Ever since the colossal satellite screens of Zoo TV first crash landed into our consciousness in the early 90s, U2 have consistently pushed the technological envelope to the very edge whether that be by erecting 100 foot LED screens, giant lemons, cocktail sticks or claws.
Now, they’ve made the much hyped Las Vegas Sphere â a $2.3bn, 18,000 seater sci-fi structure which boasts 160,000 speakers and the biggest wraparound LED screen youâve ever seen in your life â their new home for the next few months. They’ll perform 25 dates at the venue through to December, with the Sphere’s future to include sports events, music performances and more. Plans for a twin venue in London’s Stratford have advanced despite conxerns about light pollution: no issue here, mind.
The buzz around this venue has swirled like a desert sandstorm in recent months as giant space helmets, the Stars and Stripes, baby faces and even the moon have been projected on to the outside of this breathtaking forum, which is situated perfectly alongside the blinding lights of the Las Vegas strip.
Entering the inner sanctum of the Sphere for the first time and taking in the sheer scale of the screen itself, truly takes your breath away.


And of course despite the immense pressure on tonightâs opening show, brimming with a who’s who of stars including everyone from Bryan Cranston and Matt Damon to the likes of Paul McCartney, Jeff Bezos and LeBron James, U2 can always be relied upon to deliver a solid state of the art stage show. They pull off a dazzling series of technological tricks right from the outset as whirring drones whizz past the audience while everything from giant helicopters, falling letters, widescreen desert landscapes and even a projection of the Sphere itself come hurtling towards the audience.
The first half as expected is dominated by hits from âAchtung Babyâ with ‘Zoo Station”s thudding intro kicking proceedings off nicely as Bono â returning as his Fly alter-ego â slowly spins on a tiny turntable while The Edge, Adam Clayton and stand-in drummer Bram van den Berg (covering for Larry Mullen Jr. while he facing back surgery) colour in the sonics superbly.
Once the band roll into ‘Even Better Than The Real Thing’, a dizzying collage display in the style of Peter Blake featuring everyone from Elvis, to Nicolas Cage to The Queen’s Gambit actress Anya Taylor-Joy, ascends up the screen.
Despite the early onslaught of breathtaking visuals, surprisingly the band almost abandon them for a good middle section of the show with the likes of ‘Rattle And Hum”s âAll I Want Is Youâ, âDesireâ and âAngel Of Harlemâ, which Bono dedicates to Macca, being gently slipped into the set.
Even Achtungâs double punch of âAcrobatâ and the outstanding âUltra Violetâ is devoid of any giant backdrop as the focus becomes squarely placed on all four members of the band.


Of course Larry Mullen Jrâs absence from the line up “for the first time since 1978” is clearly noticeable tonight particularly on stadium slaying numbers like âWhere The Streets Have No Nameâ where his trademark drumstick clacking ahead of the spine tingling intro was a staple in U2’s set for many years. Van den Berg, who is celebrating his birthday tonight, has very big shoes to fill and he knows it. But he does a sterling job of picking up the baton from the long time drummer and co-founding member.
Wrapping up the show with âElevationâ and new Blondie-cribbed single Atomic Cityâ, Bono channels Elvis with a white Vegas style dinner jacket, swaggering against a giant cinematic backdrop of the bustling strip itself.
Reaching its cinematic climax, it feels like the band, venue and audience are transported to the vast depths of the Vegas desert itself as they rattle off âWhere The Streets Have No Nameâ, ‘With Or Without You’ and ‘Beautiful Day’. Edge previously pointed out that U2 are taking the live concert experience âto the next levelâ and this opening night does a fine balancing act of doing just that while also ensuring their music remains very much at the forefront.
And this is just the start of a stunning residency which will only continue to blossom with each passing night in this city of blinding lights.


U2 played:
âZoo Stationâ
âThe Flyâ
âEven Better Than The Real Thingâ
âMysterious Waysâ
âOneâ/âPurple Rainâ/âLove Me Tenderâ
âUntil The End Of The Worldâ
âWhoâs Gonna Ride Your Wild Horsesâ
âTryinâ To Throw Your Arms Around The Worldâ
âAll I Want Is Youâ
‘Desireâ/âLove Me Doâ
âAngel Of Harlemâ/âInto The Mysticâ/âDancing In The Moonlightâ
âLove Rescue Meâ
âSo Cruelâ
âAcrobatâ
âUltraviolet (Light My Way)â
âLove Is Blindnessâ
âElevationâ/âMy Wayâ
âAtomic Cityâ
‘Vertigoâ
âWhere The Streets Have No Nameâ
âWith Or Without Youâ
âBeautiful Dayâ/âSgt. Pepperâs Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise)â/âBlackbirdâ
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