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U2 360° Tour

2009–11 concert tour by U2


2009–11 concert tour by U2

FieldValue
concert_tour_nameU2 360° Tour
imageU2-360-tour-logo.png
image_size220px
image_captionTour logo
typeWorld
artistU2
album*No Line on the Horizon*
location
start_date30 June 2009
end_date30 July 2011
number_of_legs7
number_of_shows111
attendance7.3 million
grossUS$736.4 million
last_tourVertigo Tour
(2005–06)
this_tour**U2 360° Tour**
(2009–11)
next_tourInnocence + Experience Tour
(2015)

(2005–06) (2009–11) (2015)

The U2 360° Tour was a worldwide concert tour by the Irish rock band U2. Staged in support of the group's 2009 album No Line on the Horizon, the tour visited stadiums from 2009 through 2011. The concerts featured the band playing "in the round" on a circular stage, allowing the audience to surround them on all sides. To accommodate the stage configuration, a large four-legged structure nicknamed "The Claw" was built above the stage, with the sound system and a cylindrical, expanding video screen on top of it. At 164 ft tall, it was the largest stage ever constructed. U2 claimed that the tour would be "the first time a band has toured in stadiums with such a unique and original structure."

In an era of declining music sales, analysts expected U2 360° to be a major source of income for the band. Every date of the tour sold out, many within minutes of tickets going on sale. To accommodate the time required to assemble and transport "The Claw" between tour dates, three separate stage structures were required on tour. The 360-degree production increased the capacity of venues by up to 25%, leading to attendance records at over 60 venues. Various themes were incorporated into the shows; portions of the concerts featured outer space themes, due to "The Claw's" resemblance to a spaceship. Pre-recorded messages from the International Space Station were displayed during the shows, as were sociopolitical statements from Desmond Tutu and Aung San Suu Kyi. The setlists were adjusted for each year of the tour; for the 2010 shows, unreleased songs were debuted live, while for 2011 legs, the group performed more 1990s songs to mark the 20th anniversary of the release of Achtung Baby.

Comprising three legs and 110 shows, the tour began on 30 June 2009 in Barcelona, Spain, and concluded on 30 July 2011 in Moncton, New Brunswick. It twice visited Europe and North America, while making stops in South America, Africa, and Oceania. The 2010 North American leg of the tour was postponed until the following year after lead vocalist Bono suffered a serious back injury. U2 won Billboard Touring Awards for Top Tour and Top Draw of 2010 and 2011, and for Top Boxscore at a single venue in 2009 for shows at Croke Park in Dublin. A 2009 show at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California was filmed for the concert video U2360° at the Rose Bowl and was streamed live over YouTube; the concert set a new US attendance record for a single headlining act. The tour was generally well received by critics and fans. By its conclusion, U2 360° had set records for the highest-grossing concert tour with $736 million in ticket sales and the highest-attended tour with over 7.3 million tickets sold; both records stood until 2019.

Conception and stage design

Willie Williams, who has worked on every U2 tour since the 1982–1983 War Tour, was again a designer for this tour; Mark Fisher served as the architect. Williams had been toying with ideas for 360-degree stadium staging for U2 for a number of years, and presented sketches of a four-legged design to the group near the end of their Vertigo Tour in 2006. The inspiration for the "spaceship-on-four-legs" design, nicknamed "the Claw", came from the landmark Theme Building at Los Angeles International Airport. Early reports referred to it as the Kiss the Future Tour, though the name was later changed.

The tour featured a 360-degree configuration, with the stage being placed closer to the center of the stadium's field than usual. The stage design featured a large four-legged steel structure that held the speaker system and cylindrical video screen and hovered above the performance area. The stage was surrounded by a circular ramp, which connected to the stage by rotating bridges. Fans with general admission tickets could be placed both outside the ramp as well as between the ramp and stage. The stage had no defined front or back and was surrounded by the audience. The stage design was able to increase the venues' capacities by about 15–20%. Tiered football stadiums were preferred venues in this scheme, compared to flat fields or baseball stadiums, although a few of the latter added to the routing. As with many large-scale tours of its era, the U2 360° Tour had both the workforce and the revenues associated with a medium-sized company.

It's still daytime, and the spire stands out against a clear blue sky. The stage is empty and audience members are just starting to arrive at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia.
A spire on top added to the stage's height.

The stages were built by the Belgian company Stageco along with the U.S.-based company Enerpac. Each stage deployed high-pressure, state-of-the-art hydraulic systems. These were used for the first time ever to assemble and dismantle the high-tonnage structure. Stageco designed a unique system, based on Enerpac's Synchronous Lift System, to raise the modular construction to a height of 30 metres in an efficient and effective manner.

