The Joshua Tree Tour

(Redirected from The Dalton Brothers (band))

The Joshua Tree Tour was a concert tour by Irish rock band U2. Staged in support of their 1987 album The Joshua Tree, it comprised 109 shows over three legs,[1] spanning from April to December that year. The first and third legs visited North America, while the second leg toured Europe.[2] Although it featured minimal production like the group's previous tours, the Joshua Tree Tour was the first to involve larger venues in arenas and stadiums as a result of the album's breakthrough. Much like U2 did on The Joshua Tree, on tour the group explored social and political concerns, along with American roots and mythology, collaborated with American guest musicians and opening acts such as B. B. King. U2 also recorded new material; these songs and their experiences on tour were depicted on the 1988 album and documentary film Rattle and Hum and on the 2007 video and live album Live from Paris. Territories that this tour missed would later be covered by Rattle and Hum's Lovetown Tour.

The Joshua Tree Tour
Tour by U2
Promotional poster for the Modena concert
Location
  • North America
  • Europe
Associated albumThe Joshua Tree
Start date2 April 1987 (1987-04-02)
End date20 December 1987 (1987-12-20)
Legs3
No. of shows109
Attendance3.17 million
Box office$56 million
U2 concert chronology

The Joshua Tree Tour and its album were a huge commercial and critical success, continuing to greatly increase U2's popularity. The tour was the highest-grossing North American tour of the year and overall grossed US$56 million globally from 3.17 million tickets sold. Songs from The Joshua Tree ultimately became staples of U2's concerts on subsequent tours. Despite the band's success, lead vocalist Bono suffered injuries on tour and the band were unprepared for their newfound fame and the tour's intensity. Their experiences combined with the polarised reception of Rattle and Hum led them to change their musical direction and image, beginning with Achtung Baby and the Zoo TV Tour. U2 would later embark on anniversary tours of The Joshua Tree three decades later.

Itinerary

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The back of the most common T-shirt from the Joshua Tree Tour's first leg.
 
Fans waiting for U2 outside Hartford Civic Center on 9 May

Like their previous tours, the Joshua Tree Tour was a minimalistic, austere production,[3] and U2 used this outlet for addressing political and social concerns.[4] One such issue was Arizona Governor Evan Mecham's canceling the state's observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day.[2] Throughout the tour, the group continued to explore American roots music: they collaborated with Harlem's New Voices of Freedom gospel choir and visited Graceland and Sun Studio in Memphis, where they recorded new material.[2]

The tour's opening night was 2 April at Arizona State University (ASU)'s Activity Center in Tempe, Arizona. The day before the opening night, frontman Bono fell onto a spotlight he was carrying during a rendition of "Bullet the Blue Sky", cutting open his chin. Bono had partially lost his voice as a result. He was taken to a hospital and the wound was stitched up.[5] He asked the audience to help him sing the majority of the set, which they were happy to do. At the time, it was explained by their publicists in a press release that it was due to the week of rehearsals the band held at the Activity Center and he had over rehearsed his voice. He had fully regained his voice for the second of the two shows at the arena on 4 April. Bono later said, "I was lost in the music and at the start of any tour you're just getting to know the physicality of the stage... and you're overestimating your own physicality. You think you're made of metal and you're not. Cuts and bruises, that's what I remember from The Joshua Tree."[6]

The first leg took place in American indoor arenas during April and May. The first leg finished with 5 concerts at the Brendan Byrne Arena in East Rutherford between 11 and 16 May.

The second leg in European arenas and outdoor stadiums ran from late May through to early August, starting at the Stadio Flaminio in Rome on 27 May.[7] The final show of the European leg is at Páirc Uí Chaoimh in Cork on 8 August.[8]

The third leg returned to American and Canadian arenas and stadiums in the autumn. The tour ended on 20 December back where it started in Tempe, Arizona, but this time at Sun Devil Stadium.

