U2 pay tribute to terror victims

U2's (from far left, the Edge, Bono and Adam Clayton) concert on Sunday was the first large-scale cultural event in Paris since the Nov 13 terrorist attacks.
U2's (from left, the Edge, Bono and Adam Clayton) concert on Sunday was the first large-scale cultural event in Paris since the Nov 13 terrorist attacks. PHOTO: REUTERS

PARIS • Irish band U2 returned to Paris on Sunday night to play the first of two shows that had been postponed in the wake of the Nov 13 terrorist attacks around the city that left 130 people dead, including 89 at the Bataclan, a music hall where American band Eagles Of Death Metal were playing when it was stormed by gunmen.

It was the first large-scale cultural event in the city since the attacks, and security at the AccorHotels Arena, just a few miles from the Bataclan, was tight, with concert- goers undergoing full body searches as they entered and a heavy police presence outside.

"Tonight we are all Parisian," Bono, the band's frontman, said in French to the sold-out crowd of 17,000, adding in English, "If you love liberty, then Paris is your hometown."

Near the end of the set, he retrieved a French flag from the crowd, draping it over his shoulder and later placing it in front of the band's drums.

U2 had been set to play at the arena on Nov 14 and 15 on its Innocence And Experience tour, but called off the shows, citing the state of emergency that had been put in place across France. The tour was to end last night in Paris, with a show to be broadcast by HBO.

There had been reports that U2 would be joined onstage in Paris by Eagles Of Death Metal, but earlier on Sunday, U2 posted on their website: "This is not the case. We have another surprise guest planned for tonight's show."

That guest turned out to be Patti Smith, who closed out the 27-song concert with her 1988 song People Have The Power, with its refrain "The power to dream, to rule/To wrestle the world from fools".

In an interview before the concerts, Bono said it was important for the band to return to the stage as soon as possible.

"Terrorism relies on people being terrorised, and we were not going to be," he said. "We felt the biggest and the only real contribution we can make at a moment like that is to honour the people of Paris, who brought us the concept of liberte, egalite, fraternite."

Still, the show included an acknowledgment that Paris still remained on edge less than a month after the attacks. The simulated bomb meant to mark the band's transition from innocence to experience (the album pegged to the tour is Songs Of Innocence) in recent concerts remained part of the show, albeit with a warning: Before the band took the stage, a voice over a loudspeaker announced that the explosions "are part of the show, are safe and are nothing to be concerned about".

Bono made repeated references to Paris throughout the show. The five-song encore opened with City Of Blinding Lights as huge screens in the background showed images of the capital by night followed by the names of the Nov 13 victims.

The song ended with Bono singing lyrics from the Jacque Brel song Ne Me Quitte Pas (Don't Leave Me).

The rest of the encore included the band's early anthems Beautiful Day, Bad and One, which was modified to include the chorus from another U2 song Invisible: "There is no them. There's only us."

This is not the first time U2 have paid tribute to the victims of terror.

When the band played Madison Square Garden a few weeks after the Sept 11 attacks, they honoured emergency services workers onstage and also projected the names of those killed.

The band touched on other highly charged topics in Sunday's show, with references to HIV, the war in Syria and the European migrant crisis, displaying the hashtag #refugeeswelcome on large screens at one point.

Few fans apparently were deterred from attending the rescheduled shows.

Of the 34,000 tickets sold for the November concerts, just 2,000 were refunded and resold, according to the band.

Mr Stephane Le Bozec, 47, who drove more than five hours from the Brittany region to be in Paris for the concert, said the idea of not attending never crossed his mind.

He added: "We're not afraid. Music is my passion and the attacks make it even important to be here, to share our passion for music and for U2."

NEW YORK TIMES

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on December 08, 2015, with the headline U2 pay tribute to terror victims. Subscribe