The steel structure was 51 metres (167 feet) tall (doubling the size of the stadium set for The Rolling Stones' A Bigger Bang Tour, the previous record holder), was able to hold up to 200 tonnes underneath it, and required 120 trucks to transport each of the three sets constructed to support the tour. Each leg of the structure contained its own sound system. The cost of each structure was between £15 million and £20 million ($23 million and $31 million, respectively). As a result, the tour was heavily insured. The size of the stage led to some problems with its construction in certain venues. The band paid $2 million to raise the HD video screen in Cowboys Stadium for their concert in Arlington, and paid $3 million to expand the Hippodrome de Montréal into a temporary stadium for their concert in Montreal. The 360° tour crew consisted of 137 touring production crew supplemented by over 120 hired locally. Daily costs of the production were approximately $750,000, not including the stage construction; the majority of this came from truck rentals, transportation, and staff wages. The tour was not expected to break even until the conclusion of the second leg.

When the tour was announced, U2 guitarist The Edge said of the show's design: "It's hard to come up with something that's fundamentally different, but we have, I think, on this tour. Where we're taking our production will never have been seen before by anybody, and that's an amazing thing to be able to say. For a band like U2 that really thrives on breaking new ground, it's a real thrill." Lead singer Bono said the design was intended to overcome the staid traditional appearance of outdoor concerts where the stage was dominated by speaker stacks on either side: "We have some magic, and we've got some beautiful objects we're going to take around the world, and we're inside that object." He also said that the group's goal was for the show to not be too choreographed. Williams said the goal is to establish a physical proximity: "The band is just sitting in the palm of the audience's hand." At the conclusion of the tour, the intent was to leave the three structures in different parts of the globe and turn them into permanent concert venues. An auction of the stages was planned following the last concert. In April 2018, it was announced that the Loveland Living Planet Aquarium in Utah had reached a deal to permanently install one of the claw stages on its expanded campus; the structure was planned to be fully assembled by July 2019.

The transforming video screen was designed by Mark Fisher in a collaboration with Chuck Hoberman and Frederic Opsomer. The screen was fabricated by Opsomer's company Innovative Designs of Belgium, using LED pixels manufactured by Barco. The screen was purchased and rented to the tour by XL Video. It is made up of elongated hexagonal segments mounted on a multiple pantograph system, which enables it to "open up" or spread apart vertically as an effect during the concerts. The video screen is composed of over one million pieces: 411,000 pixels, 320,000 fasteners, 150,000 machined pieces, and 30,000 cables are needed to create the visual display at each concert. The screen is mounted on a cabled pulley system to enable the entire screen and pantograph system to move lower and closer to the band. The automation for the screen deployment was provided by Kinesys UK. The LED segments of the screen are weather-resistant.

U2 announced that it would purchase carbon offsets to take into consideration the environmental impact of the large production, which has been estimated to be up to 65,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide; approximately the same amount that would be emitted in flying a passenger plane 34 million miles. In addition to the carbon offsets, the band also set up a page on PickupPal so that people could carpool to concerts in an attempt to lower the carbon footprint. Additionally they launched a fan travel carbon offset program in partnership with Offset Options. Most of the carbon emissions are a result of transporting the three stage structures across Europe and North America. An environmental consultant to carbonfootprint.com noted that to offset the tour's 2009 emissions, the band would have to plant over 20,000 trees. In an interview with BBC Radio, The Edge reiterated that U2 were offsetting their carbon emissions, also stating, "We'd love to have some alternative to big trucks bringing the stuff around but there just isn't one."

A concert stage; four large legs curve up above the stage and hold a video screen which is extended down to the band. The legs were lit up in green. The video screen has multi-coloured lights flashing on it. The audience surrounds the stage on all sides.
"The Claw" features an expanding video screen and elaborate lighting effects.

Load-out of the massive set from venues took as much as days. Sound and light equipment was packed into the fleet of trucks first during the four hours following the concert; the remainder of the time was spent deconstructing the steel structures making up the stage using four cranes. The extensive amount of time it took to assemble and disassemble the stage interfered with the development of the schedule for the 2010 Major League Baseball season, due to U2 scheduling shows at four MLB stadiums: O.co Coliseum in Oakland, Angel Stadium in Anaheim, Rogers Centre in Toronto, and Busch Stadium in St. Louis. U2 was also forced to reschedule what would have been their final Giants Stadium concert, when the NFL changed the start time of a New York Jets game, and load-out time from the concert a day and a half prior would have been insufficient.

Commercial partnerships and philanthropy

The tour was U2's first under their 12-year deal with Live Nation. It was sponsored by BlackBerry, in a move that broke U2's prior relationship with Apple Inc. and opened possibilities for collaborations between U2 and Research in Motion on mobile music experiences. Lead singer Bono said of the new relationship, "I'm very excited about this. Research in Motion is going to give us what Apple wouldn't: access to their labs and their people so we can do something really spectacular." The explicit corporate sponsorship of a tour was a first for the group, and was due to the anticipated production costs being higher than for any previous U2 tour. The first commercials for a new BlackBerry application, called the "U2 Mobile App", began airing in early July 2009 against the song "I'll Go Crazy If I Don't Go Crazy Tonight"; the application allows the user to listen to the album No Line on the Horizon, contains a news section which features updates about the tour, and an interactive section that allows the sharing of images and enables the user to see their position during a concert relative to the band and other application users. Models of the stage were added to Google Earth approximately a week before the scheduled concert took place; tour architect Mark Fisher stated, "We thought it would be interesting to put up on Google Earth a piece of portable architecture."

