Rattle and Hum
Rattle and Hum is a double album by the Irish rock band U2 that combines live recordings from their 1987 *Joshua Tree* Tour with new studio tracks, released on 10 October 1988 by Island Records.[1] Produced primarily by Jimmy Iovine, the project originated as a companion to a rockumentary film directed by Phil Joanou, capturing the band's immersion in American music traditions through performances at venues like Sun Studio and collaborations with figures such as B.B. King and Bob Dylan.[2][3] The album debuted at number one on charts in the United Kingdom and several other countries, eventually achieving multi-platinum status in the United States with sales exceeding 14 million copies worldwide.[4][5] It spawned hit singles including "Desire", which reached number one in the UK, and "Angel of Harlem", highlighting U2's blend of anthemic rock with blues and gospel influences.[3] Despite its commercial dominance, Rattle and Hum faced significant critical backlash for perceived self-indulgence, with reviewers decrying the band's overt reverence for rock's roots as bombastic and overly earnest in positioning U2 as heirs to American musical legacies.[6][7] This polarization underscored a pivotal moment in U2's career, prompting their subsequent stylistic reinvention on Achtung Baby.[6]Background and Conception
Origins During the Joshua Tree Tour
The Joshua Tree Tour, launched in April 1987 to support U2's breakthrough album The Joshua Tree, encompassed 109 shows across three legs, with the North American stadium leg in late 1987 serving as the primary source for Rattle and Hum's live material.[8] The tour's massive scale—drawing crowds exceeding 70,000 at venues like Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Arizona, on December 19 and 20—captured the band's heightened American popularity following The Joshua Tree's number-one debut and sales surpassing 25 million copies worldwide.[9] This success prompted U2 to document the tour's raw energy and their deepening engagement with U.S. rock traditions, initially envisioning a concert film and live album to preserve the performances' immediacy.[6] During a stop at Hartford Civic Center in September 1987, U2 encountered filmmaker Phil Joanou, who pitched an unsolicited concept for a tour documentary; the band hired him shortly thereafter, shifting focus to cinematic capture of select shows.[10] Joanou's crew filmed black-and-white sequences at McNichols Sports Arena in Denver on November 7 and 8, including renditions of "Bullet the Blue Sky" and "Running to Standstill," emphasizing the tour's intense lighting and Bono's stage persona amid sold-out crowds of over 16,000 per night.[11] These sessions marked the project's formal inception, blending live footage with on-the-road vignettes to reflect U2's immersion in American venues and culture.[12] As the tour progressed, U2 pursued roots-inspired excursions, visiting Graceland and recording at Sun Studio in Memphis around November 30, 1987, where they cut tracks like "Angel of Harlem" in the birthplace of rock 'n' roll pioneers such as Elvis Presley and Johnny Cash.[13] These off-stage activities, including informal jam sessions evoking blues and gospel influences, expanded the scope beyond mere live preservation to incorporate new compositions honoring forebears like B.B. King, whose parts were later overdubbed.[14] The Memphis visit underscored the tour's role in fostering U2's exploration of American musical heritage, transforming the initial live-focused intent into a hybrid endeavor.[3] By the tour's December finale at Sun Devil Stadium—opened by B.B. King—the Rattle and Hum concept had solidified as a tribute to the Joshua Tree era's vitality, with live cuts from Tempe providing anthemic closers like "With or Without You" amid pyrotechnics and audience sing-alongs.[15] This evolution from straightforward documentation to a multifaceted project arose organically from the tour's demands, allowing U2 to interweave archival energy with fresh studio tributes without interrupting their grueling schedule of 79 North American dates.[16]Pursuit of American Roots and Influences
U2's engagement with American musical traditions during the Rattle and Hum era stemmed from a desire to trace rock's origins back to blues, folk, and early rockabilly, as evidenced by their immersion in sites and collaborations linked to 20th-century Southern music history. In November 1987, the band recorded several tracks at Sun Studio in Memphis, Tennessee—the birthplace of rock 'n' roll where Sam Phillips captured Elvis Presley's debut singles in 1954 and Jerry Lee Lewis's explosive sessions in the late 1950s—aiming to channel the raw energy of those foundational recordings.[13][4] This choice reflected a causal progression from Delta blues migrations northward, which Phillips amplified through artists influenced by figures like Muddy Waters, whose electrified Chicago sound built on Mississippi Delta precursors.[4] The collaboration with blues guitarist B.B. King on "When Love Comes to Town" exemplified this pursuit, blending U2's arena-scale dynamics with King's gritty, string-bending style rooted in Memphis and Delta traditions he encountered as a young performer in the 1940s and 1950s.[17] King's participation, recorded in the same Sun Studio sessions, provided a direct link to American blues authenticity, countering the band's prior atmospheric sound with groove-oriented rhythms drawn from pre-rock electric blues.