This is the greatest gospel band of all times, from meeting in Bible study and forming, this covenant was built, and therefore they will sing together forever spreading the GOOD NEWS, and if one should depart, they’ll never try to replace him, they’ll just stop, because their assignment has been fulfilled. EVERY TIME YIU SEE THEM TOGETHER ITS A HOLY EVENT!
That's what it means being ONE with Christ!! hallelujah ! Human bonds having as foundation Christ and the very Heart of Christianity are absoluttely " Unbreakable" , and they last for Eternity!! PRAISE THE HOLY NAME OF JESUS FOR U2 !!!!
Dude, there's tons of passionate modern music. I could give you dozens of artists to look to. The problem you have is you look at a few popular artists today through your own biased prizm and automatically judge it from there. In essense, you're not actually listening to the music, you're just judging it based on your preexisting world view that 'modern' music isn't good.
@@knapton118 Hello, thanks for responding, I'd loved if you listed some. Instead of coldly criticizing my musical preference, maybe? (I truly don't mind, everybody's got different ears). As a complementary fact, please know that I do listen to contemporary music post 2000. (Muse, Alt J, Artic Monkeys, Portugal the Man, Paak, The XX, Cyrus, Grande, Coldplay, Keane.) The list goes on, yet I still think that the emotional approach from the 70s era is quite superior from contemporary music. I admit there is bais in my opinion, but I'm just trying to make a point. Please let me know of any emotional performers that you'd consider good, so I can check em out. and it has not so much to do with the artists, rather with the deficit that contemporary composition has, the current market is very unoriginal and quality standards have dropped a lot in terms of creative composition. (not all, I'm generalizing) Obviously there is good music currently, and I am aware, but nothing compares to the golden ages, don't you think?
@@nicolugiou4423 I never coldly criticised your musical preference. I criticised your biased view that modern music lacks in emotion, which is bollocks.
Well, I'm Irish catholic ☘️☘️🕊️and I believe in the power of prayer, Bono teachers us all 🕊️⚡ about the power of music and how instrumental it is in everybody's life. ❤. It heals us, it pleases us and lastly unites us all as One❤
Man that lil fast ass dude thay kept running around fixing all the obstacles and hazards Bono kept creating for himself during this entire performance is the real hero here, practically saved Bonos ass. Lol
This is definitely my U2's favourite song ever! The emotions, the lyrics, the music, their performance, Bono's voice and indulgence in song are just mesmerizing!
He may sing with the same passion but he doesn’t dance with the same passion. Thats what I love so much about this video but then again, I’m 63, I don’t dance like I did when I was 25 either. Matter of fact, when I do dance, I cannot move at all the next day. 🥺🥺
Obrigado meu Deus, obrigado U2 !!! Tive o privilégio de estar Na frente da Melhor banda do mundo.................... Ano passado dia 19 de Outubro em SP Fiquei bem na frente do palco! Emoção única, Vcs não fazem ideia da Dimensão de estar em um Show do U2.........U2 o Brasil Ama vcs-----) ♡ beautiful 🎸🎙✌✌✌✌✌
Eu não fui a nenhum show mas eu me sinto priveligiada por ter visto e vivido para sentir uma grande emoção ouvindo U2! Faz parte das minhas Bandas Favoritíssimas ! Essa música toca minha alma profundamente; é minha música! ❤❤❤
This guy has never aged. He looks even better now than then :-D Somehow this video gave me goosebumps, because it was almost unreal, like out of the twilight zone, bringing back memories of my teenaged years, during the cold war and Americans stationed all over Germany. Nowadays, when driving by the old Cooke Barraks here in Göppingen, I can still hear the old songs we use to listen to, the festivals we used to have here together with Americans and Germans on the grounds of the Barraks. And "in the name of Love" celebrated our youth and times of peace.
I agree, it was always epic. A blend of Jim Morison moody intensity with climatic rebel yells! Later he incorporates a 3rd Influence: R&B falsetto.....beautifully placed & executed. Bono & the Edge r absolutely a representation of musical genius creating art.
I've grown up with U2 and now in adulthood and I am so so grateful to them for the music, lyrics and what they stand for...They are without doubt the best band ever... Legendary... Iconic...🇮🇪❤️
April Michelle Rose The Joshua Tree was released in the late 80's not in the early 90's. It seems to me that you need to study your facts before making them
Oh yes! The young and thrilling Bono, Edge and Co. His voice and energy transfixing everyone and remember him yelling at the audience 'we're not an English band, we're an Irish band'. I'll never forget the chills. Seems like yesterday - that voice: then and now.
