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The Joshua Tree is an Album by U2, released on March 9, 1987 on Island Records (see 1987 in music). It was produced by Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois. It won the Album of the Year award from the Grammy Awards of 1988.
It also picks up where the political themes of War left off. "Bullet the Blue Sky" is a fierce attack on the United States' policy of arming rebels in El Salvador. The song has a martial drum beat, thundering bassline, and wailing guitar reminiscent of falling bombs. Lead singer Bono reportedly told Edge to "put El Salvador through your amplifier." "Mothers of the Disappeared" is an understated lament for the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo, the mothers of the thousands of los desaparecidos (from Spanish, literally "the disappeared")—people who opposed the Videla and Galtieri coup d'état that overtook Argentina in 1976, who were kidnapped and never seen again.
In addition to the political matter, there are many personal songs, including "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For", a song about Bono's inner struggles with faith and temptation, and "One Tree Hill", an elegy written for a friend of the band, Greg Carroll (to whom the album is dedicated), who died in 1986.
Musically, the band began to incorporate American folk and blues influences into their songwriting, most evident on "Running To Stand Still", a rustic ballad about heroin addiction, and "Trip Through Your Wires", a harmonica-filled blues romp. Rattle and Hum (1988) would examine these influences in greater depth.
The Joshua Tree is not only widely considered one of the band's best albums, it is often considered one of the greatest albums ever recorded. It was named by Rolling Stone magazine as one of the band's "three masterpieces" (alongside Achtung Baby and All That You Can't Leave Behind), as well as appearing at #26 on the magazine's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. The Joshua Tree was selected as #6 on CCM Magazine's 2001 list of the greatest Contemporary Christian music albums of all time (see '' The 100 Greatest Albums in Christian Music).
The album has sold over 10 million copies in the United States alone and remains the band's best-selling album. It was followed by the successful worldwide Joshua Tree Tour.
The videos "With or Without You" and "Where the Streets Have No Name" (directed by Meiert Avis) and "I Still Haven't Found what I'm Looking For" (directed by Barry Devlin) saturated MTV, making the band much more visible to both casual music listeners and fans.
Numerous aspects of the album emphasize water and the desert. To begin with, the cover photograph is a black-and-white photo of the band at Death Valley National Park in the desert of California *, taken by the band's longtime photographer Anton Corbijn; then there is the desert tree of the title. Throughout the album, there are numerous explicit lyrical references to water and desert. Specifically, there are 46 references to the words rain, raining, rainin', rainfall, flood, water, well, sea, ocean, and river. Also, there are 17 references to desert, dry, plain, heat, dust, sunlight, and the sun. Water and desert, poetic equivalents of life and death, loss and redemption, and other diametrically opposed but uniquely linked forces, are thus used for a variety of purposes (which are further explained later):
In the initial Joshua Tree writing sessions, the band began mentioning books they were reading at the time--short stories by Raymond Carver, Norman Mailer's The Executioner's Song, and others--as well as talking about the idea of America and what it means. They also talked in detail with producer Brian Eno about the idea of music as cinematic - that music can evoke a location in the listener's mind - and began to place the setting for many of their musical explorations on this album in America's desert southwest. What is more, the band were beginning to investigate America's musical traditions, such as blues, gospel, soul, rhythm and blues, and country music, genres they felt they had ignored up to that point in their lives. From these initial forays into all things American (its music, literature, and geography), the band realized it had decidedly contradictory feelings about the country. They at once found it liberating and oppressive. Liberating as an idea and perhaps a place to live, but oppressive in its power, influence, and controversial foreign policy. A draft title to the album was The Two Americas, influenced by this fascination and deep skepticism with America, and also by Bono's trip to El Salvador where he witnessed American-backed bombings.
Many of the songs have a pronounced ache to them. Bono has commented that the album abounds with the ache of the Irish, but not in obvious ways. A cursory review of the general, explicit content of all of the songs reveals that each song generally deals with the notion of loss or absence, be it a person, place, or thing. Bono's lyrics, notoriously ambiguous, contribute to this feeling of absence of something. Album co-producer Daniel Lanois has also said that Bono sings at the top of his range on much of the album--a characteristic the Quebecois says is emotionally compelling and very "Aretha Franklin-like"--and it is quite noticeable that Bono's vocals are huskier and have slowed down compared to earlier albums. In essence, Bono's talents coalesce on this album. What is more, one of The Edge's stylistic troupes is to avoid playing the third of each chord. The third is what gives each chord its gender (major or minor sound), and without it there is a feeling of uncertainty, ambiguity, and absence. As well, the rhythm section's subtlety creates a blank slate of a musical statement. Each of these aspects of the band's sound--Bono's ambiguous lyrics and belting vocals, Edge's tenuous and ethereal playing, and Adam and Larry's austere rhythm section create an emotionally irresolute landscape rife with mystery, ambiguity, and uncertainty. And as most listeners have noted, there is a highness to these songs, a soaring, anthemic, grand quality--the same quality that became the root of most criticism the band endured after they released and toured for this album.
