If you close your eyes, everything about U2's newly launched Las Vegas residency seems old-school, nostalgic, even a bit fuddy-duddy.
The DJ before the band goes on spins your basic '80s hits playlist. The set list by U2 focuses on an album that came out in 1991. The pre-show talk among fans is typically about seeing the group in 1987 or 1997 or sometime in that golden era before child care or comfortable footwear were required to go see a concert.
Just the fact that the residency is happening in Las Vegas makes it feel like an old person's excursion. No offense to fans at Barry Manilow's concurrent residency.
So what a contrast it was in the end — with eyes wide, wide open — to feel like I just witnessed the future of concerts and maybe Las Vegas, too, after taking in the second week of the "U2: UV" run last weekend.
Spoiler alert: Fans who attend U2's Sphere concerts may never want to go to a rock or pop show in a sports arena or stadium ever again. That's how revolutionary and unprecedented this concert experience was — emphasis on "experience" over "concert."
The venue really is the rock star in this case. An ultra-hi-fi, glowing, $2.3 billion globe-like facility designed by the entertainment gurus behind New Madison Square Garden, the Sphere holds center stage at these U2 concerts in every way.
From the opening song, "Zoo Station" — the lead-off track on the concert's centerpiece album, "Achtung Baby" — the 18,600 fans at Sunday's show spent more time gazing upward than looking at the stage.
Even when U2 frontman Bono's face was projected/plastered across the spherical 360-foot-high screen that doubles as the venue's walls and ceiling, it felt like he and his bandmates were at best in the passenger seat giving directions, if not in the back seat.