U2 -u2 Duals (2011) Flac 〈Pro〉
Collaborations range from the Soweto Gospel Choir to Allen Ginsberg , and Luciano Pavarotti to Jay-Z .
Released as the eighth annual subscriber gift, Duals remains one of the band’s most talked-about fan club exclusives. While some fans initially pushed for more unreleased rarities, the album serves as a definitive roadmap of U2’s impact across genres—spanning gospel, country, opera, and hip-hop.
When Duals dropped in 2011, it wasn’t just another compilation—it was a curated window into thirty years of U2’s creative DNA, exclusively for the U2.com fan club. For audiophiles, securing this collection in FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec) is the ultimate way to experience the subtle textures of these legendary partnerships. U2 -U2 Duals (2011) FLAC
(feat. Sinéad O'Connor) – A moody standout from the End of Violence soundtrack.
(feat. Johnny Cash) – The iconic Zooropa closer, sounding more gritty and intimate in FLAC. Collaborations range from the Soweto Gospel Choir to
Many of these tracks were previously scattered across soundtracks and B-sides, making this the only place they live together. The Tracklist: Highlights in High-Res
(feat. Soweto Gospel Choir) – A soulful, reimagined live mix from Pasadena. When Duals dropped in 2011, it wasn’t just
Whether you’re revisiting the haunting "The Wanderer" with Johnny Cash or the stadium-shaking "The Saints Are Coming" with Green Day, hearing them in lossless quality reveals layers of production that standard MP3s often flatten.