Greg Carroll was Bono's personal assistant and close friend, and can be seen in videos during the European portion of the Unforgettable Fire Tour, in the video to "Bad", and figures prominently on the band's Live Aid set. Carroll was a Māori from New Zealand the band met while kicking off that tour, and was invited to join the band's touring entourage. After the tour, Carroll relocated to Ireland and assisted the band during the recording of the album. Tragically, Carroll was killed in a motorcycle accident when he was running errands for the band. Carroll's death is yet another event or emotion from which the music takes its sonic ancestry. The album is dedicated to the memory of Greg Carroll.
Crystallizing this musical journey, as the band jokingly says in the film Rattle and Hum, the album name The Joshua Tree is not without meaning. The Hebrew name יְהוֹשֻׁעַ Joshua, first encountered as the name of Moses' successor as leader of the Israelites becomes, when transliterated into Greek, Jesus, which provides a specifically Christian context for the album content. These images resonate with the themes of the album by evoking an image of a man suffering a great loss or making a great sacrifice, and either calling on something greater for assistance, or simply drawing on catharsis to reconcile what has been lost.
As for the tree itself, The Joshua Tree was named by Mormons traveling through the region, parts of which later became the Joshua Tree National Park. They named the tree because of its outstretched arms - in the Old Testament, Joshua, leading the Hebrews in their follow-up victory at Ai, hanged their king on a tree until sunset.
Each of these major themes can be viewed independently of or interconnected with one another. At the smallest level, the album deals with reconciling the death of Bono's close friend, Greg Carroll. At a larger level, the album both implicitly and explicitly praises and criticizes America as an idea and tyrant. And at the largest level, the album can be seen as a meditation on loss and redemption. But as Brian Eno says, the result is simply a rich and densely interconnected stretched envelope, called an album.
Music by U2, lyrics by Bono.
Produced and engineered by Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois.
"With or Without You", "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For", and "Where the Streets Have No Name" were released as singles internationally. In addition, "In God's Country" was released as a fourth single in North America and "One Tree Hill" was released as a fourth single in New Zealand. "Red Hill Mining Town" had originally been slated as a single before it was realized during rehearsals for the Joshua Tree Tour that Bono could not hit the high notes in the song; it ended up being the only number not played on the tour from this album.
The original CD pressings of the album incorrectly indexed the ending of "One Tree Hill" (4:43) at the beginning of "Exit" (4:53). This has been corrected on later editions.
In 1996, Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab remastered the album and released it as a special gold CD. This edition has slightly different running times, and features a slight change in the synthesised rhythm pattern just before the fade-out of "Mothers of the Disappeared" that is not audible on the Island CD editions.
| Year | Single | Chart | Position |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1987 | The Joshua Tree | The Billboard 200 | 1 |
| 1987 | The Joshua Tree | Top Contemporary Christian | 36 |
| 1987 | "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" | Adult Contemporary | 16 |
| 1987 | "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" | The Billboard Hot 100 | 1 |
| 1987 | "Where the Streets Have No Name" | The Billboard Hot 100 | 13 |
| 1987 | "With or Without You" | The Billboard Hot 100 | 1 |
| 1987 | "Bullet the Blue Sky" | Mainstream Rock Tracks | 14 |
| 1987 | "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" | Mainstream Rock Tracks | 2 |
| 1987 | "Where the Streets Have No Name" | Mainstream Rock Tracks | 11 |
| 1987 | "With or Without You" | Mainstream Rock Tracks | 1 |
| 1987 | "In God's Country" | Mainstream Rock Tracks | 8 |
| 1987 | "In God's Country" | The Billboard Hot 100 | 53 |
| 1988 | "In God's Country" | The Billboard Hot 100 | 44 |
| 1988 | "In God's Country" | Mainstream Rock Tracks | 6 |
The Joshua Tree | The Joshua Tree | The Joshua Tree | the Joshua Tree | The Joshua Tree | The Joshua Tree (U2) | ヨシュア・トゥリー | The Joshua Tree | The Joshua Tree | The Joshua Tree | The Joshua Tree
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"The Joshua Tree".
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