The Joshua Tree
is the fifth studio album by Irish rock band U2, released 9 March 1987 on Island Records. Recording took place from July to November 1986 at Windmill Lane Studios in Dublin. The album features the band's exploration of roots rock, with their music exhibiting influences from blues-rock, folk rock, country music, and gospel music. Lyrically, The Joshua Tree
depicts the band's fascination with America. The album was produced and engineered by Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois.
The album increased the band's stature "from heroes to superstars," according to Rolling Stone
. [1] The album produced several hit singles, including "Where the Streets Have No Name", "With or Without You", and "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For", all of which remain radio staples. The Joshua Tree
won Grammy Awards for Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal and Album of the Year in Grammy Awards of 1988. In 2003, the album was ranked number 26 on Rolling Stone
magazine's list of "The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time". The album is one of the world's best-selling albums of all-time, having sold over 28 million copies. [2] In 2007, a remastered version of the album was released to mark the 20th anniversary of its original release.
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THE JOSHUA TREE TICKETS
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Background
Following
The Unforgettable Fire
album, U2 realised that they "had no tradition, we were from outer space", and they explored American
blues,
country and
gospel music.
[3] Since that album, they had spent time with fellow Irish bands
The Waterboys and
Hothouse Flowers, and felt a sense of indigenous Irish music being blended with American folk music.
[4] Friendships with
Bob Dylan,
Van Morrison and
Keith Richards encouraged the band to look back to the roots of rock music, and focused Bono on his skills as a song and lyric writer.
[5] [6] The band wanted to build on
The Unforgettable Fire's
atmospherics, but also sought a more hard-hitting sound within the strict discipline of more conventional song structures, in contrast to
The Unforgettable Fire
s often out-of-focus experimentation.
[7]
Recording and production
The band interrupted their 1986 album sessions to join
Amnesty International's A Conspiracy of Hope Tour. Rather than being a distraction, the band found the tour added extra intensity and power to their new music, providing extra focus on what they wanted to say.
[8] The album sessions for
The Joshua Tree
proper began in July 1986 at
Windmill Lane Studios in
Dublin.
In his earlier 1986 travels to
Central America,
Bono saw first hand the distress of peasants bullied in political conflicts, and this was a central influence on the album. The United States' military intervention in
El Salvador angered Bono and prompted him to ask
The Edge to "put El Salvador through an amplifier" for the song "
Bullet the Blue Sky".
[9] [10] "Mothers of the Disappeared" was inspired by the
Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo, the mothers of the thousands of "
disappeared" people who opposed the
Videla and
Galtieri coup d'état that overtook
Argentina in 1976, and who were kidnapped and never seen again.
[11]
The album juxtaposes
antipathy towards the United States, including anger at
United States foreign policy in Central America, against the band's deep fascination with the country, its open spaces, freedom and what it stood for.
[12] The band wanted music with a sense of location, a 'cinematic' quality; its music and lyrics drew on imagery created by American writers the band had been reading.
[13] The band had toured in the United States extensively, which affected the band;
according to Bono, the album was inspired and influenced more by the country's geography, rather than its people.
Bono said he "...had to 'deal with' the United States and the way it was affecting me, because the United States' having such an effect on the world at the moment. On this record I had to deal with it on a political level for the first time, if in a subtle way."
Since Bono was trying to portray the both "mythic idea of America" and the "reality of America" on the album, the working title of the album was "The Two Americas".
The record was also influenced by the
blues.
While in recording sessions for the
b-side "
Silver and Gold", working with
Keith Richards, Bono and Richards listened to
blues music,
country music, American
pop music from the 1950s, and other such influences.
These influences, combined with Bono's early influences, such as
Patti Smith and
Bob Dylan, had an effect on the song and the whole album.
"
Where the Streets Have No Name" was conceived prior to one of the
Joshua Tree
recording sessions by guitarist The Edge.
