Peter: This is a special one for me.
Tyler: Well, I reckon we should hear about it.
Peter: I bought this on cassette in 1991. It was the first U2 album I ever owned. My brother was a big fan but he’d just left for college.
I actually called him today to talk about this!
Tyler: Well hell’s bells, I hope a fine conversation was had.
Peter: It was great, but we got off on some wild tangents.
It’s hard to appreciate how jarring this album was when it first came out.
It was a real departure from their ’80s output.
Bono said it was “the sound of four men chopping down The Joshua Tree.”
Tyler: That damn Bono. What a line.
Peter: U2 really reinvented themselves here, adding elements of industrial and dance music to their sound as well as adopting a more ironic, detached point of view lyrically. It could have been a huge disaster. Remember when MC Hammer embraced gangsta rap?
Tyler: “Pumps And A Bump!”
Peter: Nailed it!
It wasn’t good.
Were you familiar with Achtung Baby?
Tyler: It was on my radar when it was released, but I was eight, mystified by “Mysterious Ways” and “One,” which were everywhere for quite some time. I have a brief but vivid memory of hearing Kurt Loder discuss the album title, as well.
Peter: It was huge.
Radical reinvention is tough to pull off but they really nailed it with this album. I also think they picked the perfect time to do it. It was a really special time for music. Nevermind dropped a couple months before AB, and the times they were a-changin’.
I love this album. It’s in my top 20 or so. I like all the songs. I don’t skip any of them.
Tyler: Yeah, they crushed it. It’s a little long—55 minutes—but they earn that.
Peter: It is long. I didn’t get through this 7 times.
Tyler: By the transitive (?) property, then, you like Ringo the 4th more than Achtung Baby.
Peter: Spotify thinks I love Ringo the 4th and Dirty Work. It’s not ideal.
Tyler: Your Spotify Wrapped is going to be a special thing.
Peter: It’s true!
Okay, let’s do this! Achtung Baby, baby!
“Zoo Station” kicks off the proceedings.
Tyler: And it is some discordant shit. How in hell must have this sounded to the casual U2 fan? The devoted fan? I fucking love “Zoo Station,” but, yeah, things had changed.
Peter: Exactly. It’s a radical departure. It was a big deal! It was risky.
Tyler: But in some ways it was necessary, no? Rattle & Hum was a bit of a critical disappointment.
Peter: Right. There was some backlash around that album.
I mean, they could have recorded The Joshua Tree Part 2 and it would have gone multi-platinum, but this is much more interesting. I think that was part of it. They were evolving, Tyler!
Tyler: By George, I think I’ve got it!
Peter: Full disclosure, I just said I don’t skip any of the tracks on this album, which is true, but if I did skip one it would be “Zoo Station.”
“Zoo Station” feels like a song that could only exist as an album opener. It’s here to introduce the album. As if it’s a concept album. It’s like “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.”
Tyler: That’s a very deft assessment. “Zoo Station” is a launching pad.
Peter: Which is fine! I do listen to it. I like it. But, it’s just the menu. The food is to come.
Tyler: That, then, makes the next track our first course. “Even Better Than The Real Thing.”
Peter: It’s terrific.
Tyler: Yeah it is. It soars.
Worth noting here are the presence of some breathy, carnal deliveries from Bono. Had a touch of that in “Zoo Station,” and they continue here. Sex is far more foregrounded on this album than on previous U2 LPs.
Peter: Right. Good point.
Tyler: We’ve come a long way from “With Or Without You.”
Anyway. “Even Better Than The Real Thing” is a happy triumph. This album is about to get real dark, and it’s delightful to have a kind of upbeat table-setter.
Peter: “One” has to be their biggest hit?
Tyler: Huh. I think you might be right. It was inescapable.
Peter: I never get tired of it.
Tyler: It’s remarkable, how familiar it feels after decades of only intermittent listening.
Peter: It’s one of those songs that sounds like it has always existed, but still sounds fresh.
I love it. I also love our next track, “Until The End of The World.”
Tyler: Just one killer after another. Great song.
Peter: Bono playing Judas here. “In the garden I was playing the tart. I kissed your lips and broke your heart.”
Tyler: He spikes a drink in this one, too. Dark times.
Peter: It is dark. Great production here from Daniel Lanois with help from Brian Eno.
Tyler: What a dream team that is behind the boards. Sweet Jesus.
Peter: I never would have come up with them as a great combo, but it totally works.
Next up is “Who’s Gonna Ride Your Wild Horses.” It’s another favorite of mine.
Tyler: Love it. Just, love love love it.
Peter: The guitars! So great!
Tyler: Bono just belting the chorus. And a fine chorus it is. “Who’s gonna ride your wild horses” is a cryptic and fantastic refrain.
And the break. “Don’t turn around,” and then some. Gorgeous.
Peter: Yes! Let’s talk about that!
The middle-8s or bridges or whatever are so great on this album.
Tyler: Rock-solid song construction all around.
Peter: Agreed. This is just a great bunch of tunes.
Tyler: Every word in its right place, every note placed with care, yet nothing feels fussed over. All this noise and clatter sounds somehow natural.
Next up: “So Cruel.” I don’t know this one as innately as I do the others. No shade on it.
Peter: My wife likes this one. It’s great.
I keep saying everything is great. It is. It’s all great.
It’s Achtung Baby!
I actually got an original vinyl pressing of this album back in 1991. I had to special order it, but I did so because it was uncensored and featured full frontal nudity as Adam Clayton displayed himself in all his naked glory. I don’t know what that says about me other than I thought it would be a collector’s item someday. Maybe it is more than thirty years later.
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AB is one of those LPs that I would buy with little hesitation, were I to find it in the used bins at a reasonable price. I don’t predict this happening anytime soon.
Maybe it’s a stretch, but perhaps Clayton’s nudity is just another frank example of the album’s sensual, carnal themes.
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