A category of stage-close seats called "The Red Zone" was created to be sold by an auction process, at prices estimated at up to €1,000 ($1,300). All proceeds are to be donated by U2 members to charity, with The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria expected to receive much of it. Approximately €9 million ($11 million) in U2 360° Tour profits is expected to go to charity. The band asked fans to bring masks of Aung San Suu Kyi to concerts and wear them during performances of "Walk On" in her support; the song was originally written for Suu Kyi.

The tour was subject to minor criticisms, at both the events surrounding the opening concerts in Barcelona, and the concerts in Dublin. When rehearsing for the tour in Barcelona, residents of the city complained about the band's noise after 10 pm, which was the time until which the city allowed the band to rehearse. The setup of the band's stage for the Croke Park concerts in Dublin was criticised by fans for only allowing seating around part of the circular-shaped stage, taking away from the 360° seating configuration that was used at other venues. One fan claimed that only 270° of seating around the stage was being utilised for the three Dublin concerts, and that there was no reason that the stage could not be placed in the middle of the venue. Additional criticisms about the Croke Park shows arose from about 80 Dublin citizens, who protested against the Dublin City Council for allowing the band's crew to dismantle the stage in the middle of the night following the three concerts, due to the loud noises caused by the crew. The protest blocked several crew trucks from exiting the venue, putting the tour behind schedule, and tour promoter MCD Productions delivered a letter to the protesters informing them that they could be sued for any of the tour's financial losses due to the protest. In addition to the loudness of the band's crew, the Dublin City Council decided to withhold the band's €80,000 ($104,000) bond, after breaking the 75 decibel maximum volume at all three of the Dublin concerts.

Like most concerts, tour venues have benefited from hosting concerts. North Carolina State University's agreement with Live Nation resulted in $166,000 in parking proceeds and $175,858 food and beverage concessions. Additionally Live Nation agreed to pay for replacing the sod on the football field where the stage and floor seating was located up to a cost of $250,000.

Ticketing and itinerary

The initial tour dates were announced in March 2009. U2 played 44 shows in that year. The tour began in Barcelona on 30 June and played in Europe through 22 August 2009. The North American leg of the tour began on 12 September 2009 in Chicago followed by two nights in Toronto and ended on 28 October 2009 in Vancouver. The band played in Europe in 2010 following the postponement of the second North American leg until 2011. They finished 2010 by playing Australia and New Zealand in November and December. There were multiple shows in each city making it the largest stadium tour of Australia in the band's history.

U2 manager Paul McGuinness confessed anxiety over initial ticket sales taking place during the late 2000s recession. Drummer Larry Mullen, Jr. said, "Will we sell it out? Who knows? Will the economic situation have an impact? Probably. But that's not going to stop us." Bono said, "I want to put on an extraordinary show, but I'd like to own my house when it's over." The tour featured a tiered pricing system for tickets; the most expensive ticket being slightly higher in price than the last tour, but the cheapest tickets, the general admission tickets, being lower. Playing larger capacity venues allowed the band to price tickets more conservatively and subsidise less expensive tickets with costlier ones. In the US, field level tickets were priced at $55, and approximately 10,000 tickets per show were priced at $30. The price points were $30, $55, and depending on the market, $90–95 and $250. McGuinness said, "We have worked very hard to ensure that U2 fans can purchase a great-priced ticket with a guaranteed great view."

Tickets for European shows first went on sale in mid-March, with high demand. Shows in Gothenburg, Amsterdam and Milan sold out reasonably fast, with second dates being added in each city; those also sold out quickly. In The Netherlands, demand rendered all of KPN's 0900 paid service numbers unreachable. The nearly 90,000 tickets for the opening concert in Barcelona were sold in 54 minutes, establishing a new record for concerts in Spain. The tour set a record by selling 650,000 tickets in seven hours. Regarding the quick sellout of two Croke Park shows in Dublin, Bono said: "It's overwhelming, really. It's a very big deal for us to sell-out our hometown at such speed, it's unbelievable. ... We don't take anything for granted." Fans from all around the world travelled to Ireland for the band's hometown shows, leading the Gaelic Athletic Association to close their museum in Croke Park for the duration of the events due to fears over security and excessive demand. The Croke Park shows later won Top Boxscore at the 2009 Billboard Touring Awards.

The first North American tickets went on sale in late March. Fans who purchased general admission tickets were given seating closest to the stage on a first-come, first-served basis. Presales were held for U2.com subscribers, with those holding membership the longest getting the first chance to purchase tickets. Sales were strong, with initial dates in Chicago and outside Boston and New York selling out within minutes once the public sale began, and with second shows being added at each venue. Due to the higher capacity of the 360 degree configuration, the shows often set records for the largest concert attendance at each venue; tour director Craig Evans claims the tour set attendance records for 60 different venues. Two of the U2 360° Tour's concerts remain in the top five highest-attended single concerts in the United States ever, with the 25 October performance in Pasadena, California, setting the record at 97,014 attendees.

