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Mofo
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1997 single by U2

"Mofo" is a song by Irish rock band U2. It is the third track on their 1997 album Pop, and was released as the album`s final single on 8 December 1997. The song was partially written about lead vocalist Bono`s mother, who died when he was 14 years old. Other songs which Bono wrote about his mother include "Lemon", "I Will Follow", "Iris (Hold Me Close)" and "Tomorrow".

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Singles chronology

Please
Please
22/9/1997
Mofo
Mofo
8/12/1997
Sweetest Thing
Sweetest Thing
19/10/1998

Mofo

U2

1997 Single
  • Fecha Lanzamiento: 8 Diciembre 1997 · Fecha Grabación: 1997 -
    Discográfica: Island · · Productor: Flood
    1
    Mofo
    U2 • w: Bono and the Edge; all music is composed by U2 • 1997 /12 /08
    5:48
  • 2
    U2 • 1997 /12 /08
    0:00
  • Album


    Pop

    Pop

    Fecha Lanzamiento: 3 Marzo 1997 · Fecha Grabación: 1995 - 1996
    Discográfica: Island · Estudio de Grabación: Hanover Quay (Dublin); Windmill Lane (Dublin); The Works (Dublin); South Beach (Miami) · Productor: Flood , Howie B , Steve Osborne
    1
    Discothèque
    U2 • w: Bono and the Edge; all music is composed by U2 • 1997 /03 /03
    5:18
  • 2
    Do You Feel Loved
    U2 • w: Bono and the Edge; all music is composed by U2 • 1997 /03 /03
    5:06
  • 3
    Mofo
    U2 • w: Bono and the Edge; all music is composed by U2 • 1997 /03 /03
    5:48
  • 4
    If God Will Send His Angels
    U2U2 • w: Bono and the Edge • 1997 /03 /03
    5:21
  • 5
    Staring at the Sun
    U2 • w: Bono and the Edge; all music is composed by U2 • 1997 /03 /03
    4:36
  • 6
    Last Night on Earth
    U2 • w: Bono and the Edge; all music is composed by U2 • 1997 /03 /03
    4:44
  • 7
    Gone
    U2 • w: Bono and the Edge; all music is composed by U2 • 1997 /03 /03
    4:26
  • 8
    Miami
    U2 • w: Bono and the Edge; all music is composed by U2 • 1997 /03 /03
    4:52
  • 9
    The Playboy Mansion
    U2 • w: Bono and the Edge; all music is composed by U2 • 1997 /03 /03
    4:39
  • 10
    If You Wear that Velvet Dress
    U2 • w: Bono and the Edge; all music is composed by U2 • 1997 /03 /03
    5:14
  • 11
    Please
    U2 • w: Bono and the Edge; all music is composed by U2 • 1997 /03 /03
    5:01
  • 12
    Wake Up Dead Man
    U2 • w: Bono and the Edge; all music is composed by U2 • 1997 /03 /03
    4:52
  • Album

    Please
    Please
    22/9/1997
    Mofo
    Mofo
    8/12/1997
    Sweetest Thing
    Sweetest Thing
    19/10/1998
    "Mofo"
    CD single cover
    Single by U2
    from the album Pop
    Released8 December 1997
    Genre
    Length5:49
    LabelIsland
    Composer(s)U2
    Lyricist(s)
    Producer(s)Flood
    U2 singles chronology
    "If God Will Send His Angels"
    (1997)
    "Mofo"
    (1997)
    "Sweetest Thing"
    (1998)
    Music video
    "Mofo (Phunk Phorce Mix)" on YouTube

    Review

    1997 single by U2

    "Mofo" is a song by Irish rock band U2. It is the third track on their 1997 album Pop, and was released as the album`s final single on 8 December 1997. The song was partially written about lead vocalist Bono`s mother, who died when he was 14 years old. Other songs which Bono wrote about his mother include "Lemon", "I Will Follow", "Iris (Hold Me Close)" and "Tomorrow".

    Leer más

    "Mofo" opened every concert from the 1997–1998 PopMart Tour. It appears in the concert film PopMart: Live from Mexico City and also on Hasta la Vista Baby!, a live album from the same show.