[14] Bono conceived the lyrics with the idea that one could determine a person's religion and income based on where they lived in
Belfast. While recording the song as a band, however, U2 ran into difficulty. The song's frequent chord and time changes caused problems in playing the song correctly; the difficulty was so great that producer
Brian Eno attempted to erase the track.
[15] Drummer
Larry Mullen Jr. later said of the song, "It took so long to get that song right, it was difficult for us to make any sense of it. It only became a truly great song through playing live. On the record, musically, it's not half the song it is live."
"
I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" grew from another song called "Under the Weather Girls", which co-producer
Daniel Lanois didn't like, except for Larry Mullen, Jr.'s drum track and
Adam Clayton's bass line. These parts were used as the foundation of "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For". The development of the song saw the addition of such things as a subtle auto-pan effect added to one of
The Edge's guitar
overdubs and Bono, a
tenor, singing in the upper register of his range to add to the feeling of spiritual yearning. Both Bono and Edge have, in fact, called it a
gospel song on numerous occasions.
"
With or Without You", the album's first single and one of the band's most well-known songs, uses an effect called "
infinite guitar", developed by
Michael Brook, to infinitely sustain notes.
The band concluded recording of the album in November 1986.
Release
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A number of songs that were released as B-sides to singles from
The Joshua Tree
are thought to have been considered for a double-album version of
The Joshua Tree
. Though Bono was the most vocal proponent of this extended version of the album, The Edge successfully argued for the 11-track version that was ultimately released. "Spanish Eyes" and "Deep in the Heart" were released as
B-sides to the "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" single. "Luminous Times (Hold on to Love)" and "Walk to the Water" were released as B-sides to the "With or Without You" single. "Sweetest Thing", "Silver and Gold", and "Race Against Time" were released as B-sides to the "Where the Streets Have No Name" single.
The Joshua Tree
was first released on 9 March 1987. The album cover photo was taken by
Dutch photographer
Anton Corbijn in December 1986. Corbijn later recounted the photo shoot in
Death Valley, California; "
This is the most serious set of shots I have taken of U2 and they became my most well-known photographs at the time. It was taken with a panoramic camera to take more of the landscapes in which was the main idea of the shoot: man and environment, the Irish in America.
"
[17]
In 2007, a
20th anniversary edition of the album was released, featuring remastered tracks, along with B-sides and rarities. Four different formats of the remaster were made available.
Singles
"
With or Without You" and the rhythmic gospel "
I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" were released as singles internationally and quickly went to #1 in the U.S. "
Where the Streets Have No Name" was also successfully released. "
In God's Country" was released as a fourth single in North America with modest success, while "One Tree Hill" was released as a fourth single in Australia and New Zealand.
[18] Initially slated as a single release, "
Red Hill Mining Town" was the only track from the album not played on the tour. Bono has suggested that the song's high notes put too much strain on his voice.
[19]
Reception
Upon its release,
The Joshua Tree
debuted at #1 in the UK and also quickly reached the top of the charts in the U.S. U2 became the fourth rock band to be featured on the cover of
Time
magazine (following
The Beatles,
The Band, and
The Who), who declared that U2 was "Rock's Hottest Ticket".
[20] The album brought U2 to a new level of mega-stardom, as the worldwide
Joshua Tree Tour sold out
arenas and
stadiums around the world, the first time the band had consistently played venues of that size.
[21]
The Joshua Tree
won U2 their first two
Grammy Awards, with the band receiving honors for "
Album of the Year" and "
Best Rock Performance By a Duo or Group With Vocal".
[22] [23]
According to
U.S. Recording Industry sales figures, as of January 2005,
The Joshua Tree
ranks as the 89th best-selling album of all-time in the U.S.
[24] and, as of 2006, the 26th best-selling album in the U.K..
[25] The album has sold 10 million copies in the United States alone
[26] and more than 25 million copies worldwide. It remains the band's best-selling album.
