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December 2nd, 2008  

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The legendary U2 Popmart live from Mexico City is now available on DVD!



Yesterday in 1979
Moonlight Club, West Hampstead
1980
Hammersmith Odeon, London
1981
The Agora, Atlanta
1982
Tiffany's, Glasgow
1983
Best Hit USA, Tokyo
1984
Tower Theater, Upper Darby
1989
Osaka Castle Hall, Osaka
1993
Lancaster Park, Christchurch
2001
Ice Palace, Tampa
2002
University of Nebraska, Lincoln
2006
TV Asahi Studios, Tokyo
Today in 1979
Nashville Rooms, London
1980
Hammersmith Palais, London
1981
Vanderbilt University, Nashville
1982
Apollo Theater, Manchester
1984
The Centrum, Worcester
1997
Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez, Mexico City
2001
American Airlines Arena, Miami
2001
American Airlines Arena, Miami
2004
BBC Studios, London
Tomorrow in 1979
100 Club, Clapham
1980
Baltard Pavilion, Paris
1982
De Montfort Hall, Leicester
1984
WBCN Studios, Boston
1984
Radio City Music Hall, New York
1987
Orange Bowl, Miami
1993
BFM - Student Radio, Auckland
1997
Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez, Mexico City

New U2 photos

1982 - October Tour/1982-12-08 - Utrecht - Photo by Jeroen Meijerink / buffelone@gmail.com

1982 - October Tour/1982-12-08 - Utrecht - Photo by Jeroen Meijerink / buffelone@gmail.com

1982 - October Tour/1982-12-08 - Utrecht - Photo by Jeroen Meijerink / buffelone@gmail.com

1982 - October Tour/1981-10-01 - Norwich - Photo by Trevor Benbrook

1982 - October Tour/1981-10-01 - Norwich - Photo by Trevor Benbrook


 

U2 Vertigo Tour

Vertigo Tour 2nd leg: Europe


2005-06-15: City of Manchester Stadium - Manchester, England

(venue website)

<<< 2005-06-14 - Manchester | 2005-06-18 - London >>>

Bono's glorious demonstration of stadium rock by (published on 2005-06-16)

Source: Telegraph

David Cheal reviews U2 at City of Manchester Stadium

When it comes to the difficult art of playing guitar-based rock music, I don't think U2 are anywhere close to being the best band in the world: they can certainly play, but in a live context they can be a crude and ramshackle lot. However, when it comes to the even trickier art of getting stadiums full of people jumping up and down and clapping and singing, and presenting a big, sparkly, bombastic spectacle, they are simply unbeatable. There were times during this show when I feared for the structural integrity of the stadium, such was the bounciness of the crowd.

This was the first night of the UK leg of U2's Vertigo world tour, and if you have tickets for any of the remaining shows, you're in for a treat.

Here, the band - notwithstanding their technical limitations - were on fire, with The Edge delivering some lovely, fluent guitar solos, and Bono in full-on preacher-man-world-statesman mode. And, as the show moved through the gloaming of a temperate evening, their vast set, at the heart of which was a huge, concave backdrop-cum-screen, came into its own, shimmering and blazing. At times I didn't know where to look.

Music-wise, there were no major omissions; they played pretty much everything a U2 fan would want to hear, including Vertigo, Elevation, I Will Follow, One, Beautiful Day, Mysterious Ways, Pride (In the Name of Love), With or Without You, Sunday Bloody Sunday, Where the Streets Have No Name… 25 years' worth of epic songs, custom-made to echo around stadiums, to get thousands clapping in unison.

And Bono? Well, Bono was Bono. He's sentimental, pompous, an ego the size of a planet, but, when he was holding forth on the need to end global poverty, not for a moment did I doubt his sincerity. He pulled two people out of the crowd who were carrying a "Make Poverty History" banner.

"It's a T-shirt, it's a slogan," he said, anticipating the objections of those of a more cynical disposition. "We need T-shirts. We need slogans. We need clear melody lines."

Oh, and he sang a bit, too, his voice a little rough at first but warming to the occasion, filling the place.

But time and again I found my eyes drawn away from the stage and back to the fans lining this elegant sweep of a stadium. It's a strange and beautiful form of entertainment, stadium rock: for it to work well, the crowd need to play their part, to become a third element along with the band and the set, and here they knew exactly what to do, clapping, jumping, waving, singing, shouting, cheering. Glorious.

Is there another band on the planet capable of sparking off such an awe-inspiring reaction? I don't think so.

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