The high US demand for tickets for the tour, and the difficulty which some fans had in getting them, brought attention to rapidity with which tickets turned up on the higher-priced secondary market. Some tickets were being resold on the secondary market for prices of up to $7,500. Additionally, pre-sale passwords were being sold on eBay for bids of up to $400. Although some artists were known to be holding back tickets from general sale and delivering them straight into the secondary market, Live Nation said that U2 did not engage in this practice.

Postponement of 2010 North American shows

Bono sustained an injury to his back during preparation for the North American third leg of the tour, the damage to which included sciatica, a ligament tear, a herniated disc, and partial paralysis of his lower leg and resulted in the need for emergency spine surgery at Ludwig Maximilians-University Hospital in Munich. Following the surgery, Live Nation announced that the opening concert in Salt Lake City, which had been scheduled to take place on 3 June 2010, would be postponed to a later date, with other dates also potentially being affected. His doctors, who included noted sports physician Hans-Wilhelm Müller-Wohlfahrt, then said Bono had a good prognosis but would need eight weeks of physical rehabilitation, and McGuinness and Live Nation announced that the entire North American leg was being postponed and would be rescheduled into 2011. McGuinness stated, "Our biggest and I believe best tour has been interrupted and we're all devastated. For a performer who lives to be on stage, this is more than a blow. He [Bono] feels robbed of the chance to do what he does best and feels like he has badly let down the band and their audience."

On 13 July 2010, the rescheduled concert dates were announced for 2011, beginning 11 May in Mexico City, Mexico, and ending 30 July in Moncton, Canada. Bono apologised for the inconvenience to fans over their affected travel plans, but noted that it had given the band the opportunity to record new material in the studio which U2 were considering playing live.

Concert setlists and show themes

Main set

Bono and Adam Clayton during a concert in Charlottesville, Virginia.

Each concert of the U2 360° Tour contained between 22 and 26 songs. Two songs played over the public address system preceded the band's arrival on stage—David Bowie's "Space Oddity" and an outtake from the No Line on the Horizon sessions called "Soon" (previously titled "Kingdom of Your Love"). The opening five tracks were identical each night on the first leg; "Breathe" opened and was followed by "No Line on the Horizon", "Get on Your Boots", "Magnificent", and "Beautiful Day". The next few tracks featured the most variation of the setlist. "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" was played frequently, while early concerts featured a selection from "Angel of Harlem", "In a Little While", "Desire", and "Party Girl". Concerts later on included "Mysterious Ways", "Until the End of the World", "New Year's Day", and "Stuck in a Moment You Can't Get Out Of". "Stay (Faraway, So Close!)", "Elevation, and "Electrical Storm" were played on rare occasions, and "One", which usually closed the main set, was sometimes performed about half-way through. The rest of the setlist had little variation. "Unknown Caller" was played most nights, and was followed by "The Unforgettable Fire", "City of Blinding Lights", and "Vertigo". The remix arrangement of "I'll Go Crazy If I Don't Go Crazy Tonight" was performed next, featuring Larry Mullen, Jr. walking around the outer stage playing a djembe, followed by "Sunday Bloody Sunday", which features scenes from the 2009 Iranian election protests on the video screen. "Pride (In the Name of Love)", "MLK", "Walk On", "Where the Streets Have No Name", and "One" typically rounded out the main set, though the band occasionally closed it with "Bad" or "Mysterious Ways". "One" was usually preceded by a video from Archbishop Desmond Tutu talking about aid to Africa and the ONE campaign, though the video was played prior to "Where the Streets Have No Name" on occasion.

The second leg of the tour featured more variation in the first part of the setlist. "Breathe" opened most concerts, though its place was occasionally taken by "Magnificent". "No Line on the Horizon" continued to follow "Breathe" in early setlists, but was later moved back so that it followed "Beautiful Day" instead. "Mysterious Ways" and "Elevation" were performed more frequently, as was "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For". "Your Blue Room", a track from Original Soundtracks 1, made its live debut on the tour (with recorded guest vocals by Sinéad O'Connor), while "Pride (In the Name of Love)" was dropped. "Unknown Caller" was dropped for a period of several weeks before being revived towards the end of the leg, and "In a Little While" also returned to the setlist.

The third leg of the tour featured the debut of six previously unreleased songs: "North Star", "Glastonbury", the instrumental "Return of the Stingray Guitar", "Every Breaking Wave", "Mercy" and "Boy Falls from the Sky", a song written by Bono and The Edge for the musical Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark. "Every Breaking Wave" was later released on U2's following studio album, Songs of Innocence (2014), and "Return of the Stingray Guitar" evolved into the backing track for the song "Lucifer's Hands", which was released on deluxe editions of the same album. "Breathe", "Stuck in a Moment You Can't Get Out Of", and "Unknown Caller" were dropped from rotation, while "Miss Sarajevo", "I Will Follow", "Mothers of the Disappeared", "Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me, Kill Me" and "Spanish Eyes" made their tour debuts. On the fourth leg of the tour, "Scarlet" was performed in place of "MLK" and dedicated to the release of Suu Kyi. "One Tree Hill" made its tour debut and was dedicated to the 29 miners who died in the Pike River Mine disaster; their names were shown on the screen at the conclusion of the song. "All I Want Is You" and "Love Rescue Me" were also included in the set during the fourth leg.