Esta musica es geneial sin duda. Todos dicen que su era de Juventud tenia la mejor musica. Buena musica no es temporania y transciende las epocas. Tus hijos le diran a sus hijos que su musica era genial y que la de ellos solo es buya. Perdon si escribo mal el Castellano pero deje mi pais nativo cuando era muy niño y e vivido en Estados Unidos la mayoria de mi vida.
very proud of this band, they were never involved in a women drug scandal etc......... I love you U2 I love you The Edge 🎸🤩💖💖💖🔥🔥🔥 come to Brazil soon, we love you so much 🙌🙌🙌🙌 Vida logs my favorite band the best band on the planet!!💖🤩🤩✌️🤟🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
This is from A Conspiracy of Hope -- Sunday 15 June 1986, Giants Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey I was at the Sunday, June 8th concert at the now torn-down McNichols Sports Arena, Denver, Colorado A Conspiracy of Hope was a short tour of six benefit concerts on behalf of Amnesty International that took place in the United States during June 1986. The purpose of the tour was not to raise funds but rather to increase awareness of human rights and of Amnesty's work on its 25th anniversary, and to invite a new generation to take action to free prisoners of conscience. The shows were headlined by U2, Sting and Bryan Adams and also featured Peter Gabriel, Lou Reed, Joan Baez, and The Neville Brothers. The last three shows featured a reunion of The Police. At press conferences in each city, at related media events, and through their music at the concerts themselves, the artists engaged with the public on themes of human rights and human dignity. The six concerts were the first of what subsequently became known collectively as the Human Rights Concerts - a series of music events and tours staged by Amnesty International USA between 1986-1998. The final show at Giants Stadium was an all-day event, running from noon until 11 p.m., at an outdoor stadium rather than the indoor arenas used for the first five concerts. The following additional artists performed at this concert (in order): John Eddie (with guests Max Weinberg and 14 Karat Soul), Third World, The Hooters, Peter Paul & Mary, Little Steven (with guests Darlene Love and John Waite), Bob Geldof (also with guests Darlene Love, Paul Schaeffer, and John Waite), Stanley Jordan, Joan Armatrading, Jackson Browne, Rubén Blades (with Fela and Carlos Santana), Nona Hendryx, Yoko Ono, Howard Jones, and Miles Davis. The show then continued with the regular performers (in order) of The Neville Brothers, Joan Baez (Baez and the Nevilles also performed a number of songs together), Lou Reed, Peter Gabriel, Bryan Adams, Joni Mitchell (special to NJ), U2, The Police (with Bono during the song Invisible Sun) and finally everyone came out together to perform "I Shall Be Released". Stage introductions were made by Bill Graham, Senator Bill Bradley, Robert De Niro, Christopher Reeve, Michael J. Fox, Daryl Hannah and Muhammad Ali. The show was televised in its entirety by MTV, with the final three hours syndicated on broadcast television by Viacom. Westwood One aired the concert as a live radio broadcast. Pre-taped public service announcements about human rights by prominent figures in the entertainment world were presented on giant video screens and during the television broadcast. Jackson Browne had also performed at the San Francisco and Los Angeles shows. Robin Williams had performed an impromptu stand-up set at the Chicago show. Madonna and Sean Penn introduced Bryan Adams at the opening night in San Francisco. The pioneer of rock music for Amnesty, Pete Townshend, was scheduled to perform at the Giants Stadium concert, but had to cancel at the last moment when his father, Cliff Townshend, became gravely ill, necessitating his immediate return to London. This would have been Townshend's first ever US solo appearance. The tour artists generally arranged their sets around themes of politics, freedom, and courage. Multiple performers joined U2 for Little Steven's "Sun City", while the assembled multitude sang Bob Dylan's "I Shall Be Released" at the end. Bono sometimes joined The Police for the Troubles-flavored "Invisible Sun", while Fela and Santana joined the Neville Brothers as well. Some of the less rock-oriented acts lost crowd attention during the long Giants Stadium event (notably Joni Mitchell, who admonished the audience from the stage for their rowdy behavior during her set), although Baez was well received with a diverse set that included a rousing version of "The Times They Are a-Changin'", as well as Fela and the Nevilles assisting her on "Let it Be" and Tears for Fears' "Shout". (Curt Smith of Tears for Fears was in the audience at the Cow Palace show, and joined Baez and the Nevilles on that show's performance of this song.) The tour enhanced the growing stature of both Peter Gabriel and U2, who were on upswings of popularity and whose "Shock the Monkey" and "Bad" respectively showed percussive, hypnotic power in large settings. Sting was originally slated for the tour as a solo performer with his touring band, but he reconvened The Police for the final three concerts (with their first appearance, in Atlanta, being unannounced) to further assist Amnesty's fund-raising and profile-raising with the enhanced value of a Police reunion. These were the last public Police performances until their Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction in 2003. This was when U2 was about to burst onto the world scene from being originally promoted on college radio and then being known as the biggest "underground" act. The following year 1987 was the release of their blockbuster Joshua Tree album and tour. After that U2 gained a MUCH MUCH larger audience and lost some of their original followers from their beginnings ... not as fans, but as regular attendees to every concert. They just got SO HUGE. I still reminisce with fondness about the electricity in the air at a U2 concert. The 80's was definitely their decade. Let me just add that as great as all the artists that appeared on this bill were... the anticipation and electricity in the air was clearly on U2. You just had to look around at all the U2 banners and Irish flags EVERYWHERE. On the pilgrimage to Denver, you could see car after car on the freeway with U2 on Irish flags on their back windshields or side windows. It was an amazing time in musical history. Never seen it again since then or ever.
