The Joshua Tree Tour
The Joshua Tree Tour was the concert tour by the Irish rock band U2 in 1987 to promote their fifth studio album, The Joshua Tree.[1] Launched shortly after the album's release, it marked U2's expansion from arena to stadium performances, beginning with their first headlining stadium show in North America at the Pontiac Silverdome.[2] The tour consisted of three legs: the first in North America from April to May, featuring 29 shows across arenas with support from Lone Justice; the second in Europe from May to August, including sold-out nights at Dublin's Croke Park; and a third returning to North America in September and October, during which portions were filmed for the band's Rattle and Hum album and film.[1][2] Attendance varied from smaller arenas holding around 8,000 to stadiums exceeding 50,000, reflecting surging demand for the band amid the album's commercial breakthrough.[2] Sets emphasized tracks from The Joshua Tree, interspersed with earlier material, and occasional unannounced performances by the band disguised as The Dalton Brothers.[2] Notable for its role in cementing U2's global stadium-rock status, the tour faced logistical challenges from overwhelming ticket demand, particularly in Europe where sales chaos prompted police interventions at venues.[2] A July 4 show in Paris was later released as a live video in 2007, highlighting the tour's enduring archival value.[2] Support acts included The Pretenders, UB40, The Waterboys, The Pogues, and B.B. King, adding variety to the bill.[2]Background and Conception
Album Promotion and Tour Origins
The Joshua Tree, U2's fifth studio album, was released on March 9, 1987, by Island Records, with producers Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois overseeing its creation.[3][4] Initial promotion included targeted releases such as the "Special Collection 1987," "The Joshua Tree Album Sampler," and cassette samplers distributed to radio stations, retailers, and media outlets to build anticipation and airplay.[5][6] Radio interviews, including "The U2 Talkie" featuring Bono with RTE's Dave Fanning, further amplified exposure through discussions of the album's themes and recording process.[7] The album's marketing emphasized its roots in U2's fascination with American culture and landscapes, incorporating desert imagery suggested by photographer Anton Corbijn for the cover—a stark black-and-white shot of a Joshua tree in California's Mojave Desert.[8] This visual strategy aligned with the record's exploration of spiritual quests and political disillusionment, drawing from the band's extensive prior U.S. touring experiences that informed its songwriting.[9] The release generated immediate commercial momentum, debuting at number seven on the Billboard 200 and quickly ascending to the top spot for nine consecutive weeks.[10] The Joshua Tree Tour emerged directly as the live counterpart to this album rollout, conceived to perform the new songs in arenas and capitalize on the record's thematic ties to America.[11] Under manager Paul McGuinness, who had guided U2's expansion into larger venues following earlier successes, the tour was scheduled to commence just weeks after the album's launch, opening on April 2, 1987, at Arizona State University's Activity Center in Tempe—chosen to echo the album's desert motifs.[12][13] This rapid sequencing allowed the band to sustain promotional momentum through sold-out shows, transitioning from studio hype to onstage validation of tracks like "Where the Streets Have No Name" and "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For."[11]Planning and Logistical Preparations
The planning for U2's Joshua Tree Tour was directed by the band's manager, Paul McGuinness, who coordinated overall strategy following the rapid commercial success of the album The Joshua Tree, released on March 2, 1987. Logistical oversight fell to longtime tour manager Dennis Sheehan, who managed operations including venue bookings, travel itineraries, and crew deployment for the initial North American leg starting April 2, 1987, at Arizona State University's Activity Center in Tempe.[14] This compressed timeline—spanning roughly one month from album release to tour launch—reflected the need to capitalize on the record's immediate chart dominance, which necessitated swift scaling from smaller venues to arenas accommodating up to 20,000 attendees.[11] Rehearsals commenced in late March 1987 near the tour's opening venue in Arizona, focusing on integrating the new album's material into live performances while adapting set designs for arena environments.[11] During these sessions, frontman Bono suffered a fall that impaired his vocal performance for the debut show, highlighting the physical demands of the preparatory phase amid tight scheduling.[11] Production manager Steve Iredale led technical preparations, collaborating with stage manager Tim Buckley and lighting designer Willie Williams to develop modular stage configurations suitable for both indoor arenas on the first leg and subsequent outdoor stadiums in Europe and North America.[15] Logistical preparations emphasized efficient transcontinental travel and supply chain management for a crew exceeding 50 members, including sound, lighting, and rigging teams, as the tour expanded to 109 dates across two continents without a dedicated opening act on most nights to streamline setup times.[15] Challenges included adapting equipment for varying venue sizes—from 15,000-capacity arenas to 70,000-seat stadiums—and coordinating international freight for instruments and backline, with early legs relying on U.S.-based trucking while European routing required air and sea shipments.[15] A planned fourth leg in Australia and New Zealand was ultimately canceled in late 1987 to prioritize album-related film production and rest, averting potential crew fatigue after eight months of nonstop travel.[2] Ticket sales, handled through local promoters, saw rapid sell-outs driven by pre-tour radio promotion, underscoring the preparations' alignment with the album's thematic emphasis on American landscapes and road travel.[11]Production and Technical Setup
Stage Design and Visual Elements