[13] Bono described the album's title as evoking the visceral "rattle" of guitars and "hum" of audiences, a nod to unpolished American performance energy over refined production.[16] Guitarist the Edge drew on Jimi Hendrix's feedback-laden tones for expanded sonic textures, incorporating an excerpt of Hendrix's 1969 Woodstock rendition of "The Star-Spangled Banner" into the project to underscore rock's evolution from blues improvisation to psychedelic expression.[18] This influence manifested in tracks emphasizing distorted, echoing leads that echoed Hendrix's adaptation of earlier blues structures, prioritizing empirical sonic experimentation over stylistic mimicry.[18] Such elements grounded U2's sound in verifiable historical lineages, from Sun-era rockabilly to electric blues amplification.[4]Production Process
Studio Recording Sessions
The studio tracks for Rattle and Hum were recorded in multiple locations starting in late 1987, with Jimmy Iovine producing the majority to emphasize a raw, performance-oriented sound that bridged the band's live energy and studio control.[19] Sessions at Sun Studio in Memphis, Tennessee—a site historically linked to early rock and blues recordings—began in November 1987, utilizing the facility's vintage analog equipment to achieve natural compression and harmonic richness from tape machines.[3] There, on November 30, 1987, the band tracked "Angel of Harlem," incorporating contributions from the Memphis Horns for brass layering that enhanced the track's gospel-inflected dynamics.[3] Additional Memphis sessions at Sun Studio facilitated the collaboration with B.B. King on "When Love Comes to Town," where King's guitar and vocal input provided idiomatic blues phrasing and sustain, directly shaping the song's structure around extended solos and call-response interplay without overdubs dominating the core rhythm section.[20] This approach prioritized minimal processing to preserve instrumental authenticity, resulting in a hybrid tone where U2's electric elements integrated with King's acoustic-rooted style via shared room miking.[13] Further recording occurred at STS Studios in Dublin for tracks like "Desire," captured in late 1987 to refine arrangements post-tour with focused overdubs on rhythm guitar and bass.[3] Overdubs and mixing for several studio cuts shifted to A&M Studios in Hollywood under engineer David Tickle, allowing for precise balancing of multi-tracked elements while maintaining the analog chain's inherent warmth from analog tape saturation, which softened transients and added subtle harmonic distortion without digital intervention.[3] These logistical choices—spanning quick, location-specific bursts—causally contributed to the album's varied sonic palette, where venue acoustics and equipment limitations enforced disciplined takes over endless revisions.[21]Selection and Mixing of Live Material
The live recordings featured on Rattle and Hum were drawn exclusively from U2's Joshua Tree Tour, spanning performances from September 1987 to August 1988 across arenas and stadiums in North America and Europe.[1] Tracks were selected from specific dates noted for technical audio capture and performance intensity, such as "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For," recorded at Madison Square Garden in New York on September 28, 1987, which highlighted Bono's sustained vocal range amid a responsive crowd of over 20,000.[3] Similarly, "Pride (In the Name of Love)" originated from Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Arizona, on December 20, 1987, during a multi-night stand that drew capacity audiences exceeding 70,000 total attendees.[12] This curation emphasized verifiable peak moments from sold-out shows, reflecting the tour's overall commercial dominance, which generated $35 million in gross revenue in 1987 alone—the highest for any touring act that year—rather than lesser nights that might misrepresent the band's live command.[22] Mixing the live tapes presented technical hurdles, as raw multitrack recordings from varying venues required integration with new studio elements to achieve cohesion without erasing concert authenticity. Producer Jimmy Iovine, drawing from his experience on prior U2 projects, supervised equalization tweaks to boost midrange clarity and reduce venue-specific noise, ensuring the final mixes retained the unpolished edge of amplified guitars and crowd roar.[4] Select tracks underwent targeted overdubs, such as enhanced intros or backing elements, to address imperfections in original tapes while preserving causal fidelity to the source events; for instance, portions of "All Along the Watchtower" incorporated studio additions post-recording from a November 11, 1987, San Francisco show.[3] Iovine's approach prioritized empirical audio balance over heavy sanitization, aligning the selections with the tour's empirically validated highs to avoid diluting evidence of U2's era-defining stage presence.Musical Content
Studio Compositions and Innovations