During the sixth leg of the tour in South America, the "Fish Out of Water" remix of "Even Better Than The Real Thing", later released in the 20th anniversary reissue of Achtung Baby, was revived as the show opener. "Out of Control" and "Zooropa" were also debuted, while "In a Little While" was dropped from the setlist. The seventh leg saw the tour debut of "The Fly". It moved "Mysterious Ways" and "Until the End of the World" both up in the setlist to be the third and fourth songs following "The Fly". The last show in Moncton, New Brunswick had the chorus of "The Ballad of Springhill" included in the setlist, as a tribute to the nearby town of Springhill, Nova Scotia, which suffered from a large mining disaster in 1958.

Encores

During the encore, Bono wore a laser-embedded suit and sang into a "glowing steering wheel" microphone which hung from above.

The encore was identical each night and consisted of "Ultraviolet (Light My Way)", "With or Without You", and "Moment of Surrender". "Ultraviolet" featured an elaborate staging wherein Bono wore a suit with embedded with lasers that shone through the violet lighting scheme, while singing to, around, and hanging from, an illuminated steering wheel–shaped microphone dropped from above. Following the band's exit from the stage, Elton John's "Rocket Man" was played. Beginning on the second leg of the tour "One" opened the first encore and was followed by "Where the Streets Have No Name", with "Amazing Grace" often used to bridge between them. The second encore remained unchanged until the third leg, when "Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me, Kill Me" was debuted; U2 rotated it with "Ultraviolet (Light My Way)" to open the encore. At the 2 July 2011 show in Nashville, Bono invited a visually impaired fan on-stage to play "All I Want Is You" on guitar for his wife after the normal set closer "Moment of Surrender." After the song, Bono gave the fan his Gretsch Irish Falcon guitar. each closed a single show, each of them played after usual closer "Moment of Surrender".

Diversity of material performed

"The Unforgettable Fire" and "Love Rescue Me" were played in a U2 concert for the first time since the Lovetown Tour in 1990. "Ultraviolet (Light My Way)" and "Zooropa" had not been performed by the band since the Zoo TV Tour in 1993, while "Electrical Storm", a 2002 single from The Best of 1990–2000, was played for the first time ever. "Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me, Kill Me" was played for the first time since the end of the PopMart Tour in 1998. "Scarlet", from the group's 1981 album October, was played for the first time ever in a concert setting, and for the first time since 1981. Although the band's set became more diverse as the tour went on, the band played fewer songs from No Line on the Horizon, which Mullen felt was "a little bit of a defeat."

Setlist

The following setlists performed were at the 15 August 2009 concert held at Wembley Stadium in London, the 2 October 2010 concert held at Estádio Cidade de Coimbra in Coimbra, and the 20 July 2011 concert held at New Meadowlands Stadium in New Jersey. These do not represent all shows throughout the tour.

2009

  1. "Breathe"
  2. "No Line on the Horizon"
  3. "Get On Your Boots"
  4. "Magnificent"
  5. "Beautiful Day"
  6. "Until the End of the World"
  7. "New Year's Day"
  8. "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For"
  9. "Stay (Faraway, So Close!)"
  10. "Unknown Caller"
  11. "The Unforgettable Fire"
  12. "City of Blinding Lights"
  13. "Vertigo"
  14. "I'll Go Crazy If I Don't Go Crazy Tonight" (Remix version)
  15. "Sunday Bloody Sunday"
  16. "Pride (In the Name of Love)"
  17. "MLK"
  18. "Walk On"
  19. "Where the Streets Have No Name"
  20. "One"
  21. "Bad"

Encore

  1. "Ultraviolet (Light My Way)"
  2. "With or Without You"
  3. "Moment of Surrender"

2010

  1. "Return of the Stingray Guitar"
  2. "Beautiful Day"
  3. "I Will Follow"
  4. "Get On Your Boots"
  5. "Magnificent"
  6. "Mysterious Ways"
  7. "Elevation"
  8. "Until the End of the World"
  9. "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For"
  10. "North Star"
  11. "Mercy"
  12. "In a Little While"
  13. "Miss Sarajevo"
  14. "City of Blinding Lights"
  15. "Vertigo"
  16. "I'll Go Crazy If I Don't Go Crazy Tonight" (Remix version)
  17. "Sunday Bloody Sunday"
  18. "MLK"
  19. "Walk On"

Encore 1

  1. "One"
  2. "Where the Streets Have No Name"

Encore 2

  1. "Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me, Kill Me"
  2. "With or Without You"
  3. "Moment of Surrender"