On 30 April, the band played the Pontiac Silverdome, their first headlining stadium show in the United States. While the show's reviews were positive, they said that a video screen is necessary for people at the back. U2 production manager, Willie Williams, recalls the debate within the band about the use of screens and whether they would divide the audience's attention between the stage and the screen.[9] A video screen was installed behind the lighting tower at the 20 September show at the RFK Stadium in Washington, D.C., so the back half of the stadium could better see the band, and screens were used at most stadium shows for the rest of the tour.[3] Bono sustained a second injury during the Washington concert, falling off the rain-slicked stage and dislocating his arm.[3] He completed the performance and had his arm popped back into place after its conclusion. His arm was in a sling for twelve shows between 22 September and 20 October, which is visible at some points during the Rattle and Hum film.[10]

The Joshua Tree elevated the group to a new level of popularity; its tour sold out arenas and stadiums around the world, the first time the band had consistently played venues of that size.[2] The Joshua Tree and its singles had become huge hits and the band had reached a new height in their popularity. Songs from the album became staples of the tour's set lists, as the group regularly performed eight of the record's eleven tracks, and the only song not to be played was "Red Hill Mining Town".[1] Tickets for shows were often very hard to get, especially on the first American leg when they only played in arenas.

That first leg was also organised around multiple-night stands in centres of U2 fandom along the two U.S. coasts, with only a very few dates in the middle of the country. These multiple-night stands also featured an unusual set list twist. All but the last night would begin in conventional concert fashion with the rousing pair of "Where the Streets Have No Name" into "I Will Follow", but the last night in each city would begin with the house lights fully up and the band performing the early 1960s classic "Stand by Me", with guitarist the Edge singing one verse, all intended as a friendly, informal opening. The house lights would then stay up for "Pride (In the Name of Love)", only going off at the end of it; the rest of the set list would be consequently scrambled from the norm.

The new level of fame, exposure and the frantic nature of the tour put U2 under a large amount of stress.[11] They were dissatisfied creatively, and Bono believed they were musically unprepared for their success.[12][13] Drummer Larry Mullen Jr. said, "We were the biggest, but we weren't the best",[12] and for Bono the tour was "one of the worst times of [their] musical life".[2] On the road, the group dealt with death threats, along with injuries that Bono sustained from performing. The band hinted that the stresses of touring led them to enjoy the "rock and roll lifestyle" they previously avoided.[2]

Cover performances

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At Wembley Stadium in London, Bono sang the Beatles' "Help!", dedicating it to those in the audience who were dreading another five years of the recently re-elected Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher. As another sign of the group's confidence, they also covered the Beatles' heretofore untouchable "Helter Skelter", declaring "This is a song Charles Manson stole from the Beatles; we're stealin' it back." Other notable covers from the tour included Eddie Cochran's "C'mon Everybody", Peggy Seeger's "The Ballad of Springhill", Neil Young's "Southern Man", the Impressions' "People Get Ready" (during which Bono would invite a fan to play guitar on the song) and numerous Bob Dylan covers including "Maggie's Farm" and "I Shall Be Released". On 20 April, following a performance of "I Shall Be Released" in Los Angeles, the band surprised the audience by bringing out Dylan himself for a performance of Knockin' on Heaven's Door. During the performance, Bono jokingly said, "I usually make up my own words to Bob Dylan songs. He says he doesn't mind." Dylan replied in kind, saying "I do it too." Bono often would sing excerpts of other songs, notably ones by the Rolling Stones and Lou Reed's "Walk on the Wild Side", near the end of the song "Bad" as he had done during the Live Aid performance and would do on later tours.

U2 covered Ben E. King's "Stand by Me" at their 25 September show at Philadelphia's old JFK Stadium, accompanied by a guest performance from Bruce Springsteen.

The band performed "Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)" at their final concert in Tempe, Arizona on 20 December 1987. The band had recorded the track for the compilation album A Very Special Christmas months earlier on the European leg of their tour.

Filming for Rattle and Hum documentary

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The band filmed and recorded various shows from the tour for the documentary and album Rattle and Hum, directed by Phil Joanou. The band filmed the black-and-white footage at Denver's McNichols Sports Arena on 7 and 8 November. They chose the city following the success of their Live at Red Rocks: Under a Blood Red Sky video, which was filmed at Red Rocks Amphitheatre in 1983. "We thought lightning might strike twice", said the Edge. Seven songs from the second show were used in the film, none from the first.[14] Hours before the second Denver show, an IRA bomb killed eleven people at a Remembrance Day ceremony in the Northern Irish town of Enniskillen (see Remembrance Day Bombing). Bono addressed the event angrily during the band's performance of Sunday Bloody Sunday, which was included in the film. Bono's reference to the number of people killed in the incident was later edited for the film to reflect the actual number.

