The Joshua Tree is the fifth studio album by the Irish rock band U2, released on 9 March 1987 by Island Records.[1] Produced by Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois, it represents U2's exploration of American musical roots including rock, blues, and gospel, while grappling with themes of spiritual searching, personal loss, and political critique.[2] Recorded primarily at Windmill Lane Studios in Dublin beginning in January 1986, with supplementary sessions in Denmark and the Mojave Desert, the album's stark desert-inspired aesthetic and expansive sound propelled U2 from arena performers to global stadium icons.[3] Featuring singles such as "With or Without You," "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For," and "Where the Streets Have No Name," it debuted at number seven on the USBillboard 200 before ascending to number one, marking U2's first chart-topping album in the United States.[1]The Joshua Tree has sold over 25 million copies worldwide, received widespread critical acclaim for its ambitious scope, and won the Grammy Award for Album of the Year in 1988, solidifying its status as a landmark in rock music history.[4][5]
Background
Conceptual Foundations
U2 conceived The Joshua Tree as an exploration of America's dual nature, blending mythic ideals with stark realities, initially under the working title The Two Americas.[6] This concept arose from the band's extensive U.S. tours, which exposed them to the country's vast landscapes, cultural contradictions, and political tensions during the Reagan era.[7] Bono articulated the theme as encompassing "the mythic America and the real America," reflecting an immigrant's perspective on a land seen as a promised refuge yet marred by social divisions and foreign policy aggressions, such as U.S. involvement in Central America.[7][7]The album's foundations drew heavily from American roots music traditions, including blues, gospel, folk, and country, which the band integrated to revitalize their sound after feeling constrained by prior stylistic clichés.[8] Guitarist David Evans, known as the Edge, emphasized the drive to produce a "big record" infused with these influences, viewing America as a creative lifeline amid a perceived creative impasse.[8] This shift aimed at maturity and ambition, channeling external inspirations into personal evolution rather than mere replication.[8]Spiritually, The Joshua Tree embodies a quest for transcendence and authenticity, employing biblical motifs to probe justice, suffering, and human yearning against Cold War-era backdrops of change and conflict.[7] Tracks like "Bullet the Blue Sky" stem from direct encounters with violence in El Salvador, critiquing militarism through imagery equating leaders to pharaohs and citizens to exiles.[7] The titular Joshua tree serves as a metaphor for resilient, outstretched seeking—evocative of crucifixion and perseverance—in a narrative of disillusionment yielding deeper insight.[8]
Influences and Pre-Production
U2's conception of The Joshua Tree stemmed from their deepening engagement with American culture, forged through extensive touring in the United States following the success of The Unforgettable Fire. The band sought to channel a "mythical America," drawing on the vast spiritual resonance of its landscapes, literature, and politics, which contrasted with their Irish roots.[9][10][11]Musically, influences encompassed American roots genres including blues, gospel, and rock, marking a shift toward incorporating these elements into U2's post-punk foundation. Key figures such as Bob Dylan, Van Morrison, and Keith Richards provided counsel during early development, advising the band on authenticity in exploring these traditions.[12][13][8]Pre-production began with the decision to reconvene producers Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois, whose ambient approaches had shaped The Unforgettable Fire. Initial sessions started in January 1986 at Windmill Lane Studios in Dublin, Ireland, where the band experimented with blending new roots-inspired material and ambient textures. To immerse in American influences, U2 undertook road trips across the Southwest, including visits to deserts like Death Valley, which evoked the album's themes of isolation and transcendence.[14][15][16]
Recording and Production
Studios and Sessions