2011

  1. "Even Better Than the Real Thing"
  2. "The Fly"
  3. "Mysterious Ways"
  4. "Until the End of the World"
  5. "I Will Follow"
  6. "Get On Your Boots"
  7. "Magnificent"
  8. "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For"
  9. "Stay (Faraway, So Close!)"
  10. "Beautiful Day"
  11. "Elevation"
  12. "Pride (In the Name of Love)"
  13. "Miss Sarajevo"
  14. "Zooropa"
  15. "City of Blinding Lights"
  16. "Vertigo"
  17. "I'll Go Crazy If I Don't Go Crazy Tonight" (Remix version)
  18. "Sunday Bloody Sunday"
  19. "Scarlet"
  20. "Walk On"

Encore 1

  1. "One"
  2. "Where the Streets Have No Name"

Encore 2

  1. "Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me, Kill Me"
  2. "With or Without You"
  3. "Moment of Surrender"
  4. "Out of Control"

Rehearsals

Before the U2 360° Tour commenced, "If God Will Send His Angels", "Sometimes You Can't Make It on Your Own", and "Drowning Man" (a previously unplayed song from War), were rehearsed, as was "Even Better Than the Real Thing" in the Perfecto mix style, while The Edge stated in an interview with Rolling Stone that "Luminous Times (Hold on to Love)" was also being considered. None of these were played during the first four legs of the tour. Willie Williams stated in his 27 June 2009 tour diary entry on U2.com that the band "really wants [Drowning Man] to work and it sounds great", but the rest of the setlist struggled due to the song's "beautiful melancholy". In his 24 July 2009 entry, Williams noted that "October" and "White as Snow" were also being considered. "Sunday Bloody Sunday" and "Mysterious Ways" were rehearsed in an acoustic style, but performances during the tour were done by the full band. Before the third leg, "Tryin' To Throw Your Arms Around the World" was also rehearsed.

Show themes

Bono stated that the setlist was divided into two acts and a coda. The first half, from "Breathe" to "Vertigo", focused on the personal, where Bono "envisages himself as a young man, struggling to find his feet in life and in search of some kind of personal epiphany." The remix version of "I'll Go Crazy If I Don't Go Crazy Tonight" was created by the music team Fish out of Water as a mashup of previous remixes by Redanka and Dirty South. The "I'll Go Crazy" remix is intended to disorient the audience as the band moves into the second act, "Sunday Bloody Sunday" to the encore, which focuses more on the political aspect of Bono's persona, where he "[wrestles] with the problems of the wider world." The coda, showcased in the encore, displays U2 "at their most raw and vulnerable, stripped to the metaphorical bone."

Concert broadcast and releases

''U2360° at the Rose Bowl''

Main article: U2360° at the Rose Bowl

The 25 October 2009 concert from the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California, U2's penultimate show of the year, was simultaneously broadcast live on YouTube and filmed for a future video release. Directed by Tom Krueger, the shoot used 27 high definition cameras, and it marked the first time since 1983's U2 Live at Red Rocks: Under a Blood Red Sky that the band intentionally filmed over a single night—in contrast to recording multiple shows. It was the first time a concert was streamed live on YouTube, and nearly 10 million people from 188 countries were reported to have watched. The feed was initially set to be restricted to 16 countries but was later made available worldwide. The show's attendance reached 97,014 people, breaking the US record for single concert attendance for one headline act, a mark U2 previously held. In June 2010, the show was released to home video as U2360° at the Rose Bowl on DVD and Blu-ray, receiving positive reviews from critics.

''U22''

Main article: U22: A 22 Track Live Collection from U2360°

On 24 October 2011, it was announced that U2 would release a double CD set entitled U22, containing 22 songs recorded during the tour. Members of U2.com were able to vote on what songs would appear on the release through December 2011. U22 is available only to members of U2.com. A bonus track, "Unknown Caller", was also made available to subscribers.

''From the Ground Up''

On 30 September 2012, U2.com announced its 2012/2013 subscriber's pack would contain a "lavish 260-page large-format hardback photobook" called From the Ground Up featuring photographs from the tour, 4 lithographs of each band member, bookmarks and an album called Edge's Pick that will contain 15 tracks from the tour selected by The Edge that were not on U22. Five bonus tracks, "No Line on the Horizon", "Spanish Eyes", "Desire", "Pride", and "Angel of Harlem", were also made available to subscribers.

Reception

Critical response

U2 performing in Arlington, Texas in October 2009

Reception towards the U2 360° Tour was generally positive. The New York Times described the stage as "part insect, part spacecraft, part cathedral", noting that the design meant the band was more visible than on previous tours. They also praised the fact that political messages took a backseat to the music, while NBC News suggested that using the video screen to display Aung San Suu Kyi and Desmond Tutu reminded attendees of the plights of people in the developing world. Rolling Stone called the production a cross between Zoo TV and the Elevation Tour and noted that the design elements "all but disappear" from the band's perspective onstage. Canada's National Post saw structural similarities in the stage to the alien craft in War of the Worlds, stating the concert "was as if the band had descended to colonize the stadium with their message of intergalactic hope", and that the space theme meant "When you can play music with someone who's in space, the idea goes, you're shrinking our corner of the universe down to size." In contrast, The Boston Globe complained that the stage's size caused the band to struggle to connect with the audience and play with intimacy, as all four members were often playing to a different section of the stadium.