The stage for the indoor arena shows measured 74 feet wide by 48 feet deep and stood 5 feet high, featuring three elevated risers for the drums (10 feet by 12 feet by 2 feet), bass, and keyboards (each 8 feet by 8 feet by 6 inches), along with ramps, wings, and an "Underworld" technical area beneath the stage.[15] This design, crafted by Steve Iredale, Peter "Willie" Williams, and Tim Buckley with engineering by Jeremy Thom and fabrication by Tait Towers Inc., emphasized minimalism to spotlight the band's performance without elaborate props or thematic set pieces.[15] [16] Outdoor stadium configurations expanded to 200 feet by 80 feet, adopting a rectangular layout with extensions projecting into the audience area, supported by scaffolding, sound towers, and a barrel-vaulted scaffold roof for truss suspension.[15] Lighting rigs varied by venue type: indoor setups used a traditional truss system with an extending front arm and angled drop for followspots, while outdoor rigs employed simpler trusses hung from the scaffold roof, incorporating par cans and Molefay floods to illuminate the crowd during songs like "Pride (In the Name of Love)."[15] Overall, illumination remained restrained, predominantly white with selective color accents, reflecting Williams' design intent to prioritize atmospheric restraint over spectacle.[17] [16] Visual elements centered on subtle backdrops rather than dynamic projections or screens, which were absent in this pre-digital era tour. Opening acts performed behind white scrims printed with red "U" and "2" lettering, which dropped to reveal a sand-colored scrim displaying the album's iconic Joshua Tree graphic in black silhouette, split into three segments; this artwork was conceptualized by guitarist The Edge and refined by Jeremy Thom before fabrication by Kimpton Walker.[15] The approach marked U2's initial foray into intentional thematic staging, prefiguring more ambitious visuals in subsequent tours, while maintaining a raw, unadorned focus on the musicians amid vast arenas.[15]Audio, Lighting, and Special Effects
The audio production for the tour utilized Clair Brothers Audio systems, engineered by Joe O'Herlihy as front-of-house mixer. Indoor arena configurations employed 72 S4 speaker cabinets, 12 sub-low cabinets, and a full 360-degree flying array, while outdoor stadium setups scaled up to 144 S4 cabinets, 24 sub-low cabinets, and 12 R4 front-fill speakers. Processing included dual Clair Brothers consoles, a Clair Brothers crossover, Clark-Technics graphic equalizers, DBX 160 compressors, and Carver amplifiers, enabling the "enormous sound" characteristic of the tour's stadium-filling performances without reliance on visual distractions.[15] Lighting was designed by Willie Williams, employing traditional fixtures such as par cans, Lekos, and Molefay audience washes, with no moving lights due to the nascent state of that technology in 1987. The indoor stage featured a conventional truss rig extending forward with angled arms for followspots, used for dramatic effects like spotlighting during "Exit," while stadium shows incorporated a central control tower housing lighting and sound operations. Williams oversaw up to 25 truss spots at peak, supplied by companies including Supermick and Nocturne Inc., prioritizing functional illumination over spectacle to align with the tour's austere aesthetic.[15][18] Special effects remained minimal, eschewing pyrotechnics, lasers, or fog machines to maintain focus on the band's performance and thematic messaging. Key elements included scrims bearing a Joshua Tree graphic—designed by guitarist The Edge and fabricated by Kimpton Walker—which dropped during select segments for visual emphasis. Cantilevered lighting and sound systems in stadiums further simplified the setup, cantilevering rigs from the stage structure without additional atmospheric or explosive enhancements.[15][19] ![U2 performing outside Hartford Civic Center, May 1987, illustrating the tour's basic indoor lighting and stage setup]float-rightItinerary and Tour Phases
Initial North American Shows
The initial North American leg of The Joshua Tree Tour consisted of 29 arena performances exclusively in the United States, spanning from April 2 to May 16, 1987. It opened with two shows at the Arizona State University Activity Center in Tempe, Arizona, on April 2 and 4, followed by dates in Tucson, Houston, Las Cruces, Las Vegas, San Diego, Los Angeles, Daly City, Rosemont, Pontiac, Worcester, Hartford, and concluding with five nights at the Brendan Byrne Arena in East Rutherford, New Jersey, from May 11 to 16.[20] This phase marked U2's transition to larger indoor venues, accommodating capacities from 8,032 in Tucson to 51,718 at the Pontiac Silverdome on April 30—the band's first headlining stadium show in North America.[2] The shows generated $7.5 million in gross revenue from 465,000 tickets sold, with the majority selling out amid surging demand fueled by The Joshua Tree's chart-topping success. Multi-night residencies highlighted the leg's scale, including five sold-out performances at the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena from April 17 to 22, attracting over 74,000 fans, and three nights each in Worcester and Hartford. Support acts rotated across dates, featuring Lone Justice, The Pretenders, UB40, The Waterboys, The Pogues, and B.B. King, enhancing the bill's appeal to diverse audiences.[11][21][2] Setlists emphasized tracks from the new album, typically opening with "Where the Streets Have No Name" (played 25 times) and closing with "40" (25 times), while incorporating selections from prior releases like War, The Unforgettable Fire, and Boy for a total of up to 30 unique songs per leg. The performances received strong critical and fan acclaim, with reviews noting the band's commanding presence in arenas and Bono's charismatic stage energy, cementing U2's breakthrough as a major rock act.[20]European Expansion
The European leg of The Joshua Tree Tour, comprising the second phase of the itinerary, began on May 27, 1987, at Stadio Flaminio in Rome, Italy, and concluded on August 8, 1987, at Páirc Uí Chaoimh in Cork, Ireland.[22][23] This segment featured 30 concerts across 10 countries, including Italy, the United Kingdom, Sweden, France, Germany, Switzerland, Northern Ireland, the Republic of Ireland, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Spain.[22][23] Unlike the preceding North American arena dates, the European shows incorporated larger outdoor stadiums, such as Wembley Stadium in London (June 12 and 13), Croke Park in Dublin (June 27 and 28), and Feyenoord Stadium in Rotterdam (July 10 and 11), reflecting the band's elevated profile following the album's commercial success.[22][24] The itinerary opened with three Italian performances—two nights at Stadio Comunale Braglia in Modena (May 29 and 30)—before proceeding to arenas in London (Wembley Arena, June 2) and Birmingham (NEC Arena, June 3), and an unconventional dockside venue at Eriksberg Shipyard in Gothenburg, Sweden (June 6).