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Oct
04

U2 Brings Magnificent Show to Raleigh

u2_1 The U2 Spaceship landed in Raleigh and rocked for over two hours while a crowd of around 70,000 stood in awe; in awe of its massiveness, the band’s importance in rock history, and the show’s importance in the area’s entertainment spectrum. It was the first appearance by the world’s biggest rock band since they played in a rainy Kenan Stadium in 1983, opening for Todd Rundgren. Since those days of politically charged, angst rock, the band has matured, becoming a staple in dentists offices and Adult Contemporary radio stations around the globe. They are truly the world’s most accessible and versatile band, cemented as one of the 3-decade greats in rock history.

While we are lucky to live in an area that can support such an impressive evening of live entertainment, I found myself wondering: what took so long for the band’s return? It isn’t like the area hasn’t proven itself with a strong local music scene as well as its ability to fill one of America’s first 20,000-seat sheds, Walnut Creek, summer in and summer out. U2 had a date scheduled here in 1997 for their abominable Pop Mart tour, but the show was mysteriously cancelled, widely believed to be the victim of poor ticket sales. However that shouldn’t count against us. Rather it stands as a testament that we don’t shell out the bucks for badly slumping entertainers! U2 really found their stride again in 2000 with “All That You Can’t Leave Behindâ€, and the Triangle certainly would have responded well to a date on either of the last two tours! Nevertheless, we got our date, showed up in a big way, and had a great time.

It was an absolutely perfect night for a concert. After a day of watching football, fans trickled into the Carter-Finley lots throughout the late afternoon. We entered the East parking lot at 6pm, and had plenty of time mingle with friends before entering the stadium.

Muse Muse took the stage around 7:15 with a gorgeous sun-setting backdrop and temperatures hovering around 75. It was the first glimpse of the awesome quadrapod canopy that became the highlight of the night. More on that later, because Muse was so good we didn’t really care about the canopy. Their set was flawless, though the sound engineers had far too much kick-drum in the mix. Their set lasted around 45 minutes to an hour, which gave the entering crowd their only chance to hear a hard rock band all day. They closed with “Starlight†(one of my favorite songs of the decade), then an impeccable “Time Is Running Outâ€. Muse is not for everyone, and to be honest, I’m not sure they were the ideal act to get typical U2 fans revved. They are a fantastic band, but not a strictly fun band, like the Black Eyed Peas are. I imagine the crowds seeing some of the Pea-opening dates will be a little more excited when U2 hits the stage.

U2_4 The four-legged theatrical housing is awesome as billed. Taking 4 days to assemble, the massive structure’s footprint took over half of Carter-Finley’s field space. It will take two days to strike the set. Therefore there are actually two (and perhaps three) of these sets in the U.S. right now. The separate crews will leapfrog dates in order to provide the band a show date every 3-4 days.

The giant canopy housed the entire PA system, numerous lights on its exterior and interior, and a video cylinder made of thousands of small elongated hexagons. Later in the show the cylinder stretched downward almost to stage level, resembling a basketball net and offering a fascinating tornado/basket visual effect. The real genius of the canopy is that it was extremely lightweight at its base, affording ticket sales in 360 degrees.

The circular stage did not rotate, but was surrounded by a full circle outer stage, accessible by adjustable bridges. The band’s equipment was kept to a minimum, and afforded excellent sight lines for most of the 360 degrees.

The big surprise of the canopy was its exterior lighting. The visual artists made masterful use of the vertical spine that ran from just above Larry Mullins’ head up to around 40 feet higher than the canopy. It had mirror balls in its termini, and contained a myriad of internal and external lights.

U2_2 The band had a tough task at hand: making a venue for 70,000 “intimateâ€. They worked all parts of the stage all night, and never seemed to sound musically distant from one another.

The light show was phenomenal. With a unique lighting program for each song, the concert never seemed redundant. Even at the end we were surprised with some lighting tricks: lighting from all around the stadium.

