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UPCOMING RELEASES

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Latest Additions:

Chilly Gonzales - Solo Piano II (8/27)
The Henry Clay People - Twenty-Five for the Rest of Our Lives (6/26)
Lauren Housley - One Step Closer EP (6/12 UK)
Emily Jane White - Ode To Sentience (6/12 US)
Nell Bryden - Shake the Tree (6/18 UK)
Sandi Thom - Flesh & Blood (8/14)
The Milk - Tales From The Thames Delta (9/3 UK)
Little Feat - Rooster Rag (6/26)
Angie Stone - Rich Girl (9/25)
The Vaccines - Come of Age (9/3 UK)
Swans - The Seer (8/28)
Catherine AD - Reprise (6/25)
Shovels and Rope - O' Be Joyful (7/31)
The Dirty Guv'nahs - Somewhere Beneath These Southern Skies (8/14)
Summer Camp - Always EP (7/10)
Family of the Year - Loma Vista (7/10)
Hannah Miller - Doubters and Dreamers EP (6/12)
Tidelands - We've Got A Map (8/7)
Dawn Landes - Mal Habillée (6/5)
Anywhere - S/T (7/24)
Freelance Whales - TBA (8/21)
Citizen Cope - One Lovely Day (7/17)
Aimee Mann - TBA (9/18)
Mumford and Sons - TBA (9/25)
The Mommyheads - Vulnerable Boy (7/17)
River City Tanlines - Coast to Coast (7/31)
Steve Vai - The Story of Light (8/14)
White Violet - Hiding, Mingling (8/14)
Marc Berger - Ride (7/17)
Yeasayer - Fragrant World (8/21)
Spector - Enjoy It While It Lasts (8/11 UK)
Sola-Mi - Nexus (6/5)
Kalen Nash - Ukred (5/29)
Lianne La Havas - Is Your Love Big Enough? (8/7)
Alisha Zalkin - March to a Different Beat (6/30)
Kelly Joe Phelps - Brother Sinner & The Whale (8/22)
Animal Collective - Centipede Hz (Sept. TBA)
Sara Bareilles - Once Upon Another Time EP (5/22 DIG)
Sixpence None the Richer - Lost In Transition (8/7)
Matchbox 20 - North (9/4)
Missy Higgins - The Ol' Razzle Dazzle (7/17 U.S.)
Owl City - The Midsummer Station (8/14)
Jason Myles Goss - Radio Dial (6/17)
Daniel Powter - Turn On the Lights (8/14)
Antje Duvekot - New Siberia (6/26)
Niki and the Dove - Instinct (8/7)
Yarbo - What Is Now EP (6/2 UK)
Ami Saraiya & The Outcome - Soundproof Box (6/19)
Edmund II - Floating Monk (6/26)

DC RELEASE SCHEDULE

Artists > Site/Facebook / DC > DC Feature

May 29

2:54 - S/T DC
Chantal Kreviazuk - In This Life
Dala - Best Day
Donavon Frankenreiter - Start Livin'
Edward Sharpe & Magnetic Zeros - HERE
Elenowen - S/T (EP)
Fort Atlantic - S/T
Gemma Ray - Island Fire
Island Twins - S/T
Joan Armatrading - Starlight
Julia Stone - By The Horns
Kalen Nash - Ukred
Ladyhawke - Anxiety
Lake Street Drive - Fun Machine (Covers EP)
Lemonade - Diver
Lucy Michelle & Velvet Lapelles - Heat
Marissa Nadler - The Sister
Matthew Perryman Jones - Land of the Living DC
Melody Gardot - The Absence
Paloma Faith - Fall To Grace (UK)
Preteen Zenith - Rubble Guts + BB Eye
P.S. I Love You - Death Dreams
Rebecca Ferguson - Heaven
Regina Spektor - What We Saw From the Cheap Seats DC
Rory Block - I Belong to the Band:Tribute to Rev. Gary Davis
Rumer - Boy's Don't Cry DC
Scissor Sisters - Magic Hour
Sigur Rós - Valtari
Sun Kil Moon - Among the Leaves
The Pond (w/ Kathryn Williams) - S/T (UK)
The Static Sea - Third Parties
The Walkmen - Heaven
Ultravox - Brilliant

