
The band responsible for track #90 on my “Eighties best 100” redux needs no introduction nor historical context. Ever since their near legendary performance at Live Aid in 1985, they’ve been a global act, fitting the bill of “biggest band in the world” for many of the intervening years.
Personally, I’ve never been able to call myself a big U2 fan but I am well aware of their contribution to music, especially that of their seminal 1987 album “The Joshua tree”. Even still, I gave away this very same compact disc to an acquaintance in university because I never listened to it. Despite all this, when Bono was convinced in 2005 by “friend” and then Prime Minister of Canada, Paul Martin, to add Ottawa as a stop on their monolithic world tour of the day, I purchased tickets to see them at the Corel Centre (now the Canadian Tire Centre) for me and my wife. The fact that a hot new band called Arcade Fire opened the concert for U2 certainly sweetened the deal for me but I can freely admit that Bono, The Edge, and the rest of their company put on an excellent live show. By that point, however, they’d been at the game for close to thirty years so I would have been more surprised had the show been a snoozer.
Back in 1986, they were still young bucks, riding a high off their aforementioned Live Aid performance and the success of their previous album, 1984’s “The unforgettable fire.” U2 once again enlisted the production team of wunderkind, Brian Eno, and Canadian guitarist, Daniel Lanois, to work on what would become “The Joshua tree”, arguably the band’s best work. The trilogy of songs that lead off the album (“Where the streets have no name”, “I still haven’t found what I’m looking for”, and “Without or without you”) delivers a three punch knockout of beautifully textured music, with Edge’s trademark guitar sound at the forefront. The problem for me was that I rarely got past those first three tracks.
“With or without you”, the song that just builds and builds and builds, is easily one of my favourite tracks that U2 has produced but much of it is due to nostalgia. It just screams the eighties to me… That and high school dances.
Original Eighties best 100 position: #90
Favourite lyric: My hands are tied / My body bruised, she’s got me with / Nothing to win and / Nothing left to lose.” But nobody can really sing it like Bono.
Where are they now?: Still at it, of course. In fact, they’d been at the top of the world so long that when I was telling my wife about their current residency opening the Sphere in Las Vegas and she asked how relevant they were, I was dumbfounded. But it did have me pondering the same question.
For the rest of the Eighties’ best 100 redux list, click here.


