1. https://www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/2023/radio-2-piano-room-u2-bono-the-edge-depeche-mode-cat-burns

    The Piano Room for U2’s Bono and The Edge will air on Thursday 16 March and their classic cover is a track by ABBA, with their session accompanied by an orchestra. Bono and The Edge are founding members of Irish rock band U2, formed in Dublin in 1978. Acknowledged as one of the best live acts in the world, U2 has toured the globe countless times, released 14 studio albums, sold over 170 million albums and won numerous awards, including 22 Grammys and Amnesty International’s Ambassador of Conscience Award. They were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2005 and in December last year, Bono and The Edge, along with bandmates Adam Clayton and Larry Mullen Jr., were awarded the 45th Kennedy Center Honors for lifetime artistic achievements at a ceremony in Washington D.C. In March, U2 will release Songs of Surrender, a new collection of 40 seminal U2 songs from across the band’s catalogue, re-recorded and re-imagined; as well as a new documentary titled Bono & The Edge: A Sort of Homecoming, with Dave Letterman.

    Talking about their Piano Room performance, The Edge says: "We’ve been seen wandering the corridors of BBC Maida Vale on more than one occasion. The first time we performed here was a radio session recording of Sunday Bloody Sunday and a song called Surrender, back in 1983…”

    Bono adds: "We have played music in this room many times over the years… In fact, it was 40 years ago - almost to the day - that we first met our longtime Creative Director Willie Williams right here… in the hallowed halls of the BBC Maida Vale… You have to be at your best here."

    An hourlong special of Bono and The Edge’s Piano Room performance, including an extended interview with them, will be available on BBC Sounds later in March. Listeners will hear about their musical influences and inspirations, memories of recording previous U2 sessions at Maida Vale, their love of radio as a medium, the recent anniversary of their album War, the improvisation behind their song recordings and more.
  2. BBC out by 2 years on the formation of the band; saying 1978 when it's 1976.

    Quality researching there BBC!
  3. Edge really enjoys playing piano lately, but he's not really a good piano player. I wished someone around the band told him.
  4. Originally posted by LikeASong:Edge really enjoys playing piano lately, but he's not really a good piano player. I wished someone around the band told him.
    Doesn't need to be some of the best tunes have the most simple arrangements, some would argue he isn't really a great guitar player either but it's the sonic effects, melody, emotion and depth he puts into the songs that make them special.
  5. Originally posted by popmarter:[..]
    Doesn't need to be some of the best tunes have the most simple arrangements, some would argue he isn't really a great guitar player either but it's the sonic effects, melody, emotion and depth he puts into the songs that make them special.
    Absolutely agree, he's not a flashy guitar player either... but he IS a great songwriter and sound "landscaper" because he knows very well his way around the guitar, he knows very well his effects and he knows how to squeeze and wring out the most of them and his somewhat limited guitar abilities, and he's not afraid of experimenting.

    But that just does not apply to his piano skills. He plays piano like someone that's on level 2 of an online course: basic 3/4 finger chords with the root in the bass and basically doubling his left and right hands, and very very rarely doing inversions or melodies with either hands, which is what separates an average, begginer-ish piano player from a proper good pianist. Also, guitar is a much more friendly instrument to experiment on and it's much easier to make progresses without taking classes, whereas one almost invariably needs to take serious classes if they want to advance from the level where Edge's at.

    And hey, don't get me wrong: these basic piano skills have served U2 good for many many years - he's played piano in many U2 tunes... Albeit always (except October, obviously) as an accompaniment to the song, as a complement to a more central guitar arrangement. Problem is when he insists in doing piano-solo arrangements of already existing songs. Then, his limitations transpire pretty blatantly.
  6. Looks like edge has been sniffing around U2gigs or U2start to remember those dates.

  7. This above link doesn't include the 2017 Abbey Road session but this could be a great making of compilation one day. Just like The Beatles.

  8. The love you gave me.
    Nothing else can save me.
    SOS…
  9. Big ABBA fan here, and so much looking forward to hearing Edge and Bono destroy one of their best songs
  10. !!
  11. Originally posted by popmarter:[..]
    Doesn't need to be some of the best tunes have the most simple arrangements, some would argue he isn't really a great guitar player either but it's the sonic effects, melody, emotion and depth he puts into the songs that make them special.
    100% agree
  12. Just stuck Radio 2 there, Bono and The Edge live from half past 11