About "Dirty Day"
"Dirty Day" is a song by Irish alternative rock band U2. It is the ninth track on their 1993 studio album Zooropa. The music was written by the band as a whole, while the lyrics were written by Bono and the Edge. The song, along with "Numb", marks the Edge's first lyrical contributions to a U2 song since "Van Dieman's Land" on 1988's Rattle and Hum and indicated his growing presence as a second lyricist in the band; he would go on to contribute lyrics to every track on the band's next album, Pop.
Two alternate mixes of "Dirty Day", subtitled "Junk Day" and "Bitter Kiss" appeared on the Please single, with the former also appearing on the second disc of The Best of 1990-2000 & B-Sides. A re-recorded version of "Dirty Day" appeared on the band's album Songs of Surrender; it is one of two tracks from Zooropa, the other being "Stay (Faraway, So Close!)".
Top songs by U2
- With Or Without You
- Sunday Bloody Sunday
- One
- Beautiful Day
- Where The Streets Have No Name
- I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For
- Gloria
- Bad
- Miss Sarajevo
- New Year's Day
- All I Want Is You
- A Man And A Woman
- Babyface
- A Celebration
- Christmas (baby, Please Come Home)
- Pride (in The Name Of Love)
- Vertigo
- Angel Of Harlem
- Elevation
- Desire
- 40
- Stuck In A Moment You Cant Get Out Of
- I Will Follow
- A Day Without Me
- All Because Of You
- The Sweetest Thing
- 11 O'clock Tick Tock
- Mysterious Ways
- Another Day
- Deep In The Heart
- 4th Of July
- October
"Dirty Day" video by U2 is property and copyright of its owners and it's embedded from Youtube.
Information about the song "Dirty Day" is automatically taken from Wikipedia. It may happen that this information does not match with "Dirty Day".
SONGSTUBE is against piracy and promotes safe and legal music downloading. Music on this site is for the sole use of educational reference and is the property of respective authors, artists and labels. If you like U2 songs on this site, please buy them on Itunes, Amazon and other online stores. All other uses are in violation of international copyright laws. This use for educational reference, falls under the "fair use" sections of U.S. copyright law.