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The past few days have kept U2 on the radar for both honor and history as well as some unexpected clarifications and fond retrospectives. Let’s dive straight in. The headline making the rounds involves the upcoming Woody Guthrie Prize. Bono and The Edge will travel to Tulsa on October 21 to accept the 2025 award on behalf of all four band members in a ceremony moderated by legendary producer T Bone Burnett. According to Consequence Music and the Colorado Sound, the Prize recognizes U2’s persistent use of music to confront injustice and inspire meaningful global change. It’s a significant nod, aligning the band with previous recipients like Bruce Springsteen and Mavis Staples, and underlining U2’s status as a social consciousness icon in rock.
On the studio front, u2songs reports that the band is back working on material for their next studio album, with reliable insiders saying it could be finished toward the end of this year, although no title or design work is underway yet. Longtime fans are watching particularly closely, since this will be their first release of original music since Songs of Experience dropped in 2017—making it a seven-year wait for new U2.
Las Vegas gossip has been hot since Sphere opened with U2’s record-breaking 40-show residency, but The Street clarifies that rumors of a Sphere return are false. Eagles have just matched and will soon break U2’s show count by the end of the month; meanwhile, U2’s trailblazing performances there are still stirring conversation. Pearl Jam’s Eddie Vedder even credited the show’s stripped-back moments at Sphere as giving him inspiration, published in a Reddit AMA via visual artist Rob Sheridan and shared by Alternative Nation.
Adam Clayton’s TV documentary on Irish show bands is set for international release soon, per U2’s official site, reflecting the band’s lasting cultural reach beyond strict music boundaries. Meanwhile, fans celebrate U2’s 49th anniversary since they first jammed together in Dublin, as marked by u2songs, with September 25 as their birthday and September 26 recalling the release of their debut "Three."
Social media and fan news has included photos of the latest U2.com subscription gift—a branded hoodie—arriving for subscribers in Europe, adding a touch of delight to collectors.
There was speculation flying again about a possible Slane Castle gig in 2026, but local sources and u2songs authoritatively shut those rumors down: U2 won’t be headlining, period. The slot goes to Luke Combs instead.
In pop culture, the release of Kevin Davies’ photo book U2: In Camera 1991-1997 is drawing attention on U2.com as a window into unseen moments of the Zoo TV, Zooropa, and Popmart eras—images that capture the band in personal, sometimes vulnerable settings. Gavin Friday’s foreword highlights how relaxed and assured U2 appears in Davies’ intimate shots.
On tribute circuits, Cowichan Performing Arts Centre and venues in Granbury Texas are hosting U2 tribute acts, keeping the legacy alive for fans who can’t catch the real thing.
All in all, the week's headlines harden U2’s position as living legends—with the Woody Guthrie Prize, work underway for new music, a fresh photo chronicle, and social impact across media and generations. No confirmed controversies or viral social posts, but plenty of news with lasting relevance.
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