U2 - Live Aid | Fourteen Year-Old Reaction - Her face says it all!

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  • čas přidán 2. 04. 2020
  • Annie and I check out, discuss, and react to U2 performing Bad at Live Aid, and this song takes on a life of its own. Just an epic, amazing piece of history.
    Follow me on Instagram if you like, lots of family pics and funny stuff. We keep it pretty light. Instagram link: / glitch.in.the.matrix.life
    Annie's Instagram Link: / hmph.annie
    Also, our $1 a month - Patreon Membership: / glitchinthematrixmulti...
    Original Content Link: • U2 - Bad (Live Aid 1985)
  • Hudba

Komentáře • 3,5K

  • @johnottr
    @johnottr Před 4 lety +910

    I am 63 years old and I have seen every single U2 tour since 1982 most more than once. They are the soundtrack of my life.

    • @richatlarge462
      @richatlarge462 Před 4 lety +15

      Same, my friend (well, since 1984 - missed the "War" tour unfortunately).

    • @geminix
      @geminix Před 4 lety +1

      Do you have a favorite tour or show?

    • @TT-ls5dw
      @TT-ls5dw Před 4 lety +13

      Oh amigo. You have me by 1 tour. I started with Unforgettable Fire. Pulling that guy up on stage to do the guitar. Soundtrack of my life. This performance touches me so much I tear up. $600 is worth it for Joshua Tree 2017. I was fortunate enough to see both. Full circle. Like no other!

    • @johnottr
      @johnottr Před 4 lety +5

      @@geminix Elevation Tour October 25th 2001, MSG, New York City, it was right after 9/11, and it was very emotional. and The Vertico Tour, May 14th, 2005, Wachovia Center, Philadelphia.

    • @zoopop22
      @zoopop22 Před 4 lety +2

      since POPmart tour...... 42 years old now

  • @pazwretzky4673
    @pazwretzky4673 Před 4 lety +1432

    the guy running around after Bono on stage making sure the microphone cable is untangled and close by is Greg Carroll, a Kiwi who unfortunately died in a motorcycle accident in Ireland whilst they were touring...he was the inspiration for U2's song One Tree Hill from the Joshua Tree album

    • @Dilydaydream1
      @Dilydaydream1 Před 4 lety +30

      I dont remember that. So sad. Come from biker family

    • @pazwretzky4673
      @pazwretzky4673 Před 4 lety +57

      @@Dilydaydream1 sad indeed...I reside in New Zealand, I'm a rider myself...the song One Tree Hill was released as a single here in honour of Greg

    • @pabloairth4093
      @pabloairth4093 Před 4 lety +39

      My kids watched this video with me and kept saying why do they have a guy running around holding the cords. I had to explain that nothing was wireless in the mid 80s and they had to have a guy making sure the singer didn't trip on the microphone cords

    • @marcwilding4804
      @marcwilding4804 Před 4 lety +9

      Pablo Airth and that they shared the set with loads of other acts so it wasn’t configured for them either!

    • @adammartin7007
      @adammartin7007 Před 4 lety +34

      Yeah he died riding Bono's bike so Bono felt guilty about it. They were actually working on the Joshua Tree at the time.

  • @valerie.anderson9893
    @valerie.anderson9893 Před 3 lety +157

    The majesty of Bono's mullet cannot be overstated and neither can his performance!

    • @xenaluck
      @xenaluck Před rokem +3

      top ten 80s mullet.......fight me

    • @mhoeltken
      @mhoeltken Před rokem

      @@xenaluck A mullet is a NO-NO - even if it's bono.

    • @xenaluck
      @xenaluck Před rokem +3

      @@mhoeltken 80s everyone gets a pass and Bonos was top tier

    • @ginabean9434
      @ginabean9434 Před rokem +3

      Maybe the boots?

  • @nuttin2chereur2late74
    @nuttin2chereur2late74 Před 8 měsíci +10

    Their set was so long because the producers kept signalling not to stop. U2 had the audience so captivated that one of the producers said they were desperate to keep them on stage for fear the audience would freak out & rush the stage. And you could see in the video that there were some issues already right in front.
    U2 was popular, but that performance made them absolutely explode globally. Deservedly so.

  • @Retrospective.
    @Retrospective. Před 3 lety +324

    I was there my friend, 15 years old, and 8 rows from the front. what a day that was. :)

    • @Retrospective.
      @Retrospective. Před 3 lety +28

      @Dale Cooper it was a lovely summers day, the mood was electric, and when Bono went down to the crowd, it just kinda summed up the essence of the event, there was nothing contrived about it, it was a beautiful, touching moment, just one person, holding another. I kept my t-shirt from the day, still have it.

    • @ukpolska5335
      @ukpolska5335 Před 3 lety +18

      So was I and was 21 years old at the time and there is one shot of the Queen set where you can see my girlfriend on my shoulders. Stayed the whole 8 hours a peed in bottles as there was no way you could get to the toilet and back. Met up with others in Hyde Park later and had a party until 07.00 the next morning watching the JFK performances on a portable TV. Brilliant experience....

    • @leeklein4199
      @leeklein4199 Před 3 lety +2

      I was at Woodstock. Jk.

    • @leeklein4199
      @leeklein4199 Před 3 lety +6

      @@ukpolska5335 Phil Collins 3 hour Concord flight from London to Philadelphia, my hometown. Watched the entire day awestruck. On TV. Can't imagine how incredible it was being at Wembley. Ty for your awesome post. God Bless!

    • @wonka863able
      @wonka863able Před 3 lety +2

      Jealous...

  • @nitedreamer23
    @nitedreamer23 Před 3 lety +393

    Bono's mullet here: no words can capture its majesty.

    • @chemdah
      @chemdah Před 3 lety +9

      I was literally thinking the same thing hahaha

    • @02della
      @02della Před 3 lety +21

      Showed this to my 9 year she asked if it was a wig...the ultimate compliment for a mullet 🤣🤣🤣

    • @swingersonian
      @swingersonian Před 3 lety +1

      Truth!!

    • @surf101-
      @surf101- Před 3 lety +5

      I had a mullet, back in '89. Thought I was so cool. Wow, how ridiculous I looked back then. Still do, but without the mullet. 😎

    • @paulschmidtke425
      @paulschmidtke425 Před 3 lety +5

      Mullets are great

  • @klmorg63
    @klmorg63 Před 11 měsíci +14

    I’m 60 years old and have seen U2 over 30 times, but watching this live was was so awesome. Not just U2, but Queen, The Who and so many others, but U2 stole the show too me! Introduced to them while serving in the Air Force in England 81-83!

  • @sarahjane8146
    @sarahjane8146 Před 3 lety +49

    I saw U2 in Detroit with a French exchange student, Vero, who was living with my family at the time. Vero didn’t much care for U2, so she headed up to the balcony, while we pushed toward the stage on the main floor. Of course, Bono scaled a wall, entered the balcony from the outside, and hugged Vero for a good minute.

    • @Roobah
      @Roobah Před 2 lety +2

      Oh wow! Lucky! I attended one of those scale the ceiling shows, too. Later they asked all the girls in the front to come onto stage and dance with Bono and I was too shy to go. We were on the 2nd row.

    • @Pieter-ns5nv
      @Pieter-ns5nv Před rokem +1

      And she was all like : "Get off of me, you freak!", no? :-)

  • @oswjim
    @oswjim Před 4 lety +375

    it's impossible not to cry everytime I watch this footage ... we the children of the 80s were and are so fortunate for things like this

    • @chuleta1976
      @chuleta1976 Před 4 lety +14

      I have seen this video numerous times and I tear up every time as well.

    • @conorhealy5169
      @conorhealy5169 Před 4 lety +6

      Ditto x

    • @MartinhoIsidroCorreia
      @MartinhoIsidroCorreia Před 4 lety +6

      Someones cutting onions...

