October

Description

October is the sophomore album by the Irish rock band U2, released on Island Records in October 1981. The album was recorded by Paul Thomas with Kevin Moloney at Windmill Lane Studios in Dublin, Irland; July-August 1981, with Steve Lillywhite producing.

After completing the Boy Tour in February 1981, U2 began to write new material for October, eventually entering the studio in July 1981. (“Fire” had already been recorded at Compass Point Studios in the Bahamas while U2 took a break from the tour.) Just as they did for their debut album, Boy, from the previous year, the group recorded at Windmill Lane Studios with Lillywhite producing. The sessions were complicated by Bono’s loss of a briefcase containing in-progress lyrics for the new songs, forcing a hurried, improvisational approach to completing the album on time. October was preceded by the release of lead single “Fire” in July 1981, while a second single, “Gloria”, coincided with the album release.

[Phillip Bagdon, CCM, March 1982]

> iTunes (https://music.apple.com/us/album/october/1443144590)

LP tracklist:

Side One
A1. “Gloria” – 4:12
A2. “I Fall Down” – 3:39
A3. “I Threw A Brick Through A Window” – 4:53
A4. “Rejoice” – 3:36
A5. “Fire” – 3:50

Side Two
B1. “Tomorrow” – 4:36
B2. “October” – 2:20
B3. “With A Shout (Jerusalem)” – 4:01
B4. “Stranger In A Strange Land” – 3:57
B5. “Scarlet” – 2:50
B6. “Is That All?” – 3:02

Note: Simultaneously released on cassette and 12-inch vinyl LP by Island Records. Later re-issued on CD. In 2008, a remastered edition of October was released; Standard format: A single CD with re-mastered audio and restored packaging; Deluxe format: A standard CD and a bonus CD; Vinyl format: A single album re-mastered version on 180 gram vinyl with restored packaging.


U2’s October – 30th Anniversary; A Personal Reflection
by Steve Stockman, 2011

This last period of six weeks has been full of big landmarks in my life. It is 25 years since I set out as a student minister, 30 years since I started University and 50 years since the day I was born. Two rock music landmarks have coincided with two of my own landmarks. Q Magazine was first published on my first month of ministry and I can remember buying Issue 1 with Paul McCartney on the cover. I bought it at Eason’s on Botanic Avenue in Belfast, maybe 300 yards from the Church where I am now minister, and thought as I read it that it would hardly last too long. To celebrate their 25th Anniversary edition Q put my old friend Jonny Quinn, with his Snow Patrol mates, on one of their Collector covers, maybe to recognise our mutual celebration!

The final coincidence in anniversaries is that on the month I started University I used the tokens acquired from my 20th birthday to buy U2’s ‘October’ album. There was quite a buzz about U2 in Ireland at that time. They had played my new Queen’s University’s McMordie Hall (now known as the Mandela Hall) at the start of that year and I had caught a little of the footage when shown on BBC TV, though I was far more interested in Stiff Little Fingers who were shown in the same series. There were also rumours that they were Christians which seemed pretty cool to me, a recent convert myself!

I can remember deciding to buy ‘October’ in Boots on Royal Avenue. When I set the needle onto the vinyl later that day I guess my life would never be the same again. Musically these songs cut right into my spiritual journey, in my vocation as a communicator of Christianity in a plethora of settings I was plunged into a deep well of quotes, images and ideas and twenty years later I would get the privilege of writing one of the best selling and received book about the band; ‘Walk On’.

It all started with ‘October’. «Gloria», «Tomorrow», «With A Shout (Jerusalem)» all grabbed the attention of my soul. I arrived at Queen’s University to study theology having had my life turned around by a God encounter a couple of years before. I was twenty years old and this music opened up ways that I could communicate that faith, initially in the privacy of my college room. ‘October’ vibrated with a faith that was committed and yet vulnerable, honest in frailties but confident in hope. Words like Rejoice and Jerusalem, ideas of worship and theology were not common in mainstream rock music. U2 were not in some Christian ghetto but as Steve Turner would say at Greenbelt some years later were involving themselves in the conversation of the rock world. Turner would go on to say that they didn’t only get involved in such a conversation but began to change the very vocabulary of the conversation; Simple Minds song «Sanctify Yourself» just one example of such.

In many ways, for me, this juxtaposition is where I have lived ever since and of course U2 have travelled down three decades of spiritual growth along with me. Perhaps everything of my faith is still articulated here. As Bono wrote these almost half baked lyrics he was struggling with his faith and vocation and thus aware of his own fallibility. It is a humble way to carry the conviction of faith also present. Conviction of Creed can very easily cause an arrogance of faith that becomes Pharisaic and no friend of Jesus. Here in the full flush of belief U2 are caught in a vortex of struggle which keeps them grounded. These songs fly naively and land with a thud sometimes in the very same songs.

This is also the album most infused with the Shalom Fellowship that Bono, Larry and Edge were very involved with in their early days. There were many such fellowships in Ireland, north and south, at that time. Most of these kinds of groups are forged in a youthful idealism. Such groups broke away from traditional Churches and attempted to return to the spirit of the fledgling house churches of the New Testament. It is no coincidence that such a phenomenon appears just a few years after the hippy sixties. The freedom of that decade caressing with the charismatic movement birthed an exuberant, communal and organic form of Christian fellowship that in most of its incarnations burned pure and bright for a short period before either falling apart as Shalom did or became a little more mainstream as many others did.

When I spoke to school friend of U2 and fellow Shalom member William MacKay, as I researched ‘Walk On’, he spoke of the spontaneity of the ‘October’ recording sessions. William spoke of how the studio was filled with other members of Shalom and how the sessions would break into worship. When Neil McCormick, another school friend but not Shalom member, wrote the CD booklet notes for the Remastered ‘October’ release in 2008, he mentioned how the rehearsals for the songs were done in their old school Mount Temple and I wonder if this is what William has memories of. Whatever, ‘October’ is a document of that phase of Christian history. Nowhere else in mainstream music is there a record that best records the Charismatic House Church movement.

In the big picture of U2’s career ‘October’ is the least important album. It sits between one of the best debut albums ever made, ‘Boy‘, and the album that would begin U2’s conquering of the world, ‘War‘. It was an album strewn with difficulties; it was rushed, the aforementioned spiritual turmoil and the fact that Bono lost the lyrics. The songs come across almost half finished though Van Morrison’s spiritual streams of consciousness lyrics of the same era throws them some forgiveness. Whatever, it is not U2’s greatest artistic moment but in its uniqueness, exuberance and Christian context it is an essential place in U2’s story and very important in the story of many of the rest of us.

[Steve Stockman, Soul Surmise, 04/10/2011]

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