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    Rattle and Hum

    Rattle and Hum
    Artist: U2
    Label: Island
    Category: Music

    List Price: $13.98
    Buy Used: $0.02
    You Save: $13.96 (100%)



    New (44) Used (138) Collectible (11) from $0.02

    Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 117 reviews
    Sales Rank: 3416

    Format: Live
    Media: Audio CD
    Discs: 1
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
    Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.4

    MPN: 842299
    UPC: 042284229920
    EAN: 0042284229920
    ASIN: B000001FS6

    Release Date: June 15, 1990
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
    Shipping: International shipping available
    Condition: CD & ART WORK ONLY -no case in envelope - FREE first class mail - a few light scratches

    Tracks:

      • Helter Skelter - U2, Lennon, John
      • Van Diemen's Land - U2, Edge [1]
      • Desire - U2, U Two
      • Hawkmoon 269 - U2, Bono
      • All Along the Watchtower - U2, Dylan, Bob
      • I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For - U2, U Two
      • Freedom for My People - U2, Mabins, Macie
      • Silver and Gold - U2, Bono
      • Pride (In the Name of Love) - U2, U Two
      • Angel of Harlem - U2, Bono
      • Love Rescue Me - U2, U Two
      • When Love Comes to Town - U2, Bono
      • Heartland - U2, Bono
      • God, Pt. 2 - U2, Bono
      • The Star Spangled Banner - U2, Key, Francis Scott
      • Bullet the Blue Sky - U2, Bono
      • All I Want Is You - U2, Bono

    Similar Items:

      • The Joshua Tree
      • Achtung Baby
      • The Unforgettable Fire
      • War
      • Zooropa

    Editorial Reviews:

    Amazon.com
    The ill will that initially greeted Rattle and Hum--the follow-up to the band's massively successful Joshua Tree album--was due in large part to the bloated and self-important feature film that accompanied it, which showed the band as being simultaneously naive and pretentious as it "discovered" America. But as the film mercifully slips from memory, the music has remained, from the furious swirl of "Desire" and a clutch of live hits to insightful musical nods to heroes such as Bob Dylan, John Lennon, and Billie Holiday. Songs like "When Love Comes to Town," a supercharged blues duet with B.B. King, suggests the quartet knew more about America from listening to its music than Phil Joanou's unintentional mockumentary suggested. --Daniel Durchholz

    Album Description
    Limited edition double LP vinyl pressing of U2's soundtrack to their documentary of the same name. **Please note that this vinyl pressing features 'For Promotional Use Only' printed on the artwork. 2007


    Customer Reviews:   Read 112 more reviews...

    4 out of 5 stars U2 + American music = Great record   October 21, 2000
    S. Baker (Phoenix, Arizona United States)
    53 out of 59 found this review helpful

    U2 were completely panned by the press and some hardcore U2 fans for 'Rattle & Hum' (1988), which is purported to be U2's ill-fated egocentric exploration into American music. Leaving pretentiousness in the eyes of the beholder, a lot of people liked this record, a mix of studio songs and live tracks from 'The Joshua Tree' tour and for good reason. Here's a song-by-song:

    1. "Helter Skelter" [Live]. OK, the ego does get a bit out of hand here, but this is one of the standout cover tunes.

    2. "Van Diemen's Land". The Edge takes vocals on this nice ode to the working man which is abruptly cut off in mid-verse.

    3. "Desire". The first single, an obvious musical tribute to blues legend Bo Diddley, continues to be one of their most popular and infectious songs.

    4. "Hawkmoon 269". Although there is some lyrical help from Bob Dylan, this is one of the studio tracks that really does not work.

    5. "All Along the Watchtower" [Live]. An uninspired cover which is memorable only if you saw the movie.

    6. "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" [Live]. With embellishments by a real gospel choir, the song is performed the way it was meant to be.

    7. "Freedom for My People". This is just a snippet of a street performer.

    8. "Silver and Gold" [Live]. A great live version of a non-LP track, seethingly delivered by Bono toward an apathetic American audience.

    9. "Pride (in the Name of Love)" [Live]. What live record would be complete without the consumate U2 anthem.

    10. "Angel of Harlem". As one of the songs recorded at the historic Sun Studios, complete with a horn section, this lyrical ode to Billie Holiday is a U2 classic.

    11. "Love Rescue Me". With the accompanyment of Bob Dylan, this one never really picks up.