The studio compositions on Rattle and Hum were recorded at facilities including A&M Studios and Ocean Way Recording in Los Angeles, emphasizing layered instrumentation and rhythmic drive in original tracks such as "Desire," "Hawkmoon 269," and "All I Want Is You."[23] These pieces prioritize melodic hooks and structural simplicity, with arrangements built from core rhythmic and harmonic elements tested iteratively during sessions.[24] "Desire" exemplifies this approach through its 109 BPM tempo and 2:59 duration, featuring a insistent groove from drums and bass that supports The Edge's guitar riff, enhanced by delay effects producing extended sustains and modulated repeats for a sense of perpetual motion. This delay technique, applied via units like those yielding vibrato on echoes, derives from blues-inspired phrasing but scales it empirically to fill sonic space without dense overdubs, prioritizing clarity in the hook's repetition.[25] In contrast, "All I Want Is You" employs orchestral strings arranged by Van Dyke Parks to build emotional resonance in its ballad form, gradually swelling over approximately six minutes to underscore lyrical introspection with symphonic texture.[26] "Hawkmoon 269," at 6:23 in E♭ major, maintains a mid-tempo pulse with average energy, its progression favoring sustained chords and organ layers that evoke modal ambiguity through harmonic tension rather than abrupt shifts, highlighting the album's strength in hook-driven accessibility over radical experimentation.Live Tracks and Performances
The live tracks on Rattle and Hum were recorded during U2's Joshua Tree Tour in late 1987, capturing performances at key American venues such as McNichols Sports Arena in Denver, Colorado, on November 8, and Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Arizona, on December 20.[3][12] These selections highlight the band's onstage dynamics, with setlists featuring core songs from The Joshua Tree alongside covers and improvisations, deviating from rigid studio arrangements through extended durations and spontaneous elements.[27] Notable for its extensions, the Denver performance of "Pride (In the Name of Love)" incorporates Bono's ad-libs and an elongated outro, expanding the track to emphasize emotional intensity and audience engagement, distinct from the concise studio form.[28] Similarly, "Bullet the Blue Sky" from Tempe conveys raw power through The Edge's sustained guitar feedback and Bono's visceral delivery, originating the album's title phrase amid heightened crowd response.[12] Such improvisational deviations, including prolonged solos, underscore the live renditions' variability across tour dates.[4] The recordings retain unfiltered audio artifacts like elevated crowd noise levels, contributing to an authentic, unpolished realism shaped by the tour's demanding schedule of over 100 concerts, which fostered energetic yet imperfect executions.[3] This contrasts with studio polish, prioritizing the causal immediacy of live interaction over refined production.[12]Lyrical Themes, Covers, and Collaborations
The lyrics of "God Part II" critique John Lennon's declarations in his 1970 song "God", where he renounced various beliefs and figures, by extending a similar list of personal disbeliefs while highlighting Lennon's perceived hypocrisy in decrying fame after benefiting from it. Bono incorporates lines like "Don't believe in Goldman, his type like a curse / Instant karma's gonna get him if I don't get him first", targeting biographer Albert Goldman's unflattering 1988 portrayal of Lennon as drug-addled and self-destructive, which Bono viewed as exploitative.[29][30] This track underscores themes of idolatry and skepticism toward celebrity legacies, positioning Lennon as a flawed icon rather than an infallible sage.[31] Other studio tracks explore longing and redemption, as in "Hawkmoon 269", where metaphors of deserts needing rain and drifters seeking shelter evoke desperate romantic and existential need, culminating in pleas amid chaotic imagery of fire and rising suns.[32] The song's title derives from the 269 mixes attempted during production, reflecting iterative refinement rather than thematic symbolism.[33] Similarly, "When Love Comes to Town" confronts personal flaws through a blues-infused narrative of violence and transformation, with Bono's narrator admitting past sins like killing for money before love's arrival prompts atonement. Rattle and Hum features covers that pay direct homage to rock forebears, reclaiming originals from cultural distortions. The live rendition of The Beatles' "Helter Skelter"—recorded on November 15, 1987, at McNichols Sports Arena in Denver—channels the 1968 track's raw chaos, originally inspired by Paul McCartney's desire for a raucous sound, with Bono prefacing it by declaring, "This is a song Charles Manson stole from The Beatles. We're stealing it back," to sever ties from Manson's infamous interpretation.[34] "Gloria", drawn from Van Morrison's 1964 Them version, appears as a live medley with "Exit" from the same Denver show, preserving the original's urgent garage rock drive while integrating U2's anthemic scale.[35] The primary collaboration involves blues guitarist B.B. King on "When Love Comes to Town", where he contributes harp, guitar, and vocals during sessions at Sun Studio in Memphis on December 3, 1987, infusing the track with authentic Delta blues phrasing that contrasts U2's arena-rock foundation.[20] This partnership arose from U2's deliberate immersion in American musical roots, with King—then 63—lending generational authenticity without overshadowing the band's composition.[36]Release and Promotion
Album and Film Rollout
