• logo

U2 - Boston Garden, Ma, September 17th, 1987 (Remastered, Live On Broadcasting) (2025)

U2 - Boston Garden, Ma, September 17th, 1987 (Remastered, Live On Broadcasting) (2025)

BAND/ARTIST: U2

  • Title: Boston Garden, Ma, September 17th, 1987 (Remastered, Live On Broadcasting)
  • Year Of Release: 2025
  • Label: DMG
  • Genre: Rock
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 1:47:35
  • Total Size: 756 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

1. Opening (Live) (00:40)
2. Bullet the Blue Sky (Live) (05:04)
3. Where the Streets Have No Name (Live) (04:45)
4. I Will Follow (Live) (05:49)
5. Trip Through Your Wires (Live) (04:01)
6. I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For (Live) (07:24)
7. People Get Ready (Live) (05:11)
8. The Unforgettable Fire (Live) (04:41)
9. Exit (Live) (03:55)
10. Silver and Gold (Live) (03:58)
11. In God's Country (Live) (03:23)
12. Sunday Bloody Sunday (Live) (05:57)
13. Help! (Live) (02:06)
14. Bad (Live) (09:25)
15. Running to Stand Still (Live) (04:42)
16. New Year's Day (Live) (04:55)
17. Pride (In the Name of Love) (Live) (05:51)
18. One Tree Hill (Live) (05:15)
19. With or Without You (Live) (08:38)
20. The Party Girl (Live) (04:52)
21. 40 (Live) (06:56)

U2 catapulted over its post-punk peers to become the biggest rock & roll band in the world, a title they earned after the release of The Joshua Tree in 1987 and maintained well into the 21st century. Alone among all the groups to emerge from the post-punk era, U2 channeled their yen for moody, experimental aural textures into clearly defined rock anthems and ballads -- songs that sounded majestic yet felt personal. Much of that sense of intimacy can be attributed to Bono, a lead singer who gravitates toward grand gestures yet remains grounded by his belief in humanity and the revolutionary power of rock & roll. This sense of righteousness never left U2, not even after the group sold millions of albums all over the globe, but it burned brightest on their earliest records such as 1983's galvanizing War, when the cavernous guitar of the Edge still seemed flinty and the rhythm section of Larry Mullen, Jr. and Adam Clayton conveyed the grit of the group's punk beginnings. This phase of U2 crested around the time they stole the show at Live Aid in 1985, an event that laid the groundwork for The Joshua Tree. Powered by the twin Billboard chart-toppers "With or Without You" and "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For," The Joshua Tree contained the group's most direct music to date, yet that immediacy was countered by evocative, noir-ish production, setting a precedent U2 would follow for the rest of their career. Still, they continued to evolve. Their first -- and most radical -- reinvention arrived in 1991, with the dense, electronics-drenched Achtung Baby, a left turn that set the pace for a decade of risk-taking that culminated with 1997's Pop; an album that topped the charts even as it challenged fan expectations . U2 righted themselves with 2000's All That You Can't Leave Behind, a streamlined back-to-basics album that brought them to a cruising altitude they maintained through the 2000s, as they released albums like How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb and No Line on the Horizon that kept them at the forefront of mainstream rock. While they revisited the anthemic energy of their youth with 2014's Songs of Innocence, the album's release as a no-cost download to the library of every iTunes user underscored their daring sensibilities; one they contrasted with the reflective 2017 companion album Songs of Experience. Along with 2023's Songs of Surrender, an album that found them reinterpreting 40 songs from their catalog, U2 have continued to find vital new ways to present themselves, such as their headlining a residency at the Sphere in Las Vegas which carried them through 2024.



As a ISRA.CLOUD's PREMIUM member you will have the following benefits:
  • Unlimited high speed downloads
  • Download directly without waiting time
  • Unlimited parallel downloads
  • Support for download accelerators
  • No advertising
  • Resume broken downloads