The band did a tasteful job of pushing its humane politics without being too pious. The pressing message of the night came during Walk On, as hundreds of children filled the circular ring holding in front of their faces pictures of political prisoner Aung San Suu Kyi. It was a defiant challenge to the Burmese captors who apparently will imprison anyone carrying a picture of the Nobel Peace Price winner. Bono also acknowledged the efforts of both the John Edwards and Jesse Helms families for their work toward the “One†program. It was a classy way to disarm a crowd with strong personal feelings for these two local political giants.

While the concert was truly a phenomenal entertainment event, it wasn’t without its shortcomings. While the lighting canopy set new standards, the sound quality did not. The entire PA system was centralized, so the sound was projecting from a pinpoint spot among the immersive visual experience. It created a slightly muddy mix where instruments were not able to stand out and be heard by themselves. Overall the quality of that sound was adequate, it just wasn’t as complete a sound as we have heard in previous stadium shows like Pink Floyd and The Who.

Additionally, Bono’s microphone had a distinct digital sound to it, which did make his sometimes strident voice even edgier. Perhaps it was the major factor as well with our inability to understand what Bono was saying between songs. For instance, at the beginning of “City of Blinding Lightsâ€, Bono pulled a boy up on stage and said something about why he was doing it. Because of the muddiness, we have no idea why they proceeded to run a lap around the ring and stop for Bono to sing a song about a city with blinding lights to him.

The setlists for the tour have been changing quite a bit. The Raleigh setlist contained some peculiarities that seem to be consistent throughout the tour. The band opened with “Breatheâ€, which really set the David Letterman crowd into a frenzy in March, but didn’t quite do it for this crowd. After a good performance of the annoying “Get On Your Bootsâ€, the band launched in a huge crowd-pleaser, “Mysterious Waysâ€. I never expected to hear that song live due to the prodigious amount of sound tracking the song contains. “Beautiful Day†was really good, but the band didn’t really hit their stride with this audience until “Elevationâ€, which had just about everybody at field level and most in the stands bouncing. Early in the concert, it was painfully obvious that Bono had no idea just what you say to a crowd in Raleigh, NC. However at this point the concert was really taking off and Bono found his groove with the City of Oaks.

U2_3 The most baffling song of the set was the incredibly gorgeous “Magnificentâ€, which was a complete flop with the audience. The movement of this song within the setlist throughout the tour proves that our response wasn’t unique. The band simply cannot figure out how to sell this song. They opened with it in Boston, but apparently that didn’t work because it was immediately moved into the middle for the next show. While the song has been a flop on the charts, a key problem with its live presentation is the lighting. They are keeping a constant bright aqua lighting theme throughout the song, which is unfortunate. If anything, this song should be sung under the cloak of near darkness and incorporate strobes and hyper lighting changes during Mullin’s pulsating drumrolls that spill into the chorus.

The set list needs some life at the end as well. I felt like the climax of the show came during Sunday Bloody Sunday, a full 45 minutes before the show’s end. After that point we were treated to “MLKâ€, “Walk Onâ€, “Oneâ€, “Where the Streets Have No Nameâ€, “Ultra Violetâ€, “Without or Without Youâ€, and “Moment of Surrenderâ€. This is ENTIRELY too much slow music for the last 45 minutes of a concert. Streets was excellent, but while Ultra Violet is up tempo, it isn’t a strong enough song for this set list.

WRAL FM’s Lynda Loveland and her husband sat behind us and it hit me during the show; U2 is an Adult Contemporary band. “Sunday Bloody Sundayâ€, “Elevationâ€, “Beautiful Day†are really good rock songs, but the bread and butter of U2’s catalog is really songs like “Oneâ€, “Walk Onâ€, “Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking Forâ€, etc. I realized that 90% of the show’s songs are extremely appropriate for playing in my dentist office, which means that this really is not a rock band with an “edgeâ€, but rather one of the legendary Adult Contemporary artists of our time.