    • @genokemp2433
      @genokemp2433 Před 4 lety +16

      100% i remember sitting at home all day and all night watching Live Aid and when U2 and QUEEN came on that was it ..Best time of my life was the 80s

    • @toddr2961
      @toddr2961 Před 4 lety +4

      Yes we were.

  • @mireilleblacke6567
    @mireilleblacke6567 Před 4 lety +301

    I was a 15-year old girl glued to my television set that entire day. Such a memorable day in music history.

    • @nelliehugh
      @nelliehugh Před 4 lety +3

      Mireille Blacke me too!

    • @fergalhughes165
      @fergalhughes165 Před 4 lety +1

      14-y-o boy (that day!) here :)

    • @jnunez825
      @jnunez825 Před 4 lety +7

      I had 2 TVs/VCRs recording everything that was broadcast that day

    • @marybonetti2682
      @marybonetti2682 Před 4 lety +4

      I was a 16-year old girl doing exactly the same thing!!! What a day! Simply amazing!

    • @johnmckee7640
      @johnmckee7640 Před 4 lety +1

      When you 50.

  • @johnj3577
    @johnj3577 Před 3 lety +65

    I love at 15:19 he just gives the band a look and they instantly know he means 'soften the volume' and it all happens telepathically. Amazing moment.

    • @searchfortech8042
      @searchfortech8042 Před rokem +3

      Actually he not only gave the look, but also showed it by the hand “down”

    • @fedup3449
      @fedup3449 Před rokem +1

      @@searchfortech8042 so not rehearsed at all! LMFAO

    • @strandedinparadise8202
      @strandedinparadise8202 Před rokem

      I was going to say the same thing!

  • @ferrisguy8435
    @ferrisguy8435 Před 2 lety +17

    I've loved U2 from age 17. I am 57 now. Their music is hypnotic.

  • @OCRay1
    @OCRay1 Před 3 lety +77

    That is when U2 exploded worldwide and essentially became the biggest band in the world for a solid 15 years.

    • @skinmcghee987
      @skinmcghee987 Před 3 lety +1

      Aye and Bono liked his coke without cola back then

    • @capoditutticapos19
      @capoditutticapos19 Před 8 měsíci

      Ummm guns n roses?

    • @blackman5867
      @blackman5867 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @capoditutticapos19 nobody's heard of GNR until the late 80s when Welcome to the Jungle & Sweet Child O Mine were aired on MTV as they created a phenomenal in the world of rock & roll for a while. Too bad their reputation was kind of short lived especially after the Spaghetti Incident album, and it's safe to say that they were no longer a trending band in the late 90s

    • @goldenhourkodak
      @goldenhourkodak Před 3 měsíci +1

      Longer. 20 years after this they would win 5 Grammys.

  • @jimfletcher7650
    @jimfletcher7650 Před 4 lety +87

    I'm almost 50 and this is my favourite song. Ever. I'm lucky enough to have seen U2 live 46 times since 1983. Never, ever gets old seeing them on stage .

    • @MrSean03839
      @MrSean03839 Před 4 lety +7

      46 times? U2 should give you a lifetime pass for such dedication!

    • @JandeJongePBPLtd
      @JandeJongePBPLtd Před 4 lety +3

      Jim, I agree. This video is such fun also to watch! Can listen to this song every day. I probably do - more or less... ;) Stay safe.

    • @timdake
      @timdake Před 4 lety +4

      Jim Fletcher - That’s dedication. I am pretty loyal, and only at about 12-14 shows, since the late 80’s.

    • @alanwatt8680
      @alanwatt8680 Před 4 lety +3

      Jim, i was luckily present at Wembley Stadium for Live Aid,U2 we're one of the main reasons I traveled down from Edinburgh for the concert,they we're at their purest and in my opinion at their peak during this time period.

    • @jimfletcher7650
      @jimfletcher7650 Před 4 lety +2

      @@alanwatt8680 Seen them at Wembley old and new a few times. ZOO tv there is up amongst my favourite shows

  • @thejohnpaul
    @thejohnpaul Před 3 lety +69

    I saw that live on TV in Ireland in 1985. We recorded it on VCR and watched it back only about a million times. Me and my brothers still talk about it when we're at the pub. It was a super hot day. The sun was blazing and we had all the doors and windows of the house open and the TV turned up to 11. Loving your work guys. I wana do reaction videos with my son now.

    • @noelmccarthy9224
      @noelmccarthy9224 Před 2 lety

      Pp

    • @noelmccarthy9224
      @noelmccarthy9224 Před 2 lety

      Pp

    • @bettyb1313
      @bettyb1313 Před 2 lety +1

      Remember when the dial changed and we got 15 we thought it was amazing

    • @fmcm7715
      @fmcm7715 Před rokem +2

      I watched it too in Ireland and my mum kept coming into the sitting room and telling me to get out and enjoy the sunshine. Needless to say I stayed in all day🤣.

    • @brucedanton3669
      @brucedanton3669 Před rokem +1

      I saw it too at the time here in Britain when it was on BBC1, BBC2 and Radio 1 I think. I don't know whether in Ireland you saw it on our channels, or whether you saw it on the RTE channels at the time {not that it matters at all, of course}.
      Thank you anyway!

  • @taragreenetarotastro
    @taragreenetarotastro Před 3 lety +68

    I am amazed that Bono can project so much while singing on his toes.He has one of the richest voices in all of Rock n Roll

    • @HAL_9000__
      @HAL_9000__ Před rokem +3

      “Had”.
      All those years of singing out with such force has taken its toll.

    • @hosoiarchives4858
      @hosoiarchives4858 Před rokem

      Days long past

    • @Pieter-ns5nv
      @Pieter-ns5nv Před rokem

      Actually i dont think he is that good of a singer. Cant say he doesnt hit the notes etc. but OK. Its the combination with his performance that does it for me.

  • @davidjohnson3598
    @davidjohnson3598 Před 4 lety +171

    Everything that makes U2 special is crystallized in this performance.

    • @HitchHikersBlues
      @HitchHikersBlues Před 4 lety +7

      Yeah. They're one of those bands that were born to play stadiums. Great Performance !

    • @paulatorres5676
      @paulatorres5676 Před 4 lety

      Best comment. I'm so agree with you.

    • @danmseattle975
      @danmseattle975 Před 3 lety +1

      I was 23 when Live Aid was broadcast. I thought this was the absolute best moment in the show. The worst moment? Bob Dylan with Ron Wood and Keith Richards. I wasn't a Queen fan so I don't remember seeing them perform. I like Queen a lot more now, and I have seen their Live Aid performance on video. It's great, but I still think U2 were the highlight.

  • @roncrabb
    @roncrabb Před 4 lety +116

    I was there... right in the middle of Wembley Stadium at Live Aid.... frickin’ awesome. This was when U2 was raw and the sound seared through the air and through your body. Frickin’ awesome memories.

    • @Matkin222
      @Matkin222 Před 3 lety

      I've got to ask, how long did the band keep playing after he left the stage? I've never been able to find that out, the video always fades out.

    • @roncrabb
      @roncrabb Před 3 lety

      Matkin222 they did only a few more minutes, by my recollection.

    • @garibaldi54
      @garibaldi54 Před 3 měsíci

      How long did it take to leave at the end? I guess you didn't take a toilet break either.

  • @angelopellicci179
    @angelopellicci179 Před 3 lety +112

    I’m 16 and I love U2. Seeing this live aid performance is a first for me tho. My love and respect for this band completely sky rocketed after seeing this.

    • @dannapaolasanchezurrea3404
      @dannapaolasanchezurrea3404 Před 3 lety +7

      Hi im 18 and i love U2 too and this is one of my favorite videos of all time

    • @tije84
      @tije84 Před 3 lety +5

      This performance tipped the scale for me In 1985, and I never looked back since, fell In love with U2 for good 🇨🇮

    • @seanmack9207
      @seanmack9207 Před 3 lety +5

      Watch there Slane Castle concert Shockwave, absolutely amazing live performance.

