#62 - Zoo Station (1991) Highest- 22 Lowest- 145 Achtung Baby LP
Vulture-56/218 -sound of 4 men chopping down TJT, sound of the Berlin Wall coming down, sound of a train coming out of a tunnel into the sunlight of another country — “Zoo Station” is all of those things. U2 inviting you to get on that train w them & run away. Inside the train is the Berlin of Bowie & Iggy, the Berlin of Isherwood, Berlin split in 2 & reunited again. “When people put on the record, we wanted their 1st reaction to be either ‘This record is broken,’ or, ‘This can’t be the new U2 record, there’s been a mistake,’” Adam Clayton said. “Zoo Station” is astonishing, jaw-dropping, & ecstatic.
Comment - “We hope you like our new direction” intro to the great album. As soon as you heard the opening you knew you were in for something different. As a stand alone song, its ranking is about right.
Songfact:
The song that opens AB & the song that defines how U2 "dreamt it all up again" following R&H. The metallic riffs that open the song portend a change of direction for U2 into a more futuristic, electric sound.
The title comes from Zoo Bahnhof,
a train station in Berlin on the U2 line. Officially called Zoologischer Garten, the station is the stop for the Berlin Zoo.
Link
The lyrics were inspired by a story Bono heard of Berlin during World War II in which animals escaped the Berlin city's zoo after it was damaged in overnight bombing. Rhinos, pelicans & flamingos wandered around the next morning while people were sifting through the rubble. He compared the song to the actual subway station, saying "it was written as an opening track, the beasts breaking out of their cages."
As discussed previously........the band struggled with a song called “Lady With the Spinning Head” but that work would eventually produce “The Fly”, “Ultraviolet (Light My Way)” and “Zoo Station”.
Whereas Bono exhibited a full-throated vocal delivery on the group's previous releases, for AB he extended his range into a lower register & used "breathy & subdued colors". On many tracks, including "The Fly" and "Zoo Station", he sang as a character;
1 technique used is octave doubling, in which the vocals are doubled but sung in two different octaves. This octave differentiation was sometimes done w vocals simultaneously, while at other times, it distinguishes voices between the verses & choruses. The technique introduces "a contrasting lyrical idea & vocal character to deliver it", leading to both literal & ironic interpretations of Bono's vocals. He said that lowering his voice helped him find a new vocal vocabulary, which he felt was limited to "certain words & tones" by his tenor voice. Other methods of altering his vocals included treating them w processing & feeding them through a distortion pedal. These techniques were all used to give his voice a different emotional feel & distinguish it from his previous work.
"Zoo Station" came together near the end of the recording sessions when audio engineer Flood was mixing the song & introduced distortion to the drums. The song's direction was largely influenced by the production team of Daniel Lanois, Brian Eno, & Flood. Bono had been disappointed w his vocals fr early recording sessions for the album & told the production team, "Let's just try something that's gonna put me in a completely different place".
After they distorted his voice to make it sound as if it were coming from a megaphone, Bono was inspired to sing in a persona, as the effect gave his vocals a different "emotional feel".
Along w introducing the band's new sound, the song opens the album as a statement of intent. Lyrically, new anticipations & appetites are suggested:
"I'm ready for what's next": a willingness to throw caution to the wind & take risks
"I'm ready to let go of the steering wheel"
The bridge before the final chorus, use the eponymous subway station as a metaphor for time:
"Time is a train / Makes the future the past
"Leaves you standing in the station / Your face pressed up against the glass".
Bono cites his wife's 2nd pregnancy as an influence during the album's 1991 recording:
"I'm ready to say I'm glad to be alive / I'm ready, I'm ready for the push"
Alternate titles considered for the AB album included calling it “Zoo Station”
U2 used this as the opening number 156 times on of their 1992-1993 Zoo TV tour, an elaborate send-up of media intrusion & the band's own popularity. The concerts immersed the audience in what felt like a TV broadcast, w constantly shifting images flashing across banks of monitors. It was a major strategy shift for the band, which was looking for a new way to connect w the MTV generation.
Been played live 248 times..............Zoo 92 &93 tours, Vertigo '95 tour,.........and 2018 E+I tour
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Bottoms, Zoo Station Remix (Wata####achi no Ookina Yume)" – Track is an instrumental remixed version. The Japanese subtitle, "Wata####achi no Ookina Yume," translates to "our big dream." The track was also featured as a bonus track on the Japanese release of Original Soundtracks 1 & was one of the b-sides releases for the "Miss Sarajevo" single.
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Does anyone else hear a similar chorus sound like Echo & The Bunnymen's "Lips like Sugar"? Link