    12. "When Love Comes to Town". Although many U2 fans did not appreciate the prominent vocals and guitar of B.B. King, the lyrics are "fantastic" (as the King puts it in the movie), and if you love the blues . . .

    13. "Heartland". You can almost see the Mississippi going by on this song, a mood piece which works much better than "Love Rescue Me".

    14. "God Part II". A great rocker about contradiction and a lyrical and musical prequel to U2's "reinvention" in the 1990s.

    15. "Bullet the Blue Sky" [Live]. With a recorded intro of Jimi Hendrix doing "Star Spangled Banner", this is the consumate version of this song.

    16. "All I Want Is You". Although it seems a bit out of place on this record, this is simply one of the best U2 ballads ever.


    5 out of 5 stars U2 in America   December 11, 2000
    Thomas Magnum (NJ, USA)
    22 out of 23 found this review helpful

    Rattle & Hum is the soundtrack to the band's documentary on their 1987 tour through America. The album is a mix of live tracks and studio recordings. The album takes on an American sound to it as the band traveled through the States visiting such places as Harlem, Graceland & Sun Studios. "Angel Of Harlem" is a tribute to Billie Holliday and the band shows they've got some soul with the song's stirring horn section. "When Love Comes To Town" is a duet with blues legend B.B. King and he lets loose with some terrific guitar playing. "God Part II" is the band's sequel to John Lennon's "God" from his Plastic Ono Band album. Much like the original, U2 question their own beliefs and the beliefs about them. "Desire" is a blistering song and Bono's harmonica work is impressive. "Van Dieman's Land", "Hawkmoon 269" and the appropriately titled "Heartland" find the band playing sounds with a folky, Midwestern vibe. "All I Want Is You" closes the album with a powerful beauty. The live tracks include a gospelized version of "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For", a take on the Beatles "Helter Skelter" in which Bono adds one of his more famous lines "three chords and a dream", a simmering take of their anti-apartheid song "Silver & Gold". "Bullet The Blue Sky" shows all the power and force of the band on stage. It opens with a snippet of Jimi Hendrix's take of "The Star Spangled Banner" and then merges into a booming Larry Mullin drum beat. Adam Clayton plays an extremely heavy bass while Bono expands on his sermon in the middle of the song and The Edge's guitar soars up and down. The critics dismissed this album when it first came out as bombastic and egotistical, but that probably had a lot to do with the film. U2 had been untouchable up to that and the project gave them a chance to jump on them. The album is uneven in places and the film is precocious at times, but their overall passion and feeling override any flaws and ten years later those feelings are still strong.


    1 out of 5 stars The Great Rock n' Roll Swindle   April 15, 2002
    Alexandre Avezou (Paris, France)
    13 out of 36 found this review helpful

    A very overrated album by a very overrated band. U2, with its incantatory vocals, its asthmatic guitar riffs and its sententious messages, has always been closer to church music than to rock n'roll. If you think this is rock, you must be either 15 or 85.


    3 out of 5 stars U2 celebrates their conquest of America   December 5, 2003
    SPM (Eugene, Oregon)
    10 out of 12 found this review helpful

    When U2 made Rattle and Hum, they confused people. They started out with a live album to go with their concert film, but then they added some new live tracks --- one of their own (Silver and Gold) and one by the Beatles (Helter Skelter). They cut 6 or 7 new songs. Some of them were with guest stars like BB King and Bob Dylan. Then the Edge got a lead vocal. Then they added a bit of Jimi Hendrix playing the Star Spangled Banner.

    Okay guys. Are you really wondering why people were confused and/or disappointed? You have to commend the band for taking a few chances, of course. They took a perfectly good live album and squeezed an EP of "American roots music" songs into it. They thought it would work, but it didn't.

    The whole thing would be an afterthought, but this is U2. When they make an album between "proper" albums, they have trouble making it modest. It happened again with Zooropa: After a big tour, they tried to make a little post-tour CD of outtakes and experiments, but it grew into a full-sized album.

    In the end, just about everyone likes half of Rattle and Hum. But few people agree on exactly which half. I prefer the studio tracks that either sound like Joshua Tree outtakes (like Heartland) or the noisy stuff like God Part 2. I don't have any use for live versions of the Joshua Tree songs. They're overproduced and dull. Fans will always come back to this CD for their favorite parts. Non-fans can probably live without it.


    1 out of 5 stars Rattle And Yawn   September 5, 1999
    7 out of 14 found this review helpful

    Just because this may be the ultimate 80's album does not necessarily mean it is quality music.


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