    • @pamw3163
      @pamw3163 Před rokem +4

      Can I adopt you? Ty for recognizing greatness

    • @RetroHondo67
      @RetroHondo67 Před 7 měsíci

      They were more of an alternative band until this performance and then they followed it up with Joshua Tree and became a world wide supergroup. Actually saw them at clubs twice in the early eighties and then numerous times when they became an stadium act. They are one of the better live acts I ever saw, a great combination of musicianship, awesome stadium stage shows and charismatic presence

  • @seanbangerter4145
    @seanbangerter4145 Před rokem +11

    This is how good music gets passed down from one generation to the next. I salute you, Dad, for sharing with your daughter.

  • @tonyroberts7086
    @tonyroberts7086 Před 4 lety +165

    Watching this has taken me back to being 18 years old living in Eastbourne and my best mate Richard getting 2 tickets for Live Aid. We travelled up on the train the day before and slept outside on a grassy bank along with several hundred people. When the gates opened there was a mad fast rush towards the stage. The stewards held us back couple hundred yards before the stage. It was a boiling hot day and at first there was nothing to drink. Finally the stewards moved out of the way and we were right at the front on the right hand side of the stage. Saw Queen only 20 yards away. Bono walking close by. I’m in my 50s now and takes me back to being a kid. Thanks for sharing the vid

    • @allenrhodes7636
      @allenrhodes7636 Před 4 lety

      Tony Roberts interesting. My brother in law is named Richard and is from Eastbourne!

    • @kathy73160
      @kathy73160 Před 3 lety +2

      Tony Roberts omg. Lucky

    • @kimdobson809
      @kimdobson809 Před 3 lety +2

      Tony Roberts I was there as well, fabulous memories

    • @ironkeld
      @ironkeld Před 3 lety +4

      That’s my story too. Travelled down to London overnight by train. At Wembley for gates opening at 10am and a run a cross the pitch to claim our spot. What followed has stayed with me throughout my life and still gives me chills whenever I hear Liveaid tracks such as Bad, Heroes, Hammer to fall, etc. My friend Rog and I were 19 and we often reminisce on that day.

    • @kevinflynn7224
      @kevinflynn7224 Před 3 lety +4

      You were probably standing only a few feet from me. Started out in the seats then just moved to the front. What a day!

  • @Jamescreaney
    @Jamescreaney Před 4 lety +71

    We’re an Irish band, we come from Dublin city, Ireland. Like all cities, it has its good and it has its bad. This is a song called Bad.

  • @karpynec
    @karpynec Před rokem +16

    Thanks for making a 48 year old man bawl. You’re a good Dad, keep on rocking! 👊🏻

  • @brianjeffers3393
    @brianjeffers3393 Před 3 lety +19

    First trip to London in 1985, 3 days before the concert, had no idea until I saw a advert in a tube station that this was happening. Yeah I spent every spare $ I had for a 2 week trip on this ticket. Best time of my life! Met so many great people that we still keep in touch today! Queen was the highlight but U2, from that day in, has been my favorite of all time!!

  • @glenschol4041
    @glenschol4041 Před 4 lety +153

    Bono was 25 years old when he commanded 75,00 people at Wembley to sing with him at Live Aid.

    • @johnsouthwell1869
      @johnsouthwell1869 Před 4 lety +10

      I long ago realized I will never, ever ever ever ever be as cool as Bono - so that’s kind of freeing

    • @Franckdatank
      @Franckdatank Před 4 lety

      how is this edited lol

    • @burrenmagpie5756
      @burrenmagpie5756 Před 3 lety

      Reallly? Now I feel bad for all the times I called him a Cee U Next Tuesday!

    • @thementalsquad7135
      @thementalsquad7135 Před 3 lety +1

      7500? You mean 75,000+?

    • @johnj3577
      @johnj3577 Před 3 lety +3

      @@thementalsquad7135 Much more than 75,000. The stadium back then could hold 110,000 just for a football match and I would estimate there's another 60,000 on the pitch area. The stage takes up one end of the stadium but still there was easily 150,000 there that day.

  • @chilledmonkeebrains
    @chilledmonkeebrains Před 4 lety +131

    The power of those 4 guys to produce a singular sound is hard for today's kids to imagine.....live it was incredible

    • @raistlinmcfly7535
      @raistlinmcfly7535 Před 4 lety +2

      Today's kids will never see something like that. no one will. I feel sorry for them.

    • @chilledmonkeebrains
      @chilledmonkeebrains Před 4 lety +1

      @@raistlinmcfly7535 you never know what the future holds

    • @umbertotarallo1355
      @umbertotarallo1355 Před 4 lety +1

      @@raistlinmcfly7535 I'm 23. I've seen them 2 time, trust more in our generation.

    • @raistlinmcfly7535
      @raistlinmcfly7535 Před 4 lety +3

      @@umbertotarallo1355 I was talking about someone who could rise at such a level of epicness. do you see anyone among the new wave of musicians capable of such intensity, such charisma, such commitment to the cause of rock and roll and to what it meant back in the days? and I'm not talking about just U2.. think about all other performers that were there that day. and about what they did. I feel sorry for the new generation because they could never experience something like Live Aid. I was talking about that. You could watch U2 for another couple of tours, maybe three, maybe four. but will you ever experience such an event? do you see anyone capable of that?

    • @gerhardorlet1560
      @gerhardorlet1560 Před 3 lety

      NOBODY, save U2, makes that kind of music anymore. Of course, unless you have The Edge, you CAN’T make that kind if music. LOL!

  • @robertwood4923
    @robertwood4923 Před 3 lety +62

    This was the moment when U2 stole Live Aid.

    • @hannahevans9125
      @hannahevans9125 Před 3 lety +2

      I was 5 years old. I was allowed to stay up to watch. I remember it all so clearly

    • @tdurb0
      @tdurb0 Před 3 lety +1

      Just like Bono stole Band Aid ❤️

    • @beds139
      @beds139 Před 3 lety +22

      And about an hour later Queen stole it off them.

    • @tdurb0
      @tdurb0 Před 3 lety +9

      @@beds139 Very much so! Freddie: “No mate, THIS is how being a frontman works” ❤️

    • @beds139
      @beds139 Před 3 lety +6

      @@tdurb0 Neither U2 or Queen were anywhere near the top of the bill at Live Aid but it is their performances that are best remembered.

  • @rebeccaflowerbeck9894
    @rebeccaflowerbeck9894 Před 2 lety +28

    Bad is one of my all-time favourite U2 songs ❤️

  • @stebo9876
    @stebo9876 Před 4 lety +58

    My best friend played this song at his brother’s funeral. He was killed by a drink driver while riding his motorcycle home. Makes me cry every time I hear it.

    • @boazbell38
      @boazbell38 Před 4 lety +1

      I am sorry to hear that Stebo.. I've seen U2 over 30 times live.. and many times Bono cries through this song too...

    • @kVkV-sw5se
      @kVkV-sw5se Před 4 lety +1

      Dude I am so sorry for your pain.

    • @mattwarwick8135
      @mattwarwick8135 Před 4 lety

      Damn, man. Love to you.

    • @kVkV-sw5se
      @kVkV-sw5se Před 4 lety

      Sad and sending my thoughts to you.

  • @m.c.6711
    @m.c.6711 Před 3 lety +17

    I am 53 years of and I have been a U2 fan since I was 12...this video makes me cry every time I see it.

  • @chrisdurant19
    @chrisdurant19 Před rokem +11

    The band couldn't even see Bono and they didn't know what had happened, they just had the instincts to keep playing and hope he'd return to the stage. It's incredible

  • @kirks1234
    @kirks1234 Před rokem +8

    Bono was having lunch in a restaurant back here in Ireland. Fan spots him, walks over and asks if she could have her photo taken with her. No problem, Bono says. So the fan gives camera to Bono’s friend. Photo taken, camera is handed back to fan who exits stage left. Bono looked at the photographer. Springsteen just smiled.

