U2
Pop

Island    314-524 334-2  (1997)

Rock/Pop
CD, 12   Tracks, 60:05  Length
01 Discothèque U2 05:19
02 Do You Feel Loved U2 05:07
03 Mofo U2 05:49
04 If God Will Send His Angels U2 05:22
05 Staring At The Sun U2 04:36
06 Last Night On Earth U2 04:45
07 Gone U2 04:26
08 Miami U2 04:52
09 The Playboy Mansion U2 04:40
10 If You Wear That Velvet Dress U2 05:15
11 Please U2 05:02
12 Wake Up Dead Man U2 04:52
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Jewel Case
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Vocals Bono
Guitar The Edge
Bass Adam Clayton
Drums Larry Mullen
Musician U2
Producer Mark "Flood" Ellis
Engineer Alan Moulder; Mark Stent; Howard Bernstein
Personal Details
Index # 3621
Owner Dave
Tags Pop Rock, Synth Pop, Experimental
User Defined
Purchased New
Notes
No matter which way you look at it, Pop doesn't have the same shock of the new that Achtung Baby delivered on first listen. Less experimental and more song-oriented than Zooropa, Pop attempts to sell the glitzy rush of techno to an audience weaned on arena rock. And that audience includes U2 themselves. While they never sound like they don't believe in what they're doing, they still remove most of the radical elements of electronic dance, which is evident to anyone with just a passing knowledge of the Chemical Brothers and Underworld. To a new listener, Pop has flashes of surprise -- particularly on the rampaging "Mofo" -- but underneath the surface, U2 relies on anthemic rockers and ballads. "Discotheque" might be a little clumsy, but "Staring at the Sun" shimmers with synthesizers borrowed from Massive Attack and a Noel Gallagher chorus. Similarly, "Do You Feel Loved" and "If You Wear That Velvet Dress" fuse old-fashioned U2 dynamism with a keen sense of the cool eroticism that makes trip-hop so alluring. Problems arise when the group tries to go for conventional rock songs, some of which are symptomatic of the return of U2's crusade for salvation. Pop is inflected with the desire for a higher power to save the world from its jaded spiral of decay and immorality, which is why the group's embrace of dance music never seems joyous -- instead of providing an intoxicating rush of gloss and glamour, it functions as a backdrop for a plea of salvation. Achtung Baby also was a comment on the numbing isolation of modern culture, but it made sweeping statements through personal observations; Pop makes sweeping statements through sweeping observations. The difference is what makes Pop an easy record to admire, but a hard one to love. -- Stephen Thomas Erlewine (allmusic.com)