The U2 singer, interviewed on Desert Island Discs, describes his regrets about his teenage behaviour and explains his mocked 'poem' about Ukraine.
We pay a lot of tax and are very proud to pay tax. There are lot of reasons not to like our band and this is not one of them. “I could tell my father had a deep friendship with this gorgeous woman who was part of the family and then they had a child which was all kept a secret. He was very droll and very funny. He was coping with other stuff in his life. “I do have another who I love and adore,” he tells Lauren Laverne on BBC Radio 4’s Desert Island Discs this morning.
The Irish star spoke about his mother's sudden death, when he was 14, and his strained relationship with his father in an interview with Lauren Laverne on Radio ...
He said: “It was very difficult for the band to see me in certain company, it was excruciating for them, but they gave me their blessing. “He wasn’t apologising, he was just stating these are the facts.” Bono said: “I asked him did he love my mother and he said yes, and I asked him how could this happen and he said ‘it can’ and that he was trying to put it right, trying to do the right thing.
U2 frontman Bono has opened up about his family life and revealed he has 'secret' a half-brother.
So I think that was part of the problem I was picking up as a kid.’ You went through a lot, please forgive me”, and I felt free.’ He wasn’t apologising, just stating these are the facts.’
Fans have often wondered why U2 singer Bono wears coloured glasses, but it's due to a sometimes painful eye condition. Bono is sharing some of his secrets ...
He added: "I really love being alive and I’m quite good at being alive, meaning I like to get the best out of any day. I have good treatments and I am going to be fine." Don’t use your shoulder because you’ll break it.'"
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“They believed it was the right thing to do if we could get certain things across the line.” He said: “It was very difficult for the band to see me in certain company, it was excruciating for them, but they gave me their blessing. Bono said: “I asked him did he love my mother and he said yes, and I asked him how could this happen and he said ‘it can’ and that he was trying to put it right, trying to do the right thing.
The singer spoke about his brother, 'whom I love and adore', to Desert Island Discs host Lauren Laverne. Bono's mother, Iris — who died of a brain aneurysm in ...
"He didn't know quite what was going on and I subsequently understood he was coping with other stuff in his life. "And I said, how could this happen, and he said, 'It can', and that he was trying to put it right. "I asked him, did he love my mother, and he said yes," he said.
The U2 frontman told BBC Radio Desert Island Discs' Lauren Lavern that he made the discovery when he himself was an adult.
"It took 10 minutes. I'm at peace with it." He also spoke about how his activism was sometimes difficult for the other members of U2, and it was difficult for them to see him in certain company, but he added that they believed it was the right thing to do to get "certain things across the line". He was just stating these are the facts... The 62-year-old also spoke to Laverne about how his relationship with his father came under strain after the death of his mother, although he now admits he was partly to blame, adding that after Bob died in 2001, he apologised to him during a visit to a chapel in France. He said: "I asked him [his father] did he love my mother, and he said yes, and I asked him how could this happen, and he said, 'it can' and that he was trying to put it right, trying to do the right thing.
The Irish star spoke about his mother's sudden death, when he was 14, and his strained relationship with his father in an interview with Lauren Laverne on Radio ...
He said: “It was very difficult for the band to see me in certain company, it was excruciating for them, but they gave me their blessing. “He wasn’t apologising, he was just stating these are the facts.” Bono said: “I asked him did he love my mother and he said yes, and I asked him how could this happen and he said ‘it can’ and that he was trying to put it right, trying to do the right thing.
You might think differently of the U2 frontman after his appearance on Desert Island Discs, on BBC Radio 4.
Laverne loses her footing just once, when asking Bono about his upbringing as the son of a Church of Ireland mother and Catholic father. We’re very proud to pay a lot of tax. This is a bit of a gotcha situation for U2. There’s a lot of reasons to not like our band. Happily, squeaky-wheel Bono is generally absent from a broadcast in which he nominates the records he would bring to a secluded atoll. “I know there is a bit of an annoying gene in there,” he tells the programme’s host, Lauren Laverne. “I’m a bit of a squeaky wheel. There are a few surprises, though: who knew that singing Peter Frampton’s Show Me the Way as a teenager would give Bono the confidence to go on and become an iconic frontman?
The Irish singer said on Desert Island Discs he was unaware of relative's existence for decades.
He said: “It was very difficult for the band to see me in certain company, it was excruciating for them, but they gave me their blessing. Bono said: “I asked him did he love my mother and he said yes, and I asked him how could this happen and he said ‘it can’ and that he was trying to put it right, trying to do the right thing. The Irish star spoke about his mother’s sudden death, when he was 14, and his strained relationship with his father in an interview with Lauren Laverne on Radio 4 programme Desert Island Discs.