The Irish rebel band with bad haircuts found themselves at a crossroad with their fame and fortune. Instead of falling into the trap of writing noisier songs to deny their progressing age, U2 wrote better songs and reached out to more people. Their slump in the 90’s taught them some humility, and taught them that they cannot rest on their laurels. They still get out there and work their fannies off, and judging by people’s comments, U2 surpassed expectations. They may not be the hardest rocking band on the planet, but they are the biggest, and the Triangle has missed them in a big way.

5 stars (out of 6)

Setlist

Breathe – Fun song, crowd isn’t as into it as David Letterman’s audience. This isn’t a big hit song, though.

Get On Your Boots – Glad they got that one out the way early. Ugh.

Mysterious Ways – much tracking coming in over the PA system. Crowd LOVES this song. Oh yeah. 101 played this incessantly for months. BIG appeal song.

Beautiful Day – I love this song, but didn’t feel completely moved by it. Something isn’t quite clicking. Bono has no idea what to say to Raleigh, NC. C’mon man, talk about basketball and BBQ!

No Line On The Horizon – doubt we’ll ever hear that song live gain. Neat, bleak white theme for the video boards.

Magnificent – This song is GORGEOUS….and I think only about 20 other people like it. Lighting job on this is pretty, but no changes – like watching a marching band that doesn’t move. C’Mon, U2, make me jump and shout!!

Elevation – THERE you go! This is one of the legendary stadium rock songs of all time. Fantastic delivery, and the crowd is really getting it now.

In A Little While – Good, but a good bathroom break for people.

New Year’s Day – YES! Couldn’t understand Bono’s message to the military members. What is up with his diction/microphone. Can’t understand spoken words here. GREAT song, and Bono’s singing is phenomenal on this. He really is a tenor and nailed all of the soaring “oh’sâ€.

I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For – Very good. This concert is really cooking now. Like the Stand By Me tag at the end, crowd sang along well.

Stuck In A Moment… – Acoustic duo with Edge/Bono performing to the back of the house with full white-canopy lighting. Very well done and less strident than the recording. Edge’s falsetto is good. Coincidence? They sing this song to the people with the worst seats!

The Unforgettable Fire – Whoah! The video screen which had seems that resembled a basketball tournament bracket, is opening up. Each of those elongated hexagons is on a cross matrix, and the whole thing looks like a basketball net now.

City of Blinding Lights – Bono pulls “Ryan†out of the audience and they run a lap around the ring together. Video of Ryan’s face is obscured by the open gaps in the video board, which is artistically interesting. Can’t understand Bono’s explanation of just why the hell “City of Blinding Lights†makes a boy running laps relevant. Anyone?

Vertigo – YES!! Fantastic performance of a great song. THIS is a rock show, baby!

I’ll Go Crazy if I Don’t Go Crazy Tonight – This is the Redanka’s remix. I’ve never seen a band do a techno dance remake of a song, live. VERY interesting.

Sunday Bloody Sunday – Great, straightforward version of the song, but all green lighting for this?? Ah! He’s doing people get ready. My friend who was in Boston says this banner (with the song’s chords) was not at that show. Did this guy really make a banner? Little help here, people. “Wanna sing it? Be cool.†Bono tosses the mic into the crowd to a tone-def fan. FUN! (In Atlanta in 1989 they pulled a guy on stage, gave him a guitar, and he played along with the band for the song. awesome). This band really likes their crowd. They are confident, but not cocky jerks.

MLK – Fine

Walk On – Very nice adult contemporary song. Here come hundreds of children around the ring defiantly holding pictures of the Burmese prisoner’s face. Neat effect. How are the going to get these kids off without their being a distraction in the next song? Oh yeah. A fake “Good night!â€

ENCORES

One – Very nice, goes into Amazing Grace. The three black people in the crowd are stunned.

Where The Streets Have No Name – YES! This is a good one. Canopy is really pulsating with lights.

Ultra Violet – meh. C’mon. Play PRIDE!!

With Or Without You – Very good. Lynda Loveland and her husband are just an adorable couple, dancing to their wedding song behind me.

Moment of Surrender – Boring. What? That’s it? OK WAAAYY too many slow songs. This show peaked at 10:15, and the last 45 minutes felt like filler.

