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U2: The Joshua Tree - COMPACT DISCSTitle: The Joshua Tree Artist: U2 Label: Island Product Type: COMPACT DISCS UPC: 602557482577 Genre: Rock Release Date: 2017 06 02 Number of Discs: 4 Additional Details: BOXED SET, DELUXE EDITION Limited four CD edition. Super deluxe 30th Anniversary edition includes digitally remastered edition of the album, a live recording of The Joshua Tree Tour 1987 Madison Square Garden concert, outtakes and B sides from the album's original recording sessions;
Title: The Joshua TreeArtist: U2
Label: Island
Product Type: COMPACT DISCS
UPC: 602557482577
Genre: Rock
Release Date: 2017-06-02
Number of Discs: 4
Additional Details: BOXED SET, DELUXE EDITION
Limited four CD edition. Super deluxe 30th Anniversary edition includes digitally remastered edition of the album, a live recording of The Joshua Tree Tour 1987 Madison Square Garden concert, outtakes and B-sides from the album's original recording sessions; as well as 2017 remixes from Daniel Lanois, St Francis Hotel, Jacknife Lee, Steve Lillywhite and Flood. Also includes an 84-page hardback book of unseen personal photography shot by The Edge during the original Mojave Desert photo session in 1986. Released to universal acclaim on 9th March 1987 and featuring hit singles "With Or Without You", "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" and "Where The Streets Have No Name", The Joshua Tree went to #1 in the U.K, U.S., Ireland and around the world, selling in excess of 25 million albums, and catapulting Bono, The Edge, Adam Clayton and Larry Mullen Jr "... from heroes to superstars" (Rolling Stone). Time Magazine put U2 on it's cover in April 1987, proclaiming them "Rock's Hottest Ticket" and the 12 months that followed saw U2 create iconic moments including the traffic-stopping Grammy Award-winning "Where The Streets Have No Name" video on the roof of a Los Angeles liquor store, and go on to win a BRIT Award and two Grammys - including Album of the Year - their first of 22 received to date; as well as a triumphant return home for four unforgettable shows in Belfast, Dublin and Cork in the summer of 1987.
Tracks:
1.1 Where the Streets Have No Name (2007 Remastered Album)
1.2 I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking for (2007 Remastered Album)
1.3 With or Without You (2007 Remastered Album)
1.4 Bullet the Blue Sky (2007 Remastered Album)
1.5 Running to Stand Still (2007 Remastered Album)
1.6 Red Hill Mining Town (2007 Remastered Album)
1.7 In God's Country (2007 Remastered Album)
1.8 Trip Through Your Wires (2007 Remastered Album)
1.9 One Tree Hill (2007 Remastered Album)
1.10 Exit (2007 Remastered Album)
1.11 Mothers of the Disappeared (2007 Remastered Album)
2.1 Where the Streets Have No Name (Live at Madison Square Garden 1987)
2.2 I Will Follow (Live at Madison Square Garden 1987)
2.3 Trip Through Your Wires (Live at Madison Square Garden 1987)
2.4 I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For* (Live at Madison Square Garden 1987)
2.5 MLK (Live at Madison Square Garden 1987)
2.6 Bullet the Blue Sky* (Live at Madison Square Garden 1987)
2.7 Running to Stand Still (Live at Madison Square Garden 1987)
2.8 In God's Country (Live at Madison Square Garden 1987)
2.9 Sunday Bloody Sunday (Live at Madison Square Garden 1987)
2.10 Exit* (Live at Madison Square Garden 1987)
2.11 October (Live at Madison Square Garden 1987)
2.12 New Year's Day (Live at Madison Square Garden 1987)
2.13 Pride (In the Name of Love)
2.14 With or Without You (Live at Madison Square Garden 1987)
2.15 Party Girl (Live at Madison Square Garden 1987)
2.16 I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking for (Live at Madison Square Garden 1987)
2.17 "40"(Live at Madison Square Garden 1987)
3.1 One Tree Hill (ST Francis Hotel Remix)
3.2 Bullet the Blue Sky (Jacknife Lee Remix)
3.3 Running to Stand Still (Daniel Lanois Remix)
3.4 Red Hill Mining Town (Steve Lillywhite 2017 Mix)
3.5 With or Without You (Daniel Lanois Remix)
3.6 Where the Streets Have No Name (Flood Remix)
4.1 Luminous Times (Hold on to Love)
4.2 Walk to the Water
4.3 Spanish Eyes
4.4 Deep in the Heart
4.5 Silver and Gold
4.6 Sweetest Thing
4.7 Race Against Time
4.8 I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking for (Lillywhite Alternative Mix '87)
4.9 One Tree Hill Reprise (Brian Eno 2017 Mix)
4.10 Silver and Gold
4.11 Beautiful Ghost/Introduction to Songs of Experience
4.12 Wave of Sorrow (Birdland)
4.13 Desert of Our Love
4.14 Rise Up
4.15 Drunk Chicken/America
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4.4 ★★★★★
Based on 27 reviews
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Product Reviews
★★★★★ 5
A Brilliant Analysis of the Black Man's Experience with Colonialism. A Scientific Analysis of the Black Psyche in a White World
Format: Paperback
