eMusic Review 0
It's no coincidence that the photo on the cover of The Joshua Tree is letterboxed, and in black and white. This is U2's art film — stern and shadowy and presented in the band's proper aspect ratio: enormous-by-enormous-and-a-half. Chances are, if you live anywhere within the vicinity of a radio, you've already heard most of this record. It was an unstoppable force, moving upwards of 20 million copies, taking up residence at the top of the charts for months on end and eventually becoming one of the best-selling records of all time. But, like Bruce Springsteen's Born in the U.S.A., The Joshua Tree is not about what you think it's about; beneath its veneer of steely confidence lies the bitter tang of disillusionment.
"It's all wrapped up in America, or a place like America," Bono said of the record in a TV interview shortly before its release. "All the good and the bad that lies in that continent." Working again with Daniel Lanois and Brian Eno — the creative team responsible for The Unforgettable Fire, the group managed to make a record about America without simply mimicking its musical forms (they'd wait until Rattle & Hum to do that).… read more »