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The Best of 1980–1990 is the first greatest hits compilation by Irish rock band U2, released on 2 November 1998.It mostly contains the group's hit singles from the 1980s, but also mixes in some live staples, as well as a re-recording of the 1987 B-side "Sweetest Thing".
U2 Songs of Experience: 2017 [5] "Love and Peace or Else" U2 How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb: 2004 [10] "Love Comes Tumbling" U2 "The Unforgettable Fire" single: 1985 [3] "Love Is All We Have Left" U2 Songs of Experience: 2017 [5] "Love Is Bigger Than Anything in Its Way" † U2 Songs of Experience: 2017 [5] "Love Is Blindness" U2 Achtung Baby ...
The Best of 1990–2000 is the second greatest hits album by Irish rock band U2.It was released on 5 November 2002 through Island Records and Interscope Records.The follow-up to The Best of 1980–1990 (1998), it was issued as both a single-disc CD compilation and as a multi-disc compilation called The Best of 1990–2000 & B-Sides, which included a second disc of 14 B-sides released between ...
U2 followed this up with the 1988 release of Rattle and Hum, a double album and companion documentary film which documented their experiences with American roots music from the Joshua Tree Tour with a collection of new studio tracks, cover songs, and live recordings.
Critics welcomed the song in the group's set list: The Independent said the song "induces instant euphoria, as U2 do what they're best at, slipping into epic rock mode, playing music made for the arena". [73] In two other local newspaper reviews, [74] [75] critics praised the song's inclusion in a sequence of greatest hits.
In 2023, U2 released Songs of Surrender, an album of re-recorded songs, and began the U2:UV Achtung Baby Live concert residency to inaugurate Sphere in the Las Vegas Valley. U2 have released 15 studio albums and are one of the world's best-selling music artists, having sold an estimated 150–170 million records worldwide. [1]
It should only contain pages that are U2 songs or lists of U2 songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about U2 songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
[28] Steve Morse of The Boston Globe said the record "has great songs that tie together beautifully—a welcome change from the disjointed nature of U2 discs such as 1993's Zooropa and 1997's Pop". He believed that Bono took extra care in crafting the lyrics, resulting in the "most thoughtful, personal, and tender U2 songs in memory". [37]