Even though I give U2's "Under A Blood Red Sky" five stars, this amazing EP STILL screams for a deluxe version. When this was originally released, it came out as a budget EP at a special price, and it even clocked in at many a band's album length. Eight songs at forty minutes, covering the band's first three albums.There were stories at the time that so many music-producer buffs wanted to work with the band that Jimmy Iovine slashed his superstar fee for the opportunity to work with U2. It was really to the band's benefit, as he completely stripped away Steve Lillywhite's echo-heavy and reverb-drenched production, and gave U2 a crystal clean mix. It caught the band in great form, cocky and confident, and on the brink of the second stage of their career. That clarity also gave many people their first real glimpse at just how amazing The Edge's guitar playing is and how much he brings to the band.Even more interesting is that the band was eager to push themselves and their audience even at this early stage of the game. Band favorites like "I Will Follow" and "New Year's Day" are mixed in with "11 O'Clock Tick Tock" and "Trash Trampoline and Party Girl." And despite Bono's protestations, "Sunday Bloody Sunday" will always be a rebel song in my heart.Why I still think this album could be upgraded is that I am sure somewhere the entire Red Rocks concert is on tape. Like expanded editions of The Who's "Live At Leeds," Peter Frampton's "Frampton Comes Alive," Elton John's "Here and There" and David Bowie's "Stage," "Live At Red Rocks" (and the U2 catalog overall!) deserves an upgrade. While the deluxe CD/DVD now includes the Red Rocks DVD and the CD tracks are now listed with the locations credited, what is stopping Island and U2 fron a full concert CD release?