Days of Ash opens with the song "American Obituary", which is dedicated to
Renée Good, a Minneapolis woman who was shot and killed in 2026 by agents of
United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Bono described the song as "a little more punk rock" than their 1983 song "
Sunday Bloody Sunday". The lyrical cadence was a nod to one of Bono's favourite songs, "
It's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)" by
Bob Dylan; in Dylan's song, the child is singing to the mother, while "American Obituary" reverses the roles. The fourth track, "Wildpeace", is a poem by Israeli poet
Yehuda Amichai that is read by Nigerian artist
Adeola Fayehun, set to music by the EP's producer
Jacknife Lee. The song "One Life at a Time" was written in honour of the Palestinian activist
Awdah Hathaleen, who was killed in 2025 in his
West Bank village by an
Israeli settler. The song's title comes from a phrase spoken at Hathaleen's funeral by
Basel Adra, who directed the 2024 documentary film
No Other Land on which Hathaleen consulted; For the song, Bono reinterpreted the phrase as a "existential suggestion" that the world can be changed "for the better or for the worse... one life at a time". The EP closes with the song "Yours Eternally", which features guest vocals by the English musician
Ed Sheeran and the Ukrainian singer-turned-soldier
Taras Topolia. Through a mutual connection with Sheeran, Bono and the Edge met Topolia during their 2022 performance at a Kyiv subway station shortly after
Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The song's lyrics take the form of a letter written by a Ukrainian soldier on active duty to his friends back home saying, "you better be having a good time back there". Sheeran sings a verse that serves as a reply to the soldier's letter. ==Release==