The Fugue of Achtung Baby

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I was asked to edit TJ’s latest essay, The Fugue Fugue, and my initial responses were the predictable blathering on about technology and distraction...blah, blah, blah. But I think I may have really missed a deeper significance in the piece.

This significance, although tangential, came crashing down on me the other day as I was walking home from having a couple of pints with the old man.

I loaded up Achtung Baby by U2 on the old iPod and turned it up real loud. I was instantly lost in the orchestral bliss that is this album. Through the crashing orchestration came the sweet, sweet seductive call of Clayton’s bass, lingering there right behind it all, softening the blows of screaming guitars, of the smashing cacophonic drums.

The Edge’s guitars overlapping, looping, discussing the future of music and the world, obliterating the old and embracing the new. Bono’s haunting voice delivering lyrics at once reassuring and terrifying, as if he were lamenting the loss of his own innocence as well as his own rebirth. In this album, we find the meeting of two worlds, the nexus of a receding age and the dawn of a new one.

And it slowly dawned on me that this album is a fugue and it dares you to enter into the conversation that’s taking place. Each song a series of layers, paralleled and complimentary but also disconnected, disorienting, and challenging. There are four conversations going on. Each artist layering his own voice, his own story overtop of the others, each one distinct. Yet together, the four disappear into a perfect whole.

Each song distinct, clashing with the one before, the one upcoming. And yet, each is linked into the last and the next, engaged in a conversation, a series of conversations about where we were, where we are, and more importantly, where we’re going. And these twelve conversations, these dozen fugues disappear into a perfect whole.

Bono described the sound of Achtung Baby as the Joshua Tree being cut down. Indeed, that is precisely what it is.

And you’ve never heard anything quite so sweet as that tree coming crashing down to the ground.

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2 comments

  • Comment Link TJ Dawe Monday, 21 February 2011 00:13 posted by TJ Dawe

    This gets me wanting to have a music listening party where we listen to this album in its entirety. I resisted U2 for a lot of years growing up, out of adolescent rejection of anything my sister liked, but songs like The Fly and Until the End of the World cast their spell on me. Never bought the album though. Really does seem worth getting into.

  • Comment Link Matt Lewis Monday, 21 February 2011 20:19 posted by Matt Lewis

    @TJ I highly recommend getting immersed in this album. It was the first CD I ever owned, and it could have been the last. I'd love to participate in a listening party around this album.

    @Baxter What is the challenge of Achtung Baby? Emotionally it's a freight train. Musically they tried a lot of new things here, but the underlying melodies are still there.

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