U2 i will follow
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For The Joshua Tree Tour 2019 however, it was again played regularly as the second song of the show.
#U2 I WILL FOLLOW TV#
It has been played extensively on every tour exceptions to this are the Zoo TV Tour (where it was performed infrequently as part of the acoustic set), the U2 360° Tour (where it wasn't played until the third leg) and The Joshua Tree Tour 2017 (where it was sporadically performed as the concert closer). It has been performed at every concert of The Joshua Tree, PopMart Tour, Innocence + Experience Tour and Experience + Innocence Tours. It is the band's second most frequently performed song with over 1000 performances, only behind Pride (In the Name of Love). The song is included in the 2015 music video game Rock Band 4 as a playable track. It appeared on both the compilation album and video collection The Best of 1980–1990, and in some countries, on the U218 Singles compilation. "I Will Follow" had a second single release as a live version in the Netherlands and Germany in 1982, and a third release in the United States in 1983, taken from the Under a Blood Red Sky album. For the middle eight section of the song, producer Steve Lillywhite recorded the sounds of cutlery rubbing against the spokes of a spinning wheel on an upturned bicycle, as well as Bono smashing bottles. The song features a glockenspiel to provide what Bono called "underlying instrumental colouring" it was added at his suggestion, and was played during the Boy recording sessions by him and the Edge. Bono has said that he wrote the lyrics from the perspective of his mother Iris, who died in 1974 when he was 14 years old, and that they were about the unconditional love a mother has for her child. Bono said, "It was literally coming out of a kind of rage, the sound of a nail being hammered into your frontal lobe". Frustrated, he took the Edge's guitar from him and "hammer away" on the two-stringed chord the Edge had created to show his bandmates the urgency he wanted. During early rehearsals of the song, the group frequently had loud arguments, as lead vocalist Bono was struggling to convey the aggression for the guitar riff that he was envisioning. "I Will Follow" was written three weeks before U2 began recording Boy. The song was issued five times, first in 1981 on a 7" vinyl in Ireland, the United Kingdom, Australia, and New Zealand, second on the same format in the United States and Canada, third in the Netherlands in 1982 with a track from 1981's October, in 1983 with a live version of the song, and finally in 2011 with a live version of the song recorded at the 2011 Glastonbury Festival. The song was U2's first music video, directed by Meiert Avis in Dublin, Ireland. "I Will Follow" is the only song that U2 have performed on every tour since they released their first album. Lead singer Bono wrote the lyrics to "I Will Follow" in tribute to his mother, who died when he was 14 years old. It is the opening track from their debut album, Boy, and it was released as the album's second single in October 1980. " I Will Follow" is a song by rock band U2.
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These tunes chart U2’s ever-changing, ever-evolving sound that mirrors the band's evolution from blue-collar dreamers to rock superstars." I'll Go Crazy If I Don't Go Crazy Tonight" This playlist includes tracks that rock hard, open wounds, lift you up and bring you crashing to the ground-that place between pop songs and classic rock songs and just-plain-awesome ’80s songs. In celebration of that milestone, we present the best U2 songs of all time: 33 in total, one for every year since the band first stepped onto the Garden stage. Three decades later, the band has racked up 30 concerts at the venue. In April, 1985, just a few months before that legendary Live Aid performance, U2 played its first show at NYC's Madison Square Garden. But it was U2’s blistering, politically charged set-complete with Bono venturing into the crowd during the 12-minute rendition of “Bad”-that would catapult the band to international stardom and crown them the “world’s most important rock band.” Today Live Aid is mostly remembered for being one of Freddie Mercury’s last-and arguably most memorable-live performances with Queen before his death in 1991. The band would play two songs in just under 20 minutes. U2 took the stage at London's Wembley Stadium for Live Aid, the multi-city concert for famine relief in Africa that would feature the music industry’s greatest acts and biggest names. Where do we start with ranking the best U2 songs of all time? Let’s begin on Saturday, July 13, 1985.