The band also gave a brief, free performance in San Francisco, California three days later on 11 November, billed as the "Save the Yuppies" concert, from which the performance of "All Along the Watchtower" was taken for the film and album. During the performance of "Sunday Bloody Sunday", Bono observed a fan holding a sign with the letters "SF" and "U2" on it. Believing the "SF" in the sign to refer to Sinn Féin, Bono reacted angrily to the fan and the sign, apparently not realizing that the "SF" more likely stood for San Francisco. Also during the performance, Bono spray painted "Stop the Traffic, Rock and Roll" on the Vaillancourt Fountain in Justin Herman Plaza, which was captured in the film. The act angered some, including then-mayor Dianne Feinstein.

At least part of the band's second concert in Fort Worth, Texas was filmed and featured in the film, as the band performed an early version of the then-unreleased song "When Love Comes to Town" with blues performer B.B. King. The band would go on to tour with King on their Lovetown Tour two years later.

Colour outdoor concert footage was taken from the band's Tempe, Arizona shows on 19 and 20 December. The initial plan was that the colour outdoor footage would have been taken during 2 shows in Buenos Aires, but during the tour planning this became impossible due to heavy costs to transport all the equipment.[15] The shows were the final two of the tour, having been held in the same city in which the tour opened.

Support acts

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A number of opening acts were used for the tour. Lone Justice was still given emphasis in this role, as they had been on the Unforgettable Fire Tour, but it was not enough to give them a successful career. Other openers included the Pretenders, Big Audio Dynamite, UB40, Little Steven, BoDeans, Mason Ruffner, World Party, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Spear of Destiny, the Waterboys, Hurrah!, Los Lobos, Buckwheat Zydeco, the Pogues, the Alarm, the Silencers, Primus, and Lou Reed.

On 1 November in Indianapolis, U2 appeared as their own support act, disguised as "the Dalton Brothers", playing between sets by BoDeans and Los Lobos. They were dressed in Western outfits and wigs while Bono spoke with a twangy southern accent. Playing their own country-influenced song, "Lucille", and Leon Payne's "Lost Highway", only some of the audience in the front few rows recognised them. "The Dalton Brothers" also appeared at concerts in Los Angeles and Hampton, Virginia.[14]

B.B. King was the opening act for both final shows of the tour on 19 and 20 December at Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Arizona, and in Fort Worth same year.

Commercial performance

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On the first North American leg of the tour, the band grossed US$7,501,329 from 465,452 tickets sold across 29 shows. For the Las Vegas show, 1,063 tickets remained unsold, equating to a 99.77% sellout for the 1st American leg.[16] The 79 North American shows on the tour sold 2,035,539 tickets[17] and grossed $35.1 million, making it the highest-grossing North American tour of the year.[18]

In total, the tour grossed US$56 million and sold 3.17 million tickets.[19]

Set list

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This set list is representative of the tour's average setlist as conducted by Setlist.fm, which represents all concerts for the duration of the tour.[20]

  1. "Where the Streets Have No Name"
  2. "I Will Follow"
  3. "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For"
  4. "Trip Through Your Wires"
  5. "MLK"
  6. "The Unforgettable Fire"
  7. "Exit"
  8. "Sunday Bloody Sunday"
  9. "In God's Country"
  10. "Gloria"
  11. "Help!" (The Beatles cover)
  12. "People Get Ready" (The Impressions cover)
  13. "Bad"
  14. "October"
  15. "New Year's Day"
  16. "Pride (In the Name of Love)"
Encore
  1. "Bullet the Blue Sky"
  2. "Running to Stand Still"
  3. "With or Without You"
  4. "40"