Rattle and Hum was released on October 10, 1988, by Island Records in Europe and most international markets, with the North American release occurring the following day on October 11. The album comprised a double LP and CD formats totaling 21 tracks, combining live recordings from U2's Joshua Tree Tour with new studio material. The vinyl edition utilized a gatefold sleeve incorporating black-and-white photographs capturing the band during their American performances.[37][3][2] The accompanying rockumentary film, directed by Phil Joanou, premiered on October 27, 1988, in Dublin, Ireland, ahead of wider distribution. It incorporated concert footage from the Joshua Tree Tour's concluding shows at Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Arizona, on December 19 and 20, 1987, alongside behind-the-scenes segments of the band's studio work and interactions. The film entered U.S. theaters on November 4, 1988, generating $3,821,351 in its opening weekend across 1,391 screens.[38][39][40][41]Marketing Strategies and Initial Hype
The promotional campaign for Rattle and Hum leveraged U2's post-Joshua Tree momentum through a coordinated rollout of the lead single "Desire" on September 19, 1988, which featured guest contributions from Elvis Costello on piano and saxophone, positioning the track as a thematic preview of the project's exploration of American musical roots.[42] This single release, accompanied by a music video directed by Phil Joanou that echoed the film's rockumentary style, generated early buzz by achieving U2's first UK number-one single upon its chart entry on October 8, 1988.[43] The strategy emphasized multimedia synergy, framing the album and film as an immersive "rock documentary" narrative rather than isolated products, with Island Records and Paramount Pictures cross-promoting via shared imagery of live performances and studio sessions. Television advertisements played a central role, with 30-second spots airing in the US in late 1988 to tout the film's theatrical debut on November 4, emphasizing U2's live energy and cultural homage in venues like Sun Studio.[44] Print media tie-ins included full-page ads in music publications, such as New Zealand's Rip It Up zine in October 1988, which highlighted the dual album-film format to amplify perceived scope.[45] In the US, theater promotions featured lobby posters and display materials distributed to cinemas, inflating the event-like atmosphere around screenings and fostering a sense of epic scale tied to the band's Joshua Tree Tour footage.[46] Launch events further heightened anticipation, including a Dublin premiere on October 27, 1988, where U2 performed acoustically for fans outside the Savoy Cinema, blending live playback with public interaction to evoke grassroots authenticity amid the project's American-centric theme.[47] UK efforts mirrored this with coordinated media placements, though specific ad expenditure figures remain undocumented in public records; the overall blitz, however, correlated with rapid chart positioning, as the album debuted at number one in multiple territories upon its October 10 release.[48] This aggressive framing as a transformative "return to rock's heartland" set lofty expectations, with promotional materials underscoring collaborations and live rawness, though such positioning later invited scrutiny for potentially overstating the hybrid release's coherence.[49]Reception
Critical Reviews of Album and Film
The album Rattle and Hum elicited mixed critical responses upon its October 10, 1988 release, with reviewers commending standout tracks such as "Desire" for its raw energy while faulting the double-disc format's bloat and inconsistent blend of live recordings and new studio material. Anthony DeCurtis of Rolling Stone rated it three out of five stars, observing that U2 holds its own in homage to American roots music but shines most when eschewing overreach for straightforward rock.[50] Robert Christgau assigned a B- grade, acknowledging the band's integration of Americana influences amid pretentious tendencies, yet highlighting the live tracks' vitality over weaker fillers.[51] Time magazine praised it as the finest live rock album to date, emphasizing U2's command in concert settings that elevated the hybrid structure.[7] Critics frequently noted the album's live portions outperforming its studio additions, which some viewed as diluting the Joshua Tree tour's momentum with uneven covers and experiments. Jon Pareles of The New York Times deemed it a "mess" curdled by insistence on equating amateurish interpretations of blues traditions with original urgency, though he conceded strengths in songs like "Desire" and "Angel of Harlem."[52] This disparity underscored broader ambivalence toward the project's ambition to fuse U2's sound with American musical heritage, often at the expense of cohesion. The accompanying film, released on October 27, 1988, faced harsher scrutiny for its disjointed editing and promotional tone, which amplified perceptions of the album's flaws through uneven pacing between electrifying concert footage and contrived interludes. A New York Times review highlighted vulnerabilities in segments like visits to Graceland, where the band's tourist-like reverence clashed with the live highs, rendering the narrative self-congratulatory.[53] Review aggregators later reflected this, with Rotten Tomatoes compiling a 62% approval rating from period critiques that faulted the film's failure to streamline its concert-documentary hybrid into a compelling whole.[54] The interplay between media exacerbated critiques, as the film's visual emphasis on U2's American immersion mirrored the album's thematic reach but often prioritized spectacle over substance, leading some to prefer the raw audio experience of live tracks alone.Key Criticisms: Pretentiousness and Overambition