The recording sessions for The Joshua Tree began in January 1986 at Danesmoate House in Dublin, Ireland, where U2 collaborated with producers Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois.[17] Early work focused on developing song structures in a residential setting to foster creative experimentation before transitioning to professional facilities.[18]Principal tracking and overdubbing occurred at Windmill Lane Studios in Dublin, with sessions alternating between there and other locations such as Monkstown Studios.[18] Engineer Mark Ellis, known as Flood, assisted Eno and Lanois, contributing to the album's layered sound through meticulous microphone placement and room acoustics.[17] The band regrouped on 1 August 1986 to intensify efforts, incorporating influences from U.S. road trips that informed the album's thematic scope without direct recording abroad.[18]Core recording wrapped by November 1986, though additional production and mixing extended into January 1987 at facilities including Windmill Lane.[18] Lanois emphasized drum sounds and rhythmic foundations during sessions, while Eno guided ambient guitar elements, such as the infinite sustain on "With or Without You," achieved via innovative effects processing.[17] These efforts totaled approximately 10 months, yielding the album's distinctive "cinematic" texture through iterative refinement.[18]
Techniques and Challenges
The production of The Joshua Tree employed a collaborative approach led by co-producers Daniel Lanois and Brian Eno, who worked in shifts alongside engineer Mark "Flood" Ellis to capture the band's live performance energy.[18] Sessions utilized portable recording equipment, including a Studer A80 24-track machine initially, later upgraded to a Mitsubishi 32-track due to track limitations, with an API mixing console and microphones such as the Neumann U47 and Sony C500 valve models.[19] Techniques emphasized ambient room sounds, particularly in a resonant space at Danesmoate House where doors were removed and gobos installed for isolation, contributing to the album's characteristic low-midrange depth and loudness.[18] Drums were recorded through a PA system in a Windmill Lane warehouse for enhanced punch, while guitar effects like shimmer were applied to tracks such as "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For."[19]Challenges arose from unconventional locations, including The Edge's and Adam Clayton's homes, where poor acoustics in basement setups tested spontaneity but yielded raw results for songs like "In God's Country."[19] Transferring tapes between multitrack machines resulted in bass frequency loss, necessitating compensatory adjustments.[19] Audio spill from monitor speakers persisted despite gobos, complicating overdubs.[18] Particular difficulty plagued "Where the Streets Have No Name," with extensive revisions prompting Eno to nearly erase the master tape in frustration.[18] Mixing occurred across sites like Monkstown using an AMEK 2500 desk, with final polishes by Steve Lillywhite at Windmill Lane's SSL console to refine the expansive sound.[18]
Composition
Musical Structure
The musical structure of The Joshua Tree primarily employs verse-chorus forms common to rock, but extends them with prolonged instrumental introductions, tension-building bridges, and atmospheric codas to evoke emotional depth and spatial vastness. The 11 tracks, totaling 50 minutes and 11 seconds, alternate between anthemic rockers and introspective ballads, with average song lengths of 4 to 5 minutes allowing for gradual dynamic swells driven by rhythmic guitar delays and layered percussion. Guitarist The Edge's partial chord voicings—focusing on roots and fifths rather than full triads—introduce harmonic ambiguity, while his percussive style emphasizes space over dense rhythm guitar, creating a foundation that supports Bono's soaring vocals and the band's interlocking rhythms.[20]Opening track "Where the Streets Have No Name" sets the template with a signature arpeggiated guitar intro at 129 beats per minute, processed through digital delays of 350 milliseconds and 531 milliseconds to generate syncopated echoes that pan across stereo channels, simulating panoramic motion before resolving into verses and anthemic choruses in A major. "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For," in D major, follows a standard verse-chorus progression infused with gospel harmonies and a walking bass line, building through harmonica fills to repetitive, uplifting refrains. In contrast, "With or Without You" eschews a traditional chorus for repetitive verse-like sections anchored by Adam Clayton's bass groove, incorporating The Edge's Infinite Guitar for sustained, evolving tones that heighten tension toward an extended outro climax without a conventional bridge.[21][22][23]Heavier tracks like "Bullet the Blue Sky" utilize riff-based verses with slide guitar for a blues-derived propulsion, escalating to explosive choruses that prioritize thematic intensity over melodic resolution. Ballads such as "Running to Stand Still" integrate piano-driven verses and harmonica solos within a verse-chorus frame, while "Mothers of the Disappeared" closes with sparse percussion and echoing guitar fades, reinforcing the album's motif of unresolved searching through minimalist builds. These elements, amplified by The Edge's delay effects mimicking multiple guitarists, unify the structures into a cohesive sonic landscape.[24][20]
