U2 Album - Zooropa
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Customers rating:
(224 ratings)
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Release Date:1993-07-06
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Type:Audio CD
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Genre:Album Rock, Alternative Pop/Rock, College Rock, Dance-Rock, Pop, Pop/Rock, Pop/Rock Music, Post-Punk, Rock, Rock/Pop
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Label:Island
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UPC:731451804724
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Approx. Price:$13.98
(USD)
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Review - Album Details :
Same as USA Version.Review - Amazon.com :
Following the band's Zoo TV tour, which took aim at consumerism and media overload, U2 brought those themes and the complex, futuristic sound of its preceding album, Achtung Baby, to their somewhat illogical conclusion on Zooropa, the group's most chaotic, cutting-edge work. The monotone techno-rap "Numb" leads the way, while "Lemon" offers reminders of David Bowie's Berlin trilogy of more than a decade before. Best of all is "The Wanderer," featuring a guest vocal by country-music icon Johnny Cash. His bottomless baritone sounds bizarre over burbling synthesizers, but Bono's trenchant lyric about a postapocalyptic seeker of sensation and experience before he repents nails Cash's legend at least as well as he ever has himself. --Daniel DurchholzCustomer review - 2002-08-04
- U2 Goes ExperimentalGive U2 credit for not settling into a comfortable groove after the massive success of "Ach-Tung Baby," and just releasing more albums in that same mold. On "Zooropa," Bono and the boys decided to experiment with their sound and take it in unusual new directions. And while it doesn't always work, enough of it does to excuse them for not producing another single as catchy as "Mysterious Ways." The album is best characterized by "Numb," in which seldom-heard-from guitarist The Edge mumbles the barely sensical spoken word lyrics over a gorgeous synthesizer background. Other oddities include the slowly building opening title track, the strange vocals on "Daddy's Going to Pay for Your Crashed Car," and the Johnny Cash collaboration "The Wanderer," with some bizarre apocalyptic imagery that closes things on an appropriate note. Even the more conventional songs, like "Babyface," "Stay," have an otherwordly quality about them. Overall, "Zooropa" is not the place for casual fans to start their U2 collection. Nevertheless, it is a worthwhile challenge for the already commited.
Customer review - 2001-09-18
- Ahead of its time?U2 leaped well ahead of their fan base with this experimental record that is a way out there vision of the world and society. Numb was a hit, and is perhaps the most bizarre and yet hypnotic U2 song ever. Lemon sounds like a lemon tastes. I can't explain it if you haven't heard it. Zooropa and Babyface also have that futuristic quality about them, with lots of Bono singing in a high-pitched tone. My favorite song on the album, actually, even though it doesn't really fit here, is The Wanderer, with Johnny Cash. I simply couldn't get enough of that track when I bought this. Basically, this is a good album with several intriguing songs and certainly is a must for fans tracking the evolution of the band. But it doesn't have the emotional gut resonance for me that some of U2's most inspiring work does. Enjoy!
Customer review - 2000-05-26
- Let's Groove Baby!What can I say! This album was fresh off the heels of Achtung Baby and in the midst of the ZOO TV Tour. Recorded in 3 months, Zooropa is a spontaneous masterpiece. If U2 isn't officially credited with a "Concept Album", this is it! The leadoff song, "Zooropa", is everything ZOO TV is all about. Commercial slogans used as lyrics and arcade sound effects to fill in the blanks. This song sums up the album. Technology and commercialism IS life...not a way of life. This mentality proves to be true on the tune "Numb". The Edge, not Bono, takes the mic and repeats a list of do's and dont's. We are told what to do and brainwashed what to buy. U2 has fun disguising everything by flirting with dance rhythms. "Lemon", "Daddy's Gonna Pay...", and "Some Days Are Better Than Others" are U2 at it's most playful yet serious. Peel the layers and these songs will make more sense. Of course, no U2 album is complete without a bittersweet lovesong. "Stay" is a song that fits the bill. This tune will take you away to that U2 of yesteryear. Finally, after a blitzkrieg of trashiness around Europe, technology, and excess, someone has to make sense of it all. Enter Johnny Cash. Mr. Cash makes his appearance in the album's finale, "The Wanderer". What better way to bring in an elder statesman to make sense of U2's "sinful" tactics. Zooropa isn't the most popular U2 album, but it is indeed the most playful and danceable. Give this album more credit. Released in 1993, in the middle of Grunge's heyday, U2 was brave enough to release an "experimental" album which didn't feature a single guitar solo. Remember, Achtung Baby was a hard album for the band to make. Zooropa was born from Achtung Baby. ...and thank God Zooropa doesn't sound like Achtung Baby PtII. Turning the corner and reinventing their music is what U2 is known for...I just wish most of you knew that.
Customer review - 1999-12-28
- Flung from my third-story window after two listeningsDiehard fans may out of blind loyalty plead for others to accept this album as a natural evolution of the band's sound and a sign of maturation. I say, forget that. My appreciation of music is limited to that which sounds pleasing to my ear; I don't feel an inherent need to add money to a supergroup's coffers, just because they've decided to get experimental on me. U2 created catchy and beautiful music with Joshua Tree and Achtung Baby. Zooropa is trash. Hence, in the winter of 1993, my roommate and I flung it from our apartment window...good riddance. Who cares if they wanted to make a statement about consumerism; make a statement yourself about consumerism by not buying this garbage.
Customer review - 2005-03-03
- Not my choiceI am a big fan of the band, but this CD is in my opinion a low point. It is not terrible with songs like the title track and "Dirty Day" as my stand outs, but the rest of the album just doesn't stand out. U2 was moving toward more electronic music and away from some of the passion that makes this band great. I think that this is this CD's downfall. I was glad to see the follow up discs take a new direction. I admire the band's willingness to try new things, but this just didn't do it for me.
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