The Joshua Tree
is often cited as one of the greatest albums in rock history. In 1989, it was rated #3 on
Rolling Stone
magazine's list of "The 100 Greatest Albums of the 80's", as well as appearing at #26 on the magazine's "
500 Greatest Albums of All Time".
The Definitive 200
list sponsored by the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame ranks the album as the fifth-greatest in history.
[27] The Joshua Tree
was selected as #6 on
CCM Magazine's
2001 list of the greatest
Contemporary Christian music albums of all time (see
CCM Presents: The 100 Greatest Albums in Christian Music
). It came second place in
Channel 4's 100 Greatest albums.
[28] It came in at #10 on
ABC Television's
My Favourite Album
program, which aired in Australia in December 2006.
The Joshua Tree Tour
In support of the album, the band launched The Joshua Tree Tour. Consisting of three legs and a total of 111 shows, the tour took the band to arenas and stadiums worldwide from April 1987 to December 1987. It was the band's first tour in which many of the dates were played in stadiums. Performances of the third leg were recorded for the 1988 motion picture
Rattle and Hum
.
Track listing
The order of the songs in the track listing was devised by singer
Kirsty MacColl. MacColl, wife of producer
Steve Lillywhite, was brought into the studio one day as the album was being mixed, and was asked to come up with an order for the songs on the album, beginning with "Where the Streets Have No Name" and ending with "Mothers of the Disappeared". She listened to the songs and created a track listing simply by putting the songs in order of her favourites. The band felt that her ordering of the songs, despite being a listing of her favorites, was an excellent sequence for the album.
[29]
The original
CD pressings of the album by BMG Music Club incorrectly indexed the ending of "One Tree Hill" at 4:43 and the beginning of "Exit" at 4:53. This is because a final, quieter stanza of "One Tree Hill" ("Oh, great ocean...") occurs once the song has died down and apparently ended and when BMG Music Club produced their own
glass master, they incorrectly shifted the start of "Exit" back. As a result, owners of a BMG Music Club release of
The Joshua Tree
thought the stanza was the beginning of "Exit", even though it completely contrasts in tone with "Exit" and features lyrics similar to the chorus of "One Tree Hill". This error has been corrected on BMG's later editions of the album.
In 1996,
Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab remastered the album and released it as a special gold CD. This edition has slightly different running times from the Island CD editions, and features an alternate edit of "Mothers of the Disappeared" in which the repeating synthesizer rhythm pattern briefly rises in volume just before the song fades out completely; this recurrence is not audible on the Island CDs. (The 2007 re-issue CD remastered under the supervision of The Edge also features this edit, suggesting that it may represent the band's original intent.)
20th anniversary edition
On November 20, 2007, a 20th anniversary edition of
The Joshua Tree
was released,
[30] with a release in other regions following on 3 December 2007.
The album was released in four different formats:
[31]
- CD format
: remastered album on CD
- Deluxe format
: remastered album on CD, bonus CD with b-sides and rarities from The Joshua Tree
sessions, and a 36-page booklet
- Box set edition
: remastered album on CD, bonus CD with b-sides and rarities from The Joshua Tree
sessions, bonus DVD with a concert from the Joshua Tree Tour
and other videos, and a 56-page hardback book. The DVD also features an easter egg section, which contains a Dalton Brothers performance from Los Angeles, filmed on 18 November 1987.
- Double vinyl edition:
remastered album on two 180 Gram virgin vinyl gramophone records and pressed at Nashville's historic . It includes a 16-page booklet.
Bonus CD
Bonus DVD
- Live from Paris
– live at the Hippodrome de Vincennes in Paris, France on 4 July 1987.
