Fans of U2 around the world have started receiving letters from the band that are teasing about their upcoming project, Songs of Surrender. Twitter users have posted pictures of their letters, that appear to be photocopies of a handwritten note from guitarist the Edge. The letters also have the hashtag #U2SO40, referencing the fact that Songs of Surrender is going to contain 40 reinterpreted songs from U2’s catalog.
The letter reads, “When a song becomes well known, it’s always associated with a particular voice, I can’t think of ‘Tangled Up in Blue’ without the reedy timbre of Bob Dylan or ‘All the Time in the World’ without the unique voice of Louis Armstrong. So what happens when a voice develops and experience and maturity give it additional resonance? U2 have been around long enough to know what that is like. It’s true for us all, but it’s particularly true for Bono.” The Edge explained that U2 wrote most of their songs as “very young men,” and they “mean something quite different to us now.” With Songs of Surrender, the quartet sets out to “bring these songs back with us to the present day and give them the benefit or otherwise of a 21st-century reimagining.” U2 also released a tweet with a release date of March 17th for the album.
In conclusion he wrote, “Intimacy replaced post-punk urgency. New keys. New chords. New tempos and new lyrics arrived. It turns out that a great song is kind of indestructible. Once we surrendered our reverence for the original version each song started to open up to a new authentic voice of this time, of the people we are, and particularly the singer Bono has become. I hope you like our new direction.”
U2 hasn’t announced an official track listing, however, the 40 songs are expected to correspond with the 40 songs that Bono used as chapter titles in his memoir Surrender: 40 Songs, One Story. In the “After the Afterwords” section of the book, he wrote, “During lockdown, we were able to reimagine 40 U2 tracks for the Songs of Surrender collection, which gave me a chance to live inside those songs again as I wrote this memoir. It also meant I could deal with something that’s been nagging me for some time. The lyrics on a few songs that I’ve always felt were never quite written. They are now. (I think.)”
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