Aug. 18, 2008
Bono Blamed For Online U2 Song Leak
Taper Apparently Caught The Singer Playing 4 New Tracks On His Vacation Home Stereo
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(AP Photo/Geert Vanden Wijngaert)
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Photo Essay Bono Learn about one of Time magazine's persons of the year. The U2 frontman uses his voice to help AIDS patients and influence world politics.
Four songs from the Irish rock band's forthcoming album found themselves on the Internet after U2 front man Bono was caught playing the songs a bit too loudly on his stereo at his villa in the south of France, according to a report in The Sun. An alert passerby on the beach is credited with recognizing the iconic singer's voice and recording what he was hearing. He then supposedly posted the recordings to YouTube, but the tracks don't appear to have stuck around long on the video-sharing site.
The songs -- thought to come from a forthcoming album called "No Line On The Horizon" -- include the title track, "Sexy Boots," "Moment Of Surrender," and "For Your Love."
McGuinness, who wants to fight file sharing by forcing Internet service providers to ban people who pirate music, suggested earlier this year that Apple and other makers of digital music players were wrongly profiting from their "burglary kits." At the time, he placed much of the blame on tech companies, but also pointed a finger at record labels that "through lack of foresight and planning allowed a range of industries to arise that let people steal music."
If this tale rings true, it wouldn't be the first time U2 has lost control of unreleased music. In 2004, just before the release of their last album -- "How To Dismantle An Atomic Bomb"--the band reported that a CD containing unfinished music from that album had been stolen after a photo shoot in the south of France. The band announced it would release that album immediately if tracks from the CD were leaked online. But when songs from the album began appearing online a few months later, the band said they were finished versions, not songs from the stolen CD.
By Steven Musil
Copyright ©2008 CNET Networks, Inc., a CBS Company. All rights reserved.
- myfavoriteye,
It is just you, and a few other Blink 182 lovers.
U2 is the greatest rock band of a generation. If you want to rip on an old band try starting with the Rolling Stones. They havent made a real record in decades. They peaked a long long time ago. U2 Continues to put out great album after album (except the PopMart album). - Reply to this comment
- Article is misleading. I heard the Bootleg songs, they are literally a recording from the beach, of loud , booming music coming from inside someones house. Nothing near the quality you''d get from recording a live show.
How''d the bootlegger get the names of the songs? He didnt, he just made them up. Prolly took them from the lyrics he heard.
Nothing happened to justify this article. - Reply to this comment
- Big deal. People who like his music will either buy or bootleg the official release. Music recorded from a window is not exactly high quality stuff, you know.
- Reply to this comment
- LOL.
Boner can go away now. Especially after he and Oprah teamed up to sell pretty red ipods to fight some disease, with Oprah after that lambasting inner city youth for wanting them (gee Oprah, you ARE an influential person!)... plenty of direct reasons why he''s a phony too. - Reply to this comment
- "He then supposedly posted the recordings to YouTube, but the tracks don''t appear to have stuck around long on the video-sharing site."
And google censors again. This guy who recorded from a public place was perfectly legal in posting his recording to the internet. People really should be questioning You-Tube taking the video down. - Reply to this comment