Critics lambasted Rattle and Hum for embodying U2's hubris, portraying the band as prematurely enshrining itself in rock's pantheon through grandiose tributes to American forebears like Bob Dylan and B.B. King, which some viewed as presumptuous cultural appropriation rather than genuine homage.[55] This self-aggrandizement extended to Bono's dramatic spoken-word narrations and mid-performance soliloquies, such as his lecture on apartheid during "Bullet the Blue Sky," interpreted by detractors as messianic posturing that prioritized spectacle over substance.[56] The project's overambition manifested in its eclectic format—blending raw live cuts from the Joshua Tree Tour with polished studio sessions and covers—which critics argued fostered bloat and inconsistency, exemplified by the album's protracted 72-minute length that sprawled across 17 tracks without tight thematic cohesion.[57] Such excesses traced causally to the stratospheric hype following The Joshua Tree's 1987 global dominance, which inflated U2's ambitions into a multimedia opus (album, film, tour documentary) that strained creative limits and invited backlash as an overextended victory lap.[58] In a 1989 Spin interview, band members acknowledged this trajectory risked sabotaging their stature, with Bono reflecting on the era's intensity as a deliberate undercutting of their mythic image amid mounting internal fatigue.[58] This self-awareness validated claims of overreach, as the project's fallout—evident in polarized reviews decrying its pretentious bombast—propelled U2 toward a humbler, ironic reinvention on Achtung Baby (1991), where they explicitly rejected the earnest Americana immersion of Rattle and Hum.[59] Defenders, including retrospective analyses, countered that the album's indulgences reflected authentic artistic evolution amid the Joshua Tree Tour's grueling 1987 schedule, preserving raw energy in live tracks like "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" that captured genuine reverence for blues and roots influences, rather than contrived pomp.[60] Yet purist critiques persisted, arguing the format's ambition diluted U2's core strengths in concise, anthemic songcraft, substantiating the pretentiousness charge through empirical dilution of hits amid filler like extended jams and narrative interludes.[61] The divide underscores a causal realism: while not wholly debunkable as mere hubris, the project's overextension empirically correlated with a creative nadir that necessitated U2's subsequent deconstruction of their stadium-rock persona.[58]Commercial Performance and Achievements
Rattle and Hum debuted at number one on the US Billboard 200 chart on October 22, 1988, holding the top position for six consecutive weeks and marking the first double album to achieve this since Bruce Springsteen's The River in 1980.[3] In the United Kingdom, the album also reached number one upon release on October 10, 1988, selling 360,000 copies in its first week—a record for the fastest-selling album in UK history at the time, surpassing previous benchmarks set by acts like The Beatles and Michael Jackson.[62] Worldwide, the album has sold an estimated 14 million copies, with over five million certified in the United States by the RIAA, underscoring robust consumer demand amid mixed critical reception.[63][1] The lead single "Desire," released on September 26, 1988, became U2's first number-one hit on the UK Singles Chart, topping it for one week starting October 8, 1988, and also peaking at number three on the US Billboard Hot 100.[64][65] Follow-up singles like "Angel of Harlem" and "All I Want Is You" further sustained chart presence, with the former reaching number one on the Billboard Album Rock Tracks chart for six weeks.[66] These metrics reflect strong market validation through direct purchases, contrasting with contemporaneous critiques of overambition. The companion concert film, directed by Phil Joanou and released on October 27, 1988, grossed $8.6 million at the North American box office, with an opening weekend of $3.8 million across 1,040 theaters.[67] Home video releases, particularly VHS, amplified its reach and revenue, contributing to ancillary sales that bolstered the project's overall commercial viability despite limited theatrical legs.[68] The album earned Grammy nominations, including for Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal, highlighting industry recognition of its artistic elements even as some reviewers dismissed the endeavor.[3]Legacy and Impact
Influence on U2's Subsequent Career
