U2 – ‘Sunday Bloody Sunday’
  • Writers: U2
  • Producer: Steve Lillywhite
  • Recorded: Winter 1982 at Windmill Lane Studios in Dublin, Ireland
  • Released: March 1983
  • Players:
    Bono Vox — vocals
    The Edge — guitar, piano, vocals
    Adam Clayton — bass
    Larry Mullen, Jr. — drums
    Steve Wickham — fiddle
  • Album: War (Island, 1983)
  • Also On:
    Under A Blood Red Sky (Island, 1983)
    The Best Of 1980-1990 (Island, 1998)
  • The leadoff track from U2‘s third album, “Sunday Bloody Sunday” was a call for peace inspired by the “troubles” in Northern Ireland.
  • Frontman Bono has frequently referred to it as “a rebel song.”
  • Bono also cited Bob Marley as an influence on the song, whose key line is “How long must we sing this song?”
  • Bono often accompanied U2’s live performance of the song by carrying a white flag around the stage and leading the crowd in a defiant chant of “No more!”
  • “Sunday Bloody Sunday” was not specifically inspired by Ireland’s two “Bloody Sundays.” The first was a 1920 assassination of British undercover agents by the original, Michael Collins-led Irish Republican Army, and a subsequent revenge attack on a soccer crowd in Dublin’s Croke Park. The second was a 1972 attack by British troops on a civil rights parade in Derry.
  • Steve Wickham, who played fiddle on “Sunday Bloody Sunday,” went on to join the Irish bands In Tua Nua and the Waterboys.
  • The War album was U2’s commercial breakthrough, climbing to Number 12 on the Billboard 200 and debuting at Number One on the U.K. chart.
  • The album was also something of a healing exercise for the band, as bassist Adam Clayton had become estranged from U2’s practicing Christians — Bono, guitarist The Edge, and drummer Larry Mullen, Jr. Bono recalled that the strained relationship impacted on the music: “The uptightness of that album is something I feel — tight, taut, words choked, not singing them well.”
  • Producer Steve Lillywhite broke a personal rule of not working with the same band more than twice by producing War, which was his third effort for U2. He was forced into it, however — U2 first chose Roxy Music veteran Rhett Davies, but when that didn’t work out, the group went to Lillywhite to help bail them out.

FAST FORWARD:

  • U2 was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2005.
  • Bono has launched a new fashion collection called Edun, which is co-designed by his wife Ali Hewson and environmentally-conscious designer Rogan Gregory.
  • U2 opened the Live 8 concert in Hyde Park in London in July 2005 by performing the Beatles song “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” with Paul McCartney, then doing their own set.
  • The Edge and producer Bob Ezrin are behind an initiative called Music Rising, which is aimed at providing instruments to musicians affected by the hurricanes on the Gulf Coast in 2005.
  • The members of U2 and their manager Paul McGuinness were given the Ambassador Of Conscience Award by Amnesty International in 2005.
  • U2’s story has been told in an authorized book called U2byU2.

U2 is working on a new album, the follow up to 2004’s How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb. The members recorded some of the set in Morocco this year.