June 5

A Silent Film - Sand & Snow
Alejandro Escovedo - Big Station
Amanda Mair - S/T DC
Anna Ternheim - The Night Visitor (US) DC
Brandi Carlile - Bear Creek
Chris Robinson Brotherhood - Big Moon Ritual
Dawn Landes - Mal Habillée
Dexys (Midnight Runners) - One Day I'm Going to Soar
Emeli Sande - Our Version of Events (US)
Haroula Rose - So Easy
Heart - Strange Euphoria (Box)
Ian McGlynn - Now We're Golden
Joe Walsh - Analog Man
Kelly Hogan - I Like to Keep Myself In Pain
Kelli Scarr - Dangling Teeth DC
Lenny Kravitz - Mama Said (20th Anniv. Ed.)
Mad Staring Eyes - Talking to the Operator (UK)
Marley's Ghost - Jubilee
Masha Qrella - Analogies
Neil Young & Crazy Horse - Americana
Patti Smith - Banga
Paul Simon - Graceland (Deluxe Edition, Box)
Rhett Miller - The Dreamer
River City Extension - Don't Let the Sun Go Down On Your Anger
Ryan Humbert - Sometimes The Game Plays You
Scott Lucas & The Married Men - Blood Half Moon
Sola-Mi - Nexus
Soulsavers - The Light the Dead See
The Beach Boys - That's Why God Made the Radio
The Hives - Lex Hives
The Mynabirds - GENERALS
The Rocketboys - Build Anyway DC
The Temper Trap - S/T
Various - Kin: Songs of Mary Karr & Rodney Crowell
Xavier Rudd - Spirit Bird
Yarbo - What Is Now EP (6/2 UK)
Zaz - Zaz (US CD)

June 12

Amy Macdonald - Life In A Beautiful Light
Bobby Womack - The Bravest Man In the Universe
BoDeans - American Made
Dent May - Do Things
Ed Sheeran - + (U.S.)
Emily Jane White - Ode To Sentience
Giant Giant Sand - Tucson
Grace Potter & The Nocturnals - The Lion The Beast The Beat
Hannah Miller - Doubters and Dreamers EP
Hot Chip - In Our Heads
Jail - Traps
Jonathan Boulet - We Keep the Beat...
Jukebox the Ghost - Safe Travels
Lauren Housley - One Step Closer EP (UK)
Magic Trick - Ruler of the Night
Mary Chapin Carpenter - Ashes and Roses
Metric - Synthetica
Nouela - Chants
Oli Brown - Here I Am
POP ETC - S/T
Ryan Humbert - Sometimes the Game Plays You
Ryan Monroe (Band of Horses) - A Painting of a Painting On Fire
Spirit Family Reunion - No Separation
Stepdad - Wildlife Pop
The Constellations - Do It For Free
The dB's - Falling Off the Sky
The Hive Dwellers - Hewn from the Wilderness
The Hundred In the Hands - Red Night
The Inner Banks - Wild
The Tallest Man on Earth - There's No Leaving Now
The Welcome Wagon - Precious Remedies Against Satan’s Devices
The Young - Dub Egg
Usher - Looking for Myself
Wintersleep - Hello Hum

