U2 Finds What It’s Looking For

This is definitely the most surreal night of my life!” Bono exclaims halfway through the show, with all the sincerity a guy in pelvis-hugging black leather and space-pimp sunglasses can muster. Coming from someone decked out like a futuristic-sleazeball version of the Lizard King, it still sounds like a standard-issue rock-star snake-oil pitch. But in fact, it’s a king-size understatement. Even on a tour remarkable for its giddy spirit of postmodern pranksterism, tonight’s edition of U2’s traveling Zoo TV party in Stockholm, Sweden, is prize-winning weird.
The competition has been stiff. There was the night in Detroit when Bono, using his special onstage phone hookup, called a local pizzeria and ordered a thousand pies to go. There was the night when Bono, merrily zapping his way through the satellite-TV menu with his remote control, unexpectedly treated the audience to a live broadcast of Paul Tsongas’s announcing his withdrawal from the Democratic presidential race. And there were the nights — quite a few, actually — when during the encore, Bono picked up the phone and dialed the White House (202-456-1414, in case you’re interested). Although he never got through to George Bush, he did get chummy with the puzzled White House operator. “Who are you?” she’d ask. “Why do you keep calling at night? Sounds like there are a lot of people with you.”
At the Globe arena, in Stockholm, though, the techno-clowning of Zoo TV mutates into interactive Zoo theater. The usual show is a dizzying feast of video high jinks and high-definition irony (Bono kissing a mirror, pumping his crotch into the camera) set to most of Achtung Baby and the requisite hits from The Joshua Tree and Rattle and Hum. But tonight, Bono, guitarist the Edge, bassist Adam Clayton and drummer Larry Mullen Jr. are supplementing their regularly scheduled programming with a live TV feed to and from the home of John Harris of Nottinghamshire, England. Harris, an ardent U2 fan who works for the Pretty Polly lingerie company, won an MTV Europe contest, the prize being a private simulcast of the Stockholm gig, complete with an ample supply of champagne.
Except Harris isn’t just watching the show; he’s in it, popping up in the hyperactive Zoo video mix with big, boozy grins and exchanging quips with the host via satellite, like Nightline gone nutty.
“So, John, you work in a knickers factory?” Bono says with a mock snicker. “Well, we don’t wear underwear in Sweden.”
“Prove it!” Harris retorts, emboldened by drink. Bono actually goes for his zipper but punks out to an arenawide chorus of female Swedish groans. Those groans soon turn to cheers when, as a consolation prize, U2 brings out Swedish pop gods Bjoörn Ulvaeus and Benny Andersson of the late, great ABBA for a genial romp through its 1977 hit “Dancing Queen.”
Later, during the melancholy sway of “Tryin’ to Throw Your Arms Around the World,” from Achtung Baby, Harris and Bono are caught on adjacent video screens in a moment of sweet serendipity: Harris slow dancing with his girlfriend, Bono giving the Edge a loving choke hold during the latter’s guitar solo. The most genuinely surreal moment of the show, however, comes at the end, when Harris and his inebriated pals in Nottinghamshire appear on the video screens doing the Wayne’s World bow — “We are not worthy! We are not worthy!” The Swedes, already in hysterics, respond in kind, bowing and cheering in sync.
“You can’t plan stuff like that,” the Edge marvels later, stroking his thin, monkish beard. “Sometimes in amongst all the trash, these moments of incredible poignancy happen. In ‘Even Better Than the Real Thing,’ there were shots of the band and shots of the people in the house and all these TV ads superimposed over that. It was beautiful, this Nike ad with the big shoe coming down. And it was the perfect image and message for the song, sliding down the surface of things.
“That’s the thing, I suppose,” the Edge continues. “The jokes and the fun aspect, the props, the weird suits and all — they are making a joke of rock & roll stardom. But they do work.”
“There is a lot of soul — I think it shines even brighter amidst the trash and the junk,” Bono insists after the show. “Sam Shepard said, ‘Right in the center of contradiction, that’s the place to be.’ And rock & roll has more contradictions than any art form. U2 spent the Eighties trying to resolve some of them. Now we’ve started the Nineties celebrating them.
“Rock & roll is ridiculous,” Bono states emphatically. “It’s absurd.” He is, appropriately, still wearing his leathers and shades. “In the past, U2 was trying to duck that. Now we’re wrapping our arms around it and giving it a great big kiss. It’s like I say onstage — ‘Some of this bullshit is pretty cool.’ I think it is the missing scene from Spinal Tap — four guys in a police escort, asking themselves, ‘Should we be enjoying this?’ The answer is, fucking right. It’s a trip. It’s part of the current of rock & roll that just drags you along — and you can feed off it.
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