U2 the joshua tree album cover
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I wouldn't be too sad if I never saw it again however. U2 The Joshua Tree Album Cover 61 x 91.5cm licensed maxi poster. Nevertheless, the album is an amazing one, and this video does an okay job of keeping my attention for an hour. Twenty years on from its debut, The Joshua Tree still stands up (figuratively the actual Joshua tree on the cover sadly died back in 2000), and not just because singer Bono is still campaigning for the Third World, or that America’s still intervening. Actually, I take that back, I learned that the gossip was true, U2 is incredibly vain. U2’s ultra-seminal The Joshua Tree has been remastered and re-released, with a second disc of mostly b-sides that are, well, mostly b-sides. This is something that was accomplished in a much greater way with the Rattle and Hum video (which is amazing if you haven't seen it). According to the designer of the album sleeve, Steve Averill, the band rented a coach in Reno, Nevada, at the time the cover was shot, The Joshua Tree album. By the end of the short "hour of bragging", oops, I mean documentary, I felt no closer to really knowing the band. Although that may be a somewhat trivial annoyance, I was also disappointed with the lack of content. Call me crazy, but I'd rather not listen to how great an artist thinks his/her work is during a documentary. However, most of it was from each member of the band and those involved with the making of the album. I wouldn't have minded had this been coming from critics. I was severely disappointed by how much of the discussion was dedicated to how ahead of its time the album was, how timeless it will be, and how other (and others') music doesn't measure up to it. So, maybe I watched "The Joshua Tree" documentary with too many expectations.