June 19

Ami Saraiya & The Outcome - Soundproof Box
Boy - Mutual Friends DC
Chris Smither - Hundred Dollar Valentine
Delta Rae - Carry the Fire DC
Efren - Write A New Song
Ex Lovers - Moth
Fiona Apple - The Idler Wheel...
Glen Hansard - Rhythm and Repose DC
Jason Myles Goss - Radio Dial (6/17)
Justin Bieber - Believe
Kate Miller-Heidke - Nightflight
Kenny Chesney - Welcome to the Fishbowl
Maren Parusel - Tightrope Walker
Mary Epworth - Dream Life
Morning Parade - S/T
Nell Bryden - Shake the Tree (UK)
Richard Marx - A Night Out With Friends (CD/DVD)
Rush - Clockwork Angels
Seth Walker - Time Can Change
Smashing Pumpkins - Oceania
Sophie B. Hawkins - The Crossing
Vicci Martinez (The Voice) - Vicci
Walk the Moon - S/T
Zulu Winter - Language

June 26

A Place to Bury Strangers - Worship
Alisha Zalkin - March to a Different Beat (6/30)
Antje Duvekot - New Siberia
Beachwood Sparks - The Tarnished Gold
Blues Traveler - Suzy Cracks the Whip
Cassandra Wilson - Another Country
Catherine AD - Reprise
Chris Price - Homesick
Cory Chisel & The Wandering Sons - Old Believers
Dive - Oshin
Echo Lake - Wild Peace
Edmund II - Floating Monk
Eugene McGuinness - Invitation to the Voyage (UK)
Gloriana - Thousand Miles Left Behind
Jay James Picton- Play It By Heart (U.K.)
Jesca Hoop - The House That Jack Built DC
Joe Jackson - The Duke (Ellington Tribute)
Jonathan Boulet - We Keep the Beat...
Levellers - Static On The Airwaves
Little Feat - Rooster Rag
Milk Maid - Mostly No
Mindy Smith - S/T
Maroon 5 - Overexposed
New Beard - New Beard City
Ry Cooder - Election Special
Sonny and the Sunsets - Longtime Companion
The Eastern Sea - Plague
The Henry Clay People - Twenty-Five for the Rest of Our Lives
The Offspring - Days Go By
The Soundtrack of Our Lives - Throw It to the Universe
Vacationer - Gone

July 3

Easter Island - Frightened DC
Gold Motel - S/T
Honey Ryder - Marley's Chains (UK)
The View - Cheeky For A Reason

July 10

Clare & The Reasons - KR-51
Dirty Projectors - Swing Lo Magellan
Duran Duran - A Diamond in the Mind/Live
Eleni Mandell - I Can See the Future
Family of the Year - Loma Vista
Husky - Forever So
JJAMZ - Suicide Pact
Joshua Hyslop - Where the Mountain Meets the Valley DC
Lianne La Havas - Is Your Love Big Enough? (UK) DC
Newton Faulkner - Write It On Your Skin (UK)
Summer Camp - Always EP
Zac Brown Band - Uncaged

July 17

Angus Stone - Broken Brights
Citizen Cope - One Lovely Day
Marc Berger - Ride
Michael Kiwanuka - Home Again (US) DC
Milo Greene - S/T DC
Missy Higgins - The Ol' Razzle Dazzle (US)
Soul Asylum - Delayed Reaction
Susanna Hoffs - Someday
The Drowning Men - All of the Unknown
The Farm - S/T
The Mommyheads - Vulnerable Boy
Various - Tribute to Fleetwood Mac

July 24

Anywhere - S/T
Delilah - From the Roots Up (U.K.)
Gaslight Anthem - Handwritten
MoZella - The Brian Holland Sessions
Passion Pit - Gossamer
Young Moon - Navigated Like the Swan

July 31

Jesse Harris - Sub Rosa
Nolwenn Leroy - Nolwenn
River City Tanlines - Coast to Coast
Shovels and Rope - O' Be Joyful