Lyrical Themes
The lyrics of The Joshua Tree, penned primarily by Bono, intertwine spiritual yearning with disillusionment toward American ideals, reflecting the band's immersion in U.S. landscapes and culture during the mid-1980s. Drawing from road trips across deserts and cities, the songs portray America as a paradoxical "promised land"—a source of inspiration and freedom yet marred by violence, hypocrisy, and unfulfilled dreams, as Bono described in reflections on the album's immigrant-like narrative of discovery and critique.[25][7] This thematic core emerged from the group's deliberate shift toward broader, less insular concerns than their prior work, incorporating influences from American literature like Norman Mailer's The Executioner's Song and Flannery O'Connor's Southern Gothic explorations of faith and sin.[26]A prominent motif is spiritual questing and existential incompleteness, evident in "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For," where Bono evokes a pilgrim's journey through biblical allusions—such as climbing Mount Sinai and witnessing divine light—while acknowledging persistent human longing despite redemptive encounters.[27] Similarly, "Where the Streets Have No Name" conveys a desperate pursuit of unvarnished truth and communal authenticity, inspired by Bono's observations of urban divisions in Belfast and U.S. cities, framing it as a cry against superficiality in favor of raw, redemptive connection.[25] These tracks align with the album's understated Christian undertones, rooted in the band's evangelical backgrounds, though Bono has emphasized their universality over doctrinal preaching, avoiding resolution to mirror life's ongoing search.[28]Romantic and interpersonal tension surfaces in songs like "With or Without You," which Bono has interpreted as the torment of codependent love—essential yet agonizing, akin to a drug-like addiction where separation promises relief but union demands surrender.[29] "Running to Stand Still" extends this to personal stagnation amid heroinaddiction's grip, drawing from Dublin's inner-city struggles and symbolizing futile escapes from inner voids.[27] These lyrics eschew sentimentality for raw vulnerability, highlighting emotional paradoxes without prescriptive outcomes.Politically, the album critiques U.S. foreign policy and militarism, most starkly in "Bullet the Blue Sky," inspired by Bono's 1986 visit to war-torn El Salvador, where he witnessed U.S.-backed violence; the lyrics rail against "outside intelligence" and helicopter raids as emblems of imperial overreach during the Reagan era's Central American interventions.[27] "In God's Country" juxtaposes Ireland's rugged spirituality against America's commodified "holy" pursuits, while "Exit" probes the brink of rage-fueled violence or self-destruction, Bono later linking it to contemplating suicide amid relational despair.[25] Overall, these themes coalesce into a realist appraisal of idealism's limits, privileging lived contradictions over utopian narratives.[30]
Title, Artwork, and Packaging
Origin of the Title
The title The Joshua Tree derives from Yucca brevifolia, a tree species native to the Mojave Desert and other arid regions of the southwestern United States, known for its unique, twisted branches that resemble human arms extended skyward.[28] Early Mormon pioneers named the tree after the biblical prophet Joshua, interpreting its form as evoking the figure's raised arms during supplication or the Israelite conquest of Jericho, as described in the Book of Joshua.[31]U2 selected the title during a late-1986 photoshoot in the California desert with photographer Anton Corbijn, where the band encountered a lone Joshua tree amid the barren terrain and recognized its symbolic resonance with the album's themes of spiritual quest, resilience, and confrontation with the vast, unforgiving American landscape.[32] The tree's ability to thrive in harsh conditions mirrored the band's perception of faith enduring amid desolation, aligning with lyrical explorations of doubt, redemption, and the "unacceptable face of love and religion" in modern life.[28]Bono, influenced by a 1985 trip to famine-stricken Ethiopia, sought a desert motif to evoke isolation and spiritual aridity, further cementing the tree as a fitting emblem over prior working titles like The Two Americas, which highlighted perceived contradictions in U.S. culture and politics.[13][33]This choice encapsulated the album's shift toward roots music influences and a mythic view of America as both promised land and spiritual wilderness, with the Joshua tree serving as a visual and thematic anchor rather than a literal reference to any specific location like Joshua Tree National Park.[34]
