

U2
With Bono’s soulful, grandiose cry, The Edge’s intricately textured guitar parts, and the steady propulsion of bassist Adam Clayton and drummer Larry Mullen Jr., U2’s sound is instantly recognizable and much-imitated. Inspired equally by the Ramones’ punk thrust and Bob Dylan’s insightful punditry, the four Irishmen went from Dublin dives to the Top Forty by applying Brian Eno’s ambient concepts to three-chord transcendence. They went on to influence the global political agenda while continually tweaking their sound.
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Selected Discography
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star rating
Boy
January 01, 1980
star ratingThe ten tunes of U2's debut, Boy, are sturdily constructed and melodic. But by far the most arresting thing about the band is its sound.
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No historical review exists for this album.
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1981October
star ratingOctober
January 01, 1981
star ratingThe band as a whole suffers from sophomore slump on October. Bono seems particularly at a loss, making an impressive noise but precious little sense.
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No historical review exists for this album.
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1983Under a Blood Red Sky
star ratingUnder a Blood Red Sky
January 01, 1983
star ratingThe EP Under a Blood Red Sky offers a glimpse of how U2's early sound translated in concert.
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No historical review exists for this album.
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1983War
star ratingWar
January 01, 1983
star ratingWar is U2's first great record. Not only is the writing more tightly focused, but the band leaps nimbly between the personal and the political without a single misstep.
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No historical review exists for this album.
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1984The Unforgettable Fire
star ratingThe Unforgettable Fire
January 01, 1984
star ratingProducers Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois give The Unforgettable Fire a rich, atmospheric aura. The instrumental sound is blurred, giving the band a warmer, more intimate sound. This album also signals the start of Bono's obsession with America.
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No historical review exists for this album.
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1987The Joshua Tree
star ratingThe Joshua Tree
January 01, 1987
star ratingThe intensely personal Joshua Tree album doesn't entirely avoid the political, but such concerns seem secondary to the quest for love and identity. Vivid as the album’s wordplay may be, it’s still the music that carries these songs.
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1988Rattle and Hum
star ratingRattle and Hum
January 01, 1988
star ratingAt this point, the next logical move for U2 would have been a live album, but the bloated semi-live soundtrack album Rattle and Hum isn't quite what fans expected.
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1991Achtung Baby
star ratingAchtung Baby
January 01, 1991
star ratingThanks to the sound-shaping technology applied to the Edge's guitar and Larry Mullen's drums, the band's sound on Achtung Baby is more intricate and articulate than ever, affording the album broad stylistic range.
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1993Zooropa
star ratingZooropa
January 01, 1993
star ratingThe quickly recorded Zooropa attempts to expand the band's new horizons even further, but gets mired in a quicksand of unwise groove and texture experiments–the result is an album with overlong, mostly unmemorable songs.
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1997Pop
star ratingPop
January 01, 1997
star ratingPop puts more emphasis on the songwriting; the best song is the one that sounds the most like classic, pre-Achtung U2: the sweeping "Staring At the Sun."
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No historical review exists for this album.
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1998The Best of 1980-1990
star ratingThe Best of 1980-1990
January 01, 1998
star ratingIf you happen to have been stuck in a soundproof chamber for the last few decades, U2's first two greatest-hits albums may prove useful in getting up to speed. The 1980-1990 collection spits (unforgettable) fire from start to finish.
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No historical review exists for this album.
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2000All That You Can't Leave Behind
star ratingAll That You Can't Leave Behind
January 01, 2000
star ratingAfter spending the Nineties dabbling in postmodernism, electronica and orange goggles, U2 transformed back to a world-beating pop band on All That You Can't Leave Behind, an album that oozed arena-scale romance.
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No historical review exists for this album.
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2002The Best of 1990-2000
star ratingThe Best of 1990-2000
January 01, 2002
star ratingIf you happen to have been stuck in a soundproof chamber for the last few decades, U2's first two greatest-hits albums may prove useful in getting up to speed.
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No historical review exists for this album.
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2004How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb
star ratingHow to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb
January 01, 2004
star ratingThat was also the thrust of the enormous publicity push that accompanied the release of How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb (which included a U2-themed iPod and The Complete U2, a 446-track digital "box set."
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2006U218 Singles
star ratingU218 Singles
January 01, 2006
star ratingU218 Singles is a jumble of radio staples and two blah new tracks, one of which is a cover of the Skids' "The Saints Are Coming" recorded with Green Day.
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2009No Line on the Horizon
star ratingNo Line on the Horizon
January 01, 2009
star ratingU2 reunited with the Eno/Lanois team for most of No Line on the Horizon. Much of the album is relatively straightforward, but the songwriting was experimental and process-driven, integrating Moroccan music.
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No historical review exists for this album.
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