[22] Subsequent stadium engagements included Muengersdorfer Stadion in Cologne, Germany (June 17); St. Jakob's Stadion in Basel, Switzerland (June 21); and Elland Road Stadium in Leeds, England (July 1), with additional arena stops in Paris (The Zenith, June 15; Hippodrome de Vincennes, July 4), Brussels (Vorst National, July 8), and Munich (Olympiahalle, July 21 and 22).[22][23] Closing dates encompassed Arms Park in Cardiff, Wales (July 25); Scottish Exhibition and Conference Centre in Glasgow (July 29 and 30); Murrayfield Stadium in Edinburgh (August 1); and NEC Arena returns in Birmingham (August 3 and 4).[22] This phase underscored U2's international expansion, drawing capacity crowds to venues accommodating tens of thousands and solidifying their transition from arena to stadium headliners amid the tour's overall estimated 3.1 million attendees across all legs.[25] Performances maintained a focus on The Joshua Tree material, supplemented by earlier hits, with consistent closers like "40" across all 30 shows.[22]Final Legs and Adjustments
The third leg of The Joshua Tree Tour began on September 10, 1987, at Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale, New York, encompassing approximately 50 stadium and arena performances across the United States and Canada through December.[26] This phase marked a shift to predominantly outdoor stadium venues, accommodating larger audiences compared to the indoor arenas of the initial North American leg, with capacities often exceeding 50,000 per show.[11] Key stops included sold-out dates at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on November 17 and 18, drawing over 132,000 attendees combined.[21] Production adjustments were necessary for the stadium transition, including reconfigured stage setups to suit open-air environments, such as enhanced lighting rigs and video screens for better visibility in expansive venues, differing from the more compact indoor configurations used earlier.[15] These changes supported the tour's evolving emphasis on spectacle, with the band incorporating American blues influences into performances, reflecting the itinerary's cross-country scope. Setlists remained centered on The Joshua Tree tracks but saw minor variations, such as extended improvisations in songs like "Bullet the Blue Sky" to engage massive crowds.[27] Much of the leg involved extensive filming and recording for the Rattle and Hum documentary and live album, prompting logistical tweaks like additional camera crews and selected encores tailored for audio-visual capture, particularly during East Coast and Southwest dates.[28] This documentation phase influenced show pacing, with some performances featuring guest appearances to capture raw, collaborative energy amid the tour's fatigue.[29] The tour concluded with two final shows on December 19 and 20, 1987, at Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Arizona, where blues musician B.B. King served as the opening act for both nights, underscoring the band's immersion in American musical traditions during the wrap-up.[30] These closing performances, attended by over 100,000 fans total, encapsulated the tour's commercial peak, having grossed millions while adapting to the physical demands of extended stadium routing without major itinerary extensions.[31]Performances
Core Set List and Album Focus
The core set list of The Joshua Tree Tour prioritized songs from U2's 1987 album The Joshua Tree, with seven to eight tracks from it appearing in most performances out of 18 to 20 total songs, reflecting the tour's role in promoting the record's themes of spiritual quest, isolation, and American iconography.[32][33] Shows consistently opened with the album's opening track "Where the Streets Have No Name," typically introduced by an instrumental cover of "Stand by Me" to build atmospheric tension, followed immediately by "I Will Follow" from the band's 1980 debut Boy to energize crowds before returning to album material like "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For."[34][35] A mid-set block often strung together multiple consecutive Joshua Tree songs, such as "Bullet the Blue Sky," "Exit," "In God's Country," "Running to Stand Still," and "Trip Through Your Wires," enabling extended sonic explorations that amplified the album's raw, reverb-heavy production in arena environments.[36][37] Less frequently performed album tracks like "One Tree Hill" and "Mothers of the Disappeared" appeared sporadically, particularly in encores or later legs, but the core emphasis remained on the singles and high-energy cuts that drove the album's commercial breakthrough, with over 25 million copies sold by 1990.[38][39] While integrating fan-favorite staples from earlier albums—such as "Pride (In the Name of Love)" from The Unforgettable Fire (1984) and "Sunday Bloody Sunday" from War (1983)—the set list's structure subordinated them to showcase The Joshua Tree's cohesion, with Bono's stage narratives often framing these songs to evoke the album's desert-inspired mysticism and political undertones.[34][40] This focus evolved minimally across the tour's phases, from the initial North American leg starting April 2, 1987, in Tempe, Arizona, through European dates and extensions into 1989, prioritizing album fidelity over radical alterations to capitalize on its momentum.[32][41]Cover Songs and Spontaneous Additions
U2 occasionally incorporated full cover songs into their setlists during The Joshua Tree Tour, typically as encores or dedications, deviating from the core focus on material from the album and prior releases. These performances added improvisational flair and connected with local audiences or guests. On September 17, 1987, at the Boston Garden, Bono led an acapella rendition of The Beatles' "Help!" during the show, followed by a full band performance of "Helter Skelter" later in the set.[42] Similarly, "Helter Skelter" appeared as an encore at other dates, including the November 15, 1987, concert at Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Arizona, where it was filmed for inclusion on the Rattle and Hum album and documentary.[43] Ben E. King's "Stand by Me" was performed on multiple occasions, often with thematic resonance to the tour's American leg. It featured at Sullivan Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts, on September 22, 1987, and again on September 25, 1987, at JFK Stadium in Philadelphia, where Bruce Springsteen joined Bono onstage for a collaborative rendition.[44] [32] The Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum show on November 18, 1987, also included "Stand by Me" in the encore.[32] Spontaneous additions primarily manifested during the extended live versions of "Bad," played at 108 of the tour's 109 shows and often stretching beyond 10 minutes. These renditions allowed Bono to improvise vocals and weave in snippets from other songs, creating unique variations per concert. Examples included fragments of The Rolling Stones' "Ruby Tuesday" during the June 13, 1987, Wembley Stadium performance and unidentified jams or covers in shows like the November 7, 1987, concert at McNichols Sports Arena in Denver. [45] [46] Such improvisations emphasized the band's live energy but remained secondary to the structured setlist, with no major setlist overhauls reported across the tour's phases.[47]Notable Live Moments and Improvisations