Visual Design Choices
The album cover features a monochrome landscape photograph of U2 positioned in the Mojave Desert at Zabriskie Point, Death Valley, captured by photographer Anton Corbijn during a December 1986 road trip.[35][36] The band occupies the left half of the widescreen frame, clad in dark clothing and facing forward with a distant mountain range on the right, evoking a sense of isolation and mythic frontier exploration tied to the album's American thematic influences.[37][35]Designer Steve Averill integrated the image against a stark black background to achieve a cinematic letterbox scale, enhancing the austere, timeless quality of the monochrome treatment, which was selected over color to convey seriousness and spiritual desolation mirroring the record's motifs of drought and quest.[36][35] The title "THE JOSHUA TREE" and band name "U2" appear in minimalist sans-serifgold lettering stretched horizontally across the top, an early conceptual element retained for its subtle contrast and premium evocation without overwhelming the central imagery.[38][36] This layout, developed in collaboration with Corbijn after the band delegated creative control amid their focus on songwriting, prioritized simplicity to let the desert expanse dominate and symbolize unyielding vastness.[36]The rear sleeve and gatefold employ a colorful silhouette of a Joshua tree (Yucca brevifolia) with the band foregrounded near California State Highway 190, contrasting the front's severity to highlight the title's botanical origin while maintaining thematic cohesion through natural desert motifs.[35][37] These choices, rooted in rapid on-location shoots that included incidental elements like a overlooked mirror, aligned with U2's established graphic restraint under Averill, avoiding embellishment to underscore the album's raw, exploratory essence.[36]
Release
Launch Strategy
The Joshua Tree was released on March 9, 1987, by Island Records, with North American distribution following on March 10.[17][1] Recognizing the emerging compact disc market alongside established analog formats, Island issued the album simultaneously on vinyl, cassette, and CD, marking the first major release to employ this multi-format strategy on launch day and catering to diverse consumer preferences.[2]Island Records orchestrated a comprehensive promotional rollout, which president Lou Maglia described as "the most complete merchandising effort ever assembled in my career."[39] This included a $100,000 investment in in-store displays, engagement of a specialized West Coastpublic relations firm for media outreach, and distribution of bespoke promotional materials such as the "Special Collection 1987" package, "The Joshua Tree Album Sampler," cassette samplers, a themed pizza box edition, and interview discs like "The U2 Talkie."[39][17] The campaign built on U2's rising profile from prior albums and Live Aid, aiming to transition the band from cult status to mainstream dominance through targeted hype around lead single "With or Without You," which achieved their first U.S. Top 10 placement shortly after release.[39]To sustain momentum, the launch integrated immediate touring, with the Joshua Tree Tour commencing on April 2, 1987, in Tempe, Arizona, as a U.S. springleg designed to amplify album exposure through live performances emphasizing the record's American thematic influences.[39] This rapid tour activation, combined with format innovation and merchandising scale, positioned the album for blockbuster sales from day one, debuting at number one in multiple territories.[17]
Singles and Promotion
"With or Without You" served as the lead single from The Joshua Tree, released on 16 March 1987. It marked U2's first number-one single on the Billboard Hot 100, where it held the top position for three weeks beginning 16 May 1987.[40][41] The track peaked at number 4 on the UK Singles Chart.[42]The second single, "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For", was issued on 25 May 1987 in Europe and 26 May in North America. It became U2's second consecutive Billboard Hot 100 number one.[43]
Single Title
Release Date
US Billboard Hot 100 Peak
UK Singles Chart Peak
"With or Without You"