  • @bengordon2330
    @bengordon2330 Před 4 lety +315

    The amount of hairspray on Bono's mullet single handedly created the ozone hole - that's science.

    • @davidmay8104
      @davidmay8104 Před 4 lety +6

      Ben Gordon 😆 😆 😆 lol.

    • @armyguy872008
      @armyguy872008 Před 4 lety +19

      Ben Gordon The Bozone Hole?

    • @granthambeard
      @granthambeard Před 4 lety +2

      But it's not numberwang

    • @mojopin70
      @mojopin70 Před 4 lety +5

      Even Bono's mullett could not beat Queen that day.

    • @Daisy-ct3nh
      @Daisy-ct3nh Před 4 lety

      Ozone is created by UV Light..
      Thats science.

  • @peterskdtmortensen9093
    @peterskdtmortensen9093 Před 4 lety +36

    Sitting in my parents living room, 18 years old, this performance was fantastic and still is. Greetings from Denmark.

  • @alfredrestivo2713
    @alfredrestivo2713 Před 3 lety +51

    I've seen tons of concerts including U2. They are not my favorite band. But they are the best live performance I've ever seen. Unforgettable Fire Tour.

    • @onitsed-
      @onitsed- Před 8 měsíci

      I guess that its probably what any of u2 fans think
      I never like the Studio songs at the first time
      and then appears the live version

  • @AlBeeston
    @AlBeeston Před 11 měsíci +12

    There was about 80,000 of us in Wembley Stadium that day, it was Epic! U2 we’re still relatively unknown by most people, but they did put on a great set, Queen were the kings of the day, but U2 came a close 2nd for me. It was an unforgettable day, being in that crowd with 4 Friends that love ‘Live’ music was unbelievable. 😎😎😎

    • @Islendingar
      @Islendingar Před 10 měsíci +1

      I’d have to add that David Bowie & Sir Elton John were a very close tie for third behind U2 & Queen …… an amazing show and the Philadelphia show with over 82,000 at it and some killer artists there too …. WOW !!!

  • @aujax1
    @aujax1 Před 4 lety +42

    i remember reading that they thought they “blew it” that day. the reality was the opposite. best performance of the song ever

    • @billytk247
      @billytk247 Před 4 lety +4

      Larry wanted to sack Bono from the band.. They had a massive argument after the gig backstage. They should of also played the single at the time Unforgettable fire, I knew a stage guy from that day. Dire Straits where on after them and also commented on it

    • @michaelchamberlain3106
      @michaelchamberlain3106 Před 4 lety +7

      @@billytk247 They should have played Pride (In The Name Of Love) as that was the single of the time. Correct - the band were extremely angry with Bono and he went away for a few days back in Ireland and didn't know the impact he and U2 had made until a round a week later. He met a sculptor who was creating the moment Bono jumped down to the crowd called 'The Leap'.

    • @declanfitzpatrick8268
      @declanfitzpatrick8268 Před 4 lety +3

      @@billytk247 Pride was the song they had to drop, not TUF

    • @declanfitzpatrick8268
      @declanfitzpatrick8268 Před 4 lety +1

      @@michaelchamberlain3106 Yep! That's what I heard too

    • @fredsmith6324
      @fredsmith6324 Před 3 lety +2

      tbh Pride is an awesome song but it's not that good live. the guitar does not sound near as good as in the studio version. the unforgettable fire was one of my favorite songs, and is pretty good live. it would've blown people away.

  • @boybato2690
    @boybato2690 Před 4 lety +228

    You should show her U2 at Red Rocks 1983, to me that's they're greatest live performances. I WILL FOLLOW and SUNDAY BLOODY SUNDAY my favorites. I still have my vhs tape f the concert from when I was a Teen.

    • @chrismcduffie4888
      @chrismcduffie4888 Před 4 lety +5

      Boy Bato fully agree! I have this album and could listen to it all the time...

    • @scottmi645
      @scottmi645 Před 4 lety +6

      Haha, I worked in a video store in the 80's when I was in college. That tape was checked out every day.

    • @gruijtje68
      @gruijtje68 Před 4 lety +9

      Totally agree! The Red Rocks concert is bad ass legendary, and the rain and fires make such a great unexpected setting. Man, what an awesome show! And no phone to be seen. Just a crowd that goes wild no matter the cold and rain. I bought the record when it came out and i keep watching the concert on video at least 2 times a year. I love the Boy/October/War era which is fully covered in this concert. This was U2 in its purest form. Don't get me wrong, I got totally hooked on The Unforgettable Fire and The Joshua Tree as well and of course Achtung Baby when they came out. But I must say I lost them a bit after that. Went to see them in 2017 in Amsterdam Arena for the The Joshua Tree anniversary tour. Unforgettable!!

    • @wpollock1
      @wpollock1 Před 4 lety +2

      I saw them in Detroit in 1982 (second row). They stopped the concert halfway through briefly and Bono lectured the crowd - they were pressing forward too much. Great concert - it was such a small venue. I liked the Red Rocks concert better, but this was great.

    • @theresaflannery1992
      @theresaflannery1992 Před 4 lety +6

      Boy Bato I was there. My local record store guys had promotional tickets and I was invited. It wasn’t just raining. It was sleeting, nearly snowing. They offered “rain checks” to all ticket holders and held an indoor concert at the CU Field house the next day, and they honored all tickets...and STUBS. It was the most life changing concerts ever. We froze and huddled down at the bottom of the “bowl”... Still live 6 miles away from Red Rocks...still my favorite venue.

  • @monica110
    @monica110 Před 3 lety +69

    I fell in love. He brought me onstage 1987 Chicago

    • @chrisscott4619
      @chrisscott4619 Před 3 lety +5

      He only ever brings the beautiful ladies on stage 😉

    • @yahweh1979
      @yahweh1979 Před 3 lety +3

      God bless you

    • @dantebacani
      @dantebacani Před 3 lety +8

      If it was U2 in Chicago in 1987, then I *definitely* saw you dance with Bono! 😎👍🏻

    • @monica110
      @monica110 Před 3 lety +1

      @@dantebacani yes it was. Rosemont Horizon! Me and my best friend 😊

  • @grandvianna8551
    @grandvianna8551 Před 3 lety +17

    You know, I’ve shit on U2 in the past many times but oh my god. I’ve never seen this and have no qualms with eating my words. This is incredible

  • @dab0ltz
    @dab0ltz Před 4 lety +116

    Nothing today will EVER beat these types of festivals we had in the 80's

    • @gg41r
      @gg41r Před 4 lety +8

      The quality of festival Headliners these days gets weaker and weaker with each passing year now. Look at Glastonbury Festival last year. Headlined by Stormzy, who had one album out. In days gone by, the headline slot had to be earned, by years and years of hard graft. Nowadays, it seems as tho any mildly successful act can be handed the headline slot.

    • @energ8t
      @energ8t Před 4 lety

      👆🏼😂

    • @fawlteemontee3118
      @fawlteemontee3118 Před 4 lety +1

      @@gg41r ... what about The Cure at Glastonbury? I've heard they overshadowed everyone with their performance, it was the highlight of that festival. Stay safe brother!

    • @gg41r
      @gg41r Před 4 lety

      @@fawlteemontee3118 Yeah....the Cure are great. But i was referring to the quality of modern Day acts. Once the cure, and that generation of acts are gone....I dont like to think about it. Glasto will be stuck for great headliners. They are all turning into Pop festivals, There is still a lot of GREAT usic being made, by upcoming bands, but they arent found in the mainstream or Charts.

    • @billnict1
      @billnict1 Před 4 lety +5

      Smartphones have sucked concert-goers brains out or their heads...