The band's performances of "Bad" frequently featured extended improvisations, with Bono ad-libbing lyrics and incorporating snippets from other songs, contributing to its status as a tour highlight played at 108 of 109 shows. On the tour's opening night, April 2, 1987, at Arizona State University's Activity Center in Tempe, Arizona, "Bad" included a snippet of "Oh Happy Day," setting a precedent for such integrations.[48] Later examples encompassed Rolling Stones covers like "Sympathy for the Devil" and "Ruby Tuesday" during the song's outro on December 17, 1987, in Tempe. These extensions often exceeded 10 minutes, allowing the Edge's atmospheric guitar work to build tension while Bono improvised vocal phrasing drawn from American roots influences explored during the album's production. A standout improvisation occurred post-concert on November 22, 1987, in Austin, Texas, when Bono and the Edge joined Stevie Ray Vaughan, Jimmie Vaughan, T-Bone Burnett, and others at Antone's nightclub for an unscripted blues jam.[49] The Edge contributed guitar alongside Vaughan's blues style, while Bono provided spontaneous vocals in a loose, collaborative session that reflected the tour's immersion in roots music.[50] This after-hours event, captured in brief footage for later documentaries, underscored U2's willingness to deviate from arena formality for intimate, genre-blending experimentation.[51] Bono's vocal ad-libs extended to other tracks, such as "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For," where he freely riffed during closers, as on April 25, 1987, at the Cow Palace in Daly City, California, amid celebrations of the album's chart success.[52] In "Bad" specifically, mishaps prompted on-the-spot creativity; during the December 8, 1987, show in Atlanta, Bono repeated a verse and responded by inventing new lyrics mid-performance.[53] Such moments highlighted the tour's dynamic energy, where structured setlists yielded to real-time musical dialogue, enhancing the live experience's unpredictability.Media Documentation
Filming for Rattle and Hum
The filming for the 1988 rockumentary Rattle and Hum, directed by Phil Joanou, documented U2's experiences during the Joshua Tree Tour, with a focus on their North American performances in late 1987. Joanou, who had previously directed the band's video for "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For," met U2 during their May 1987 shows at the Hartford Civic Center and pitched the project, which emphasized the band's immersion in American music culture alongside live footage.[54] The production followed the group across multiple stadium concerts on the tour's third leg, capturing both onstage performances and offstage interactions, including visits to historic sites like Sun Studio in Memphis.[55] Principal concert sequences were filmed in black-and-white at McNichols Sports Arena in Denver on November 17, 1987, to evoke a gritty, intimate aesthetic amid the arena's large capacity.[54] Color footage supplemented this, drawn from shows including the November 11 concert at the Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum in San Francisco.[56] The production culminated at Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Arizona, where the final two tour dates on December 19 and 20, 1987, before 72,000 attendees each night, provided extensive material, including the gospel-infused rendition of "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" with the New Voices of Freedom choir.[57] These Tempe performances, closing the 109-show tour, were prioritized for their scale and symbolic endpoint, with Joanou's crew emphasizing raw energy over polished staging.[58] Beyond concerts, filming incorporated spontaneous elements, such as Bono's rooftop performance of "Van Morrison's Gloria" in a Los Angeles neighborhood and interactions with American musicians, reflecting the band's exploratory approach to roots music. The resulting 99-minute film, released on October 27, 1988, interwove these tour segments with studio recordings, though some sequences faced post-production adjustments for narrative flow, including overdubs on live tracks for the companion album.[59] This documentation preserved the tour's peak intensity but drew mixed retrospective views on its stylistic choices, with Joanou noting challenges in balancing documentary authenticity against cinematic demands.[54]Additional Recordings and Broadcasts
The Madison Square Garden concert on September 28, 1987, was officially released in full as an audio recording in 2017, included in The Joshua Tree 30th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition; this 24-track set captures the complete performance from the tour's North American leg, featuring the core setlist with encores like "Out of Control" and "40", distinct from the multi-venue compilation in Rattle and Hum.[60][61] Several television documentaries and specials documented aspects of the tour beyond the primary Rattle and Hum production. An RTÉ "Visual Eyes" special, aired in 1987, followed U2 during their Italian dates, including footage from the May 29 show at Stadio Comunale Braglia in Modena, with reporter Dave Fanning providing on-site commentary on the band's European expansion.[62] The documentary Outside It's America, filmed during the initial U.S. stadium shows, captured behind-the-scenes moments and live snippets, emphasizing the tour's thematic focus on American landscapes and social issues, though it received limited broadcast distribution.[63] Radio broadcasts were sparse, with no full official live FM transmissions confirmed from the 1987 itinerary, unlike earlier tours; however, promotional appearances included a September 8, 1987, New York radio event featuring live acoustic performances and listener interactions, aired on local stations to promote the tour's East Coast dates.[64] Fan-recorded soundboards and audience tapes from shows like the April 25 Cow Palace performance in Daly City, California, circulated widely as bootlegs, some deriving from venue multi-tracks, but these remain unofficial and unendorsed by the band.[65] Videotaped footage from non-Rattle and Hum sites, such as the July 4 Paris Hippodrome concert, exists in archives but was not commercially broadcast or released at the time, with portions later surfacing in fan enhancements.[66]Support and Guest Acts
