U2 – Not Quite As "Magnificent" As The Media Would Have You Believe
U2 are the Biggest Band In The World. Everyone knows that. It must be a freakish anomaly, then, that their new single "Magnificent" sold just 4,000 copies in its first week of release, and hobbled into the charts at number 42, giving the band their worst chart performance since 1982.
But perhaps they're not a singles band anymore. Parent album No Line On The Horizon must be a global sales behemoth, right? Well, yes and no. In the U.K., it has sold fewer copies than the Prodigy's Invaders Must Die. In the U.S., as Idolator pointed out, the album shifted around half as many copies in its first week as the band's previous long-player, How To Dismantle An Atomic Bomb.
Could it be that the public is not quite as head-over-heels infatuated with U2 as the mainstream media likes to make out?
When No Line… was released in February, the BBC essentially became U2's unofficial media partners, offering them across-the-board coverage. The band's rooftop-gig stunt could have been reported no more enthusiastically had Bono unexpectedly morphed into a golden eagle and flown into the sky as a finale.
Indeed, the BBC's coverage was so extensive it prompted an official complaint from commercial radio's trade body, RadioCentre, who argued that the corporation's "excessive and exclusive promotion of leading artists" (using license-payer funds) constituted a breach of fair trading rules.
But the BBC weren't the only ones to roll over for the U2 machine. Critics were at it too. Q magazine called No Line… U2's "greatest album." The Observer said it was "as memorable as any [album] U2 have created." Rolling Stone labeled it "their best since Achtung Baby." (All three magazines, incidentally, put the band on theirs covers around the same time.)
All this is symptomatic of a wider power shift within the music industry. As magazine sales slide, big-hitting PRs increasingly hold all the cards. Hence big-budget albums get correspondingly big-budget reviews.
Witness the weird, Stepford Wives-esque critical consensus surrounding Green Day's 21st Century Breakdown. Is no one willing to break ranks? Do we really all agree that this daft, over-reaching record is a masterpiece of stadium-filling, punk-rock dissent? Or are we just desperate to participate in the blockbuster moment of its release, hoping to catch some of its reflected, multimillion-selling glory?


Other than that, lets all go defSpot com to watch music videos!
Its reached a point that all the magazines will claim that the latest U2 album is the greatest just so they can get an interview with Bono. It is funny and sad.
As for No Line...being the best U2 album, this is overhyping it.