  • @karlclemmy2054
    @karlclemmy2054 Před 3 lety +24

    Great reaction, Bono after this was distraught about what happened, he thought he'd ruined the performance, they were meant to play Pride after this, it was only months later that Bono saw a sculpture that a friend of his had done called the leap, it was the moment Bono danced with the young girl, he then realised it was a wonderful thing to have done, everyone talked about it after live aid, it basically lifted U2 into world wide mega stars

  • @wowzieee
    @wowzieee Před 3 lety +12

    My favourite U2 moment, I was with my adult son at a U2 concert kn Toronto. Bono dedicated the song to his Mom and how much he missed her. I looked at my son and held his hand, and all I could think about was , I hope when I m gone he remembers how much I loved him. Tears. It was a magical moment for me and i m so glad i got to share that moment at a U2 concert, my favousite band. I remember watching Live Aid at the cottage, all the Toronto tv channels were carrying it.

  • @slugatha1
    @slugatha1 Před 3 lety +7

    I have been fortunate enough to have seen U2 live on several occasions, one of the best bands ever. I was also at Live Aid, I know it has been said before but I have to say it again, the atmosphere there that day at Wembley was something I had never experienced before or since. It was a very, very special day and a number of bands / artists besides Queen and U2 gave some exceptional performances. Definitely a concert that will give me goose bumps for the rest of my life.

  • @racerfink
    @racerfink Před 4 lety +41

    You have to tell her the part about after seeing U2 in concert, how the crowd sings “40” outside as they walk to their cars.

  • @robertkees6048
    @robertkees6048 Před rokem +18

    I remember this well. The big news was that Led Zeppelin and The Who were both going to play, and Phil Collins was everywhere. Everyone played that day, but U2 stole the show. They were getting really big, but this put them in a legendary status, it was a real springboard to them being the biggest band in the world. Their performance made an impression on a whole generation that day. Zep and The Who were rocks royalty, but they were rocks past, U2 was the shiny new future of rock and we all knew it.

    • @TalktoKel
      @TalktoKel Před rokem +1

      Planty’s Goldilocks and Bono’s mullet give me life! My personal favorite frontmen (and VOICE along with Steve Perry).

    • @robertkees6048
      @robertkees6048 Před rokem +1

      @@TalktoKel I saw Journey at like 15 at Nassau Coliseum, it was he tour with Anyway you want it song. First real concert, and I remember thinking Steve Perry was a "ROCK STAR" all of it captured my imagination, the lights, sound, cloths, movement, I'll never forget it. I think Loverboy opened up for them if I'm not mistaken, and they were a road tested band , even a novice like me could see they played a lot of dates. What a great night it was.

    • @TalktoKel
      @TalktoKel Před rokem

      @@robertkees6048 Awesome! I saw them at 16 at the L.A. Rose Bowl (+++). WE have good taste! 😎

    • @robertkees6048
      @robertkees6048 Před rokem +1

      @@TalktoKel well don't be too confident on our good taste, you haven't seen my golf pants, and I don't even play golf.

    • @buckstraw925
      @buckstraw925 Před rokem +3

      Queen might have something to say but yeah U2 was great great great!

  • @aqua_fuschia6178
    @aqua_fuschia6178 Před 2 lety +12

    Jeez, I was 22 when this event happened. Still gives me chills when I watch it. The greatest concert ever. And all for the cause of helping the needy. And everyone performed for free across the Atlantic Ocean. I wish something like this will happen again before I die.

  • @tiacoubrough8135
    @tiacoubrough8135 Před rokem +11

    I love Bono’s voice. Always have. It’s smooth like whiskey, but also kinda haunting that it draws you in and captivates your soul♥️

  • @niksta007a
    @niksta007a Před 3 lety +21

    Once they got off stage they had a massive row, because Bono's showboating meant they missed playing Pride live in front of this crowd due to time restrictions. Little did they know that his antics during Bad would propel them to the mega-stardom they enjoyed for decades.

    • @jackoneout
      @jackoneout Před 3 lety +1

      i heard that ...+ he thought he had fukt up big time. a real shame Pride wasn't played. (my shame was not buying a 25£ ticket offered at school- it wasnt really well advertised and i didnt know anything about it....DOH !)

    • @PlumbPitiful
      @PlumbPitiful Před 3 lety +1

      A year after this they played the Amnesty International conspiracy of Hope concert at Giants stadium and that time they didn't take any chances. They STARTED with Pride, then did a much shorter version of Bad!

  • @bostonwhofan
    @bostonwhofan Před 4 lety +21

    The first rock star I ever met was Bono in Hollywood, Florida after the last 2 shows of The Unforgettable Fire tour in America. I drank beer with Bono 2 nights in a row. Those shows were the last shows of that tour before their Live Aid appearance. You can't imagine the goosebumps I had while watching U2 at Live Aid that day.

    • @maltapope
      @maltapope Před 4 lety

      Good evening, just a friendly update.. the last 2 shows of the tour in the US was indeed on the 3rd & 4th May 1985 in Ft. Lauderdale. However on the 25th May 1985 U2 commenced a schedule of 9 shows in Europe, some at festivals. The first being 05/23/85 was in Koblenz (West Germany) and the shows continued until August. The last show U2 did before Live Aid was on July 7th 1985 in Werchter, Belgium. Live Aid was the following weekend, July 13th. U2 did one more gig after Live Aid which was in Cork, Ireland on the 25th August 1985. This was the last gig of the Unforgettable Fire Tour as we knew it. Cheers..

    • @michellemiller1067
      @michellemiller1067 Před 4 lety

      gonna need more details, friend

    • @maltapope
      @maltapope Před 4 lety

      Michelle Miller - Who ? More details on what, if I can help..

  • @ThePhilomathe
    @ThePhilomathe Před 3 lety +50

    Bono has such a huge personality that the other members are often left in obscurity at the back. I feel that Edge is probably one of the most underrated guitarists of our era. He defines the U2 sound, a perfect compliment to Bono's voice.

    • @TheMikeDudley
      @TheMikeDudley Před 3 lety +3

      As B. B. King once said... "The Edge? He's a really good rhythm guitarist". 😂

    • @MegaVector2011
      @MegaVector2011 Před 3 lety

      @@TheMikeDudley And that's a struggle.

    • @Stl71
      @Stl71 Před 3 lety +3

      @@TheMikeDudley I don't know that Edge is, but I am pretty sure that everyone's recognizing his sound...Only a few have achieved that.

    • @darrenmacdonald1499
      @darrenmacdonald1499 Před 3 lety +3

      There is a great documentary called "It Might Get Loud" and they get Jimmy Paige, The Edge and Jack White together on a sound stage and just lets them talk with each other and play music for each other. It's pretty amazing.

    • @padraigsisk4057
      @padraigsisk4057 Před 3 lety

      @@darrenmacdonald1499 Edge has to thank Stuart Adamson

  • @gerhardorlet1560
    @gerhardorlet1560 Před 3 lety +2

    And that, right there, is why U2 are the GOAT. Bono will just compose a verse on the fly. Is there ANYONE you would rather have as a front man than Bono? I felt I was watching a conversation between myself and my kids. I remember showing them the clip in the wake of us watching Live Aid after seeing Bohemian Rhapsody. Bad gave me chills the first time I heard it, and live was even better. I’ve seen U2 multiple times, but the Joshua Tree anniversary (Cleveland) was so good. And you’re right about their popularity, at one point Bono could have run for President of the world and also been elected Pope...simultaneously. A U2 concert is probably the closest you can get to going to church without actually going to church. Thanks for the multiple memories, y’all!

  • @kyliemitchellharper6872
    @kyliemitchellharper6872 Před 3 lety +10

    Im in Australia and I sat up all night watching LIVE AID just to see U2, have been to every Sydney show, except 84, too young, wasnt allowed to go, but my brother did and I stayed home and cried!
    JT tour just came to Sydney last year!
    I think his part in Band Aid, Do they know its christmas was brilliant too, maybe show her that!!

  • @_uptoolate_2284
    @_uptoolate_2284 Před 4 lety +6

    Being a guy who lived through the sheer wonder of early U2, I cannot help but smile and laugh at this guy's excitement. It truly was magical. So happy to see him pass the torch to his daughter.