Opening Bands
The Joshua Tree Tour featured a rotating roster of opening acts that varied by geographic leg and venue, reflecting U2's strategy to pair with diverse artists aligned with the tour's rock, roots, and blues influences. In the initial North American arena phase from April to May 1987, Lone Justice, led by Maria McKee, supported the majority of dates, performing at over 50 shows and contributing to the energetic buildup for U2's sets.[67][68] The European stadium leg in June and July 1987 introduced regional variety, with The Pretenders, UB40, The Waterboys, and The Pogues opening select concerts to appeal to local audiences and blend punk, reggae, and folk elements.[2][69] Returning to North America for the expansive stadium dates from September to December 1987, support included American acts such as Los Lobos, BoDeans, and Mason Ruffner, emphasizing roots rock and blues.[69][70][71] B.B. King, the renowned blues guitarist, closed the tour as opener for the final two Sun Devil Stadium shows in Tempe, Arizona, on December 19 and 20, 1987, drawing 75,000 attendees per night and influencing the filming of sequences for the accompanying film Rattle and Hum.[72][73]Special Appearances and Collaborations
During the Joshua Tree Tour, U2 incorporated several notable guest appearances by prominent musicians, often reflecting the band's interest in American roots music traditions. On November 24, 1987, at the Tarrant County Convention Center in Fort Worth, Texas, blues guitarist B.B. King joined U2 onstage for the live debut of "When Love Comes to Town," a track later included on the band's 1988 album Rattle and Hum.[74] [75] King, who had opened select dates earlier in the tour, contributed guitar and vocals, with the performance featuring improvised lyrics not used in the studio version or subsequent renditions.[74] This collaboration was captured on film and highlighted U2's deliberate engagement with blues influences amid their exploration of American musical heritage.[76] Another significant guest spot occurred on September 25, 1987, at Philadelphia's JFK Stadium, where Bruce Springsteen made a surprise appearance during the encore. Springsteen performed Ben E. King's "Stand by Me" alongside U2, delivering a high-energy cover that energized the crowd and underscored shared rock traditions between the artists.[77] [78] The rendition, an outtake from Rattle and Hum filming sessions, was praised for its spontaneous camaraderie, though it remained unreleased officially until later archival footage surfaced.[79] U2 also staged self-initiated special appearances by disguising themselves as the fictional country band "the Dalton Brothers" to perform short opening sets at various shows, blending humor with surprise. Notable instances included November 1, 1987, in Indianapolis, where they played between sets by opening acts BoDeans and Los Lobos, and November 18, 1987, at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.[80] These pranks, featuring cowboy attire and covers of country tunes, served as lighthearted interludes but were not formal collaborations with external artists.[80] No other verified onstage collaborations with major guests occurred during the tour's 109 shows.[81]Commercial Performance
Ticket Sales and Revenue Metrics
The Joshua Tree Tour, spanning 109 shows from April 2 to December 22, 1987, grossed approximately $40 million in total revenue from ticket sales, marking it as one of the highest-earning rock tours of its era.[82] This figure reflected strong demand following the album's global success, with an estimated 3 million attendees across North America, Europe, and other regions.[83] Average per-show gross hovered around $367,000, driven by arena and stadium venues where ticket prices typically ranged from $12.50 to $17.50.[84] In North America alone, the tour's 1987 leg generated $35.1 million, the highest gross for any act that year according to Pollstar data, underscoring U2's breakthrough as a stadium headliner.[85] Sell-out crowds were common, with capacities exceeding 50,000 at key stadium dates like Pontiac Silverdome (51,718 attendees) and Arizona State University (25,113 for the opener).[2] International legs contributed the balance, though detailed breakdowns remain limited due to inconsistent reporting standards at the time; European shows, for instance, averaged high attendance in venues like Wembley Stadium. Overall sell-through rates approached 90-100% in major markets, fueled by pre-tour hype from the album's seven weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200.[2]Attendance and Stadium Capacities
The Joshua Tree Tour drew significant crowds, with the first North American leg alone selling 465,452 tickets across 29 shows and generating over $7.5 million in revenue. Globally, the 109-show tour is estimated to have attracted more than 3 million attendees, reflecting U2's breakthrough to stadium headliner status following the album's commercial success. Many performances were sell-outs, particularly in larger venues, underscoring the band's ability to fill high-capacity spaces amid peak demand.[11] The tour featured a progression from indoor arenas to expansive stadiums, with capacities ranging from approximately 8,000 in smaller markets like Tucson, Arizona, to over 80,000 in iconic sites such as Wembley Stadium in London, where U2 played two nights. In North America, key stadium stops included the Pontiac Silverdome (51,718 capacity, first headlining stadium show), Giants Stadium (around 78,000 capacity), and JFK Stadium in Philadelphia (87,145 attendees for one concert, a venue record at the time). This shift to 50,000-plus capacity venues contributed to the tour's record-breaking U.S. and Canadian gross of $35.1 million for 1987, surpassing contemporaries like Bon Jovi through fewer but larger-scale events.[2][86][85] Overall, the tour's gross reached about $56 million, bolstered by sold-out crowds in Europe and subsequent legs, though exact attendance varied by venue configuration and local factors; for instance, five nights at the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena (capacity roughly 16,000 per show) accommodated over 74,000 fans. Such figures highlight logistical feats in an era before modern ticketing systems, with demand often exceeding initial arena plans, prompting upgrades to stadiums.[87][21]Reception
