- Writers: U2
- Producer: Steve Lillywhite
- Recorded: Winter 1982 at Windmill Lane Studios in Dublin, Ireland
- Released: March 1983
- Players:
Bono — vocals
The Edge — guitar, piano, vocals
Adam Clayton — bass
Larry Mullen, Jr. — drums - Album: War (Island, 1983)
- Also On:
Under A Blood Red Sky (Island, 1983)
The Best Of 1980-1990 (Island, 1998) - “New Year’s Day” was U2‘s first appearance on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, reaching Number 53 in May 1983. The song hit Number Four on the U.K. chart.
- “New Year’s Day” was inspired by the Polish Solidarity movement of the early ’80s, though it was actually written before the band learned that Poland’s leadership would end the nation’s martial law on New Year’s Day 1983.
- The song is marked by the Edge‘s haunting piano refrain, which kicks things off and leads into body of the tune.
- Fans also embraced the song’s striking video, which found U2 performing in the snow (the horse riders at the start of the video were hired professionals, not the band members).
- The War album was U2’s big commercial breakthrough, climbing to Number 12 on the Billboard 200 and debuting at Number One on the U.K. chart.
- The album was also something of a healing exercise for the band, as bassist Adam Clayton had become estranged from U2’s practicing Christians — the Edge, Bono, and Larry Mullen, Jr. Bono recalls that the strained relationship impacted on the music: “The uptightness of that album is something I feel — tight, taut, words choked, not singing them well.”
- Producer Steve Lillywhite broke his own rule of not working with the same band more than twice by producing War, which was his third effort for U2. He was forced into it, however — U2 first chose Roxy Music veteran Rhett Davies, but when that didn’t work out, the group came to Lillywhite to help bail them out.
FAST FORWARD:
- U2 was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame by Bruce Springsteen in March 2005. It was a returned favor, since Bono had done the honors for Springsteen’s induction a few years earlier.
- U2 opened the Live 8 concert in Hyde Park in London in July 2005 by performing the Beatles song “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” with Paul McCartney, then doing their own set.