  • @argotejosegregorio
    @argotejosegregorio Před 3 lety +18

    Simplesmente lindo, muito lindo, não fica velho nunca, 2020 simplesmente cult. Ou não???!!!!!!.....

  • @jasontaverner391
    @jasontaverner391 Před 3 lety +6

    "Do I know this song?" Edge's jangly guitar work is so instantly recognizable, it's easy to think you have.

  • @davedublin1
    @davedublin1 Před 3 lety +10

    The guy who's dealing with Bono's mic, his roadie, in this was Greg Carroll. He died in a motorbike accident in Dublin the following year running an errand for Bono. The following album, the Joshua Tree, was dedicated to him, and there's a song on it called One Tree Hill which is the town in New Zealand Greg was from

    • @fredsmith6324
      @fredsmith6324 Před 3 lety

      i remember that guy, i did not know he had died or that one tree hill was about him. so tragic. thanks for the info.

    • @stefankirner7347
      @stefankirner7347 Před rokem

      ...it is not a town, it`s a spot, a hill with only one tree and a monument on top...

  • @amarisviv
    @amarisviv Před 4 lety +53

    I was there and 16 years old! I will never ever forget this moment. CHILLS!!!!!!!!

    • @ytaka72
      @ytaka72 Před 3 lety +2

      What a beautiful woman you are!
      Greetings from Italy.

    • @marine4lyfe85
      @marine4lyfe85 Před 3 lety +1

      I was 18 and about graduate from Parris Island.

  • @jmardo6825
    @jmardo6825 Před rokem +11

    Greatest live performance of all time!! That song right there on that day

    • @2011watchman
      @2011watchman Před rokem +1

      True that! The clarity of Bono's voice along with rhythmic, mesmerizing guitar play makes this a standalone performance for the ages.

  • @Baudelaire_TheAccursed
    @Baudelaire_TheAccursed Před rokem +13

    This is one of those cases when the live version far surpasses the studio version, U2 is amazing!

  • @louloumacd4122
    @louloumacd4122 Před 4 lety +41

    I was 9 at the time. They were my heroes. They still are. Amazingly they were all around 25 at the time. Find me any 25 year old superstars today who could write and perform like that. And then still be doing it just as well 35 years later. This was one of many absolutely epic performances over the years. Best band in the world and of all time. Awesome review 😊😊😊
    Show her the performance of Streets recorded on the LA rooftop!

    • @morebsnstuf
      @morebsnstuf Před 4 lety

      Posty, God willing. He is 24 now.

  • @danielhogan7749
    @danielhogan7749 Před 4 lety +30

    Interesting note about when he first starts singing: The song is 'Satellite of Love' by Lou Reed. It's from the album TRANSFORMER, which was produced by David Bowie. Bowie provided background vocals on that track, including the "bum-bum" melody that Bono was singing at the beginning (although Bowie sang a three note riff and Bono sang a two note version for breath/timing, as he was combining the two vocal parts). So aside from doing a bit of "Walk on the Wild Side" later on, he also starts off by singing a little Lou Reed and David Bowie. Spectacular performance all around by Bono and the band.
    czcams.com/video/FH2EgYq_NCY/video.html

  • @OlafProt
    @OlafProt Před rokem +3

    Because, understandably, the other three didn't know what was going on, they thought they'd blown it. They didn't know to keep going they just, thankfully, did. When actually - this was THE moment it all changed. I remember my sister (who was 17) saying afterwards, "Nick, they are gonna be HUGE". I guess they were pretty much the only 'new' band that wasn't from the 70s or earlier that utterly killed it. I saw them at this very same venue 8 years later on the Zooropa tour, and it was incredible.
    So true what 'they' say about the Queen performance overshadowing everyone else. U2 were also utterly brilliant, as was Bowie and Elton. But yeah, there was some pretty lacklustre stuff too obviously (I thought the Beach Boys sucked lol).
    I was 13, and this was some formative shit happening. It gives me chills even now. This just doesn't happen anymore, this is why these guys will live forever because we will have to look back, to know those moments when humans managed to be heroes, just for a day.

  • @siferg5601
    @siferg5601 Před 3 lety +14

    Still sends chills down my spine! Amazing.

  • @erwinquiachon8054
    @erwinquiachon8054 Před 4 lety +69

    Tear jerker to see Greg Carroll alive in this video. The Joshua Tree album was dedicated to him after he died while they were recording. He's the curly haired one following Bono around on stage as a roadie/security. Apparently "One Tree Hill" is written about his funeral. Here's an interesting video for "One Tree Hill" showing some scenes from his funeral and the actual One Tree Hill in New Zealand, where he was burried. "And when it's raining
    ... Raining hard... That's when the rain will... Break my heart... Raining, raining in the heart " Bono still sounds like he's mourning in this live version. Heartbreaking. czcams.com/video/H2kWgm-0xmM/video.html

  • @davelee47
    @davelee47 Před 4 lety +18

    The first time I saw U2 was this day live and this was the first song I heard that hooked me. For me from that day forward I immersed myself in the band, all based on this performance. The Edge with his haunting guitar in the background as Bono danced with that girl sent chills through me. I read somewhere that the rest of the band were furious that he did that as they were scheduled to play more songs in their set but it was eaten up by all the distraction..... Not for me... The whole song, dance and all encapsulated what the whole day was about. I watched the whole day and years later I heard that Queen also sang at the event.... Don't get me wrong I love Queen and I am a massive Elton John fan since the 70's but for me this was U2's day. This concert catapulted them into the greatest band in the world for a long while.

    • @elessarlanguages2490
      @elessarlanguages2490 Před 4 lety

      YES, that! I'm right there with you. Also, what happened was that Bono had a couple of routines during their gigs that scared the band because he'd usually put himself in risky situations. Just watch what he did at Red Rocks climbing the scaffolding to the top. So before the Live Aid concert the other band members gave him an ultimatum because they knew the stadium would be packed and they were afraid him pulling people out of the crowd could end up in disaster. Not only physically hurting others, but also turning their gig into a mess. I love the guys, but thank goodness they were wrong. lol

  • @kellyb1420
    @kellyb1420 Před 3 lety +6

    I think this is when most people witnessed Bono compassion for people in need? Also 1st time people who didn’t know of the band U2. And witnessed 1st hand just how strong and powerful Bono’s vocals really were. Not to mention the fact that Bono is a Lyrical Genius!!! The Band and Bono only produce songs they are passionate about? Love this band for life!!!♥️❤️♥️❤️

  • @chrisjuliano3964
    @chrisjuliano3964 Před 3 lety +5

    I was 14 years old in 1985. I remember watching this live. I can't even count how many times I've watched this treasure of a performance. My all time favorite version of this song. I get goosebumps...EVERY TIME, I get chills...EVERY TIME, I get tears in my eyes EVERY TIME.

  • @KevinSmith-fe9rn
    @KevinSmith-fe9rn Před 4 lety +14

    Watched all of Live Aid that day and the USA equivalent and Bad is one of the stand out performances of all time, the rest of the band don't get enough credit for the way they keep the melody going without missing a note. 35 years on and whenever I see or here this version I still remember all the lyrics even where Bone freestyles it out. Awesome performance.

  • @villegas24
    @villegas24 Před 4 lety +18

    I also got into U2 as a kid, something about their shows and their music is captivating at any age. This performance still makes my eyes water.

  • @geeeze2403
    @geeeze2403 Před rokem +14

    Legend has it that the rest of the band are STILL playing that riff to this day..

