U2 live in London: finding new relevance in The Joshua Tree 30 years on

The Dublin band kicked off the European leg of The Joshua Tree in tour in Twickenham Stadium on Saturday

U2 kicked off the European leg of their 'Joshua Tree' 30 year anniversary tour on Saturday (July 8) at Twickenham in London. Playing songs such as "With or Without You" and "I Still Haven't Found What I'm looking For". Video: U2 / Reuters

U2 kicked off the European leg of The Joshua Tree tour on Saturday by returning to the album that tackled their love-hate relationship with the United States and propelled them to superstardom when it was released 30 years ago.

The band, led by 57-year-old singer Bono, is playing the entire record to 2.4 million fans on their 2017 tour, including hits With or Without You and I Still Haven’t Found What I’m looking For.

But they started the London show with early songs Sunday Bloody Sunday, New Year's Day, Bad, and the Martin Luther King Jr-inspired Pride (In the Name of Love), which Bono dedicated to the "rainbow people of London" who took part in the annual Pride LGBT march in the city earlier on Saturday.

Their 1987 album The Joshua Tree was played in sequence against a backdrop of video of US landscapes such as Death Valley, and Americans standing in front of the Stars and Stripes, shot by Dutch photographer Anton Corbijn who created the imagery on the original record.

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The tracks Bullet the Blue Sky and Mothers of the Disappeared were inspired by trips Bono made to Nicaragua and El Salvador, where he saw the impact of US foreign policy, while Red Hill Mining Town was about the impact of the socially divisive miners' strike in Britain in the 1980s.

Bono sings as U2 perform during their U2: The Joshua Tree Tour, at Twickenham Stadium, London, Britain, July 8, 2017. REUTERS/Dylan Martinez
Bono sings as U2 perform during their U2: The Joshua Tree Tour, at Twickenham Stadium, London, Britain, July 8, 2017. REUTERS/Dylan Martinez

Lead guitarist the Edge said in an interview with Rolling Stone in January that politically "things have kind of come full circle".

“It just felt like, ‘Wow, these songs have a new meaning and a new resonance today that they didn’t have three years ago, four years ago’,” he told the magazine.

Bono largely let the music speak for itself on Saturday, although a character called “Trump” was called a liar by the “good-guy cowboy” in a Western movie-style clip.

The Joshua Tree, which sold more than 25 million copies, marked the pinnacle of the band tackling social and political issues through rock music.

Follow-up Rattle and Hum did not match its success critically or commercially, and the band reinvented themselves in the 1990s by incorporating electronic and alternative rock into their sound.

Bono sings as U2 perform during their U2: The Joshua Tree Tour, at Twickenham Stadium, London, Britain, July 8, 2017. REUTERS/Dylan Martinez
Bono sings as U2 perform during their U2: The Joshua Tree Tour, at Twickenham Stadium, London, Britain, July 8, 2017. REUTERS/Dylan Martinez

Seven of their later songs, including Ultraviolet and One, were played as an encore, before Bono invited support act Noel Gallagher back on stage to sing the Oasis song Don't Look Back in Anger.

The track became an anthem for Manchester after 22 people were killed by a suicide bomber in the city in May, and Gallagher also dedicated it to the victims of further attacks and a devastating tower block fire in London in June.

U2, Gallagher and thousands of fans united in singing the anthem, ending a show that proved the enduring relevance and appeal of 1980s and 1990s rock music. - (Reuters)

  • The Joshua Tree tour plays seven other European cities, including Dublin's Croke Park on July 22nd, before returning to the US in September.