
From their debut album Boy (1980), they sounded huge, Bono's passionate wail and the Edge's ringing, skyscraping guitar brimming with optimism and self-belief. On albums such as War they turned sonic bombast into high art and by the mid-'80s they were well on their way to becoming the biggest and most important band in the world. Their crown was secured by a charismatic Live Aid performance and their position rendered unassailable by 1987's Joshua Tree, which for many remains their masterpiece.
Of course, they left themselves wide open to accusations of self-importance, zealotry and egoism, particularly once Bono added statesman to his other job titles of showman and poet. But the second glorious thing about U2 is that they are so convinced of their own righteousness and integrity that they simply don't care.
Into the '90s they blithely ignored both grunge and Britpop and reinvented themselves with the post-modern dance-rock of Achtung Baby and a not-entirely successful fringe flirtation with electronica on 1997's Pop. By the start of the new millennium they even had Salman Rushdie writing lyrics for them and they recently returned to reclaim their 'biggest band in the universe' tag with the widescreen melodrama of 2004's How To Dismantle An Atomic Bomb.

Working with producers Daniel Lanois and Brian Eno for the first time, an album of shimmering textures and unforgettable anthems packing big messages about religion, war, race and life with The Edge's layered, effects-laden guitar to the fore.

One of the finest albums of the '80s. Sophisticated songs that transcend mere riffs and hooks - personal, political, anguished, yearning, hopeful, searching, surging, hypnotic, elegiac, mournful and magnificent. After The Joshua Tree, U2 were not so much a pop band as a cultural phenomenon.

Something of a reinvention as U2 trade in their American influences for a post-modern Europeanism in which many saw a parallel with Bowie's late-'70s experimentalism. Sometimes disquieting, even disturbing, it also contains some of Bono's most emotionally naked songwriting.

Until we get a U2 box set, the top compilation on offer is a less-than-comprehensive 'best of the '80s' with some odd omissions ("Gloria" and "Two Hearts Beat As One", to name but two). A companion volume covering 1990-2000 is also available.

Full of post-9/11 doom but uplifting at the same time, there are few bands who could make a record so urgent, strident and rampant, so brave, honest and troubled, a quarter of a century into their career. Best compilation:


