  • @bredaobrennan9993
    @bredaobrennan9993 Před 3 lety +2

    Being Irish, I have seen U2 many times live. All major festivals - we only have a population of about 4 million - in my 20's, U2 were the main attraction. They were mind blowing, fantastic, ,they set the bar, no other band or artist could even get close. In fact, I used to frequent a Mexican restaurant in Dublin, they were very often sitting at the next table. My friend brought my attention to them the first time, I looked, mouth open. Would have loved to chat to them, better still, get an autograph. But, again, in Ireland, we really value our privacy, I wouldn't interfere in their private lives. It would be considered, not only rude, but ignorant. That's why celebrities like Ireland. I would suggest you do reaction videos to Sinead O'Connor songs, Nothing Compares to You, being my favourite. Also, The Cranberries, Linger and Zombie. Dolores, God rest her soul, was from my small city, used to bump into her all the time. She was a lady, always said hello and asked how I was. Her brother is now a partner to a friend of mine, a lovely guy. This was an amazing reaction video. Especially considering the age of your daughter. So wonderful when young people get, and more importantly feel real, live music. God Bless you both xx

  • @Thynqikan
    @Thynqikan Před 4 lety +6

    I worked security for a local U2 show in the late 80's and enjoyed hearing them live. After the show they gave so much during the performance that all they wanted to do was sit around on some couches drinking water and ice teas. Love the band

  • @markpotter6594
    @markpotter6594 Před 4 lety +9

    Rushed my paper round that day, to get home to watch U2 that day, the memory of that performance reminds me how far music can take you. It gets into your soul and gives you spirit. Stay safe

  • @saba223
    @saba223 Před 3 lety +3

    I love that you shared this with Annie. Part of the story is that that the band couldn’t see Bono when he jumped off the stage and they didn’t really know whether to keep playing or if he’d gone off to do something else! Bono was in trouble with the others afterwards esp. Larry Mullen Jr! Thanks for this. I had chills when the chords started. And I was reminded once more why I’ve loved and lived this band all my life! I was 14 when I fell in love with them...during the release of The Joshua Tree. That love has been tested a few times but they still give me chills and goosebumps 34 years on.

  • @TerdFerguson
    @TerdFerguson Před 3 lety +10

    Cool that you and your daughter can share music together. Keep up the great work.

  • @teknoxjr
    @teknoxjr Před 4 lety +6

    Finally! Someone highlights One of the worlds best live performances ever. I watched it live, years later I bought the Live Aid the DVDs years later I talk about this moment. Thank you so much for highlighting this and bringing this to lots of people’s attention. Magnificent performance,

  • @deanrobert9953
    @deanrobert9953 Před 4 lety +12

    One of the greatest moments in rock history... good on you to share it. Cheers.

  • @planelvr07
    @planelvr07 Před 3 lety

    Thank you for playing that! I remember watching Liveaid all day! I loved U2 before the concert, but this was the first time I saw them. Truly been a big fan ever since.

  • @Saritabanana
    @Saritabanana Před rokem +5

    YES! One of the few bands I'd rather watch their live performances rather than the videos. Oh god I'm back in time with my mom in Junior High taking road trips and singing loud with the windows down! I love seeing this precious generation discovering these guys. THE EDGE! unlike any other! best dad award

  • @michaelchamberlain3106
    @michaelchamberlain3106 Před 4 lety +5

    Slight correction needed. The 'ad libs' at the end weren't added because of a realisation they had overran their 2nd song and needed to fill. They should have played 'Pride', the single at the time. The snippets of 'Ruby Tuesday' and 'Sympathy For The Devil' are well documented as being sung earlier on The Unforgettable Fire Tour as far back as February '85. Bono had a run of The Velvet Underground's 'Waiting For The Man' in 'Bad' from January '85 then adding 'Walk On The Wild Side' in May '85. So those snippets were well rehearsed and expected by the band before Live Aid in July.
    The band were furious at Bono for not getting to play the single which was one of the main aims of playing the concert - single promotion.
    From Rolling Stone: 'Mullen, Clayton, and the Edge were unhappy with Bono’s venture into the crowd, which hung them out to dry and denied the band a chance to play their biggest hit, “Pride (In the Name of Love).” The consensus among the four band members was that their performance had been clumsy and earthbound. “We felt like we’d blown an opportunity to be great,” Mullen said.
    “It was a great day, but I thought I had fucked it up,” Bono said. He flew home to Ireland with his wife Ali, visiting her parents in Wexford, brooding about what felt like a massive failure.
    The Edge said, “It really took us by surprise when people started talking about U2 as one of the noteworthy performances of the day. I thought they were joking, I really thought we were crap. But looking back, as I did a week later, I started to see what it was. It was the sense of real, total jeopardy, which is always very exciting for a live event, and Bono’s complete determination to make physical contact with the crowd and eventually getting there after two minutes of struggling over barriers. I think there was something about the effort he had to put in to do it that somehow made it even more powerful.”
    Considering Live Aid years later, Bono summed up U2’s set: “Crap sound, crap haircuts, and we didn’t end up playing the hit ‘Pride (In the Name of Love)’ because the singer fucked off into the crowd - band wanted to fire me as a result..."

  • @kevinjfallon
    @kevinjfallon Před 4 lety +11

    When Live Aid happened they said it was a once in a lifetime viewing. It was never going to be shown again. Of course that’s not what happened. They released it many years later. As my children were growing up I told the story of this being the greatest performance I had ever seen and too bad it will never be released (according to Bob Geldof). So when the DVD was released my children surprised me with it. We all watched it together. All those years later I was still blown away! Glad your daughter liked it.

    • @amnril
      @amnril Před 4 lety +2

      Bob Geldof wanted no recordings made, what an idiot, thank god recordings around the world could stick together most of the concerts.

  • @DBMe33
    @DBMe33 Před 3 lety +10

    My favorite part is the ad libs Bono does, the walk on the wild side, sympathy for the devil, ruby tuesday lines. His version of the walk in the wild side lines randomly replay in my head to this day. I thought that was a great, spontaneous audience engagement moment for a day like that.
    I bought the album initially bc of that performance. Of course, the live aid performance was very different from the album version.
    I knew about the static about them going over their time but I never knew about her having that experience being the reason that he brought her on stage.
    And I was always piqued by the blk earring in his ear. At least I guess that it is lol. Back then, I wasnt sure if it was an earring or something physical on his ear bc it was in an odd spot for a single ear piercing. Blk earrings or any earrings in str8 male ears back then wasnt the norm, so my brain latched onto it especially with him being who he was & not having much if a sense of them beyond the music. Up to that point I had only seen a Bono interview in 1984 about them performing 'Sunday Bloody Sunday' in Ireland.
    Thats what happens when u have an organic anal retentive, ocd minded observational nature. All of those small things that get permanently filed in to the ? cabinet of ur mind bc u dont have an answer & ur mind is obsessd with having an answers. 🤓✌🏼

  • @redneckprofessor1
    @redneckprofessor1 Před 3 lety +1

    I was lucky enough to see U2 at the Civic Arena in Pittsburgh in the mid-80’s at the height of their popularity. It was like a religious experience. The advantage of being inside was that they could control the lights, which created an amazingly moving lyrics and performance. We all left feeling like we’d been to the coolest huge revival! People were in such good moods after the show. So much so that when I went to my car to leave, I clutch was gone. I couldn’t even get it off of the road. A huge bunch of guys got together and lifted my car up on to the road so we could coast to a dealer. After sitting through a highly spiritual version of MLK in the dark with just candlelight (and lighters). People were holding hands in the seats! Truly moving on so many levels. Plus, every older women like me were all madly in love with Bono! 😂😂😂

  • @fabiomagalhaes7292
    @fabiomagalhaes7292 Před 4 lety +12

    U2 are one of the best live performing bands in the world, no wonder why the concert tickets are expensive, still worth it i reckon... hope i get to see them live at least once in my lifetime!

    • @GlitchintheMatrixMultiMedia
      @GlitchintheMatrixMultiMedia  Před 4 lety +2

      If you get a chance, don't miss it, I promise you will not have buyers remorse on the cost of the tickets.