Parking lots took over 1:45 to empty

  • cindy

    i was one of those people who drove 2.5 hrs in 1997 to a cancelled show at walnut creek…enjoyed the concert last night but didn’t feel the intimacy as i was soooooooo far away…the video show both for muse and u2 was awesome…and your write up of the venue is right on…

  • Neva

    Hey Dana – great review. Loved the show. Wanted to clarify some parts as I understood them. First, I wore earplugs at the show (first time ever). And, although I felt like an old fart it really helped with discrimination of the sounds and made it sound much better actually. I think I heard more of Bono talking than you did. I loved that he said. “We’re in North Carolina ya’ll” at the beginning.
    And, to answer about Ryan and the City of Blinding Lights. When he brought him on stage he said something to the effect of I need to see the beauty I had before the world changed and I think it alluded to the lyrics..

    “The more you know the less you see
    The less you find out as you go
    I knew much more then than I do now.

    I want Time…time…time…time…time
    Won’t leave me as I am
    But time won’t take the boy out of this man.

    I think he found a young boy to represent his younger self. Also, I think they decided to run because it seemed like a kid thing to do. They were over near us when they started running. Ryan looked totally in shell shock and confused about what to do so Bono said, “you want to run with me” and he nodded. It was really touching.

    I think they are a band with amazing talent and really good hearts.

    My favorite part was the acoustic “Stuck in a Moment”. Highlighted the beauty of gorgeous guitar chords and lyrics. They held the attention of 70,000 people with just one guitar player and a voice (or two).
    I did miss Pride though.

  • Neva

    Oh, also, they were not kids on the stage for Walk On. They were all adults. They had come out of the Red Zone. I saw them all leave a few minutes before and wondered where the heck they were going!

    • http://www.danamccall.com Dana

      Alright, a few things:
      * Thanks for the clarification, Neva. After watching a few YouTube clips today, it is apparent that the sound was better up high and down low toward the sides than it was really low at my angle. I heard him say something like “you have the face I once had”, but since I am COMPLETLY not a lyrics guy, I haven’t really absorbed the meaning of that song.
      * Not only do I need my ears checked, I need my eyes checked, too! So they weren’t kids. I guess that speaks to the enormity of the set?
      * Neva rules :)

      I hope that people don’t misconstrue my criticism of the show. It really was phenomenal, but I think the song choices down the stretch kept it from quite reaching its potential. I’d strike “MLK” and put “One” there in the main set. Then close with “All Because of You” or “Pride”. That would have sealed the deal.

  • Jason

    Pride, definately, and what happened to Desire??? Excellent show, beautiful song at the end, but not a great way to end. Great review, pretty spot on.

  • Kevin

    My amazement for “The Claw” was quickly eclipsed by my amazement for the traffic situation leaving that show. We sat there over 2 hours, without anyone directing any traffic onto Westchase. Ever see 5 lot lanes trying to merge into one, to get into three lanes of stopped traffic? It’s a disaster. I should have seen it coming when they hired McLaurin parking, who has nearly zero experience at that venue. But at least I got to see it, unlike some of the last minute folk who couldn’t find parking.

    Rants aside, it was a pretty good show. I agree with the criticism of the setlist, it could have been stronger. I saw Jerry Cantrell and Stone Temple Pilots at a Charlotte Center City Fest several years ago, and the two together put on an amazing show, with a crowd pleaser of a setlist. No special effects, but it’s still my favorite concert to date.

  • DPK

    I thought that their 1997 tour was axed here not due to poor ticket sales, but one of the background video screens was damaged due to foul weather at a previous tour location. Pretty sure of that.

  • Dana

    Kevin,
    This event involved almost 4X as many people as a hockey game, which typically takes over 30 minutes to clear. When we left at 12:30, the RBC Center lots were totally clear. We’ve sat for over 45 minutes in Cary leaving a 10,000 seat venue.

