So Cruel
"So Cruel" | |
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"So Cruel" is a song by rock band U2. It is the sixth track on their 1991 album Achtung Baby, concluding side one of the album. The song was written at Elsinore in Dalkey. While audio engineer Flood changed reels to listen to a demo of another song, lead singer Bono began to improvise a song on guitar. The rest of the band quickly joined in, creating the first take of the song. It was developed as an acoustic track, with Flood adding overdubs and additional elements later. Bassist Adam Clayton and Flood noted that the technology in the studio was crucial in transforming the acoustic song into the final mix.
During the recording sessions for Achtung Baby, guitarist the Edge separated from his wife, Aislinn O'Sullivan. The separation had a major effect on the development of the song, as Bono channelled their pain into the lyrics. Bono said "there were lots of other things going on internally within the band and outside it, and I was working through all of that", noting that the Edge's separation from Aislinn was just one component of that. Thematically the song is about unrequited love, jealousy, obsession, and possessiveness. The track was favourably received by critics.
Writing and inspiration
"So Cruel" was developed by lead singer
"So Cruel" was developed acoustically, with guitarist the Edge playing an acoustic guitar, bassist Adam Clayton playing an acoustic bass, and drummer Larry Mullen Jr. using a bodhrán.[4] Author John D. Luerssen interpreted the song as beginning "with the same kind of basic approach to songcraft that gave wings to 'She's a Mystery to Me'".[5] Bono said that "People thought it was too traditional, one more attempt at writing a song for Roy Orbison".[4] Lyrically, it was also inspired by Scott Walker. Bono said, "His is a very delicate mode of expression on the outside, though too often it is laced underneath with a lot of pain and rage."[6]
According to Clayton, Flood "did a couple of treatments to the track that utterly transformed it." He
Themes

During the recording sessions for Achtung Baby, the Edge separated from his wife, Aislinn O'Sullivan. Reflecting on the impact it had on U2, Bono said, "We're a really tight community. This is not like somebody's, you know, girlfriend's left. We've grown up with these people, this our family, our community. This was really hard for us... It was like the first cracks on the beautiful porcelain jug with those beautiful flowers in it that was our music and our community, starting to go 'crack'."[9] The Edge explained that travelling to Berlin to write and record provided him with an escape from his failing marriage: "I was disappearing into the music for a different reason. It was a refuge in a way. That approach didn't completely work. You know, I wasn't really... in a good positive headspace. I was running away, I suppose."[9] Hot Press editor Niall Stokes noted that in the lyrics, "Bono is clearly drawing on the experiences of those close to him, and particularly on the emotional turmoil that the Edge and Aislinn had been going through."[6] Bono said "that's in there, but it's unfair to lump it all on the Edge and Aislinn splitting up. That was one of the saddest things... But that was only one part of it. There were lots of other things going on internally within the band and outside it, and I was working through all of that. People are desperately trying to hold onto each other in a time when that's very difficult. Looking around, you see how unprepared for it all people are, and the deals they make."[6]
Thematically, "So Cruel" also deals with unrequited love, jealousy, obsession, and possessiveness.
Author Višnja Cogan wrote "Women... never get treated badly in U2 songs... Women are put on a pedestal by Bono, his mother's untimely death being undoubtedly one of the reasons. If anything, in some of the songs on Achtung Baby, it is the man who gets the raw deal. On 'So Cruel', it is the man who is the victim of a woman. It is the reverse of the classical torch song".[14] Quoting the lyric "Her skin is pale like God's only dove / Screams like an angel for your love / Then she makes you watch her from above / And you need her like a drug", he added "The man is manipulated by the woman's sexual power. He is incapable of pulling himself out of this relationship and despite his best efforts, he comes back to her."[14] He noted that the woman is portrayed as "cruel, unreliable and unfaithful. She can only betray him and the duality between love and lust is well depicted in the song." Cogan concluded by saying "unlike the classical torch song, this one ends with the man seemingly deciding to leave the woman... The only thing we don't know in the end is whether he actually acts on his promise or not."[14]
Conversely, author Deane Galbraith believed the song was told from the woman's viewpoint, saying "a woman is unable to receive love without also hating those who love her. She acts simultaneously as tender lover and cruel sadist. The lyrics that describe her 'like an angel' are immediately juxtaposed with a more sordid description that pictures her love as an addictive and manipulative drug. Instead of the subtle and vivifying transcendence of a heavenly angel, when she offers to take her lover higher, he is forced to watch her while she controls him 'from above'. For this is a fallen angel, not purely good or evil, but a lover whose best intentions are insidiously corrupt".[15]
Reception
"So Cruel" was favourably received by critics. Hot Press editor Niall Stokes called it "dark, bitter, intense and masochistic", believing the lyrics to be the aspect that made the song memorable. He added, "As a statement about marital infidelity, the sense of betrayal that accompanies it and the rage that almost inevitably follows, it would be hard to surpass."