    • @ryanfarrell153
      @ryanfarrell153 Před 4 lety +1

      I went to the Joshua tree tour here in NZ, first big concert I've been to and it was surreal. One of those things you have to see to believe

    • @boazbell38
      @boazbell38 Před 4 lety +1

      @@GlitchintheMatrixMultiMedia I've paid my share for U2 tickets.. but I actually saw the Joshua Tree Tour's Last concert at Sun Devil Stadium in 1987 they were filming for Rattle and Hum and wanted to fill the stadium so they only charged $5.00 a ticket.. I was a freshman at ASU.. bought 20 tickets and took my Manzanita dorm mates with me .. I had already seen them a handful of times at the time and knew how amazing they were .. have seen them over 30 times.. all over the world one time I saw them on a Friday, Saturday and Sunday at Chicago's Soldier field in the 90's.. I was tired at the Sunday Show- but they sounded perfect every single show- they NEVER disappoint!

  • @michaelmcshane6395
    @michaelmcshane6395 Před 4 lety +9

    Rip Greg. This was one of those performances that drives me to tears every time. You see bono and that level of caring back then (and contrast that with the awesome humanitarian he is today) and it is simply amazing but also honest. Thank you two for sharing that honesty also. Stay safe and keep on rocking. I am hopeful that we as a species can become more kinder and gentle with each other. Peace.

  • @Backez
    @Backez Před rokem +3

    I've read an artcile that said that the band almost broke up after that show, due to Bono's interaction with the crowd, but that's exactly what made them even more famous at that time. Love this band thanks to my father.

  • @davidrolston2249
    @davidrolston2249 Před 3 lety +1

    Lead singer and bassist of Thin Lizzy, Phil Lynott grew up in Dublin, and was a huge international rock star when the boys from U2 were young dreamers. Lynott died in january 1986 at the age of 36, after years of Heroin addiction. This was a huge blow to music fans throughout the country. Aside from Lynott, none of the other members died from drug issues at this time, and of the Irish members, several are still alive and well in their 70's.

  • @S0mewhat_Damaged
    @S0mewhat_Damaged Před 4 lety +47

    It was actually the singer phil lynott from Thin Lizzy who died from Heroin. Great video though, love the reacts to Irish bands, being an Irishman myself. Keep it up.

    • @GlitchintheMatrixMultiMedia
      @GlitchintheMatrixMultiMedia  Před 4 lety +3

      Appreciate the additional info on Phil, I knew I was close but didn't want to get it too wrong. Sometimes things come to me during videos and if I am not 100% I just say what I know for the most part.

    • @graemecollin
      @graemecollin Před 4 lety +3

      Singer and bassist ... :)

    • @S0mewhat_Damaged
      @S0mewhat_Damaged Před 4 lety +1

      @@graemecollin Gary Moore? He died of a heart attack partly brought on by Alcohol.

    • @graemecollin
      @graemecollin Před 4 lety +1

      @@S0mewhat_Damaged No, Philip Lynnott - he was both the singer and bass player ... Gary Moore died 25 years later, but I do agree that he is another legendary Irish musician, and one of my all-time favourite guitarists!

    • @cephalotus59
      @cephalotus59 Před 4 lety +5

      @@GlitchintheMatrixMultiMedia About time you did some Thin Lizzy - there's a lot to choose from.

  • @Bodezefah
    @Bodezefah Před 3 lety +8

    a band that can give me goosebumps, just makes me really feel good.

  • @kendoglarson5419
    @kendoglarson5419 Před 3 lety +4

    To ALL my Brothers & Sisters who are here watching this.....you are my People & I Love You ALL. We were the ones who lived this ridiculous year of existence. 1985. We were the U2 Generation. Wide Awake!

  • @jim19714
    @jim19714 Před 3 lety +5

    This reminded me why U2 is legendary. I might be biased because I grew up with them in the 80s but this music still holds up today.

  • @Lutzilla_
    @Lutzilla_ Před 4 lety +14

    funny fact: in 1985 as i watched this, i was nearly as old as Annie is today...still can live aid remember like it was just yesterday. it was a very hot summer day and im sweating on the couch :-) almost watched the whole concert..

    • @Fromnevernever
      @Fromnevernever Před 4 lety +2

      Dude, if I was 5 y/o and I remember this show. I imagine how memorable this was for a 14 y/o at the time.

    • @davidpotts1778
      @davidpotts1778 Před 4 lety +2

      I was 14 at the time and watched it from the very start til about 3 or 4 in the morning when the US finished their show. Awsome. U2 was my fave and got me seriously into them. Queen was amazing too and also if anyone hasn't seen looking up. Patti labelle at luve aid. What a singer!!!

    • @mireilleblacke6567
      @mireilleblacke6567 Před 4 lety +1

      I was 15 at the time, and know exactly what you mean. Especially on the hot summer day part!

  • @kelmco
    @kelmco Před 4 lety +5

    Hi guys, I'm from Holland and every time I see and moreover hear this I cry... it brings so many happy memories. My first concert with U2 was in 1984 in Belgium, still my best one ever

  • @trishagg
    @trishagg Před 3 lety

    You were recommended by youtube while I was watching The Twins and I am grateful for algorithms. You are both genuinely precious. The nostalgia alone for me right now for U2 is such a profound, incredible feeling. I didn't know I needed you. Thank you.

  • @the_proteus_void
    @the_proteus_void Před 2 lety

    This was the video I didn't know I needed to see. I remember seeing this at the time and brought back many emotions and thoughts of that particular moment in history. Thanks.

  • @uppanadam74
    @uppanadam74 Před 4 lety +33

    Bono and his ladies!! Ahhh to be 14 and to fall in love with U2 for the first time all over again!! :-)!!

    • @ctwofirst6635
      @ctwofirst6635 Před 4 lety

      He still love to pull them out of the audience. I'm not sure about the story about the young lady being in trouble. I think Bono just fancied her.

    • @jco6528
      @jco6528 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ctwofirst6635 No, he actually said that she was being crushed in an interview and saw her immediately but the security thought he was pointing to the first 2 girls they pulled out... then he got frustrated because they didn't see who he was pointing to and jumped down off the stage to help them get her out. :) Ya.. it's true he fancies brunettes but she was being crushed and therefore he wanted her pulled out of there even more urgently. Bono saves. :) LOL Love U2 Forever

    • @AndTheRoadGoesEverOn
      @AndTheRoadGoesEverOn Před 3 lety

      Yeah, the last woman actually WAS being crushed. She said iso several interviews. She having trouble breathing because everyone was pushing forward so hard. You can see how when she’s first brought over the edge she can barely stand. She basically collapses onto Bono. Partly to hug him, partly for support.

    • @fredsmith6324
      @fredsmith6324 Před 3 lety

      @@ctwofirst6635 beards

  • @babymullen04
    @babymullen04 Před 4 lety +12

    I was a teenager when this happened, and I stayed up the entire weekend in Australia to watch the live broadcast, not only that I had purchased a lot of black video tapes so I could record it on my vhs recorder. It was the biggest event that I have ever seen, concerts in London, America and even one in Australia all broadcast over that weekend. I have been a U2 fan since I was 11 (nearly 40 years) , and I still thank my brother for giving me the copy of October (on cassette tape) that he received for Christmas because he didn’t like them.

    • @cheripetty1805
      @cheripetty1805 Před 4 lety +2

      I purchased my 1st VCR (SONY) the day before Live Aid specifically to record this historic & momentous occasion!

    • @danspirkmusic
      @danspirkmusic Před 4 lety

      This performance changed their lives.

  • @sheagoff6009
    @sheagoff6009 Před 3 lety +3

    As a 20 year old who has literally grown up with U2, thank you for exposing her to some of the greats!!! It’s one of my favorite bands and you better believe that when I have kids they’re going to be brainwashed with these oldie but goodie bands just like I was. I really had no choice from the time I was very little, anytime we were in the car it was U2 and I just fell in love. I wish more people especially younger people enjoyed U2 as much as I do.

  • @TheManc4
    @TheManc4 Před rokem +2

    this is just great,I was blessed to see U2 at Wembley in 1987..and the fact your daughter just gets it👏🏻makes me smile!!❤️