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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
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| U2 Vertigo Tour
Vertigo Tour 3rd leg: North America
2005-10-03: Fleet Center - Boston, Massachusetts, USA
<<< 2005-09-25 - Milwaukee | 2005-10-04 - Boston >>> U2 brings persistent Vertigo back to Hub by (published on 2005-10-04)
Source: Boston HeraldBy Sarah Rodman/ Music Review
Tuesday, October 4, 2005 - Updated: 02:44 AM EST
The biggest change between U2's appearances in Boston in May and last night was the name of the venue.
The FleetCenter may have become the TD Banknorth Garden in the interim but U2 is still putting on the same brawny, two-hour-and-fifteen-minute show more than eight months into its ``Vertigo'' tour.
If anything, the boys in the band sounded and looked in better spirits last night, in the first of two sold-out shows. (They return for two more shows Dec. 4 and 5.)
The 22-song setlist had a few minor but interesting deviations from the spring performances, but whether you were a repeat customer or a first timer to the show, it's unlikely you went home disappointed.
In a shower of confetti, the quartet took to their circular stage – surrounded by an oval that encircled 300 fans – and blasted into ``City of Blinding Lights,'' dove directly into ``Vertigo'' and ratcheted up the temperature with ``Elevation.'' The latter must-move groove again proved to be the real rocket fuel for the show as Bono and company teased the crowd, who were eating out of the palm of their hands waiting for Larry Mullen Jr.'s cathartic downbeat.
Whether speechifying about the need for global co-existence or singing an aria about ``Miss Sarajevo,'' Bono's voice was strong and heartfelt. He struggled briefly near the end of the show during ``Pride (In the Name of Love)'' – which oozed seamlessly into the sinister sizzle and shriek of ``Bullet the Blue Sky.'' But he recovered almost immediately and seemed no worse for the wear during spirited encores, including a glorious stripped down acoustic version of ``Who's Gonna Ride Your Wild Horses?'' and the great ``Zooropa'' deep cut ``The First Time.''
The crowd of 18,152 diehard U2-niks were in good voice ``whoo-hoo''-ing and ``how long''-ing and ``no more''-ing with gusto in all of the appropriate places, but the fans proved their true lung power during the show's apex, a sweeping ``Where the Streets Have No Name'' that had even ushers, security folks and a few cops shaking a leg.
While there were a couple of discomfiting moments – Bono donning a Red Sox jersey or miming being a prisoner of war – the quartet's sheer energy and palpable good will carried them over rough spots, not to mention the Edge's cascading waves of sound and Adam Clayton and Mullen's muscular rhythms. back
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