Commercial performance

The U2 360° Tour was the highest-grossing tour of 2009, with earnings of over $311 million for the year's 44 shows, and around 3 million ticket sales. Due to the high costs to operate the tour, U2's profits were minimal. Sales of No Line on the Horizon had been slow, meaning the group was not making much money from that either. Through November 2010, the tour's first 66 shows had grossed $443 million and sold 4.3 million tickets. At the 2010 Billboard Touring Awards, U2 were honored for the year's Top Tour and Top Draw for U2 360°.

On 11 April 2011, Live Nation announced that the U2 360° Tour became the highest-grossing concert tour in history, with ticket sales totalling over $700 million. The tour concluded in July 2011 with a final gross of $736,421,586, and a total attendance of 7,272,046. According to Billboard.com, the final gross and attendance figures for the tour were the highest ever reported to the site. At the 2011 Billboard Touring Awards, U2 repeated as winners in the Top Tour and Top Draw categories.

Tour dates

DateCityCountryVenueOpening actAttendanceRevenueLeg 1 — Europe30 June 20092 July 20097 July 20098 July 200911 July 200912 July 200915 July 200918 July 200920 July 200921 July 200924 July 200925 July 200927 July 200931 July 20091 August 20093 August 20096 August 20099 August 200910 August 200914 August 200915 August 200918 August 200920 August 200922 August 2009Leg 2 — North America12 September 200913 September 200916 September 200917 September 200920 September 200921 September 200923 September 200924 September 200929 September 20091 October 20093 October 20096 October 20099 October 200912 October 200914 October 200918 October 200920 October 200923 October 200925 October 200928 October 2009Leg 3 — Europe6 August 201010 August 201012 August 201015 August 201016 August 201020 August 201021 August 201025 August 201030 August 20103 September 20106 September 201011 September 201012 September 201015 September 201018 September 201022 September 201023 September 201026 September 201030 September 20102 October 20103 October 20108 October 2010Leg 4 — Oceania25 November 201026 November 20101 December 20103 December 20108 December 20109 December 201013 December 201014 December 201018 December 201019 December 2010Leg 5 – Africa13 February 201118 February 2011Leg 6 — South America25 March 201130 March 20112 April 20113 April 20119 April 201110 April 201113 April 2011Leg 7 — North America11 May 201114 May 201115 May 201121 May 201124 May 201129 May 20111 June 20114 June 20117 June 201117 June 201118 June 201122 June 2011Leg 7 — Europe24 June 2011Leg 8 — North America26 June 201129 June 20112 July 20115 July 20118 July 20119 July 201111 July 201114 July 201117 July 201120 July 201123 July 201126 July 201130 July 2011Total7,272,046 / 7,272,046 (100%)$736,421,584
BarcelonaSpainCamp NouSnow Patrol182,055 / 182,055$19,825,497
MilanItalySan Siro153,806 / 153,806$15,168,799
Saint-DenisFranceStade de FranceKaiser Chiefs186,544 / 186,544$20,902,760
NiceStade Charles-EhrmannSnow Patrol55,641 / 55,641$6,261,208
BerlinGermanyOlympiastadion88,265 / 88,265$9,169,830
AmsterdamNetherlandsAmsterdam Arena125,866 / 125,866$12,583,998
DublinIrelandCroke ParkGlasvegas
Damien Dempsey243,198 / 243,198$28,815,352
Kaiser Chiefs
Republic of Loose
Bell X1
The Script
GothenburgSwedenUlleviSnow Patrol119,297 / 119,297$11,047,995
GelsenkirchenGermanyVeltins-Arena73,704 / 73,704$7,292,826
ChorzówPolandSilesian Stadium75,180 / 75,180$6,414,960
ZagrebCroatiaStadion MaksimirSnow Patrol
The Hours124,012 / 124,012$12,700,784
LondonEnglandWembley StadiumElbow
The Hours164,244 / 164,244$20,680,860
Glasvegas
The Hours
GlasgowScotlandHampden Park50,917 / 50,917$5,290,103
SheffieldEnglandDon Valley StadiumElbow
The Hours49,955 / 49,955$5,147,896
CardiffWalesMillennium StadiumGlasvegas
The Hours66,538 / 66,538$7,041,576
ChicagoUnited StatesSoldier FieldSnow Patrol135,872 / 135,872$13,860,480