16 March 1987
1
4 [42]
"I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For"
25 May 1987
1
-
"Where the Streets Have No Name"
31 August 1987
13
-
"In God's Country" received limited promotional release in select markets, including Canada and the US, but did not achieve significant commercial charting.[44]Promotion emphasized music videos directed by Anton Corbijn, which aired extensively on MTV and helped expand U2's American audience through visual storytelling tied to the album's desert motifs. The singles strategy sustained radio airplay and chart momentum ahead of the band's extensive touring, with Island Records coordinating timed releases to align with growing international demand.[39]
Critical Reception
Initial Reviews
Upon its release on March 9, 1987, The Joshua Tree garnered widespread critical acclaim for its expansive sound, thematic maturity, and production polish under Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois.[45] Reviewers frequently highlighted the album's blend of spiritual searching, political undertones, and arena-ready anthems, positioning U2 as rock's preeminent stadium act while elevating their artistry beyond prior efforts like The Unforgettable Fire.[26]David Fricke of Rolling Stone awarded it five stars on April 9, 1987, calling it "U2's most varied, subtle and accessible album" and praising tracks like "Where the Streets Have No Name" for their "power and allure to seduce and capture a mass audience on its own terms," though he observed it lacked "sure-fire smash hits" compared to radio-friendly predecessors.[45] Similarly, The New York Times on March 29, 1987, commended U2's "bid for 'great band' status," noting the record's integration of "rock grandeur" with Bono's vulnerable vocals on songs addressing faith, addiction, and American idealism.[26]Irish outlet Hot Press previewed it positively in February 1987, asserting that The Joshua Tree "clarifies how U2's vocation has become the revival and renewal of rock and the recovery of its most romantic values," emphasizing the band's evolution toward concise, focused songcraft over atmospheric abstraction.[46] This enthusiasm reflected a consensus on the album's commercial viability and emotional resonance, contributing to its immediate chart dominance in multiple countries.[47]Some reviewers expressed reservations about its scale and influences. Simon Reynolds in Melody Maker on March 14, 1987, critiqued the shift to a "stadia, sweat"-driven aesthetic infused with Americanroots music, arguing it diluted U2's earlier punk-edged urgency in favor of polished, reactionary bombast.[48] Despite such dissent, the preponderance of praise underscored The Joshua Tree's role in cementing U2's global stature, with its introspective lyricism and sonic landscapes deemed a pinnacle of 1980s rock ambition.[49][45]
Awards and Accolades
At the 30th Annual Grammy Awards on March 2, 1988, The Joshua Tree won Album of the Year and Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal, marking U2's first Grammy victories from four nominations that also included Best Engineered Recording – Non-Classical and Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal for "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For."[5] These wins elevated the album's profile as a pinnacle of 1980s rock, with Album of the Year recognizing its overall artistic and commercial impact.[5]The album's success contributed to U2 receiving the Brit Award for Best International Group in 1988.[50] It also topped Rolling Stone's year-end readers' and critics' polls for Album of the Year in 1987, reflecting strong industry and fan endorsement.[17]
Criticisms and Counterviews
Some music critics expressed reservations about the album's artistic merits despite its commercial dominance. Robert Christgau, in his 1987 Village Voice review, graded The Joshua Tree a B-, praising its atmospheric buildup as suitable for background listening but critiquing the songs for failing to produce humming-along hooks akin to Neil Young's Tonight's the Night or Rust Never Sleeps, positioning U2 as Ireland's Bruce Springsteen surrogate in a commodified global rock landscape.[51] He noted the record's thunderous ebb and flow conveyed impressiveness and occasional emotional resonance, yet it prioritized grandeur over tight songwriting.[51]Retrospective analyses have echoed unevenness in quality and execution. Music journalist Tim Sommer, writing for Observer in 2017, characterized the album as "half a masterpiece," alternating between ecstatic highs and underwhelming lows, historic significance and histrionic excess, powerful gestures and vague posturing.