This is a brilliant attempt of the era to scientifically analyze the black psyche in a white world. This book has far reaching effects on how colonialism was viewed to impact the black man in society and undoubtedly must have sparked a few revolutionary undertakings. This is not my first encounter with this book, I have had the opportunity to use it as sociological reference in 1981/82 and felt compelled that I would read it in its entirety some day. Now I can say I did and was more than satisfied. Fanon is a great writer of his times and beyond. I am tempted to say that this book should be read by all Black men and women however it is not an easy read because to me it is not a Novel (not a story book). As a student of History, Sociology, Psychology and Psychiatry I found it very delightful and relatively easy to follow. This Book is very powerful writings for the time when it was written, no wonder Fanon was dissuaded from using it as his Thesis for his Ph.D.. May his soul rest in peace but may his ideas live on. O my body always make me a man who questions?
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Reviewed in the United States on May 11, 2014
★★★★★ 5
An evocative poetic-critical reading of oppression, racism, colonialism
Format: Paperback
"I am black; I am in total fusion with the world, in sympathetic affinity with the earth, losing my id in the heart of the cosmos... I am black, not because of a curse, but because my skin has been able to capture all the cosmic effluvia. I am truly a drop of sun under the earth." (p. 27)~ Thus Fanon reaches into the experience and meaning of the black man's alienation.
This alienation strikes in an essential sense--it stems from the denial of the black man's very flesh: "The black man is attacked for his corporeality. It is his tangible personality that is lynched. It is his actual being that is dangerous..." (142). The white man, who has been obsessed with eradicating the body out of collective consciousness for millennia, now associates this abjected domain of the body with the black man, and constructs it as the essential evil Other. The white man does this because he is insecure--he does this out of hatred, a hatred that he works to cultivate, that consumes his time and energy. The white man is dehumanized. Projecting his fears onto the black man, the white man shirks his responsibility to acknowledge his guilt (83) in instrumentalizing the black man (206).
Even though this work was written over 50 years ago in a literal colony of Europe, sadly it remains only too relevant in the United States today as a condition between people that allegedly have the same legal and human rights. This is largely made possible by the many ever-so-casual-racists (who vehemently deny they are racist)--people who, for example, complain about affirmative action as unfair to them personally (nevermind history and generations of enslavement and stolen opportunities). Fanon writes, "outside university circles there is an army of fools... Granted, these fools are the product of a psychological-economic substructure. But that does not get us anywhere" (18). An education for racial tolerance from which we are sadly very far removed is necessary for moving towards a world of love.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 23, 2009
★★★★★ 5
Excellent
Format: Paperback
Glad I purchased this book for my collection. Great information. Knowledge is power.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on November 18, 2023
★★★★★ 4
Good book, this isn't my favorite (Wretched of the ...
Format: Kindle
Good book, this isn't my favorite (Wretched of the Earth continues to be) but it gives a good account of the effects of colonialism on people's psyche. Fanon masterfully demonstrates how violence is practiced on the minds and bodies of those on the receiving end of colonialism. He digs deep into how the ideology of whiteness as 'pure' and 'good' are, for one, deeply flawed, but more importantly, these false beliefs are incredibly damaging to humanity as a whole. Although it's a good book, I found some serious flaws with some of his arguments but I still think it was worth the read.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 21, 2015
★★★★★ 5
Black Nationalism
Format: Paperback
This is and was a great book. Even though he discussed the effects of racism in regards to his native land of Martinique we Mr. Fanon has to say still resounds in today's so-called PC world.
I do wish he had lived long enough to see Barack Obama elected President of the United States. I would have loved to hear his take on that. The only aspect I found missing from this book is his opinion on Black American ex-patriots living in France. James Baldwin, Richard Wright, Josephine Baker.... Did these African-Americans living in Paris not realize the effect of colonolism on all Africans in the Diaspora?, or were they treated as "Honorary Whites" in France. I truly wish Frantz Fanon had explored that entire subject.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 25, 2009