Steve Morse of The Boston Globe called it an "embittered love [song]" with "a minimalist drum sound from Larry Mullen and an even more minimalist vocal from Bono."[18] Jon Pareles of The New York Times wrote that "[love is] a state of desperation or a bitter memory... The marchlike 'So Cruel' [ricochets] from fond reminiscence to vindictiveness to accusations, some of them directed at the narrator himself".[19] Writing for the Boston Herald, Julie Romandetta called "So Cruel" a "broken-hearted [lament]" that was "lushly orchestrated".[20] Robert Hillburn of the Los Angeles Times believed that it was one of U2's best tracks, describing it as "pulsating and accusatory".[21] Brian Eno described the song as "epic and intimate, passionate and chill".[22]
Live performances
U2 performed "So Cruel" three full times live on the
Covers
Depeche Mode reworked the song for the 2011 tribute album AHK-toong BAY-bi Covered. "We first heard Achtung Baby working on Songs of Faith and Devotion with Flood," remarked Martin Gore. "It was the closest our bands ever got: U2 had become more electronic, while Depeche Mode were working on a new rock vision. But there was never a rivalry. Bono used reverse psychology in his email (requesting the band's participation in the tribute album), saying he totally understood why we'd say no. We just thought, 'Why not?' 'So Cruel' is Bono at his best, words-wise. And we couldn't tackle 'One' – that would be almost sacrilegious."[26]
Credits and personnel
U2[8]
Additional performer[8] |
Technical[8]
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See also
- List of covers of U2 songs - "So Cruel"
References
Footnotes
- ^ a b Tingen, Paul (March 1994). "ROBBIE ADAMS: U2's Achtung Baby & Zooropa". Sound on Sound. Retrieved 15 October 2011.
- ^ McGee (2008), pp. 134–135
- ^ Beyda (2000), p. 6
- ^ a b c d McCormick (2006), p. 228
- ^ Luerssen (2010), pp. 258-259
- ^ a b c d e f g h Stokes (2005), p. 101
- ^ Graham (2004), p. 45
- ^ a b c d Achtung Baby (CD). U2. Canada: Island Records. 1991. 510 347-2.
{{cite AV media notes}}
: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link) - ^ a b c U2, Davis Guggenheim (Director) (2011). From the Sky Down (film). BBC Worldwide Canada.
- ^ Graham (2004), p. 49
- ^ a b Martin, Gavin (April 2009). "Achtung Baby". The Ultimate Music Guide (U2). Uncut: 74–77.
- ^ Wurtzel (2003), p. 97
- ^ Dreyfuss (2006), p. 18
- ^ a b c Cogan (2008), p. 85
- ^ Galbraith (2011), p. 180
- The Vancouver Sun. p. 6.
While songs such as One, Until the End of the World, So Cruel and the dour closer Love is Blindness are riddled with images of self-doubt and uncertainty, they are countered by the uplifting cadences of Even Better than the Real Thing, Mysterious Ways and Acrobat.
- ^ Gardner, Elysa (9 January 1992). "U2's 'Achtung Baby': Bring the Noise". Rolling Stone. No. 621. p. 51. Retrieved 15 October 2011.
- ^ Morse, Steve (15 November 1991). "U2 Bounces Back". The Boston Globe. p. 53.
- New York Times. Archivedfrom the original on 14 October 2014. Retrieved 15 October 2011.
- ^ Romandetta, Julie (18 November 1991). "Band returns to its roots with 'Achtung Baby'". Boston Herald. p. 31.
Songs about romantic hardship fill more than half of Achtung Baby. Bono's broken-hearted laments are most poignant on the lushly orchestrated 'So Cruel' and the gentle, subdued 'Love is Blindness'.
- ^ Hillburn, Robert (22 November 1991). "Achtung Baby - U2 (Island)". Los Angeles Times. p. 4G.
Yet some tracks - including the pulsating and accusatory "So Cruel" and the anxious "Until the End of the World" - clearly rank with the finest moments in U2's body of work.
- ^ Eno, Brian (17 November 1991). "The Making of U2's New Recording". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. p. 3F.
- ^ de la Parra (2003), p. 147
- ^ de la Parra (2003), p. 151
- ^ de la Parra (2003), p. 153
- ^ "What's On Your Free CD?". Q: 6–7. December 2011.
Bibliography
- Beyda, Adam (2000). "Chapter One: Flood Rising". In Barbara Schultz (ed.). Music producers: conversations with today's top hit makers. ISBN 0-87288-730-8.
- Cogan, Višnja (2008). U2: An Irish Phenomenon. New York: Pegasus Books. ISBN 978-1-933648-71-2.
- de la Parra, Pimm Jal (2003). U2 Live: A Concert Documentary (second ed.). New York: ISBN 978-0-7119-9198-9.
- Dreyfuss, Hubert L.; Wrathall, Mark A. (2006). "2: Staring at the Sun: U2 and the Experience of Kierkegaardian Despair". In Mark A. Wrathall (ed.). Philosophy and U2. Popular Culture and Philosophy. Vol. 21. Chicago: ISBN 978-0-8126-9599-1.
- Galbraith, Deane (2011). "Chapter 2: Staring at the Sun: U2 and the Experience of Kierkegaardian Despair". In Scott Calhoun (ed.). Exploring U2: Is This Rock 'n' Roll?: Essays on the Music, Work, and Influence of U2. Plymouth: ISBN 978-0-8108-8157-0.
- Graham, Bill; van Oosten de Boer, Caroline (2004). U2: The Complete Guide to Their Music. London: ISBN 0-7119-9886-8.
- Luerssen, John D. (2010). U2 FAQ. Milwaukee: ISBN 978-0-87930-997-8.
- McGee, Matt (2008). U2: A Diary. London: Omnibus Press. ISBN 978-1-84772-108-2.
- Stein, Atara (1999). "Chapter 11: "Even Better Than the Real Thing" - U2's (love) songs of the self". In Richey, William; Dettmar, Kevin J.H. (eds.). Reading rock and roll: authenticity, appropriation, aesthetics. New York: ISBN 978-0-231-11399-1.
- ISBN 1-56025-765-2.
- ISBN 0-00-719668-7.)
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link - Wurtzel, Elizabeth (2003). "Me2". In Hank Bordowitz (ed.). The U2 Reader: A Quarter Century of Commentary, Criticism, and Reviews. Milwaukee: ISBN 0-634-03832-X.