Silver and Gold (song)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
"Silver and Gold"
Image:U2r&h.jpg
Song by U2
Album Rattle and Hum
Released 10 October 1988
Genre Rock
Length 5:49
Label Island
Writer Bono
Producer Jimmy Iovine
Rattle and Hum track listing
"Freedom for My People"
(7)
"Silver and Gold"
(8)
"Pride (In the Name of Love)" (live)
(9)

"Silver and Gold" is the eighth track from U2's 1988 album, Rattle and Hum, recorded as a live version. It was previously released by U2 in 1987 on the "Where the Streets Have No Name" single as a B-side (in the form of a studio recording) and performed on that year's Joshua Tree Tour. The studio recording was later included on the limited edition B-sides bonus disk on the band's compilation album, The Best of 1980-1990.

It is one of the few songs written solely by Bono, and was originally written for the Artists United Against Apartheid project, which featured songs in protest of the South African apartheid policy. In that very first incarnation it appeared on that project's Sun City album in December 1985, recorded by Bono and Keith Richards and Ron Wood of The Rolling Stones.

The version on Rattle and Hum is the most widely known, and it shows the influence of several other U2 songs — the central riff is very similar to that from "When Love Comes to Town," one guitar solo sounds like the solo from the Rattle and Hum version of "Bullet the Blue Sky," and the second guitar solo sounds similar to the one from "In God's Country."

pl:Silver and Gold (piosenka U2)
Views
Personal tools

Toolbox