BLOG | JUN. 11, 2025

U2's Songs of Innocence "Review"


I'm not actually going to review the music on this record; it's free, just go get it and listen to it yourself. Instead, I'm a bit fascinated by the mechanics of the release itself. As my wife said when I told her I had the record, "Does anybody care about U2 anymore?" She certainly doesn't, and she brings up a good point. What does the world's once biggest band do on the eve of releasing their 97th record to a world that mostly doesn't care? Well, if you're buddies with the CEO of Apple, you can literally give it away on iTunes on the same day that Apple debuts the Apple Watch and a slew of new iPhones.

1

At first I thought it was pretty ballsy move for U2 to give away their album for free — one they had worked years on with lots of pricey big name producers — but then I heard that Apple essentially paid $100 million for the album in a deal that involved guaranteed marketing budgets and a blanket royalty. The deal was brokered by their new manager Guy Oseary, part of the Live Nation conglomerate. Bono was quoted in the New York Times, saying, "We're not going in for the free music around here." So not that ballsy after all?

Notwithstanding whether this comes off more as PR for some new consumer electronics, it also puts the band in an interesting critical position. Music journalism, or what it has turned into today, is pretty much geared towards one thing: publicists, on behalf of the bands (and their labels) they are paid to represent, implore journalists to write about their clients albums so the records will sell. If an album is being given away on this scale, it removes the sales part and takes away a primary part of the equation. It remains to be seen how this will be perceived. The other thing that is interesting to me is U2's obvious and continued quest for authenticity. Creators these days are very concerned about being authentic, artisanal, and handcrafted. It's a mostly thin facade that culturally we can usually see though, but who amongst us doesn't appreciate a handcrafted object over a machine made one? The explosion of $15 hamburgers and microbrews in the face of Big Macs and a can of Budweiser will attest to this. As they approach their mid-50s, the members of U2 appear very artisanal and authentic, down to their matching faded dark leather jackets that they have possibly carefully kept from falling apart since their youth in Dublin. But one little detail that jumped out at me was their use of a computer generated typewriter font for . Using the typewriter font screams out, "We are handmade. We are vintage. We are artisanal." I know, I use it sometimes in Tape Op when I want to invoke a sense of history around a certain article. The thing that grabbed my eye, however, was that Bono's two-page essay on the album was set in justified type (this means every line is exactly the same length; the computer adjusts the space between individual characters so that every line is exactly the same length). This is impossible to do on a real typewriter. Typewriters are only able to set text left justified, with a ragged right, which is one of the reasons typewriter fonts look vintage. Not to be too smug, but this is why I left justify the type in the Behind the Gear intro in Tape Op set in the Vintage Smith Corona Upright font. Also, justified type is harder to read than left justified ragged right type. Didn't U2's graphic designer know this? For that matter, with all the money U2 spent on this record, couldn't they have gone the extra mile and hired someone to type this all out on a real typewriter? The booklet would have been a little bit longer, but hopefully Apple wasn't putting a limit on the size of the PDF.

For the record, I like the music on this album. As much as Bono's public persona annoys me, and I would never consider seeing U2 live even if it was free, I think they make great records. And I think this record has some excellent songs that contain authentic feelings and emotions from Bono and the rest of the band. I guess the trick is how they and so many other creators communicate their authenticity in a marketing message, in an age where authenticity is so easy to appropriate and feign.

Tape Op is a bi-monthly magazine devoted to the art of record making.

Or Learn More

MORE ENTRIES

BLOG

Ronan's Recording Show features Jerks Behind Tape Op mag

By Mike Caffrey

December 24, 2009

Our pal Ronan Chris Murphy does this cool "TV" show on his site, http://ronansrecordingshow.com, and the most recent one is with me and John...

BLOG

Vinyl Lives?

By Mike Caffrey

November 3, 2009

James Goss has interviewed many independent record store owners across the country to see how they stay in business and what they sell. Every month a...

BLOG

MICS FEATURED IN THE BEATLES?: ROCK BAND? VIDEO GAME

By Mike Caffrey

October 26, 2009

So I just noticed an email in my inbox from a PR person with the headline: "XXXXX MICS FEATURED IN THE BEATLES?: ROCK BAND? VIDEO GAME". What's next?...
Damian Wagner and the Sound of the Earth?

BLOG

Damian Wagner and the Sound of the Earth?

By Mike Caffrey

October 21, 2009

Ina previous blog post, we saw the beginnings of this project. Damian Wagner was in issue 64 - here's a crazy project where he's amplifying the sound...
Meeting Your Maker

BLOG

Meeting Your Maker

By Mike Caffrey

October 17, 2009

Well, not my maker but the man behind the baby that is our RND5088 console at Jackpot! I got to spend a little time (and a photoshoot) with Rupert...

BLOG

This happens EVERY week

By Mike Caffrey

October 7, 2009

I didn't do this video. But the guy who did must be spying on me. You can replace the style of music with any style, but the conversation is the...
Nashville Recording Summit Nov. 13-15

BLOG

Nashville Recording Summit Nov. 13-15

By Mike Caffrey

October 7, 2009

Tape Op contributor, Chris Mara, has organized an amazing studio event coming up. I wanted to go but sessions have stopped me. If you can make it,...

BLOG

The solution, clearly, is more dissonance

By Adam Kagan

October 2, 2009

It's not Idol, technically, but America's Got Talent and its dentally-impaired overseas cousin are still franchises helmed by Simon Cowell, who I...
Bob Johnston live interview in Montreal October 2nd

BLOG

Bob Johnston live interview in Montreal October 2nd

By Mike Caffrey

September 30, 2009

Our pal Howard Bilerman will be interviewing legendary producer Bob Johnston in Montreal coming up. Should be a real hoot!