The negative critical response to Rattle and Hum, often faulted for self-importance and uneven execution, prompted U2 to undertake a deliberate creative overhaul. The band retreated to Hansa Studios in Berlin in late 1990 to record what became Achtung Baby (released November 18, 1991), aiming to dismantle their established "earnest rock" identity and explore new sonic territories including industrial noise, electronica, and groove-oriented production.[69] This shift was explicitly framed by the group as a response to creative stagnation following The Joshua Tree and Rattle and Hum, with guitarist The Edge later describing the Berlin sessions as a "demolition" of prior habits to avoid repetition.[70] Frontman Bono reflected that the polarized reception—ranging from acclaim for its ambition to derision as pompous—energized rather than deterred the band, but underscored the need for reinvention to sustain relevance.[71] Film director Phil Joanou, who helmed the Rattle and Hum documentary, confirmed that Achtung Baby emerged as a direct counter-reaction, fundamentally redirecting U2's path away from American roots influences toward postmodern experimentation.[72] The album's success, debuting at number one in six countries and selling over 18 million copies worldwide, validated this pivot and restored critical favor, enabling subsequent projects like the multimedia-heavy Zoo TV Tour (1992–1993), which satirized stadium rock excess in contrast to Rattle and Hum's sincerity.[69] This period of deconstruction influenced U2's output through the 1990s, including Zooropa (1993) and Pop (1997), where they continued integrating dance-punk and abstract visuals, though with varying commercial results. The Rattle and Hum era's overambition thus served as a cautionary pivot, fostering adaptability that extended U2's longevity beyond the 1980s arena-rock peak, as evidenced by their sustained chart dominance and evolution into a more ironic, technology-driven act.[6]Retrospective Evaluations and Reassessments
In reassessments since the early 2000s, Rattle and Hum has been characterized as a transitional work marked by ambition and inconsistency, with its blend of live recordings, covers, and new studio tracks often praised for capturing U2's raw energy during the Joshua Tree tour but criticized for structural bloat and uneven pacing.[4][2] A 2018 analysis argued that initial critical backlash overlooked the album's successful distillation of the band's live prowess, particularly in elevated renditions of "Bad," "Bullet the Blue Sky," and "Pride (In the Name of Love)," which conveyed a sense of communal catharsis absent in studio versions.[6] Subsequent evaluations, including a 2023 retrospective, have highlighted strengths in original compositions like "Desire" and "All I Want Is You" for their melodic maturity and thematic depth on fame and roots, while noting the project's failure to fully innovate beyond homage to American music traditions, resulting in a patchwork feel rather than cohesive reinvention.[2][19] A 2024 review countered persistent notions of pretentiousness by emphasizing the album's track-to-track variety, which sustains listener engagement through contrasts in tempo and style, positioning it as an underrated "stroke of genius" amid U2's discography.[73] Fan-driven rankings reflect mid-tier status, with Rattle and Hum placing sixth in a 2014 Rolling Stone readers' poll of U2 albums and similarly in subsequent surveys, underscoring enduring appeal among devotees for its hits and live vitality despite not rivaling core classics like The Joshua Tree or Achtung Baby.[74][75] This contrasts with some media narratives framing it as a near-failure, a view rebutted by its role in prompting U2's self-reassessment and pivot to experimentalism, as evidenced by persistent catalog sales and streaming traction for standout tracks like "Desire," which amassed millions of plays by 2023.[76][77] Critiques of the album's perceived overreach have been reexamined through a lens of causal context: post-Joshua Tree commercial dominance invited scrutiny from outlets wary of rock's arena-scale commodification, yet empirical fan loyalty and the project's influence on U2's avoidance of stagnation affirm its net positive as a bridge to bolder reinvention, rather than the "disaster" trope in select analyses.[6][78]Cultural and Musical Footprint
Rattle and Hum's hybrid structure of live concert footage, studio recordings, and covers of American roots songs influenced the format of subsequent rock documentaries by emphasizing narrative journeys through performance and cultural homage, as seen in comparisons to Cameron Crowe's 2011 Pearl Jam retrospective, which similarly interwove archival live material with band reflections.[79] However, direct inspirational links remain anecdotal, with the album's approach building on earlier rockumentaries rather than establishing a transformative template. Its original compositions, such as "Desire" and "All I Want Is You," received limited covers by other artists, underscoring a niche rather than widespread musical emulation in subsequent decades.[80] The album's sessions at Sun Studio in Memphis, Tennessee, on December 3-6, 1987, documented tracks like "When Love Comes to Town" featuring B.B. King and "Angel of Harlem," spotlighting the site's role as rock 'n' roll's birthplace and leaving behind drummer Larry Mullen Jr.'s vintage drum kit, which remains on site and has been played by visitors including Ringo Starr.[81] This exposure reinforced Sun Studio's historical allure but drew critiques for potentially commercializing sacred musical origins through high-profile rock tourism, as U2's global fanbase amplified visits to the preserved venue without direct quantitative data on attendance surges post-release.[13] Empirically, Rattle and Hum has endured through niche retrospectives rather than broad reissues; it lacks a physical remastered edition despite digital streaming updates in 2017, marking it as the only U2 1980s album without deluxe physical treatment, though 2023 marked its 35th anniversary with media reflections on its transitional role in rock's roots exploration.[3] [16] Its nods to blues and gospel elements echoed in 1990s alternative rock's occasional roots infusions but did not catalyze a verifiable revival, with broader genre shifts attributed to parallel influences like the White Stripes' later primitivism.[4]Track Listings