[52] He argued that while tracks like "Where the Streets Have No Name" and "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" evoked spiritual yearning effectively, others devolved into self-serious Americana romanticism without sufficient irony or edge, reflecting U2's strained embrace of roots-rock influences amid their post-punk origins.[52]Critics have also faulted the album's front-loaded structure and Bono's vocal style. A 2017 Phoenix New Times piece deemed it overrated relative to U2's discography, contending that blockbuster singles dominate the first half while the back half features filler tracks lacking comparable passion or innovation, with Bono's keening delivery grating on repeated listens despite conveying raw emotion on sociopolitical themes like American imperialism in "Bullet the Blue Sky."[53] This view aligns with earlier accusations of commercialization, where U2 traded angular post-punk urgency—evident in prior works like War (1983)—for polished, stadium-ready anthems tailored to U.S. audiences, diluting their Irish specificity.[54]Counterviews defend the album's cohesion against charges of pretension, emphasizing its deliberate fusion of spiritual introspection and political critique as sincere rather than contrived. Proponents argue that perceived vagueness stems from U2's first-principles approach to faith and disillusionment, drawing on biblical imagery (e.g., the Joshua tree as a symbol of resilience in arid landscapes) without reductive resolution, which sustained its appeal amid 1980s Cold War anxieties.[53] Sales exceeding 25 million copies worldwide by 2017 underscore empirical listener validation over elite critic skepticism, suggesting the record's "histrionic" elements—Bono's soaring falsetto and The Edge's delay-drenched guitars—engineered causal impact for mass transcendence, not mere background noise.[52] Detractors' focus on weaker cuts overlooks production innovations by Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois, which layered ambient textures to evoke vast American emptiness, influencing subsequent arena rock without pandering.[51]
Commercial Performance
Sales and Chart Achievements
The Joshua Tree debuted at number one on the UK Albums Chart on 21 March 1987, marking the fastest-selling album in British chart history at the time of release, and held the top position for two weeks while accumulating over 200 weeks on the chart in total.[55][56]In the United States, it entered the Billboard 200 at number seven on 4 April 1987 before ascending to number one on 25 April, where it spent nine non-consecutive weeks at the summit during an original chart tenure of 103 weeks.[57][58]The album reached number one in over 20 countries, including U2's first chart-topping release in the US market.[2]Global sales exceeded 25 million copies, establishing it as U2's best-selling studio album.[4]
Certifications
In the United States, the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) certified The Joshua Tree Diamond in 1999, recognizing shipments of 10 million copies, the organization's highest award level.[59] This followed earlier multi-platinum certifications, including 10× Platinum awarded on September 11, 1995.[17]The British Phonographic Industry (BPI) certified the album 10× Platinum in June 2023, accounting for physical sales, downloads, and streaming equivalents exceeding 3 million units.[60]The album has earned platinum or higher certifications in over 20 countries, including Diamond awards in Canada and France, reflecting its global commercial dominance with reported worldwide sales exceeding 25 million copies.[17]
The Joshua Tree Tour was U2's concert tour supporting their 1987 album The Joshua Tree, spanning three legs across North America and Europe from spring to late 1987. The first leg focused on arenas in North America, including five sold-out nights at the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena from April 17 to 22, drawing over 74,000 attendees.[61] The European leg ran from late May to early August, with dates such as Wembley Stadium in London on June 12.[62] A third North American leg followed in the fall, featuring stadium shows like the Carrier Dome in Syracuse on October 9 and concluding with two performances at Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Arizona, on December 19 and 20.[62][63]Support acts varied by leg and venue, including Lone Justice for early U.S. dates, The Pretenders for multiple shows, Little Steven and the Disciples of Soul in Syracuse, and Mason Ruffner on select outings.