Tour dates

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Date City Country Venue Opening acts Attendance Revenue
Leg 1: North America[21][22]
2 April 1987 Tempe United States Arizona State University Activity Center Lone Justice 25,113 / 25,113 $389,251
4 April 1987
5 April 1987 Tucson Tucson Community Center 8,032 / 8,032 $124,496
7 April 1987 Houston The Summit 27,251 / 27,251 $368,974
8 April 1987
10 April 1987 Las Cruces Pan American Center 12,500 / 12,500 $185,580
12 April 1987 Paradise Thomas & Mack Center 8,637 / 9,700 $138,192
13 April 1987 San Diego San Diego Sports Arena 27,937 / 27,937 $450,384
14 April 1987
17 April 1987 Los Angeles Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena 74,176 / 74,176 $1,298,080
18 April 1987
20 April 1987
21 April 1987
22 April 1987
24 April 1987 Daly City Cow Palace 25,785 / 25,785 $425,453
25 April 1987
29 April 1987 Rosemont Rosemont Horizon 16,854 / 16,854 $270,923
30 April 1987 Pontiac Pontiac Silverdome 51,718 / 51,718 $853,347
2 May 1987 Worcester Centrum in Worcester 37,482 / 37,482 $601,739
3 May 1987
4 May 1987
7 May 1987 Hartford Hartford Civic Center 47,327 / 47,327 $773,632
8 May 1987
9 May 1987
11 May 1987 East Rutherford Brendan Byrne Arena 102,640 / 102,640 $1,621,278
12 May 1987
13 May 1987
15 May 1987
16 May 1987
Leg 2: Europe[7]
27 May 1987 Rome Italy Stadio Flaminio The Pretenders
Big Audio Dynamite
Lone Justice
29 May 1987 Modena Stadio Alberto Braglia
30 May 1987
2 June 1987 London England Wembley Arena Hurrah!
3 June 1987 Birmingham National Exhibition Centre
6 June 1987 Gothenburg Sweden Eriksberg The Pretenders
Big Audio Dynamite
Lone Justice
12 June 1987 London England Wembley Stadium The Pretenders
Spear of Destiny
World Party
13 June 1987 Lou Reed
The Pogues
Lone Justice
15 June 1987 Paris France Le Zénith Lone Justice
17 June 1987 Cologne West Germany Müngersdorfer Stadium The Pretenders
Lou Reed
Big Audio Dynamite
21 June 1987 Basel Switzerland St. Jakob Stadium
24 June 1987 Belfast Northern Ireland King's Hall Lou Reed
27 June 1987 Dublin Ireland Croke Park Lou Reed
The Pogues
The Dubliners
Light a Big Fire
28 June 1987 Christy Moore
The Pretenders
Lou Reed
Hothouse Flowers
1 July 1987 Leeds England Elland Road The Pretenders
The Mission
The Fall
4 July 1987 Paris France Hippodrome de Vincennes UB40
The Pogues
8 July 1987 Brussels Belgium Forest National In Tua Nua
10 July 1987 Rotterdam Netherlands Feijenoord Stadion The Pretenders
In Tua Nua
11 July 1987 The Pretenders
Big Audio Dynamite
In Tua Nua
15 July 1987 Madrid Spain Santiago Bernabéu Stadium The Pretenders
UB40
Big Audio Dynamite
18 July 1987 Montpellier France Espace Richter The Pretenders
UB40
World Party
21 July 1987 Munich West Germany Olympiahalle In Tua Nua
22 July 1987
25 July 1987 Cardiff Wales Cardiff Arms Park The Pretenders
The Alarm
The Silencers
29 July 1987 Glasgow Scotland Scottish Exhibition and Conference Centre Hoodoo Gurus
30 July 1987 Hue and Cry
1 August 1987 Edinburgh Murrayfield Stadium The Pogues
The Mission
Love and Money
Runrig
3 August 1987 Birmingham England National Exhibition Centre Hoodoo Gurus
4 August 1987
8 August 1987 Cork Ireland Páirc Uí Chaoimh UB40
The Subterraneans
The Dubliners
Leg 3: North America[23][24]
10 September 1987 Uniondale United States Nassau Coliseum 34,899 / 34,899 $648,603
11 September 1987
12 September 1987 Philadelphia The Spectrum 17,622 / 17,622 $323,509
14 September 1987 East Rutherford Giants Stadium 54,780 / 54,780 $1,040,820
17 September 1987 Boston Boston Garden 31,018 / 31,018 $589,342
18 September 1987
20 September 1987 Washington, D.C. Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium 51,016 / 53,056 $969,304
22 September 1987 Foxborough Sullivan Stadium 55,378 / 55,378 $1,051,137
23 September 1987 New Haven New Haven Veterans Memorial Coliseum 10,535 / 10,535 $177,960
25 September 1987 Philadelphia John F. Kennedy Stadium 86,145 / 86,145 $1,593,683
28 September 1987 New York City Madison Square Garden 39,510 / 39,510 $744,838
29 September 1987
1 October 1987 Montreal Canada Olympic Stadium 66,117 / 66,117 $1,243,660
3 October 1987 Toronto CNE Stadium 62,846 / 62,846 $1,194,194
6 October 1987 Cleveland United States Cleveland Municipal Stadium 50,081 / 50,081 $901,458
7 October 1987 Buffalo Buffalo Memorial Auditorium 17,065 / 17,065 $298,638
9 October 1987 Syracuse Carrier Dome 39,157 / 39,157 $685,248
11 October 1987 Rochester Silver Stadium 30,500 / 30,500 $564,250
13 October 1987 Pittsburgh Three Rivers Stadium
20 October 1987 Iowa City Carver–Hawkeye Arena 15,846 / 15,846 $261,469
22 October 1987 Champaign Assembly Hall BoDeans 16,193 / 16,193 $275,281
23 October 1987 Lexington Rupp Arena 22,815 / 22,815 $387,855
25 October 1987 St. Louis St. Louis Arena 18,237 / 18,237 $317,153
26 October 1987 Kansas City Kemper Arena 17,168 / 17,168 $297,535
28 October 1987 Rosemont Rosemont Horizon 51,998 / 51,998 $941,471
29 October 1987
30 October 1987
1 November 1987 Indianapolis Hoosier Dome Los Lobos
The Dalton Brothers
38,441/ 38,441 $634,277
3 November 1987 Saint Paul St. Paul Civic Center 35,152 / 35,152 $615,160
4 November 1987
7 November 1987 Denver McNichols Arena 34,000 / 34,000 $605,779
8 November 1987
11 November 1987 San Francisco Justin Herman Plaza
12 November 1987 Vancouver Canada BC Place Stadium 54,204 / 54,204 $1,012,878
14 November 1987 Oakland United States Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum The Pretenders
BoDeans
103,260 / 119,000 $2,013,570
15 November 1987
17 November 1987 Los Angeles Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum 132,925 / 142,000 $2,590,457
18 November 1987 The Pretenders
The Dalton Brothers
BoDeans
22 November 1987 Austin Frank Erwin Center 17,202 / 17,202 $280,467
23 November 1987 Fort Worth Tarrant County Convention Center B.B. King 27,560 / 27,560 $435,676
24 November 1987
26 November 1987 Baton Rouge LSU Assembly Center 15,042 / 15,042 $249,025
28 November 1987 Murfreesboro Charles M. Murphy Athletic Center 11,619 / 11,619 $203,333
3 December 1987 Miami Orange Bowl
5 December 1987 Tampa Tampa Stadium 58,865 / 58,865 $1,089,003
8 December 1987 Atlanta The Omni 32,734 / 32,734 $572,845
9 December 1987
11 December 1987 Hampton Hampton Coliseum 21,088 / 21,088 $358,496
12 December 1987 BoDeans
19 December 1987 Tempe Sun Devil Stadium B.B. King 110,450 / 110,450 $552,340
20 December 1987
Total 1,946,920 / 1,974,838 $33,312,043