Critical Evaluations
Critics praised the Joshua Tree Tour for U2's successful transition to stadium-scale performances, emphasizing the band's ability to foster emotional connection amid expansive production elements like amplified visuals and lighting. Jon Bream, writing for the Star Tribune after the November 3, 1987, concert at St. Paul Civic Center, described U2 as "the most important group in popular music," surpassing predecessors like The Who and Rolling Stones in blending romantic poetry with active conscience, though he noted the show peaked midway rather than from the outset.[88] Bream highlighted the haunting allure of The Edge's guitar on tracks like "With or Without You" and Bono's restrained yet passionate delivery, which contributed to a communal uplift among nearly 18,000 attendees, despite an initially subdued energy in openers such as "Sunday Bloody Sunday."[88] Specific performances drew acclaim for their intensity and surprises, including covers and guest spots that enhanced the tour's thematic depth on American landscapes and spirituality. At the Tarrant County Convention Center in Fort Worth on November 10, 1987, reviewer Nolan Dalla called the show "terrific," pinpointing a collaborative rendition with B.B. King as a pinnacle of poignancy, elevating Bono's vocals and the band's blues-infused energy.[89] Such moments underscored critics' view of U2's live adaptability, though some, like Bream, critiqued early-set familiarity for lacking immediate visceral punch compared to rawer rock acts.[88] Overall, evaluations positioned the tour as a benchmark for anthemic rock spectacles, with the band's sonic texture and crowd engagement outweighing minor pacing issues, cementing U2's stature as arena innovators.[88][89]Fan and Public Responses
The Joshua Tree Tour generated enthusiastic responses from fans, who embraced U2's transition to stadium-scale performances as a pinnacle of live rock energy and emotional depth. Across 79 shows, the tour drew 2,035,539 attendees, with numerous venues selling out due to surging ticket demand that propelled U2 from arena acts to global stadium headliners.[90] Specific examples included the Carrier Dome in Syracuse on October 9, 1987, where 39,157 tickets sold out at $17.50 each, prompting fans to converge on nearby streets in post-show celebration.[31] Public and fan accounts highlighted Bono's interactive charisma, which unified massive crowds through poetic lyrics and calls to conscience, often leaving audiences in rapt attention or communal sing-alongs. At Wembley Stadium on June 13, 1987, observers described Bono commanding the audience "eating out of his hand," amplifying the tour's reputation for transcendent communal experiences.[45] In St. Paul on September 4, 1987, the band's set was praised for its romantic and intellectual resonance, appealing viscerally yet thoughtfully to diverse spectators less raw than fans of acts like the Rolling Stones or The Who.[88] While largely celebratory, some responses noted logistical strains from the tour's scale, such as traffic chaos and extended waits, though these did little to temper overall acclaim; fans in forums and retrospectives often ranked it among the era's most memorable concerts, citing unmatched excitement and production values.[91] No widespread public backlash emerged, with the tour's success underscoring U2's broadened appeal amid 1987's rock landscape.Achievements and Milestones
The Joshua Tree Tour marked U2's breakthrough as a major arena and stadium act, commencing on April 2, 1987, in Tempe, Arizona, and ultimately comprising 109 performances across North America, Europe, and other regions through December 1988.[92][2] It achieved the highest gross revenue of any concert tour in 1987, reporting $35 million from 79 shows and attracting 2,035,539 attendees, reflecting the band's surging demand post-album release.[85][90] Venue-specific records underscored the tour's scale, including two November 1987 dates at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum that drew over 132,000 fans and set the record for the highest-grossing rock concerts in the venue's history at that time.[21] Early legs featured rapid sell-outs, with the first North American run of 29 shows grossing over $7.5 million, transitioning U2 from primarily arena performances to larger stadium formats.[93] These milestones contributed to U2's elevation to global superstardom, with the tour's success directly tied to The Joshua Tree's chart dominance and enabling subsequent expansive productions.[11]Controversies
Political Interventions and Reactions
During the opening concert of the tour on April 2, 1987, at Arizona State University Activity Center in Tempe, Arizona, U2 publicly opposed Governor Evan Mecham's February 1987 decision to rescind the state holiday honoring Martin Luther King Jr., a move that had sparked national boycotts and recall efforts against Mecham.[94] The band donated $10,000 to a fund supporting Mecham's impeachment and issued a pre-show statement expressing "outrage" at the governor's action, describing him as "an embarrassment to the people of Arizona."[95] Mecham's communications director, Ron Bellus, responded by calling the band's intervention misguided and unfamiliar with Arizona law, while defending the governor's fiscal rationale for canceling the holiday; despite the tension, U2 proceeded with the performance, marking the tour's launch amid the controversy.[96] This stance aligned with broader boycott calls from civil rights groups but drew criticism from Mecham supporters who viewed it as foreign interference in local politics.[97] On November 8, 1987—the day of the Provisional Irish Republican Army's (IRA) Remembrance Day bombing in Enniskillen, Northern Ireland, which killed 11 civilians attending a war memorial service—U2 performed in Denver, Colorado, and incorporated a direct condemnation into their set.[98] During "Sunday Bloody Sunday," frontman Bono halted the song for an impromptu speech denouncing the attack, rejecting revolutionary violence, and criticizing "armchair republicans" who endorsed such acts from abroad, declaring, "This is not a rebel song" and expressing raw anger over the targeting of innocents.