It's because he was growing out the rest of his hair from the mullet last seen on the world stage at Live Aid 1985. And it's also before he put on those shades in the 90's and never goes around without ever wearing them. This was Bono in his prime IMHO -- strong voice before smoking and drinking too much took its toll. Don't mistake me, Bono still has a great voice. It's just different from that primal scream he used to and would belt out back then. It would make your hair stand on end listening to the passion in his voice then. They're more mature and wiser but it's no longer the 80's version of U2. Still love them regardless. But those days were heady days for U2 and their fans then.... before the Joshua Tree widened, broadened, and deepened the landscape of their audience.
@@eaglebrother1577 thank you for sharing your thoughts and explaining everything so we'll done. I am sorry to say that I have forgotten some memories due to having MS so I am trying to remember what I have forgotten to remember as much as possible to keep learning more about everything and anything in this fight of multiple sclerosis well anyway Thank You! For those memories Back ✌️❤️🎶😎🙏😘🌸🌸💐🎶✌️ I will keep pushing hard to remember to repeat the information over and over again and have back all it's taken from my memory. I truly appreciate your help and support. you did me a huge favor and I send you my Thank You from the bottom of my heart.
Como amo essa música que é uma preciosidade que me remete aos " Good Times!" U2! Great Band❤❤❤❤👏👏👏👏👏( I'm 60 years old) In my heart and my soul! Greetings from Brazil 😘😘😘😘😥😥😥😥😥
[EN] That rodie is Greg Carrol dead in 1986. Bono wrote "One Tree Hill" for him. [PT] Aquele rodie é Greg Carrol, morto em 1986. Bono escreveu "One Tree Hill" para ele.
Yes, truely, I just experienced the power and uniqueness of Bono's voice, here again. on my reminiscencing on RU-vid. Gifted, he and the whole band! Genuine performers, honest and most honourable. Most lovable. The more, for their speaking out for freedom, equality, justice, and love among all people. U2 are written in stone.
I was there! 3 rows from the top of stadium- surprise Police reunion! Amazing! The 80’s were loaded with great U2 memories! Sadly like most things money or lack of makes it hard to get to do stuff like see concerts.
The title should really be 'MLK', and 'Pride In the Name of Love' by U2. @ Amnesty International's 'Conspiracy of Hope Tour', Giants Stadium, New Jersey, 6/15/86. I remember watching this on Live TV and being excited. I am still excited by the music and performances of U2.
Awesome activism, Bono! Applaud you! Whenever I taught children with special needs, I quoted your line , “They took your life, they could not take your pride.” Powerful!!! Black History Month Bulletin Board, RIP/MLK, Jr.
I heard this song first in 1986 from the album "under the blood red sky".....i am still hooked and addicted to this band and so is my Son, U2 has always been one of his greatest bands and this created His taste for music
The song isn’t on ‘Under a blood red sky’ it came out the following year on album the ‘Unforgettable Fire’ (in 1984) Under a blood red sky was from their performance at red rocks in 1983
One man come in the name of love One man come and go. One man come here to justify One man to overthrow. In the name of love What more in the name of love. In the name of love What more in the name of love. One man caught on a barbed wire fence One man here resist One man washed up on an empty beach One man betrayed with a kiss. In the name of love What more in the name of love. In the name of love What more in the name of love. Early morning, April four Shot rings out in the Memphis sky. Free at last, they took your life They could not take your pride.
Finalmente encontré la versión en vivo que tanto buscaba de esta canción, esta es justo la versión que ponen en el episodio de Los Simpson Basura de Titanes de la Octava Temporada cuando aún estaba chida la serie.
Bono's voice. Cure for human soul. Passion from pure heart. Can you imagine what the world would look and sound like without Bono and U2? Gray and boring mute world. Proud that I am living in the same time with U2. Band of my youth, my whole life❤🙏❤🙏❤
Quien en medio de ésta pandemia del Covid19 sigue escuchando está memorable canción y se estremece cómo la primera vez que la escuchó? Yo si..! Saludos desde la ciudad de México. Amo a U2.
@@giannagarcia4937 los años pasan igual para todos y es normal que Bono ya no se escuche como antes pero aún así es un honor escuchar esta canción a todo U2
Amazing Tour In the Name💜💜💜 U2 A deep bow and a curtsy I Remember everything everything everything 🎵Drum & Bass She’s #GIRL & like #BOY WE R going to change the World 🌎 #keepthepromise 4 Chris Cornell 🎵🌹🎬 #rocknrollgramma Cindia Rose Boyle indi Rose 🌹 Films