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Monday, 23 February 2026

REVIEW: U2 - DAYS OF ASH EP


4/5

Ash Wednesday

It may not always be a beautiful day, but U2 are back in play. In these times of war and disorder, we need a voice, like the people that are fighting the power that corrupts, and Bono are the boys are offering a helping hand with theirs clasped together in coming together, comeback solidarity. Yeah, yeah, you may cry "f###, U2" (who? me and who?), like Tyler, The Creator, because your iTunes automatically gave you an album ('Songs Of Innocence') that literally felt forced, but I didn't even have a laptop with an internet connection back then. I wanted that. Is this really guilty of being controversy on the same New Music Friday where we get albums from artists no stranger to that? Although I stand firmly behind the man who told Bono to "stop f###ing clapping your hands" when he talked about people dying of AIDS every time he put his hands together.

Self-righteous? Indignation? In this age of virtue signalling online, it's hard to tell what's real and who genuinely wants to help, but you can't deny all that Bono and U2 have done. Even if at times they've hit 'Elevation' insufferable levels like Coldplay. Yet you can't deny either acts amazing anthems. There's always going to be cynical comments, but at least this band on the run against hate is fighting the good fight like friend and E Street neighbour Bruce Springsteen's ICE out anthem 'Streets Of Minneapolis' to go alongside his Philadelphia avenue, that along with the Tom Hanks and Denzel Washington movie it won Academy Awards with, looked to raise awareness for HIV and AIDS without a round of applause. Here, U2 enlist more famous friends for their urgent 'Days of Ash' EP. Their first album of original material since 2017's 'Songs Of Experience' (2023's 'Songs Of Surrender' in their chronology and 'Songs Of' trilogy was a reworked album for the Irish act who always did this on their greatest hits) had to come now. Released on Ash Wednesday, a day after Willow's surprise drop of 'Petal Rock Black', before the New Music Friday of Mumford & Songs and all the other prize-fighters.

Ed Sheeran, until he's seventy, plays on 'Yours Eternally', but it's Ukrainian singer Taras Topolia who has a much more indelible impact on this track. One written as a letter from a soldier, in closing of this six-track extended play, reading, "Dearest friends or whatever/We are callin' ourselves these days/My current location/I cannot disclose/Geographically/It's nowhere that I've been before/But emotionally/We're on the same road", hiding in the plain-sight of fear. The same can be said for the spoken-word track of 'Wildpeace', a poem by Yehuda Amichai, read by Nigerian artist Adeola, telling us, "I know that I know how to kill/That makes me an adult/And my son plays with a toy gun that knows/How to open and close its eyes and say Mama." A stark reality for a band who once opened a live show with a video of a child tentatively taking a handgun out of high-street shopping bag. Produced by Jacknife Lee, and recorded as an "immediate response" to current events, in the Curlews and Universal studios, Bono is ready to write an 'American Obituary' with an incendiary video.

All for the likes of Renee Good, who lost their lives to bad men and the coldest ICE. "I love you more/than hate loves war", Bono sings in this anthem call to arms that embrace instead of disgrace. Holding up a mirror to the current state of America that shows, "930 Minneapolis/To desecrate domestic bliss/Three bullets blast, three babies kissed/Renee, the domestic terrorist???/What you can't kill, can't die/America will rise/Against the people of the lie." The political urgency, and hope amongst the hurt, continuing on the Richard Rohr book based 'The Tears of Things'. Or the 'Song Of The Future' that sings for the Iranian Women, Life, Freedom movement led by Sarina Esmailzadeh. Hoping to change things, 'One Life At A Time', with a dedication to Awdah Hathaleen, a Palestinian activist killed in the West Bank. Released to coincide with a special edition of U2 fanzine 'Propaganda', the struggle and resilience is clear to see. This band just being a microphone for the people with the megaphones. We know where the real courage for freedom lies. Hate has no home here in heart. Lend your hand in art. Don't play your part in scars. Ashes to ashes. TIM DAVID HARVEY.

Playlist Picks: 'American Obituary', 'The Tears Of Things', 'Yours Eternally (Feat. Ed Sheeran & Taras Topolia)'.

Spin This: U2 - 'War'

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