BONO has told how U2 became his family after his mother died when he was just 14 years old. The frontman explained how he looked elsewhere for a 'home' when ...
"There's a lot of reasons not to like our band but this is not one of them. It's actually the fiduciary duty of a public company to control costs." The frontman explained how he looked elsewhere for a "home" when Iris died of a brain aneurysm she suffered at her own father's funeral.
Bono joined Lauren Laverne on this week's Desert Island Discs on BBC Radio 4 to talk about life… and the eight tracks and a book he would bring with him to ...
Why would I want to meet the royal family?’. “This is Inhaler, they are very good, and my son happens to be the singer. The seventh track is in honour of his father Bob who loved this piece. “Abide With Me is Emeli Sandés version..; but I’ve segwayed it into this Welsh choir because I think community is really important for the future. Honestly, at the time I didn't tell the band, but something in me was just wanting to know what to do with my life.” I turned the song, a teenage boy turned this song into a prayer.
The Irish star spoke about his mother's sudden death, when he was 14, and his strained relationship with his father in an interview with Lauren Laverne on Radio ...
He said: “It was very difficult for the band to see me in certain company, it was excruciating for them, but they gave me their blessing. “He wasn’t apologising, he was just stating these are the facts.” Bono said: “I asked him did he love my mother and he said yes, and I asked him how could this happen and he said ‘it can’ and that he was trying to put it right, trying to do the right thing.
Their band, U2, with Bono as the front-man, is one of the most successful acts in music history, selling more than 170 million albums and winning 22 Grammys – ...
“There's a picture of Edge dodging him in the backstage area. You know, a kind of out-of-tune extraordinariness, it was still extraordinary and even when we eventually got a record deal we were still very, very erratic.” He gave me the name Bono, and I've been known as Bono since I was 14 or 15 years old.” “[We were] like a street gang, but humour was the weapon we chose to defend ourselves,” Bono recalls. But Larry could, and even though we were really crap it was just brilliant.” Well, some of them are from [this band].” So we went to this little Church of Ireland church and then he would drive to Saint Canice’s the Catholic church that was 100 yards away.“ Honestly, at the time I didn't tell the band, but something in me was just wanting to know what to do with my life.” And he used to drive us to Saint Canice's Church of Ireland church, because he felt that my mother should have the choice in what religion we grew up in. It's a free school, non-denominational, pretty experimental school, so posh people get to meet not so posh people - like me. Their band, U2, with Bono as the front-man, is one of the most successful acts in music history, selling more than 170 million albums and winning 22 Grammys – more than any other band. I turned the song, a teenage boy turned this song into a prayer.
Bono opened up to BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs about the discovery of his half-brother, who was a complete secret for decades.
He said: "This is a good place to explain to people that I’ve had glaucoma for the last 20 years. Bono said that he 'found another family' with him forming U2 and finding his wife Ali Hewson. "I asked him, did he love my mother, and he said yes," Bono said.
In the episode, broadcast today (26 June), Bono says that he had a “complicated” relationship with his late father, who conceived a child in an extramarital ...
“I asked him, did he love my mother, and he said ‘yes’,” the singer recalled. Bono said that before his father’s death, he confronted him on the subject. And this was all kept secret.”
He recalled his father taking him to a Church of Ireland church in Finglas, Dublin, where the family lived, and then to the Catholic chapel nearby. But he said ...
“My father was very, very elegant about all of this. “It’s a very close family and I could tell that my father had a deep friendship with this gorgeous woman who is part of the family and then they had a child and this was all kept a secret.” They say you get just enough religion to inoculate you against it. The 62-year-old, who lost his mother to an aneurysm when he was just 14, told Laverne how he discovered he had a half-brother in 2000 and how he was ‘at peace’ with the situation after talking to his father about it before his death in 2001. Bono was speaking to Lauren Lavern on BBC Radio 4’s Desert Island Discs music and chat show. I mean it’s just so mad.
Bono's activism often lead to tensions within U2, he revealed as part of his BBC Radio 4 Desert Island Discs interview.
“There's a picture of Edge dodging him in the backstage area. “If you are going to serve the song you might as well do it with the people that understand you and can tell you where to go. “He was really helpful,” explains Bono “And Edge said, ‘But you'd never invite him to a U2 show,’ and I said, ‘I have,’ and he came with his wife.
U2 frontman Bono has revealed that he has a half-brother that he only found out about in the early 21st century. Speaking on BBC's Desert Island Discs, ...
I’m at peace with it." The U2 frontman admitted he was partly to blame for the breakdown in relations with his father and said he apologized shortly after Bob died during a visit to a chapel in Paris in 2001. U2 frontman Bono has revealed that he has a half-brother that he only found out about in the early 21st century.