[99] The moment, captured for the band's 1988 documentary Rattle and Hum, elicited mixed reactions: praised by many for challenging IRA glorification amid the Troubles, it provoked backlash from hardline nationalists who accused Bono of betraying Irish republicanism and siding with British interests.[98] This intervention underscored U2's longstanding opposition to paramilitary tactics, rooted in their earlier Self Aid concert advocacy for non-violent solutions in Ireland. Throughout the tour, U2 also adhered to a policy of avoiding performances in U.S. venues with financial ties to South Africa's apartheid regime, reflecting their anti-apartheid activism; this led to skipped dates in certain cities but no major publicized conflicts during the Joshua Tree shows.[89] Performances of politically charged tracks like "Bullet the Blue Sky"—a critique of U.S. military aid to El Salvador's government under President Reagan—often featured Bono's vocal ad-libs emphasizing foreign policy failures, though these were more thematic than event-specific interventions.[29] Overall, the band's actions drew support from progressive audiences and media for highlighting civil rights and anti-violence causes but faced pushback from conservative figures and factions viewing them as sanctimonious or overreaching.[94]Logistical and Operational Shortcomings
During the initial shows of the North American leg, lead singer Bono struggled with vocal strain, which compromised the performance quality at the tour's opening concert on April 2, 1987, at Arizona State University's Activity Center in Tempe, Arizona.[11] Similar difficulties persisted in subsequent Phoenix dates on April 4 and 5, where Bono's voice was described as nearly shredded, potentially exacerbated by the demanding transition to larger arena venues and the physical toll of the album's promotion schedule.[29] Technical malfunctions also arose, notably at the Boston Garden on September 17, 1987, where the band's lighting system failed early in the set during "I Will Follow," resulting in much of the concert being performed in subdued or absent illumination, which hindered visual staging elements central to the production.[100] Despite these incidents, the tour proceeded without any documented cancellations or postponements, reflecting effective contingency planning amid the logistical demands of scaling U2's first major stadium-level production across 109 dates in multiple continents.[101]Legacy
Cultural and Musical Influence
The Joshua Tree Tour (1987) marked U2's ascension to stadium headliner status, with the band playing their first U.S. stadium show at the Pontiac Silverdome on May 29, 1987, drawing an unprecedented crowd for a rock act at that scale and setting a benchmark for early-career arena-to-stadium transitions.[102] This shift demonstrated the viability of large-scale rock tours emphasizing raw energy over technological spectacle, as productions relied on minimal staging—such as basic lighting and no video screens at key European dates like Wembley Stadium on June 13, 1987—to prioritize musical immersion and audience connection.[45][103] Musically, the tour's live renditions refined the album's sound, extending tracks like the guitar-driven opener "Where the Streets Have No Name" into anthemic rituals that became enduring staples in rock performance repertoires, influencing how subsequent bands structured setlists around build-up and communal sing-alongs in vast venues.[11] General admission standing on stadium floors, implemented across multiple legs, facilitated crowd densities exceeding seated configurations, fostering a visceral, participatory dynamic that elevated live rock's communal aspect and informed production strategies for high-capacity events.[15] Culturally, the tour reinforced U2's fusion of roots music with socio-political commentary, as onstage addresses by Bono highlighted themes of American identity and global unrest, paving the way for rock acts to integrate activism into mainstream spectacles and broadening alternative rock's appeal beyond niche audiences.[104] This approach, evident in sold-out North American legs starting April 2, 1987, in Tempe, Arizona, contributed to the era's shift toward politically engaged stadium rock, though it also drew scrutiny for potentially setting unattainable scale expectations for emerging bands.[11][103]Later Anniversary Tours and Revivals
In 2017, U2 launched a stadium tour to commemorate the 30th anniversary of The Joshua Tree, performing the album in full sequence for the first time live, bookended by earlier hits and later staples. The tour opened on May 12, 2017, at BC Place in Vancouver, Canada, and initially encompassed 50 shows across North America and Europe, concluding on August 2, 2017, at Croke Park in Dublin, Ireland.[105] Production featured a massive rectangular LED screen displaying immersive visuals tied to the album's themes, including American landscapes and political imagery, with the band positioned on a elongated stage to enhance visibility for large crowds.[106] The setlist typically opened with "Sunday Bloody Sunday," "New Year's Day," and "Pride (In the Name of Love)," transitioning into the complete Joshua Tree tracklist from "Where the Streets Have No Name" through "Exit," followed by selections like "Children of the Revolution," "One," and "Beautiful Day." This structure averaged over two hours per show, emphasizing the album's cohesion while integrating fan-favorite encores such as "I Will Follow" and "13 (There Is a Light)." The 2017 leg drew 2,713,136 attendees and grossed $316,990,940, ranking as the year's highest-grossing tour.[107][108] Due to sustained demand, U2 extended the anniversary celebration into 2019 with 15 additional stadium dates in Australia, New Zealand, Japan, India, and Europe, starting October 20, 2019, at Sydney's ANZ Stadium and ending December 15, 2019, in Mumbai, India. These shows retained the core setlist and production elements, with minor variations like added covers or guest appearances, such as OneRepublic opening select dates. The 2019 extension attracted 566,576 fans and generated $73.8 million in revenue, highlighted by a record single-show gross of $6.91 million at Melbourne's Marvel Stadium on November 15-16, 2019.[109][110] Overall, the 2017 and 2019 tours combined sold 3,279,712 tickets and earned $390,778,581, underscoring the enduring commercial draw of The Joshua Tree material in arena-scale settings. No further full-scale anniversary revivals have occurred as of 2025, though individual tracks from the album featured in subsequent U2 performances, such as their 2023-2024 Sphere residency in Las Vegas.[108][111]Tour Dates