[64][65][62][66] The production emphasized the album's themes with minimalistic staging, relying on the band's energy and Bono's audience interactions rather than elaborate visuals; typical setlists opened with "Where the Streets Have No Name" and included most Joshua Tree tracks like "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For," "Bullet the Blue Sky," and "With or Without You," alongside staples such as "Pride (In the Name of Love)," "Bad," and "Sunday Bloody Sunday," often extending into improvisational jams.[67] "One Tree Hill" served as a tribute to roadie Greg Carroll, who died in a 1986 motorcycle accident, with Bono dedicating performances to him during the tour.[68]Notable incidents included Bono's injuries: he fell during a rehearsal day before the tour's start, sustaining minor harm, and later slipped on a rain-slicked stage at RFK Stadium in Washington, D.C., on September 20, dislocating his shoulder and separating part of his collarbone, requiring hospital treatment.[69][70] He continued performing with his arm in a sling for subsequent dates, including Syracuse.[62] The final Sun Devil Stadium shows were partially filmed, with footage of songs like "Where the Streets Have No Name" and "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" incorporated into the 1988 documentary Rattle and Hum and its companion album.[63]Commercially, the tour set benchmarks for the era; U.S. and Canadian grosses reached $35.1 million in 1987, topping Pollstar's rankings for any act that year and reflecting the album's breakthrough success in expanding U2's audience to stadium scale.[71] Performances drew large crowds, such as the Syracuse show amid Bono's injury, underscoring the band's rising global draw despite physical setbacks.[62]
Subsequent Tours and Revivals
Following the original 1987 tour, U2 revived The Joshua Tree with dedicated performances during the band's 30th anniversary celebrations, emphasizing the album's full track listing amid expansive stadium productions. Announced on January 9, 2017, the tour began on May 12 in Vancouver, Canada, at BC Place, and initially comprised 25 stadium dates across North America and Europe, with subsequent extensions to Latin America due to demand.[72][73] The setlist structure opened with pre-album selections like "Sunday Bloody Sunday" and "New Year's Day," transitioned into a complete playback of The Joshua Tree—a rarity for the band post-1987—and closed with hits such as "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" and "One" from later works.[74] Supporting acts included Mumford & Sons, the Lumineers, and OneRepublic, enhancing the event's draw.[75]The 2017 itinerary spanned three legs: North America (May to June), Europe and the UK (July to August), and Latin America (October), totaling over 40 shows by October 25 in São Paulo, Brazil.[76] Stage design featured a massive 200-foot-wide by 45-foot-high LED screen and curved video walls evoking the album's desert imagery and themes of American road trips, integrated with 4K projections for immersive visuals.[77] These productions grossed significant revenue, underscoring the album's enduring commercial viability three decades later.[76]In 2019, U2 extended the revival to Oceania and Asia from November 8 to December 15, marking 15 additional stadium concerts and the band's debut performances in South Korea, Singapore, the Philippines, and India.[78] Kicking off in Auckland, New Zealand, at Mt Smart Stadium, the leg mirrored the 2017 format with full-album renditions, adapting to regional audiences—such as incorporating local cultural nods in set transitions—while maintaining high production values.[79] This phase concluded the anniversary cycle, reinforcing The Joshua Tree's global resonance without further major dedicated revivals as of 2025.[78]
Legacy
Cultural and Musical Influence
The Joshua Tree marked a pivotal shift in U2's sound, integrating elements of American roots music such as gospel, blues, and folk with the band's post-punk foundations, which expanded the scope of arena rock and influenced subsequent acts pursuing expansive, spiritually infused anthems.[12][80] This blend, produced by Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois, emphasized atmospheric guitars and introspective lyrics, setting a template for rock albums that prioritized thematic depth over synth-pop trends dominant in the mid-1980s.[27] The album's production techniques, including Edge's signature delay effects and layered rhythms, contributed to its enduring sonic blueprint, as evidenced by musicians like Rob Reed of Magenta citing it as life-altering for its emotional resonance and structural innovation.[81]Culturally, the album propelled alternative rock into mainstream consciousness, catapulting U2 to superstardom and redefining stadium rock as a vehicle for social and existential commentary amid 1980s materialism.