Beyond

A Fine Frenzy - Pines (9/18)
Aimee Mann - TBA (9/18)
Alanis Morissette - Havoc & Bright Lights (8/28)
Angie Stone - Rich Girl (9/25)
Animal Collective - Centipede Hz (Sept. TBA)
Ben Taylor - Listening (8/14)
Cat Power - Sun (9/11)
Chilly Gonzales - Solo Piano II (8/27)
Daniel Powter - Turn On the Lights (8/14)
Dispatch - Circles Around the Sun (8/21)
Elton John - Diving Board (Fall TBD)
Eric Lindell - West County Drifter (8/22)
Freelance Whales - TBA (8/21)
Green Day - ¡Uno! (9/25) ¡Dos! (11/13) ¡Tré! (1/15)
Jay James Picton- Play It By Heart (8/6 U.K.)
Karima Francis - The Remedy (8/6 UK)
Kelly Joe Phelps - Brother Sinner & The Whale (8/22)
Lianne La Havas - Is Your Love Big Enough? (8/7)
Luciana Souza - Duos III/The Book of Chet (8/28)
Matchbox 20 - North (9/4)
Mumford and Sons - TBA (9/25)
Nelly Furtado - The Spirit Indestructable (9/11)
Niki and the Dove - Instinct (8/7)
No Doubt - TBA (9/25)
Owl City - The Midsummer Station (8/14)
Rickie Lee Jones - TBA (8/14)
Sandi Thom - Flesh & Blood (8/14)
Selah Sue - S/T (8/21)
Sixpence None the Richer - Lost In Transition (8/7)
Spector - Enjoy It While It Lasts (8/11 UK)
Steve Vai - The Story of Light (8/14)
Swans - The Seer (8/28)
The Cast of Cheers - Family (8/21)
The Dirty Guv'nahs - Somewhere Beneath These Southern Skies (8/14)
The Darkness - Hot Cakes (8/21)
The Milk - Tales From The Thames Delta (9/3 UK)
The Old Ceremony - Fairy Tales and Other Forms of Suicide (8/21)
The Vaccines - Come of Age (9/3 UK)
Tidelands - We've Got A Map (8/7)
Tristan Prettyman - TBA (9/25)
Various - Ghost Brothers of Darkland County (John Mellencamp/Stephen King Musical)
White Violet - Hiding, Mingling (8/14)
Yeasayer - Fragrant World (8/21)

All titles and dates subject to change!

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Thursday
Oct202011

Watch: U2 & Bruce Springsteen - I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For

The Boss and Bono shakin' the rafters with "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" was one of the highlights when Bruce Springsteen officially inducted U2 into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2005. That performance joins nearly 200 others in a special 10-volume digital-only collection arriving at iTunes on November 15 and a 51-song 3-CD set available November 1. The annual induction ceremonies are known for their legendary jam sessions and these collections capture many of the best. Take a look at the box set track listing, read Bruce's induction speech for U2 and watch a 2009 U2/Springsteen concert performance of the song after the jump.

U2/Bruce Springsteen - "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" (Live in NYC 2009)

