
He's searching for something that can never be found, and that's OK. He has toiled for love, but it isn't enough. How many albums begin with not one or two but three of the greatest radio hits of the '80s? Bono has described "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For," one of the band's most ebullient songs, as an "anthem of doubt." While popular music rarely reaches higher than romantic love when laying out desires for its protagonists, the narrator in "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" seeks a greater understanding. The Joshua Tree's opening trilogy is unimpeachable. "I STILL HAVEN'T FOUND WHAT I'M LOOKING FOR" However bad you butcher this song at karaoke, you still can't quite diminish its power.ģ.
#Bullet the blue sky from u2 sounds like tv#
It is euphoric, the sort of song that's made to ring out in a stadium or across a desolate countryside-there is a reason U2 has played this track at virtually every concert since 1987 (even when the band drifted away from grand, earnest gestures during its Zoo TV tour). The lyrics are simple but evocative (a storm, a bed of nails), and the song served as a breakthrough moment as U2 fumbled toward the sound that would define The Joshua Tree.įrom its rumbling, luxuriant fade-in to its final guitar ripple, "Where the Streets Have No Name" captures the drama and spiritual yearning that's all over The Joshua Tree. Everything that's great about pre- Achtung Baby U2 is contained in these four minutes and 56 seconds: spiritual longing, desire, soaring falsetto vocals and ridiculous amounts of reverberating guitar effects.


We've ranked the album's tracks from best to worst, separating the classics from the near classics and one or two duds.Ī rippling synthesizer and an unmistakable bass line form the basis of U2's greatest ballad. (Ever notice how U2 frequently puts the weakest songs at the end, as if fans just won't notice? All That You Can't Leave Behind is the most egregious offender.) The Joshua Tree's only significant weakness is its sequencing: The best songs are all pushed to the front, while the weaker tracks are scattered near the end of the album. The album would go on to sell 25 million copies worldwide, while its historic tour was documented in the 1988 documentary U2: Rattle and Hum. Building on 1984's The Unforgettable Fire, The Joshua Tree located the ideal balance between U2's atmospheric qualities and its anthemic rock instincts, establishing the trademark sound the Irish group spent the 1990s trying to escape. While the airwaves were dominated by glitzy synth-pop acts and goofy hair-metal monstrosities, U2 found astronomical success in soaring, plainly earnest songs inspired by faith and America and geopolitical conflict.

It rewrote the rules of '80s superstardom. With 1987's The Joshua Tree(released 30 years ago today), U2 didn't just become a superstar act. And four bookish lads from Dublin somehow become the biggest band in the world. Platoon wins best picture at the 59th annual Academy Awards. The Iran–Contra affair is threatening to engulf his administration.
