
U2
U2 is an Irish rock band. Founded in Dublin 1976 with Bono as its frontman alongside The Edge, Adam Clayton, and Larry Mullen Jr., the band started to break through globally with their 1983 album War. They then embarked on a string of classic albums produced by Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois, beginning with 1984’s The Unforgettable Fire (featuring the smash anthem Pride (In The Name Of Love) and The Joshua Tree in 1987. One of the best-selling albums of all time, it produced the No. 1 singles With or Without You and I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For; won them their first Grammy Awards for Album of the Year and Best Rock Performance By a Duo Or Group With Vocal; and was placed on Apple Music’s 100 Best Albums list.
The group has continuously broken box-office records for their global stadium tours supporting Grammy-winning albums—including Achtung Baby, All That You Can't Leave Behind, and How To Dismantle An Atom Bomb, for which they took home a second Album of the Year Grammy—and hit singles such as Beautiful Day and Vertigo. They have collaborated with the likes of Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen, Johnny Cash, Mary J. Blige, Lou Reed, and Luciano Pavarotti.
U2 has appeared in the concert documentaries Rattle and Hum, Bono & The Edge: A Sort of Homecoming with David Letterman, and U2: Innocence + Experience Live in Paris. They were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2005.
Latest Release
- FEB 18, 2026 Days Of Ash - EP

From the early 2010s onward, U2 entered a long period of personal reflection that yielded autobiographical albums (the Songs of Innocence/Songs of Experience albums), Bono’s memoir (Surrender: 40 Songs, One Story), and albums inspired by Bono’s memoir (the career-spanning acoustic-reinterpretations set Songs of Surrender). But on this surprise release, the Irish rock legends are once again saying, “I can’t believe the news today.” Days of Ash is a rarity in the U2 canon: a non-live EP that functions as a mini six-track concept album, and released with none of their characteristic fanfare. And while its dimensions are small, its ambitions are huge, with Bono and co. taking stock of the state of the world—from Minneapolis to Ukraine to Gaza. “American Obituary” is U2’s rueful response to the shooting death of Renée Good by an ICE agent, but its funky Achtung-esque groove and gospel-gilded sentiments (“I love you more than hate loves war!”; “America will rise!”) channel an expression of grief into an uplifting rallying cry. The Dylanesque standout “The Tears of Things” frames the global struggle against authoritarianism with David-vs.-Goliath metaphors and “let my people go” invocations en route to a skyscraping display of Bono in his rabble-rousing element. The liberation anthem “Yours Eternally” sees U2 unite Ed Sheeran with Ukrainian singer/activist Taras Topolia to deliver an alt-pop liberation anthem that hits like a tidal wave. But Days of Ash isn’t all wide-eyed optimism in the face of horror: The EP includes a recitation of Israeli poet Yehuda Amichai’s “Wildpeace”—a former soldier’s meditation on the intergenerational traumas of perpetual war—and follows it with “One Life at a Time,” a tense, acoustic-powered sidewinder that acknowledges peace is more easily preached than achieved.
Discover More
U2 on Apple Music
U2 on Apple TV
About
- FROM
- Dublin, Ireland
- FORMED
- 1976
- GENRE
- Rock