Disc: 1
1. Johnny B. Goode - Chuck Berry with Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band
2. The Train Kept A-Rollin - Jeff Beck, Jimmy Page, Ron Wood, Joe Perry, Flea and Metallica
3. A Change Is Gonna Come - Al Green
4. Be My Baby - The Ronettes
5. Sweet Little Rock and Roller - Kid Rock and the Rock Hall Jam Band
6. I Saw Her Standing There - Mick Jagger, Bruce Springsteen and the Rock Hall Jam Band
7. Glad All Over - Joan Jett, John Mellencamp, John Fogerty and Billy Joel
8. All Day and All of the Night - The Kinks
9. You ve Lost That Lovin Feelin - The Righteous Brothers
10. (I Can t Get No) Satisfaction - Mick Jagger, Bruce Springsteen and the Rock Hall Jam Band
11. It s My Life - Eric Burdon and Bon Jovi
12. Substitute - The Who and the Rock Hall Jam Band
13. I Got You (I Feel Good) - James Brown
14. For What It s Worth - Crosby, Stills & Nash with Tom Petty
15. California Dreamin - The Mamas & the Papas
16. Break On Through - The Doors with Eddie Vedder
17. In the Midnight Hour - Wilson Pickett with Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band
18. Let It Be - Paul McCartney and the Rock Hall Jam Band
Disc: 2
1. Sunshine of Your Love - Cream
2. While My Guitar Gently Weeps - Tom Petty, Jeff Lynne, Steve Winwood, Dhani Harrison and Prince
3. Green River - John Fogerty & Friends
4. Beck s Bolero - Jeff Beck with Jimmy Page
5. Woodstock - James Taylor
6. Won t Get Fooled Again - The Who and the Rock Hall Jam Band
7. Dear Mr. Fantasy - Traffic
8. Midnight Rider - The Allman Brothers Band with Sheryl Crow
9. Who ll Stop the Rain - John Fogerty & Friends
10. Fire and Rain - James Taylor
11. Crossroads - Cream
12. Iron Man - Metallica
13. Roadhouse Blues - The Doors with Eddie Vedder
14. Sweet Home Alabama - Lynryd Skynyrd
15. Born on the Bayou - John Fogerty & Friends
16. La Grange - ZZ Top
17. Tired of Being Alone - Al Green
Disc: 3
1. Tie Your Mother Down - Queen with Dave Grohl and Taylor Hawkins
2. Say You Love Me - Fleetwood Mac
3. Sweet Emotion - Aerosmith with Kid Rock
4. Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out - Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band
5. Landslide - Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham
6. Only the Good Die Young - Billy Joel
7. American Girl - Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers
8. Blitzkrieg Bop - Green Day
9. The Promised Land - Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band
10. Running on Empty - Jackson Browne
11. Pink Houses - John Mellencamp
12. Pride (In the Name of Love) - U2
13. R.O.C.K. in the USA - John Mellencamp
14. I Still Haven t Found What I m Looking For - U2 with Bruce Springsteen
15. Handle with Care - Tom Petty, Jeff Lynne, Steve Winwood and Dhani Harrison

16. Man on the Moon - R.E.M. with Eddie Vedder

Bruce Springsteen's R+RHOF induction speech for U2 in 2005...Bloody brilliant:

Uno, dos, tres, catorce. That translates as one, two, three, fourteen. That is the correct math for a rock and roll band. For in art and love and rock and roll, the whole had better equal much more than the sum of its parts, or else you're just rubbing two sticks together searching for fire. A great rock band searches for the same kind of combustible force that fueled the expansion of the universe after the big bang. You want the earth to shake and spit fire. You want the sky to split apart and for God to pour out.

It's embarrassing to want so much, and to expect so much from music, except sometimes it happens -- the Sun Sessions, Highway 61, Sgt. Peppers, the Band, Robert Johnson, Exile on Main Street, Born to Run -- whoops, I meant to leave that one out (laughter) -- the Sex Pistols, Aretha Franklin, the Clash, James Brown...the proud and public enemies it takes a nation of millions to hold back. This is music meant to take on not only the powers that be, but on a good day, the universe and God himself -- if he was listening. It's man's accountability, and U2 belongs on this list.

It was the early '80s. I went with Pete Townshend, who always wanted to catch the first whiff of those about to unseat us, to a club in London. There they were: A young Bono -- single-handedly pioneering the Irish mullet; (laughter) the Edge -- what kind of name was that?; Adam and Larry. I was listening to the last band of whom I would be able to name all of its members. They had an exciting show and a big, beautiful sound. They lifted the roof.

We met afterwards and they were nice young men. They were Irish. Irish! Now, this would play an enormous part in their success in the States. For what the English occasionally have the refined sensibilities to overcome, we Irish and Italians have no such problem. We come through the door fists and hearts first. U2, with the dark, chiming sound of heaven at their command -- which, of course, is the sound of unrequited love and longing, their greatest theme -- their search for God intact. This was a band that wanted to lay claim to not only this world but had their eyes on the next one, too.

