U2 features Irani, Lankesh during maiden Indian performance
December 16, 2019  10:32
image
Irish rock band U2 paid tribute to women icons of the country during their maiden performance here, putting the spotlight on Union minister Smriti Irani, author Arundhati Roy and journalist Gauri Lankesh among others.
The Irish rockers closed 'The Joshua Tree Tour 2019' -- their final show of the tour after Seoul, Auckland, Brisbane and Melbourne -- in honour of their 1987 album at the DY Patil Stadium on Sunday.
Frontman Bono, guitarist The Edge, drummer Larry Mullen and bassist Adam Clayton opened the concert with their classic "Sunday Bloody Sunday" and ended with a visual montage of women icons across the world, including India.
The night also saw performance by academy award winner composer A R Rahman.
Rahman, along with his children, joined U2 to sing -- for the first time -- their new song, "Ahimsa", which Bono described as "India's greatest gift to the world."
In their special segment, called 'Herstory', the musicians featured photos of women -- projected on a giant screen at the backdrop of the stage -- as the band played their track "Ultraviolet".
The names were of women and child development minister Irani, Roy, Kalpana Chawla, Karuna Nandy, Lankesh and Rana Ayyub among others. 

U2 also acknowledged the contribution of Greta Thunberg.
To highlight the security concern women face the world over, the band also included pictures from the recent protest march in Hyderabad after a young vet was raped and killed.
"When women feel safe at homes or walking on the street, that's a beautiful day. When sisters around the world are in school like their brothers, that's a beautiful day.
"When women of the world unite to rewrite history as their story, that's a beautiful day. To rewrite history as her story- that's a beautiful day," Bono said as the crowd erupted in applause.
The tour celebrated U2's fifth album, The Joshua Tree. Their playlist included songs from the seminal record including With or Without You, Where The Streets Have No Name and Bullet The Blue Sky.
Bono, in his greeting to the audience which began with "namaste Mumbai!", acknowledged that it took them a while to visit the country.

Image: Irish rock band U2 singer Bono with band members performs during a concert in Navi Mumbai on Sunday, December 15, 2019. Photograph: Shashank Parade/PTI Photo
« Back to LIVE

TOP STORIES