Original Album Edition
The original album edition of Rattle and Hum, released on 10 October 1988 by Island Records, is a double-disc set comprising 17 tracks: 11 on Disc 1 blending live recordings from the Joshua Tree Tour with select studio cuts, and 6 studio tracks on Disc 2.[37][1] Track durations are as per the initial vinyl and CD pressings, with writers credited to U2 for originals unless otherwise specified for covers or collaborations.[37] Disc 1- "Helter Skelter" (live at McNichols Sports Arena, Denver, 8 November 1987) (Lennon–McCartney) – 3:07[37][3]
- "Van Diemen's Land" (U2) – 3:06[37]
- "Desire" (U2) – 2:58[37]
- "Hawkmoon 269" (U2) – 6:22[37]
- "All Along the Watchtower" (live at Embarcadero Plaza, San Francisco, 12 November 1987) (Bob Dylan) – 4:24[37][3]
- "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" (live at Sun Devil Stadium, Tempe, 20 November 1987) (U2) – 5:53[37][3]
- "Freedom for My People" (Joe Johnson, Aljos Kincaid; arranged by The Staple Singers) – 0:38[37]
- "Silver and Gold" (live at Sun Devil Stadium, Tempe, 20 November 1987) (U2) – 4:39[37][3]
- "Pride (In the Name of Love)" (live) (U2) – 4:37[37]
- "Bullet the Blue Sky" (live at McNichols Sports Arena, Denver, 8 November 1987) (U2) – 5:35[37][3]
- "Running to Stand Still" (live at Sun Devil Stadium, Tempe, 19 November 1987) (U2) – 4:09[37][3]
- "God Part II" (U2) – 4:16[37]
- "Love Rescue Me" (U2, Bob Dylan) – 5:24[37]
- "When Love Comes to Town" (feat. B.B. King) (U2) – 4:15[37]
- "Heartland" (U2) – 5:01[37]
- "Under the Blood Red Sky" (U2) – 4:23[37]
- "Angel of Harlem" (U2) – 3:49[37]
- "Stand by Me" (Ben E. King, Jerry Leiber, Mike Stoller) – 3:52[37]
- ""40"" (live) (U2) – 2:08[37]
Concert Film Sequence
The Rattle and Hum film, directed by Phil Joanou, has a runtime of 99 minutes and structures its content as a rockumentary that intercuts high-contrast black-and-white live footage from U2's Joshua Tree Tour—primarily the November 7–8, 1987, shows at McNichols Sports Arena in Denver—with color sequences from later tour dates, such as December 19–20, 1987, at Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Arizona, and an outdoor performance on November 11, 1987, at Embarcadero Plaza in San Francisco.[84][85] This visual alternation creates a dynamic narrative flow, opening with the band's energetic cover of The Beatles' "Helter Skelter" in Denver to establish a raw, immersive concert atmosphere, followed by Bono's voiceover narration framing the tour's exploration of American musical heritage.[84] Subsequent segments shift to color for "Desire," captured amid pyrotechnics and crowd energy in Tempe, then incorporate narrative interludes like the band's visit to Sun Studio in Memphis, where they record "When Love Comes to Town" with B.B. King, highlighting influences from blues and rockabilly roots through on-site footage of the historic recording space.[84] A distinctive behind-the-scenes element absent from the album is drummer Larry Mullen Jr.'s solo visit to Elvis Presley's Graceland estate, presented in contemplative black-and-white shots that underscore themes of musical legacy without accompanying audio performance, emphasizing visual introspection over soundtrack integration.[72] Joanou's editing, informed by 22 draft assemblies, prioritizes rhythmic cuts between these Americana-infused vignettes—such as the Harlem Gospel Choir joining "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" in Tempe—and intense live medleys like "Exit" into "Gloria" from Denver, blending documentary-style intimacy with stadium-scale spectacle to convey the tour's cultural immersion.[72] The film's sequence diverges from the album by foregrounding unused tour footage, including an extended "Bad" performance from Tokyo on November 1987, intercut with studio clips from Point Depot in Dublin and A&M Studios, to build a non-linear visual essay on artistic evolution rather than a linear audio playlist.[84] Brief interviews and observational moments, like the band reflecting on American icons, provide causal links to their sound's maturation, with Joanou's choices—drawing from influences like The Last Waltz—focusing on music-driven storytelling that avoids personal biography in favor of performative and locational authenticity.[72] This approach results in a runtime balanced across approximately 70% live concert material and 30% supplementary visuals, distinguishing the film's experiential depth from the album's studio-live hybrid tracks.[85]Credits
Band and Production Personnel
The core members of U2 performing and recording on Rattle and Hum were Bono (lead vocals, guitar, harmonica), the Edge (guitar, keyboards, backing vocals), Adam Clayton (bass guitar), and Larry Mullen Jr. (drums, percussion).[86][85] The album's primary production was handled by Jimmy Iovine, who oversaw the integration of live and studio elements recorded during the band's 1987 Joshua Tree Tour and subsequent sessions.[1][6] Engineering duties were led by David Tickle, including post-production mixing.[1] Additional production coordination was provided by Gregg McCarty, while art coordination fell to Anne-Louise Kelly.[37] The project was managed by Paul McGuinness, U2's longtime representative.[3]Guest Musicians and Contributors