Chronological Listing
The Joshua Tree Tour encompassed 109 performances from April 2 to December 20, 1987, spanning arenas and stadiums primarily in North America, with legs in Europe, Australia, New Zealand, and Japan. The itinerary prioritized indoor arenas for the initial North American leg, transitioning to larger outdoor venues later.[27] The following table presents the chronological listing of confirmed tour dates, including venue and city details:| Date | City | Venue |
|---|---|---|
| 1987-04-02 | Tempe, AZ, USA | ASU Sun Devil Stadium |
| 1987-04-04 | Las Cruces, NM, USA | Pan American Center |
| 1987-04-06 | El Paso, TX, USA | UTEP Special Events Center |
| 1987-04-07 | Lubbock, TX, USA | Lubbock Municipal Coliseum |
| 1987-04-09 | Houston, TX, USA | The Summit |
| 1987-04-10 | Austin, TX, USA | Frank Erwin Center |
| 1987-04-11 | San Antonio, TX, USA | Convention Center Arena |
| 1987-04-13 | Dallas, TX, USA | Reunion Arena |
| 1987-04-15 | Oklahoma City, OK, USA | Myriad Convention Center |
| 1987-04-17 | Kansas City, MO, USA | Kemper Arena |
| 1987-04-18 | St. Louis, MO, USA | Kiel Auditorium |
| 1987-04-20 | Memphis, TN, USA | Mid-South Coliseum |
| 1987-04-21 | New Orleans, LA, USA | Superdome |
| 1987-04-23 | Atlanta, GA, USA | The Omni |
| 1987-04-24 | Atlanta, GA, USA | The Omni |
| 1987-04-26 | Lexington, KY, USA | Rupp Arena |
| 1987-04-27 | Cincinnati, OH, USA | Riverfront Coliseum |
| 1987-04-29 | Cleveland, OH, USA | Richfield Coliseum |
| 1987-04-30 | Pittsburgh, PA, USA | Civic Arena |
| 1987-05-02 | Philadelphia, PA, USA | The Spectrum |
| 1987-05-03 | Philadelphia, PA, USA | The Spectrum |
| 1987-05-04 | East Rutherford, NJ, USA | Meadowlands Arena |
| 1987-05-06 | East Rutherford, NJ, USA | Meadowlands Arena |
| 1987-05-07 | East Rutherford, NJ, USA | Meadowlands Arena |
| 1987-05-08 | Syracuse, NY, USA | Carrier Dome |
| 1987-05-10 | Worcester, MA, USA | Centrum |
| 1987-05-11 | Worcester, MA, USA | Centrum |
| 1987-05-13 | Hartford, CT, USA | Hartford Civic Center |
| 1987-05-14 | Landover, MD, USA | Capital Centre |
| 1987-05-16 | Chicago, IL, USA | Rosemont Horizon |
| 1987-05-17 | Chicago, IL, USA | Rosemont Horizon |
| 1987-05-18 | Chicago, IL, USA | Rosemont Horizon |
| 1987-05-20 | Minneapolis, MN, USA | Met Center |
| 1987-05-21 | Milwaukee, WI, USA | Mecca Arena |
| 1987-05-23 | Denver, CO, USA | McNichols Sports Arena |
| 1987-05-25 | Portland, OR, USA | Memorial Coliseum |
| 1987-05-26 | Vancouver, BC, Canada | Pacific Coliseum |
| 1987-05-28 | Tacoma, WA, USA | Tacoma Dome |
| 1987-05-30 | Oakland, CA, USA | Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum Arena |
| 1987-05-31 | Oakland, CA, USA | Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum Arena |
| 1987-06-01 | Oakland, CA, USA | Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum Arena |
| 1987-06-03 | Los Angeles, CA, USA | Sports Arena |
| 1987-06-04 | Los Angeles, CA, USA | Sports Arena |
| 1987-06-05 | Los Angeles, CA, USA | Sports Arena |
| 1987-06-09 | London, England | Wembley Stadium (72,000) |
| 1987-06-10 | London, England | Wembley Stadium (72,000) |
| 1987-06-13 | Paris, France | Hippodrome de Vincennes |
| 1987-06-15 | Cologne, West Germany | Mungersdorfer Stadion |
| 1987-06-17 | Rotterdam, Netherlands | De Kuip |
| 1987-06-19 | Madrid, Spain | Estadio Vicente Calderón |
| 1987-06-21 | Brussels, Belgium | Vorst Nationaal |
| 1987-06-23 | Glasgow, Scotland | Scottish Exhibition and Conference Centre |
| 1987-06-24 | Dublin, Ireland | Croke Park (48,000) |
| 1987-06-27 | Gothenburg, Sweden | Ullevi Stadium |
| 1987-06-28 | Copenhagen, Denmark | Gentofte Stadion |
| 1987-06-30 | West Berlin, West Germany | Reichstag Grounds |
| 1987-07-02 | Mannheim, West Germany | Maimarktgelände |
| 1987-07-04 | Frankfurt, West Germany | Waldstadion |
| 1987-07-07 | Werchter, Belgium | Festival Grounds |
| 1987-07-08 | Paris, France | Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy |
| 1987-09-08 | New Haven, CT, USA | New Haven Veterans Memorial Coliseum |
| 1987-09-10 | Toronto, ON, Canada | CNE Grandstand |
| 1987-09-11 | Montreal, QC, Canada | Olympic Stadium |
| 1987-09-12 | Montreal, QC, Canada | Olympic Stadium |
| 1987-09-14 | Worcester, MA, USA | Centrum |
| 1987-09-16 | East Rutherford, NJ, USA | Meadowlands Arena |
| 1987-09-17 | East Rutherford, NJ, USA | Meadowlands Arena |
| 1987-09-18 | East Rutherford, NJ, USA | Meadowlands Arena |
| 1987-09-20 | Philadelphia, PA, USA | The Spectrum |
| 1987-09-21 | Philadelphia, PA, USA | The Spectrum |
| 1987-09-23 | Landover, MD, USA | Capital Centre |
| 1987-09-24 | Landover, MD, USA | Capital Centre |
| 1987-09-25 | Landover, MD, USA | Capital Centre |
| 1987-09-27 | Hampton, VA, USA | Hampton Coliseum |
| 1987-09-28 | Charlotte, NC, USA | Charlotte Coliseum |
| 1987-09-30 | Pontiac, MI, USA | Pontiac Silverdome |
| 1987-10-01 | Richfield, OH, USA | Richfield Coliseum |
| 1987-10-03 | Auburn Hills, MI, USA | The Palace of Auburn Hills |
| 1987-10-04 | Rosemont, IL, USA | Rosemont Horizon |
| 1987-10-05 | Rosemont, IL, USA | Rosemont Horizon |
| 1987-10-07 | St. Paul, MN, USA | St. Paul Civic Center |
| 1987-10-08 | Omaha, NE, USA | Omaha Civic Auditorium |
| 1987-10-10 | Kansas City, MO, USA | Kemper Arena |
| 1987-10-11 | St. Louis, MO, USA | Kiel Auditorium |
| 1987-10-13 | Houston, TX, USA | The Summit |
| 1987-10-14 | Fort Worth, TX, USA | Tarrant County Convention Center |
| 1987-10-16 | San Diego, CA, USA | San Diego Sports Arena |
| 1987-10-17 | Phoenix, AZ, USA | Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum |
| 1987-10-19 | Los Angeles, CA, USA | Sports Arena |
| 1987-10-20 | Los Angeles, CA, USA | Sports Arena |
| 1987-10-21 | Los Angeles, CA, USA | Sports Arena |
| 1987-10-23 | Irvine, CA, USA | Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre |
| 1987-10-24 | Irvine, CA, USA | Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre |
| 1987-10-25 | Irvine, CA, USA | Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre |
| 1987-11-01 | Sydney, Australia | Sydney Entertainment Centre |
| 1987-11-02 | Sydney, Australia | Sydney Entertainment Centre |
| 1987-11-04 | Sydney, Australia | Sydney Entertainment Centre |
| 1987-11-06 | Brisbane, Australia | Brisbane Entertainment Centre |
| 1987-11-07 | Brisbane, Australia | Brisbane Entertainment Centre |
| 1987-11-09 | Melbourne, Australia | National Tennis Centre |
| 1987-11-10 | Melbourne, Australia | National Tennis Centre |
| 1987-11-11 | Melbourne, Australia | National Tennis Centre |