TorontoCanadaRogers Centre115,411 / 115,411$9,571,672
FoxboroughUnited StatesGillette Stadium138,805 / 138,805$12,859,778
East RutherfordGiants StadiumMuse161,810 / 161,810$16,128,950
LandoverFedExField84,754 / 84,754$6,718,315
CharlottesvilleScott Stadium52,433 / 52,433$4,738,695
RaleighCarter–Finley Stadium55,027 / 55,027$4,962,240
AtlantaGeorgia Dome61,419 / 61,419$5,746,430
TampaRaymond James Stadium72,688 / 72,688$6,399,375
ArlingtonCowboys Stadium70,766 / 70,766$6,664,880
HoustonReliant Stadium58,328 / 58,328$5,985,101
NormanOklahoma Memorial StadiumThe Black Eyed Peas50,951 / 50,951$4,395,085
GlendaleUniversity of Phoenix Stadium50,775 / 50,775$4,912,050
WhitneySam Boyd Stadium42,213 / 42,213$4,641,280
PasadenaRose Bowl97,014 / 97,014$9,960,036
VancouverCanadaBC Place Stadium63,802 / 63,802$5,748,919
TurinItalyStadio Olimpico di TorinoKasabian42,441 / 42,441$3,944,452
FrankfurtGermanyCommerzbank-Arena53,825 / 53,825$5,544,868
HanoverAWD-Arena56,494 / 56,494$4,967,381
HorsensDenmarkCASA Arena HorsensSnow Patrol69,886 / 69,886$7,809,611
HelsinkiFinlandHelsinki Olympic StadiumRazorlight106,360 / 106,360$10,642,517
MoscowRussiaLuzhniki StadiumSnow Patrol60,496 / 60,496$7,986,534
ViennaAustriaErnst-Happel-StadionOneRepublic69,253 / 69,253$6,866,065
AthensGreeceOlympic StadiumSnow Patrol
Aviv Geffen82,622 / 82,622$7,321,356
IstanbulTurkeyAtatürk Olympic StadiumSnow Patrol54,278 / 54,278$3,775,662
ZürichSwitzerlandLetzigrundOneRepublic90,349 / 90,349$9,152,209
MunichGermanyOlympiastadion76,150 / 76,150$7,624,367
Saint-DenisFranceStade de FranceInterpol96,540 / 96,540$10,175,248
BrusselsBelgiumKing Baudouin Stadium144,338 / 144,338$15,074,746
San SebastiánSpainEstadio Anoeta47,721 / 47,721$4,956,464
SevilleEstadio Olímpico de Sevilla76,159 / 76,159$7,519,534
CoimbraPortugalEstádio Cidade de Coimbra109,985 / 109,985$9,925,611
RomeItalyStadio Olimpico75,847 / 75,847$8,215,742
AucklandNew ZealandMount Smart StadiumJay-Z93,519 / 93,519$8,819,418
MelbourneAustraliaEtihad Stadium105,312 / 105,312$13,460,407
BrisbaneSuncorp Stadium85,745 / 85,745$11,031,839
SydneyANZ Stadium107,155 / 107,155$13,695,929
PerthSubiaco Oval108,706 / 108,706$13,910,989
JohannesburgSouth AfricaFNB StadiumSpringbok Nude Girls
Amadou & Mariam94,232 / 94,232$9,433,051
Cape TownCape Town Stadium72,532 / 72,532$6,107,754
SantiagoChileEstadio Nacional de ChileMuse77,765 / 77,765$7,550,446
La PlataArgentinaEstadio Ciudad de La Plata172,029 / 172,029$20,550,302
São PauloBrazilEstádio do Morumbi269,491 / 269,491$32,754,065
Mexico CityMexicoEstadio AztecaSnow Patrol282,978 / 282,978$22,866,542
DenverUnited StatesInvesco FieldThe Fray77,918 / 77,918$6,663,410
Salt Lake CityRice-Eccles Stadium47,710 / 47,710$3,029,760
WinnipegCanadaCanad Inns Stadium47,190 / 47,190$4,908,091
EdmontonCommonwealth Stadium66,835 / 66,835$6,498,291
SeattleUnited StatesQwest FieldLenny Kravitz69,439 / 69,439$6,118,785
OaklandO.co Coliseum64,829 / 64,829$6,075,895
AnaheimAngel Stadium of Anaheim105,955 / 105,955$10,790,140
BaltimoreM&T Bank StadiumFlorence and the Machine74,557 / 74,557$6,832,510
PiltonEnglandWorthy Farm
East LansingUnited StatesSpartan StadiumFlorence and the Machine63,824 / 63,824$5,064,980
Miami GardensSun Life Stadium72,569 / 72,569$6,799,670
NashvilleVanderbilt Stadium46,857 / 46,857$4,269,125
ChicagoSoldier FieldInterpol64,297 / 64,297$5,786,335
MontrealCanadaHippodrome de Montreal162,466 / 162,466$17,178,724
TorontoRogers Centre58,420 / 58,420$6,856,131
PhiladelphiaUnited StatesLincoln Financial Field72,389 / 72,389$6,536,230
St. LouisBusch Stadium52,273 / 52,273$4,423,395
East RutherfordNew Meadowlands Stadium88,491 / 88,491$8,927,150
MinneapolisTCF Bank Stadium59,843 / 59,843$5,163,440
PittsburghHeinz Field55,823 / 55,823$5,050,730
MonctonCanadaMagnetic Hill Concert SiteCarney
Arcade Fire66,823 / 66,823$6,127,953

Notes

References

References

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