[82][83] Its exploration of American landscapes, spiritual longing, and redemption—evident in tracks like "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For"—resonated beyond music, inspiring phenomena such as the 2004 U2Charist, an Episcopalian worship service format founded by pastor Sarah Dylan Breuer that incorporated the album's songs into liturgy.[30] This Christian-leaning influence extended to shifting dynamics in faith-based music, with the record's themes of fear and grace prompting reevaluations among Christian artists and audiences.[84]The album's reach permeated broader pop culture, referenced in television series like Friends and shaping country crossover efforts, as country artist Tim McGraw acknowledged its impact on blending rock grandeur with narrative introspection.[85] In the Library of Congress's assessment for the National Recording Registry, it stood as a counterpoint to greed-driven pop culture, promoting a search for meaning that echoed in political activism and faith discourses for decades.[27]
Reissues and Anniversaries
In 2007, U2 issued a remastered edition of The Joshua Tree to commemorate its 20th anniversary, drawing from the original analogue master tapes for enhanced audio quality.[86] This release featured the core 11-track album alongside bonus content, including B-sides like "Luminous Times (Hold the Red Light)" and "Walk to the Water," as well as alternate mixes and live tracks from the era.[87] Available in standard CD, deluxe two-CD sets with additional audio, and formats incorporating a bonus DVD of live footage and promotional videos, the remaster aimed to preserve the album's dynamic range without modern compression, distinguishing it from earlier digital versions.[88]The album's 30th anniversary in 2017 prompted a more expansive reissue campaign, announced on March 9, featuring six formats from standard remastered LP to a super deluxe edition with over 3.5 hours of previously unreleased or rare material.[89] The super deluxe 4-CD (or 7-LPvinyl) box set included the remastered original album, a full live recording of the band's September 28, 1987, concert at Madison Square Garden—capturing the tour's intensity with tracks like "Bullet the Blue Sky" and "One Tree Hill"—plus B-sides, studio outtakes such as early versions of "Walk to the Water," and 2017 remixes by producers like Jacknife Lee.[90] Accompanied by a 36-page hardcover book of photography by Anton Corbijn and lyrics, the edition emphasized archival depth, with the live disc highlighting the tour's raw energy amid the arena's acoustics.[91] These releases underscored the album's enduring commercial viability, though critics noted the remixes occasionally diverged from the original's sparse production ethos.[92]
Album Details
Track Listing
All tracks on The Joshua Tree were written by U2 (Bono, Adam Clayton, Larry Mullen Jr., and the Edge).[93] The standard track listing for the original 1987 release, as issued on CD and double LP, comprises eleven tracks divided across two sides per LP disc.[59]
No.
Title
Duration
1
Where the Streets Have No Name
5:35
2
I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For
4:38
3
With or Without You
4:57
4
Bullet the Blue Sky
4:32
5
Running to Stand Still
4:20
6
Red Hill Mining Town
4:51
7
In God's Country
3:37
8
Trip Through Your Wires
3:32
9
One Tree Hill
5:24
10
Exit
4:14
11
Mothers of the Disappeared
5:14
[94]
Personnel
The core lineup of U2 for The Joshua Tree comprised Bono on lead vocals and harmonica, the Edge on guitar and backing vocals, Adam Clayton on bass guitar, and Larry Mullen Jr. on drums.[95][17] The album was produced by Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois, both of whom also provided backing vocals; Eno additionally contributed DX7 programming and keyboards, while Lanois played tambourine, Omnichord, and additional rhythm guitar.[17][94]Additional musicians included the Armin Family, who performed radd strings on "One Tree Hill" (recorded by Bob Doidge), and the Arklow Silver Band with Paul Barrett arranging and conducting brass for "Red Hill Mining Town".[17] Engineering was led by Flood, with further assistance from Dave Meegan and Pat McCarthy; Steve Lillywhite mixed select tracks including "Where the Streets Have No Name", "With or Without You", "Bullet the Blue Sky", and "Red Hill Mining Town", assisted by Mark Wallace and Mary Kettle.[17]The studio crew consisted of Joe O’Herlihy, Des Broadberry, Tom Mullally, Tim Buckley, Marc Coleman, Mary Gough, and Marion Smyth. Management was handled by Paul McGuinness, with support from Anne-Louise Kelly in Dublin and Ellen Darst in New York.[17]