    British electronica band Underworld also recorded a remix that was never released.[3]

    Recording and composition

    "Mofo" originated from a songwriting trip that guitarist the Edge and lead vocalist Bono took to Nice, France,[4] before U2 began the recording sessions for Pop.[5] The song originally had a blues feeling to it, with Bono playing wah-wah guitar, but it evolved after the band began working on it in the studio and bassist Adam Clayton added a bassline in the style of Motown. Producer Flood said that it was a relatively traditional R&B song at that stage. As the lyrics began to take shape, the band felt that they needed to make the music tougher to "capture a kind of rage as well as the inherent sexiness of rock `n` roll". Flood thought that the song had more potential and advocated for them to "go further". The group spent months working on it before Bono said "Let`s give it one more night", at which point they told Flood, "let`s hip-hop it, let`s strip it back, let`s get a beat together, let`s see where it goes". Flood and producer Howie B subsequently spent a weekend deconstructing the song. As Flood described, "Howie B was acting the maverick, playing different ideas to [U2] for feel and rhythm and they had to take it on from there." Flood singled "Mofo" out as the song from Pop on which he had the greatest influence. The resulting changes pushed the song into a more techno direction reminiscent of music by Underworld or the Prodigy. Producer Steve Osborne also contributed a "blaring" Moog synthesizer part, against which drummer Larry Mullen Jr. was able to create rhythms.[4]

    "Mofo" features a "divebombing-jet" guitar sound that the band dubbed the "747".[6] Flood said it was named as such because it resembled a "ridiculous jet plane taking off and going absolutely mad". The Edge achieved the sound with several effects units and a creative signal chain; a Korg SDD delay pedal was fed into several distortion pedals, one of which was a Fuzz Face, which then fed into a DigiTech Whammy pitch shifting pedal.[7][8] Whereas most songs on the album featured Clayton playing bass guitar with a heavily processed sound, most of the bassline on "Mofo" was played on a keyboard bass. The song also features vocal and guitar samples made by the band and then played back by the Edge on a keyboard. Some guitar parts on the song were processed through an ARP 2600 synthesiser.[5]

    By the time the final version of "Mofo" created, the band had scaled back their experimentation by removing loops and any electronic percussion from the song so that it anchored on one drum performance by Mullen that was "layered on top of some of the elements of a more techno arrangement". The Edge said that this creative process was a microcosm of how Pop was written and recorded.[7] During the album`s mastering in New York in November 1996, Flood created the final mix of "Mofo" by editing together segments of three separate mixes of the song on half-inch tape. Flood eschewed digital editing, describing himself as a "bit of a diehard analogue fan".[5]

    Critical reception

    Andrew Unterberger of Stylus Magazine considers the song to be "the only legitimate evidence" of U2`s supposed dance-orientated direction on the album.[9] He said the song was "Underworld-esque house frenzy."[10]

    Music video

    A promotional video directed by Maurice Linnane was created for "Mofo"; using an edited version of the Phunk Force mix, it consists of footage from the PopMart Tour, including screen visuals. The video was later released on The Best of 1990–2000 DVD.

    Track listings

    CD release

    All lyrics are written by Bono and The Edge; all music is composed by U2

    No.TitleRemixed byLength
    1."Mofo" (Phunk Phorce mix)Matthew Roberts8:43
    2."Mofo" (Mother`s mix)Roni Size8:56
    3."If God Will Send His Angels" (Grand Jury mix)Gerald Baillergeau (aka Big Yam) and Victor Merritt (aka Vino)5:40

    12-inch release

    All lyrics are written by Bono and The Edge; all music is composed by U2

    Side A
    No.TitleRemixed byLength
    1."Mofo" (Phunk Phorce mix)Matthew Roberts8:43
    2."Mofo" (Black Hole dub)Matthew Roberts6:45

    Side AA
    No.TitleRemixed byLength
    1."Mofo" (Mother`s mix)Roni Size8:56
    2."Mofo" (House Flavour mix)Roni Size7:16
    3."Mofo" (Romin mix)Johnny Moy5:50

    Charts

    Chart (1998)

    Peak
    position

    Australia (ARIA)[11]

    35

    Italy (Musica e dischi)[12]
    Remix

    23

    1997 single by U2

    "Mofo" is a song by Irish rock band U2. It is the third track on their 1997 album Pop, and was released as the album`s final single on 8 December 1997. The song was partially written about lead vocalist Bono`s mother, who died when he was 14 years old. Other songs which Bono wrote about his mother include "Lemon", "I Will Follow", "Iris (Hold Me Close)" and "Tomorrow".

