East Bay Times

U2 concert opens with stunning visuals at the massive Sphere venue

- By Jonathan Landrum Jr.

It looked like a typical U2 outdoor concert: Two helicopter­s zoomed through the starlit sky before producing spotlights over a Las Vegas desert and frontman Bono, who kneeled to the ground while singing the band's 2004 hit “Vertigo.”

This scene may seem customary, but the visuals were created by floor-toceiling graphics inside the immersive Sphere. It was one of the several impressive moments during U2's “UV Achtung Baby” residency launch show at the high-tech, globe-shaped venue, which opened for the first time Friday night.

The legendary rock band, which has won 22 Grammys, performed for two hours inside the massive, state-of-the-art spherical venue with crystal-clear audio. Throughout the night, there were a plethora of attractive visuals — including kaleidosco­pe images, a burning flag and Las Vegas' skyline, taking the more than 18,000 attendees on U2's epic musical journey.

“What a fancy pad,” said Bono, who was accompanie­d onstage with guitarists The Edge and Adam Clayton along with drummer Bram van den Berg. He then stared at the highresolu­tion LED screen that projected a larger version of himself along with a few praying hands and bells.

U2 made their presence felt at the $2.3 billion Sphere, which stands 366-feet high and 516-feet wide.

With superb visual effects, the band's 25-show residency opened with a splash performing a slew of hits, including “Mysterious Ways,” “Zoo Station,” “All I Want is You,” “Desire” and new single “Atomic City.”

On many occasions, the U2 band members were so large on screen that it felt like Bono intimately sang to the audience on one side while The Edge strummed his guitar to others on a different side.

The crowd included many entertaine­rs and athletes: Oprah, LeBron James, Matt Damon, Andre Agassi, Ava DuVernay, Josh Duhamel, Jason Bateman, Jon Hamm, Bryan Cranston, Aaron Paul, Oscar de la Hoya, Henrik Lundqvist, Flava Flav, Diplo, Dakota Fanning, Orlando Bloom and Mario Lopez.

 ?? JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Members of the media wait for celebritie­s to arrive during the opening night of the Sphere on Friday in Las Vegas.
JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Members of the media wait for celebritie­s to arrive during the opening night of the Sphere on Friday in Las Vegas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States