- Outside It's America
– a 50-minute documentary on the Joshua Tree Tour
- "With or Without You" music video, alternative version
- "Red Hill Mining Town" music video, directed by Neil Jordan
Chart positions and sales
Album
| Country
| Peak position
| Certification
| Sales
|
| Australia
| 3
| 5x Platinum [32]
| 350,000+
|
| Austria
|
| 3x Gold [33]
| 45,000+
|
| Canada
|
| Diamond [34]
| 1,000,000+
|
| Finland
|
| Gold [35]
| 27,965
|
| France
| 1
| 2x Diamond
[36]
| 2,072,100
|
| Germany
|
| 2x Platinum/3x Gold [37]
| 700,000+
|
| Mexico
|
| Gold [38]
| 100,000+
|
| Netherlands
| 1
| Platinum [39]
| 80,000+
|
| United Kingdom
| 1
| 6x Platinum [40]
| ~2,750,000 (2,665,553 by 22 October 2006 - 26th on The Official Chart Company's list of the Top 110 all-time best selling UK albums)
|
| United States
| 1
| Diamond
| 10,000,000+
|
Singles
| Year
| Single
| Chart
| Position
|
| 1987
| "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For"
| Billboard Adult Contemporary
| 16
|
| 1987
| "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For"
| The Billboard Hot 100
| 1
|
| 1987
| "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For"
| Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks
| 2
|
| 1987
| "Where the Streets Have No Name"
| The Billboard Hot 100
| 13
|
| 1987
| "Where the Streets Have No Name"
| Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks
| 11
|
| 1987
| "With or Without You"
| The Billboard Hot 100
| 1
|
| 1987
| "With or Without You"
| Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks
| 1
|
| 1987
| "Bullet the Blue Sky"
| Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks
| 14
|
| 1987
| "In God's Country"
| Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks
| 8
|
| 1987
| "In God's Country"
| The Billboard Hot 100
| 53
|
| 1988
| "In God's Country"
| Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks
| 6
|
| 1988
| "In God's Country"
| The Billboard Hot 100
| 44
|
| 1988
| "One Tree Hill"
| RIA New Zealand Singles Chart
| 1
|
Personnel
;U2
- Bono – lead vocals, harmonica
- The Edge – guitar, backing vocals, keyboards
- Adam Clayton – bass guitar
- Larry Mullen Jr. – drums, percussion
;Additional personnel
- Brian Eno – keyboards, backing vocals, production, engineering
- Daniel Lanois – rhythm guitar, tambourine, backing vocals, production, engineering
- Flood – mixing
- Steve Lillywhite – additional production and mixing on "Where the Streets Have No Name", "With or Without You", "Bullet the Blue Sky" and "Red Hill Mining Town"
- Bob Ludwig – mastering
References
- U2: The Rolling Stone Files
- The Joshua Tree
- Bono in McCormick (2006), p.169
- McCormick (2006), p.172
- McCormick (2006), p.179
- The Joshua Tree
- U2 Releases The Joshua Tree
- McCormick (2006), p.174
- U2 Lists: Top 10 Political U2 Songs
- "U2" episode of VH1's Legends.
- McCormick (2006)
- McCormick (2006), p.186
- U2: the Complete Guide to their Music
- U2 by U2
- Rock's Near Misses
- My Two Visits to U2's Joshua Tree
- Corbijn_U2
- One Tree Hill
- U2 FAQs.com, Song/Lyrics FAQ
- "Rock's Hottest Ticket" Time Magazine Archive, April 1987. Retrieved on 20 January 2007.
- The RS 500 Greatest Albums of All-Time Rollingstone.com. Retrieved 15 October 2006.
- GRAMMY Winners List grammy.com. Retrieved 4 December 2006.
- The Joshua Tree Album Review
- Best-selling records_US
- Best Selling Albums Ever - UK
- Top 100 Albums. ''RIAA.com''. Retrieved on 2007-07-15
- Definitive 200
- The 100 Greatest Albums
- McCormick (2006), p. 185
- U2's 'Joshua Tree' Blooms Again
- The Joshua Tree 2007. U2.com. Retrieved on 2007-10-22.
- ARIA Australia
- IFPI Austria
- CRIA
- IFPI Finland
- InfoDisc: Les Ventes Réelles des Albums depuis 1968
- IFPI Germany
- AMPROFON
- NVPI
- BPI