Pop was U2’s effort to rediscover that sense of journey. A playful, eclectic, generally abrasive synthesis of the band’s conventional songwriting instincts and their big selection of up to date influences, together with trip-hop, rap, and breakbeat, the album was not a lot a stylistic departure as an try and show the breadth of what U2’s model may embody. “The fundamental premise was that they wished to maneuver on, that they couldn’t repeat themselves,” Flood, one among its producers, mentioned of the album. “They wished to usher in components from the dance world and combine them, not essentially with the goal of turning it right into a danceable album, however to synthesize a brand new sound.” That synthesis could possibly be unpredictable, however that was the purpose. “Half the time I didn’t have a clue what was happening,” Howie B, one other producer, has claimed. “So long as you have been in a position to react to what was taking place and have been sincere, it was actually thrilling.”
On the ultimate pages of U2: On the Finish of the World, Invoice Flanagan’s ebook concerning the making of Achtung Child, Zooropa, and the ZooTV tour, the writer finds the band again within the studio in London, experimenting with Brian Eno and really slowly easing into writing and recording after a much-needed yr of break following an extended stretch on the highway. “They won’t formally start a brand new U2 album till the spring of 1995,” Flanagan writes, whereas hinting that the work could have already nonetheless begun. That was November of 1994. Pop, their subsequent album, wouldn’t be launched till March 1997. “Now we have hassle ending issues,” the Edge admitted shortly earlier than Pop debuted, throughout a time of 14- to 16-hour workdays, all-night recording classes, and always shifting deadlines.
In the course of the 4 earlier years, the band had been engaged on virtually something aside from a studio album. Bono and the Edge had written a James Bond tune for Tina Turner (“GoldenEye,” for the film of the identical title). Adam Clayton and Larry Mullen, Jr., to not be outdone, had composed a brand new model of the Mission: Unattainable theme for Brian De Palma’s cinematic reboot of the Nineteen Sixties TV sequence. The entire band had come collectively to report “Maintain Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me, Kill Me,” for the Batman Ceaselessly soundtrack, and so they had reunited with Brian Eno to report Authentic Soundtracks I, a report of theme music “for imaginary movies,” launched below the title Passengers. The latter is a few of the most dynamic and rewarding music U2 ever wrote. In fact, not less than one bandmember all however disowned it. “There’s a skinny line between making fascinating music and being self-indulgent,” Mullen mentioned in 1997. “We crossed that a number of occasions on Passengers.”