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "U2 Joshua Tree Tour". U2Gigs. Retrieved 22 September 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Dalton, Stephen (October 2003). "How the West Was Won". Uncut. No. 77.
  3. ^ a b c McGee (2008), p. 110.
  4. ^ Rohter, Larry (15 March 1992). "A Chastened U2 Comes Down to Earth". The New York Times. p. H33. Retrieved 20 March 2017.
  5. ^ McGee (2008), p. 102.
  6. ^ U2 (July 2010). "Stairway to Devon − OK, Somerset!". Q. p. 103.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ a b de la Parra (2003), pp. 103–110
  8. ^ McGee (2008), p. 109.
  9. ^ McGee (2008), p. 104.
  10. ^ McGee (2008), pp. 110, 112
  11. ^ Graham, Bill (17 December 1987). "Band on the Run". Hot Press.
  12. ^ a b Fricke, David (1 October 1992). "U2 Finds What It's Looking For". Rolling Stone. No. 640. pp. 40+. Archived from the original on 26 October 2007. Retrieved 2 July 2018.
  13. ^ Flanagan (1996), pp. 25–26
  14. ^ a b McGee (2008), p. 112
  15. ^ McGee (2008)
  16. ^ de la Parra (1996), p. 102.
  17. ^ Grossweiner, Bob (1992). "U2: It's A Business". Hit Parader. No. Special. p. 10–11.
  18. ^ Hilburn, Robert (23 January 1988). "U2's $35-Million Gross Is Highest for '87 Tour". Los Angeles Times. sec. Calendar, p. 1. Archived from the original on 2 January 2022. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
  19. ^ Quinn, Karl (16 November 2019). "Masters of stagecraft add wall of wonder". The Sydney Morning Herald. p. 24. Retrieved 6 September 2024.
  20. ^ "Average setlist for tour: The Joshua Tree". Setlist.fm. Retrieved 18 March 2019.
  21. ^ de la Parra (2003), pp. 79–102
  22. ^ North American 1st leg boxscore data:
  23. ^ de la Parra (2003), pp. 111–121
  24. ^ North American 2nd leg boxscore data:

Bibliography

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