- About Sweetest Thing and Greatest Hits
- © TM & Copyright © 1996-1998 by Paramount
Pictures.
All Rights Reserved, October 22, 1998
Why was now the perfect time for rock supergroup U2 to release
a greatest hits compilation? While shooting the video for the
album's single, "The Sweetest Thing," band members BONO, THE
EDGE, ADAM CLAYTON and LARRY MULLEN JR. discuss how they
assembled this anticipated collection.
Question: Why is now a good time for U2 to
release this collection?
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- Bono: We have to accept the fact that there's people out
there that aren't familiar with our work in the eighties. There's
a lot of people who are into U2 that came into U2 on "Achtung
Baby" and "Zooropa." There's something that really rings true
about these songs and it's kind of ecstatic music. That's how I
look at it. It's so high... in a good way as in uplifting.
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- Larry Mullen Jr.: The whole idea behind doing this greatest
hits; and it's something that we've wanted to do for a couple of
years, just to clear out. Every band does a greatest hits
normally after two or three years. We waited a long time and it
just feels right. It's the right time for us to do this.
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Question: Would you call this project a musical
autobiography?
The Edge: It's not really an autobiography. It's more just
little, tiny polaroids. Just moments captured down through that
ten year period that have remained fresh and special and
unique.
Question: How did you choose what to include?
The Edge: There's about fifteen moments that crystalized.
Fifteen songs that have, ten years later, actually stood the test
of time.
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Question: How can you best sum up your career in the
Eighties?
Adam Clayton: For me it was like, this is our first album and
it might be our last one. Then we got to make two albums and then
three and we slowly began to realize that we were half way
through the Eighties by then. It was something that we just
didn't know where it would go. The pressure really wasn't on us
until after "The Joshua Tree" when we were playing stadiums, and
doing stadium tours is hard work. Pre '86 or '87 it was a "doss"
but after that it got a bit serious.
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Question: Where do you think U2 is headed?
Larry: We're always striving to do something different and to
be on that cutting edge. We don't feel that we've actually
finished what we started. It's like there's unfinshed business
and that's why we still do it. There's stuff left for us to
do.
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Question: What about the collection of B-sides that goes with
this album?
Bono: The B-sides are really important. It's like they're more
revealing. A lot of times we wrote them in the middle of the
night, as we were recording them, usually being thrown out of
studios. People would be knocking on the doors saying, "You have
to leave," but we don't have a B-side. It's a bit like a
photograph, like a polaroid. You didn't take that much care
putting it together, but it captures a moment that tells a
story.
Adam: There was a lot more material to have a look at and some
of it was pretty unfinished. So it was quite hard to go through
it again. I think what we ended up with is really good.
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Larry: Those B-side packages were really for U2 fans or for
people who were into what U2 was into, whatever that was. There's
a greater license to put whatever we liked on it. The funny thing
is that on the B-sides collection, we've got nearly everything.
The Edge: I'm very happy tosay that I like this group of songs
that we've put out -- both the A-sides and the B-sides because I
feel they do actually still hold true and I think that they've
dated well.
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Question: You've gone back and re-recorded one of those
B-sides, "The Sweetest Thing." Why this song?
Bono: It was [my daughter] Ali's birthday and I didn't make it
for the birthday. (laughs) I wanted to write her a little sweet
song, but it ended up a little bit sour, as all the best love
songs are. I can't write these straight love songs. They make me
want to throw up.
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Question: Why re-explore this particular song as the single?
Adam: "Sweetest Thing" was a situation where we got it up and
we were looking at it because we knew we hadn't really finished
it.
Bono: It was written during the album sessions for "The Joshua
Tree." We forgot about it until this compilation record we put
together of our A-sides and our B-sides from the Eighties.
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The Edge: It was actually the one song that we always felt
that we could have nailed better than we did. In my mind it was
always a pop song and I just felt we could do it better. We went
in for a couple of days to try rewriting and Bono resang and we
remixed it. It came together very quickly and I'm pretty happy
with how it turned out.
Adam: Edge came up with a couple of extra chords and it was a
really quick thing. So we said, "Yeah, let's stick them in."
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Question: Now, you're shooting a video for it.
The Edge: Yeah.
Question: You don't sound amused.
The Edge: Really, videos are not much fun to do. There really
quite boring. We try as much as possible to limit them to a day
or half a day, if we can get away with it. One way that we keep
it amusing for ourselves is when we get a chance to do something
that's kind of surreal or completely over-the-top.
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Larry: Yeah, but you can't really beat the "Lemon." I mean
four men in a mirrorball lemon. You can't really top that.
Adam: Yeah. (laughs) I always thought we'd either end up
working with animals or whatever 'cause it's kind of a circus
anyway, this whole U2 thing.
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