging off Bono appeared a little hysterical. God forbid we should never question the motives or criticise the actions of successful people - especially those who voice opinions suggesting how we should behave. I don't have to agree, but I can still appreciate that others might have perfectly good reason to think differently... and one of the reasons I read magazines like The Word is because I like the breadth of opinion.

This reaction reads to me as if it's truly hysterical, however: to suggest that you have to "kill a prostitute or sexually abuse a child"... "to belong to that immortal club of rock stars" is disingenuous in the extreme, if not frankly ludicrous. You happily admit that there are "several interpretations" to Bono's actions, but then criticise writers if they dare to put voice to them.

Also: forgive me, but is there not a contradiction in saying you're "no U2 fan", before admitting in the same paragraph to being in the group of people who see then live and buy their records? Perhaps that's why U2 are so big: even people who don't like them are generously lining the band's pockets.

Personally, I'm just looking forward to the Wembley shows.

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Barry Womm | 4 July 2009 - 6:30pm

I suggest u to read my entry with more care...

I did not say that you have to kill a prostitute or sexually abuse a child... to belong to that immortal club of rock stars.

I said: "Some [rock artists] even get serious and kill a prostitute or sexually abuse a child."

which has a totally different meaning. Thank God blog pages allow you to cut and paste old bits.

I do not mind people critisizing whoever they want, but this piece was just rubbish, a bad pile-up of old prejudices and anecdotes with no journalistic investigation watsoever. The kind of opinion you hear in the pub after a few rounds. I do not pay the price of the magazine plus foreign subscription to read the same rubbish I hear from my half drunken mates at the pub.

Once Julie Burchill declared that she does not do reseach. I inmediately thought "it shows".

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knasil | 5 July 2009 - 8:54pm

conspiracy theory

I've got U2 albums and I've got no idea how. They just seem to appear. For instance I've got that one with the one on it about it being a nice day and I've absolutely no idea why or how. Do people come into our houses under cover of darkness and just plant the beastly things or exchange them for old unlistened to Supergrass albums? I mean good luck to the tax dodging, Bush tolerating caterwauling chap with the silly name but how do I stop him getting into my property?

As for the article, there were some interesting anecdotes from those that have met the aforementioned but it felt "bitty" it didn't go anywhere or conclude anything. Not really worth getting upset about as there will be another one along in a minute!

Much like those bishops in the 70's with life of brian surely U2 fans faith in the lad can't be shaken that much by a few jokes or a dissenting voice or several?

And why did they never play Glastonbury, was it the money or because they couldn't control the TV recording? either way, it just seems strange to me that they and the stones have not done it. Something cynical, cold and corporate seems to intervene and stop what should be, and is for many if not all, a privelige and career defining highlight.

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Jon Whitney | 4 July 2009 - 7:57pm

I read in an Eavis interview that

they nearly played a couple of years back but couldn't agree to lack of control over what was broadcast on TV (although that didn't seem a problem with Laughing Len) so they didn't.

I found the some of the 'J'accuse Bono' articles interesting and some a little dull and pointless. Much like my appreciation of the band's output. Haven't seen em in a few years* and haven't bought the albums either.

* except when they turned up unannounced at that Cat Stevens gig last month

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DogFacedBoy | 4 July 2009 - 8:44pm

agree with Barry

Seemed fairly well-balanced to me - a few negative points of view set off by some pretty positive ones. Mind you, I'm not a U2 fan.

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timjulian | 5 July 2009 - 10:08am

I couldn't

Really care less about U2,but surely they get enough coverage elsewhere (as we found out recently).There are so many great and interesting artists out there that would kill for a piece in The Word and these articles just seemed very pointless to me.
I would much rather read an article on a new and upcoming band to be honest than read about how Bono is short and wears shades and is a megalomaniac.(not exactly a huge surprise)
I'm sure having him on the front cover sells a lot of copies but I just thought this was below the usual high quality I've come to expect from the mag.
There should be room for people to criticise things in the magazine without the over zealous attacks on them from the true believers.

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Doug B | 5 July 2009 - 10:46am

Not much to add...

I have not much to add to this thread other than pointing out that, although I buy his records and like his shows, I am not a big Bono fan in the sense that he is not among my top 30 favourite musicians, I just happen to consume and listen to a lot of music. Thanks Paolo Meccano for pointing me out to McCormick's piece. Although he does admit his partiality he basically says the same as I. May be he would have been the right person to include so as to keep the articles more balanced.

http://www.neilmccormick.co.uk/?p=466

Dear Word people: I was sincerely appalled by the far below average quality of the U2/Bono articles and I hope next time you do better. I still consider this to be the best entertainment magazine in business today.

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knasil | 5 July 2009 - 10:03pm
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