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U2 Have Been Making ‘Sci-Fi Irish Folk Music’ With Brian Eno

U2’s next album could be something of another sonic left turn, if comments from founding guitarist The Edge are to be believed.

The veteran guitarist spoke to BBC Radio 2‘s Jo Whiley on Monday (Nov. 25) to discuss the recent release of How to Re-Assemble an Atomic Bomb, a 20th anniversary collection of unreleased tracks and rarities from the band’s 2004 album, How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb.

During the discussion, The Edge turned his attention to recent creative endeavors from the Irish outfit, explaining that he and frontman Bono and had recently in the studio with ambient pioneer (and previous collaborator) Brian Eno, working on some “crazy new music”.

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“Bono and I are working on some crazy kind of sci-fi Irish folk music,” he explained. “Which could end up becoming a part of the new U2 album. We’re not sure yet, we’ll see.”

“Part of our kind of process is to go so widely away from, off track, and the sort of the process of bringing things back on track is kind of how you get sort of unique sounding music.”

Adding that “a bunch [of] beautiful, Irish musicians” could also be involved in the process, the guitarist’s comments indicate a vast change in the band’s sound when compared to what has come recently. Their latest album of new material, Songs of Experience, arrived in 2017, with 2023’s Songs of Surrender arriving as a follow-up despite consisting of new recordings of previously-released songs.

However, in 2023, Bono explained that a “noisy, uncompromising, unreasonable” rock album would be their next project, ostensibly replacing the apparently-shelved Songs of Ascent, which had been teased for more than a decade.

“I don’t think the world is waiting on the next U2 album,” Bono told Mojo. “I think we have to give them a reason to be interested in it. I just want to write great tunes because that’s where U2 started – with big choruses, clear ideas. And let’s go back there, but do it with some petrol and some matches.”

Elsewhere in his discussion with the BBC, The Edge also turned his attention to the return of drummer Larry Mullen Jr., who missed U2’s 40-date residency at Sphere in Las Vegas from 2023 to 2024 while recovering from surgery.

“We’re at that great phase where we don’t have to overthink it, we’re just making music and loving that process,” The Edge noted. “And then we’ll figure out where things belong afterwards so there’s a couple of different projects.

“Definitely U2, with Larry which is wonderful, we’ve got him in the studio,” he continues. “He’s good, he’s taking it easy but he’s back in the saddle on the drums still doing some recording with us and so we’ll be doing a bit more of that before the end of the year.”

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