Now, they're a real band; each member plays a vital part. I believe they actually practice some form of democracy -- toxic poison in a band's head. In Iraq, maybe. In rock, no! Yet they survive. They have harnessed the time bomb that exists in the heart of every great rock and roll band that usually explodes, as we see regularly from this stage. But they seemed to have innately understood the primary rule of rock band job security: "Hey, asshole, the other guy is more important than you think he is!" They are both a step forward and direct descendants of the great bands who believed rock music could shake things up in the world, who dared to have faith in their audience, who believed if they played their best it would bring out the best in you. They believed in pop stardom and the big time. Now this requires foolishness and a calculating mind. It also requires a deeply held faith in the work you're doing and in its powers to transform. U2 hungered for it all, and built a sound, and they wrote the songs that demanded it. They're keepers of some of the most beautiful sonic architecture in rock and roll.

The Edge. The Edge. The Edge. The Edge. (applause) He is a rare and true guitar original and one of the subtlest guitar heroes of all time. He's dedicated to ensemble playing and he subsumes his guitar ego in the group. But do not be fooled. Take Jimi Hendrix, Chuck Berry, Neil Young, Pete Townshend -- guitarists who defined the sound of their band and their times. If you play like them, you sound like them. If you are playing those rhythmic two-note sustained fourths, drenched in echo, you are going to sound like the Edge, my son. Go back to the drawing board and chances are you won't have much luck. There are only a handful of guitar stylists who can create a world with their instruments, and he's one of them. The Edge's guitar playing creates enormous space and vast landscapes. It is a thrilling and a heartbreaking sound that hangs over you like the unsettled sky. In the turf it stakes out, it is inherently spiritual. It is grace and it is a gift.

Now, all of this has to be held down by something. The deep sureness of Adam Clayton's bass and the rhythms of Larry Mullen's elegant drumming hold the band down while propelling it forward. It's in U2's great rhythm section that the band finds its sexuality and its dangerousness. Listen to "Desire," "She Moves in Mysterious Ways," [sic] the pulse of "With or Without You." Together Larry and Adam create the element that suggests the ecstatic possibilities of that other kingdom -- the one below the earth and below the belt -- that no great rock band can lay claim to the title without.

Now Adam always strikes me as the professorial one, the sophisticated member. He creates not only the musical but physical stability on his side of the stage. The tone and depth of his bass playing has allowed the band to move from rock to dance music and beyond. One of the first things I noticed about U2 was that underneath the guitar and the bass, they have these very modern rhythms going on. Rather than a straight 2 and 4, Larry often plays with a lot of syncopation, and that connects the band to modern dance textures. The drums often sounded high and tight and he was swinging down there, and this gave the band a unique profile and allowed their rock textures to soar above on a bed of his rhythm.

Now Larry, of course, besides being an incredible drummer, bears the burden of being the band's requisite "good-looking member," (laughter) something we somehow overlooked in the E Street Band. (laughter) We have to settle for "charismatic." Girls love on Larry Mullen! I have a female assistant that would like to sit on Larry's drum stool. A male one, too. We all have our crosses to bear.

Bono...where do I begin? Jeans designer, soon-to-be World Bank operator, just plain operator, seller of the Brooklyn Bridge -- oh hold up, he played under the Brooklyn Bridge, that's right. Soon-to-be mastermind operator of the Bono burger franchise, where more than one million stories will be told by a crazy Irishman. Now I realize that it's a dirty job and somebody has to do it, but don't quit your day job yet, my friend. You're pretty good at it, and a sound this big needs somebody to ride herd over it.

And ride herd over it he does. His voice, big-hearted and open, thoroughly decent no matter how hard he tries. Now he's a great frontman. Against the odds, he is not your mom's standard skinny, ex-junkie archetype. He has the physique of a rugby player...well, an ex-rugby player. Shaman, shyster, one of the greatest and most endearingly naked messianic complexes in rock and roll. (laughter) God bless you, man! It takes one to know one, of course.