    "Mofo" opened every concert from the 1997–1998 PopMart Tour. It appears in the concert film PopMart: Live from Mexico City and also on Hasta la Vista Baby!, a live album from the same show.

    British electronica band Underworld also recorded a remix that was never released.[3]

    Recording and composition

    "Mofo" originated from a songwriting trip that guitarist the Edge and lead vocalist Bono took to Nice, France,[4] before U2 began the recording sessions for Pop.[5] The song originally had a blues feeling to it, with Bono playing wah-wah guitar, but it evolved after the band began working on it in the studio and bassist Adam Clayton added a bassline in the style of Motown. Producer Flood said that it was a relatively traditional R&B song at that stage. As the lyrics began to take shape, the band felt that they needed to make the music tougher to "capture a kind of rage as well as the inherent sexiness of rock `n` roll". Flood thought that the song had more potential and advocated for them to "go further". The group spent months working on it before Bono said "Let`s give it one more night", at which point they told Flood, "let`s hip-hop it, let`s strip it back, let`s get a beat together, let`s see where it goes". Flood and producer Howie B subsequently spent a weekend deconstructing the song. As Flood described, "Howie B was acting the maverick, playing different ideas to [U2] for feel and rhythm and they had to take it on from there." Flood singled "Mofo" out as the song from Pop on which he had the greatest influence. The resulting changes pushed the song into a more techno direction reminiscent of music by Underworld or the Prodigy. Producer Steve Osborne also contributed a "blaring" Moog synthesizer part, against which drummer Larry Mullen Jr. was able to create rhythms.[4]

    "Mofo" features a "divebombing-jet" guitar sound that the band dubbed the "747".[6] Flood said it was named as such because it resembled a "ridiculous jet plane taking off and going absolutely mad". The Edge achieved the sound with several effects units and a creative signal chain; a Korg SDD delay pedal was fed into several distortion pedals, one of which was a Fuzz Face, which then fed into a DigiTech Whammy pitch shifting pedal.[7][8] Whereas most songs on the album featured Clayton playing bass guitar with a heavily processed sound, most of the bassline on "Mofo" was played on a keyboard bass. The song also features vocal and guitar samples made by the band and then played back by the Edge on a keyboard. Some guitar parts on the song were processed through an ARP 2600 synthesiser.[5]

    By the time the final version of "Mofo" created, the band had scaled back their experimentation by removing loops and any electronic percussion from the song so that it anchored on one drum performance by Mullen that was "layered on top of some of the elements of a more techno arrangement". The Edge said that this creative process was a microcosm of how Pop was written and recorded.[7] During the album`s mastering in New York in November 1996, Flood created the final mix of "Mofo" by editing together segments of three separate mixes of the song on half-inch tape. Flood eschewed digital editing, describing himself as a "bit of a diehard analogue fan".[5]

    Critical reception

    Andrew Unterberger of Stylus Magazine considers the song to be "the only legitimate evidence" of U2`s supposed dance-orientated direction on the album.[9] He said the song was "Underworld-esque house frenzy."[10]

    Music video

    A promotional video directed by Maurice Linnane was created for "Mofo"; using an edited version of the Phunk Force mix, it consists of footage from the PopMart Tour, including screen visuals. The video was later released on The Best of 1990–2000 DVD.

    Track listings

    CD release

    All lyrics are written by Bono and The Edge; all music is composed by U2

    No.TitleRemixed byLength
    1."Mofo" (Phunk Phorce mix)Matthew Roberts8:43
    2."Mofo" (Mother`s mix)Roni Size8:56
    3."If God Will Send His Angels" (Grand Jury mix)Gerald Baillergeau (aka Big Yam) and Victor Merritt (aka Vino)5:40

    12-inch release

    All lyrics are written by Bono and The Edge; all music is composed by U2

    Side A
    No.TitleRemixed byLength
    1."Mofo" (Phunk Phorce mix)Matthew Roberts8:43
    2."Mofo" (Black Hole dub)Matthew Roberts6:45

    Side AA
    No.TitleRemixed byLength
    1."Mofo" (Mother`s mix)Roni Size8:56
    2."Mofo" (House Flavour mix)Roni Size7:16
    3."Mofo" (Romin mix)Johnny Moy5:50

    Charts

    Chart (1998)

    Peak
    position

    Australia (ARIA)[11]

    35

    Italy (Musica e dischi)[12]
    Remix

    23

    DISCOGRAFÍA

    No videos available