U2 Songs of Innocence – Song by Song Walkthrough

As promised

in my previous post with quick reviews of U2’s catalogue, here’s my review of

U2’s latest, Songs of Innocence. Overall, it’s a good album, but not a great

one. As with their previous outing, No Line on the Horizon, I would place it

somewhere in the middle of their output. There are few great songs, but many of

the songs are a bit… well, meh. The album still get two songs with the core 5

out 5. Not bad, but most of the other songs don’t exactly burst through the

roof so as a whole the album get 3 out of 5 stars from me. I might still change

my mind — U2 albums have a tendency to grow on you. Below is a song by song

walkthrough with some short comments for each.


U2 – Songs of

Innocence – 3 out of 5 stars



The Miracle (of Joey Ramone) – 3 out of 5 stars


This

tribute to Joey Ramone sounds nothing like a Ramone song. Good song, with

choppy rhythms and quite deliciously distorted guitars that I suspect are

intentionally made to sound bad. It sounds a bit like The Edge borrowed my old

200 Euro crap Zoom 2020 multi from the Grenland museum back in Zoran

Cullibrick’s basement. If I were to venture a guess I would say he’s using a

fuzz pedal on low gain.


Every Breaking Wave – 5 out 5 stars


Best song

of the album, one that truly belongs in the canon of great U2 songs. This is U2

wringing every last bit emotion out of a song, something they’ve done so well

in the past with songs like With or Without You, Pride (In the Name of Love)

and one (to name a few). One of the best songs U2 has made in a decade.


California (No End to Love) – 3 out of 5 stars


U2 tries

their hand at surf pop with a song that starts of with a Beach Boy’s like chant

(baba Barbara, Santa Barbara…). A catchy tune, almost in the style of Even Better

Than the Real Thing. This is a good song, but alas, not quite the real thing.


Song for Someone – 5 out of 5 stars


A

hauntingly beautiful ballad, Song for Someone is another emotional track, with

gorgeous soaring Edge backing vocals. “I was told I’d feel nothing the first

time”. Great lyric.


Iris (Hold me Close) – 3 out of 5 stars


The opening

of this song sounds suspiciously like that of Fleetwood Mac’s Little Lies (1987). This tribute to

Bono’s mother Iris, who died when Bono was 14, also pays tribute to U2’s

post-punk origins. Given how important this song must be to Bono, I can’t help

but to feel it should’ve been better. The line “something in your eyes, took a thousand

years to get here” is one the best pieces of lyrics on the album.


Volcano – 4 out 5 stars


Hard

driving bass, delicious pop melody chorus. This one you will be humming on for

days after listening to it.


Raised by Wolfs – 3 out of 5 stars


The heaviest

and possibly the most intense song of the album. Political lyrics, wailing

song, tom-tom galore and a good nod to U2’s roots.


Ceaderwood Road – 2 out 5 stars


This is U2

crossing into more traditional rock music, with Zeppelin and Hendrix like

guitar riff and more straight forward drum licks. There’s been one song like in

this style on the last few albums they’ve made and I can’t help it. I don’t

think U2 does this kind of music well.


Sleep Like a Baby Tonight – 3 out 5 stars


With heavy

lyrics and quite creative structure, I can’t help but to feel that this song

too should’ve been more than it is. It never really reaches the heights one has

come to expect of U2 songs. The verse borrows from Gene Pitney’s Something’s Got a Hold on My Heart.

Maybe this has something to do with it?


This is Where You Can Reach Me Now – 3 out 5

stars


The most

experimental track of the album, with Edge guitar that sounds like sweeping

birdsong one moment, blues the next and Pointer Sister’s the next again. Did it

work? Sort of.


The Troubles – 4 out 5 stars


Beautiful

closer with Lykke Li performing guest vocals. Not likely to be a radiohit but still one of the strongest tracks on the album.

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Published on October 13, 2014 01:41
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