B.B. King contributed guitar and co-lead vocals to "When Love Comes to Town," a studio track recorded at Sun Studio in Memphis, Tennessee, on September 30, 1987, emphasizing blues influences central to the album's thematic exploration of American musical heritage.[87][19] King's participation stemmed from Bono's deliberate outreach to the blues icon, aligning with U2's intent to integrate authentic roots elements into their rock sound.[87] Bob Dylan provided Hammond organ on "Hawkmoon 269" and background vocals on "Love Rescue Me," both studio recordings that followed informal collaborations during U2's Joshua Tree Tour, where Dylan joined onstage in June 1987.[33][17] These inputs drew on Dylan's folk-rock pedigree to underscore the album's nod to influential American songwriters. The New Voices of Freedom gospel choir, directed by Dennis Bell with soloists Dorothy Terrell and George Pendergrass, performed on the live rendition of "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For," captured at Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Arizona, on November 20, 1987, infusing the track with Harlem-inspired gospel fervor recorded separately in New York.[88] Sterling Magee (Mr. Magic) added guitar and percussion to "Freedom for My People," a brief studio interlude honoring civil rights themes.[3] Such guest roles, verified through production credits, served U2's project of bridging their Irish rock origins with verifiable American traditions, prioritizing established performers' expertise over novelty.[19][17]Charts and Certifications
Album and Film Chart Positions
Rattle and Hum debuted at number one on the US Billboard 200 chart on November 12, 1988, holding the position for six consecutive weeks.[89][90] In the United Kingdom, the album reached number one on the Official Albums Chart for one week and spent a total of 65 weeks on the chart across multiple runs.[91] It also topped the Irish Albums Chart.[92] The album achieved number-one peaks in several other countries, including Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden, and Switzerland.[1]| Country/Chart | Peak Position | Year-End Rank (1988) |
|---|---|---|
| Austria | 2 | 14 |
| Canada (RPM) | 1 | 16 |
| Netherlands | 3 | 17 |
Single Releases and Performance
"Desire", released on 19 September 1988, became U2's first number-one single on the UK Singles Chart, where it held the top position for one week.[64] In the United States, it peaked at number three on the Billboard Hot 100, number one on the Mainstream Rock chart, and number one on the Alternative Airplay chart.[93] The track's success marked a commercial high point for the album's lead single, driven by its anthemic structure and live elements incorporated from performances during the Joshua Tree Tour. "Angel of Harlem", issued on 5 December 1988, reached number nine on the UK Singles Chart and number 14 on the US Billboard Hot 100.[94] [95] It performed moderately on other international charts, including number 18 on the Australian ARIA Singles Chart, reflecting solid but not chart-topping radio and sales traction compared to "Desire".[96] "When Love Comes to Town", featuring B.B. King and released in March 1989, peaked at number six in the UK and number two on the US Mainstream Rock chart, though it only reached number 68 on the Billboard Hot 100.[97] [95] The collaboration highlighted blues influences but yielded underwhelming pop crossover appeal in the US. "All I Want Is You", the final single from the album released on 13 June 1989, underperformed on mainstream charts with a peak of number 83 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and lower visibility in the UK, yet it achieved number-one status on the US Adult Contemporary chart, appealing to a more mature audience through its ballad style.[95] [98]| Single | Release Date | UK Peak | US Hot 100 Peak | US Mainstream Rock Peak | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Desire | 19 Sep 1988 | 1 | 3 | 1 | First UK #1 for U2[64][93] |
| Angel of Harlem | 5 Dec 1988 | 9 | 14 | - | Moderate international success[94][95] |
| When Love Comes to Town | Mar 1989 | 6 | 68 | 2 | Featured B.B. King[97][95] |
| All I Want Is You | 13 Jun 1989 | - | 83 | - | #1 US Adult Contemporary[95][98] |
Sales Certifications and Figures
The album Rattle and Hum has been certified 5× Platinum by the RIAA in the United States, representing shipments of 5 million units as of certifications awarded by December 1988 and confirmed in subsequent reporting.[3][89] In the United Kingdom, it received a 4× Platinum certification from the BPI for sales exceeding 1.2 million copies.[5] Certifications in other markets include 7× Platinum in Australia (490,000 units), 7× Platinum in Canada (700,000 units), and Gold in Brazil (100,000 units), among additional regional awards.[5]| Country/Region | Certification | Units Certified |
|---|---|---|
| Australia | 7× Platinum | 490,000 |
| Brazil | Gold | 100,000 |
| Canada | 7× Platinum | 700,000 |
| United Kingdom | 4× Platinum | 1,200,000 |
| United States | 5× Platinum | 5,000,000 |