U2 – MLK + Where The Streets Have No Name (2002 Super Bowl Live)
U2 performed this at halftime of the 2002 Super Bowl between the Patriots and Rams. As they played, names of victims in the September 11 attacks were scrolled on a giant screen. At the end of the performance Bono opened his jacket to reveal an American flag in the lining. “Where the Streets Have No Name” is more like the U2 of old than any of the other songs on the LP, because it’s a sketch – I was just trying to sketch a location, maybe a spiritual location, maybe a romantic location. I was trying to sketch a feeling. I often feel very claustrophobic in a city, a feeling of wanting to break out of that city and a feeling of wanting to go somewhere where the values of the city and the values of our society don’t hold you down. An interesting story that someone told me once is that in Belfast, by what street someone lives on you can tell not only their religion but tell how much money they’re making – literally by which side of the road they live on, because the further up the hill the more expensive the houses become. That said something to me, and so I started writing about a place “where the streets have no name.” – Bono from Propaganda 5, 1987
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cod5masta4 11:23 pm on February 6, 2010 Permalink |
this is a great song and powerful
it also fits the state that the haitians are in right now
hefe300 11:20 pm on February 6, 2010 Permalink |
If you think that civil rights, what Martin Luther King fought for, only apply to black people, then you’re ignorant to the point that you shouldn’t be commenting on such matters. You only embarrass yourself.
scrubsmaniac34 11:04 pm on February 6, 2010 Permalink |
@u2b9876–
The reason it says MLK at the beginning is because the intro to Streets is the song written by U2, called MLK. It is on The Unforgettable Fire.
MRmcgunnerrsworth 10:33 pm on February 6, 2010 Permalink |
Cry everytime i see this. barbara arestegui RIP
Scope000 10:27 pm on February 6, 2010 Permalink |
@u2b9876 – While I happen to agree on that point, that was ignorant and random. The first short song they played before “Where the Streets Have No Name” was a part of the song called “MLK”
backrubs62 10:06 pm on February 6, 2010 Permalink |
perfect song when you think about all those we lost on that fateful day. may they all rest in peace
u2b9876 9:10 pm on February 6, 2010 Permalink |
Great band, great performance. But I don’t see why the title includes MLK. This performance had nothing to do with that. This performance was all about 9/11. The fact that MLK is a holiday is anti-american. True, America is about minorities being lifted up. But there are many different minorities, including whites these days. The fact that blacks get so much special treatment and sympothy is BS. For goodness sake, we have a black president. Who is holding you down now? No more excuses
missyA1958 9:07 pm on February 6, 2010 Permalink |
Just Incredible! No Band could of ever done it Better! Awesome Post, Many Thanks.
bpmanzoli 8:11 pm on February 6, 2010 Permalink |
what has happened to our country since!!!!! all this world outpouring and we screwed it up!
tobulko 7:30 pm on February 6, 2010 Permalink |
goosebumps….