You see, every good Irish and Italian-Irish front man knows that before James Brown there was Jesus. So hold the McDonald arches on the stage set, boys, we are not ironists. We are creations of the heart and of the earth and of the stations of the cross -- there's no getting out of it. He is gifted with an operatic voice and a beautiful falsetto rare among strong rock singers. But most important, his is a voice shot through with self-doubt. That's what makes that big sound work. It is this element of Bono's talent -- along with his beautiful lyric writing -- that gives the often-celestial music of U2 its fragility and its realness. It is the questioning, the constant questioning in Bono's voice, where the band stakes its claim to its humanity and declares its commonality with us.

Now Bono's voice often sounds like it's shouting not over top of the band but from deep within it. "Here we are, Lord, this mess, in your image." He delivers all of this with great drama and an occasional smirk that says, "Kiss me, I'm Irish." He's one of the great front men of the past twenty years. He is also one of the only musicians to devote his personal faith and the ideals of his band into the real world in a way that remains true to rock's earliest implications of freedom and connection and the possibility of something better.

Now the band's beautiful songwriting -- "Pride (In The Name of Love)," "Sunday Bloody Sunday," "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For," "One," "Where the Streets Have No Name," "Beautiful Day" -- reminds us of the stakes that the band always plays for. It's an incredible songbook. In their music you hear the spirituality as home and as quest. How do you find God unless he's in your heart? In your desire? In your feet? I believe this is a big part of what's kept their band together all of these years.

See, bands get formed by accident, but they don't survive by accident. It takes will, intent, a sense of shared purpose, and a tolerance for your friends' fallibilities...and they of yours. And that only evens the odds. U2 has not only evened the odds but they've beaten them by continuing to do their finest work and remaining at the top of their game and the charts for 25 years. I feel a great affinity for these guys as people as well as musicians.

Well...there I was sitting down on the couch in my pajamas with my eldest son. He was watching TV. I was doing one of my favorite things -- I was tallying up all the money I passed up in endorsements over the years (laughter) and thinking of all the fun I could have had with it. Suddenly I hear "Uno, dos, tres, catorce!" I look up. But instead of the silhouettes of the hippie wannabes bouncing around in the iPod commercial, I see my boys!

Oh, my God! They sold out!

Now...what I know about the iPod is this: It is a device that plays music. Of course their new song sounded great, my guys are doing great, but methinks I hear the footsteps of my old tape operator Jimmy Iovine somewhere. Wily. Smart. Now, personally, I live an insanely expensive lifestyle that my wife barely tolerates. I burn money, and that calls for huge amounts of cash flow. But I also have a ludicrous image of myself that keeps me from truly cashing in. (laughter) You can see my problem. Woe is me.

So the next morning, I call up Jon Landau -- or as I refer to him, "the American Paul McGuinness" -- and I say, "Did you see that iPod thing?" And he says, "Yes." And he says, "And I hear they didn't take any money." And I said, "They didn't take any money?!" And he says, "No." I said, "Smart, wily Irish guys." (laughter) Anybody...anybody...can do an ad and take the money. But to do the ad and not take the money...that's smart. That's wily. I say, "Jon, I want you to call up Bill Gates or whoever is behind this thing and float this: A red, white, and blue iPod signed by Bruce "the Boss" Springsteen. Now remember, no matter how much money he offers, don't take it!" (laughter)

At any rate...at any rate, after that evening, for the next month or so, I hear emanating from my lovely 14-year-old son's room, day after day, down the hall calling out in a voice that has recently dropped very low: Uno, dos, tres, catorce. The correct math for rock and roll. Thank you, boys.

(applause)

This band...this band has carried their faith in the great inspirational and resurrective power of rock and roll. It never faltered, only a little bit. They believed in themselves, but more importantly, they believed in "you, too." Thank you Bono, the Edge, Adam, and Larry. Please welcome U2 into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

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