    What’s up with this story about people who didn’t make it to the concert due to traffic? We waltzed in at 6pm for a 7pm concert. Of course, readers of gogoraleigh’s twitter feed were privy to insider traffic info 😉

  • steelcity36

    The show was great, but Muse really rocked the house. I would never say they were better than U2, but they would have had the whole crowd moving if everybody was in the stadium. Seemed like U2 had a hard time getting everybody amped up.

    Parking Lot traffic was a nightmare and I think we do have McLaurin to thank for it. Why wouldn’t the promoters use the same system in put in place for NCSU Football and Hurricanes hockey? Makes you wonder why Meeker is pushing so hard for a downtown stadium when McLaurin, who controls most of the downtown parking lots, does such a horrible job? Oh that’s right because he is married to a McLaurin and he would personally benefit.

  • Daria

    Muse was amazing! I was so bummed that half the stadium was still empty while they played. I thought Muse was a pretty well known band but I guess not, and they didn’t seem to fit well with the typical U2 fan. I agree though the mix was off, it was difficult to hear the vocals. We had forgotten our earplugs.
    I arrived at 6:00pm as well, thinking we were too late, but I found getting in and parking to be relatively painless. We also left right after With or Without You and got out pretty easily.
    All and all I’m really happy we got to experience this in Raleigh, even though I personally think U2 hit their peak with the Joshua Tree.

  • Kevin

    Yeah, I was there at 3pm. So no traffic issues going in for me. I think the traffic problems going in were for those coming in from 40E/Wade, probably at 7pm. I came in from Blueridge/Trinity and exited on Westchase.

    Like I said, I’ve been to some full house football games (55k people) on fair night, which is usually a cataclysmic traffic situation and it did not compare to this. I grabbed an extra beer, and walked around for a little while. I was surprised to find that there weren’t any parking attendants helping to move people through the lots. It was every man for himself. There’s usually people helping with traffic around the RBC service roads, as well as Westchase, but nothing Saturday night.

  • PeterO

    I was there when they opened for Todd Rundgren back in ’82. They were good. But I mostly remember Rundgren. That was something.

  • Daria

    Those of us living in the Raleigh area were really lucky. I just read in the N&O today about the traffic nightmares on 40, and how some people never even made it to the show. Being that I was able to take backroads to the stadium, I had no idea this was happening and it explains why I was able to just pull in to a largely empty parking lot. I feel so bad for those people coming from the West, no wonder Raleigh rarely gets really big acts if we can’t plan ahead for this.

  • Bruce in NC

    Is it heresy to say I went to this concert specifically to see Muse? They put on a great show! I wonder if their late start caused them to nix a song or two that I thought they would have played. I’ll have to check playlists from other shows. It was nice of U2 to close for them.

    I am really glad I saw U2 as well. The set, the weather, my seat were just great. I feel bad for those that did not get to the show due to traffic. It is a real shame and requires official review and improvement otherwise word will spread that Raleigh can’t handle the big shows.

  • Dana

    Bruce, check out this YouTubr clip of Hysteria. WHOAAAA!!
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KcodpCm8c4g

  • Lilleth

    I wonder why they didn’t play “Until the End of the World.” Wikipedia says it’s their 14th most frequently played live song.

  • John

    To add to the comments about the 1997 tour, I remember that the Raleigh date was for Carter-Finley, not Walnut Creek. It was indeed canceled because the video backdrop was damaged in a wind and rain storm in Washington, DC at RFK Stadium during the proceeding show. The repairs would take 3 days that included Raleigh’s date so Raleigh was canceled/skipped. However, only 20,000 tickets had been sold so this was a convenient excuse to not bother adding Raleigh back to the schedule at a later date.

    Articles:

    http://www.atu2.com/news/rains-apathy-cancel-u2-in-raleigh.html

    http://www.u2tours.com/displayfan.src?ID=19970526&XID=309&Return=

    Photo:

    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/69/U2-LiveInReggioEmilia-19970920-BonoEdge.jpg/800px-U2-LiveInReggioEmilia-19970920-BonoEdge.jpg

    I had tickets to the ’97 show.

    I attended the recent show and was in GA Inner Circle. This was the best concert and best U2 show I have attended to date.

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