The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, April 22, 1987 - Page 13 Records U2 The Joshua Tree Island In our times of cynical materialism and stupidity, the thrill of a band like this is priceless. U2 has fulfilled its megagroup promise with breathtaking integrity; they are spiritual idealists carrying , a passionate torch of conscience who still believe in the positive force of music. This purported mission creates an immense burden of expectations. In 1984, U2 shook off the bombastic image of its break - through LPWar, working with impressionistic innovator Brian tho on a vital turning point in its career.The Unforgettable Fire, a progressive though unfocused col - lection of ideas, raised hopes higher still. Its latest, The Joshua Tree , rises to the occasion, revealing a rock-solid and completely realized vision in words and music - their most literate, potent album to date. Much like the giant cactus found in the sun-scorched regions of the Southwest, where nothing else will grow, U2 conjures the image of a spring of hope upon this ethical wasteland called America. And despite its vast, bleak picture of despair, from the political prisoners to psychotic killers, one finds redemption in U2's enthusiastic spark of belief, as lyricist/singer Bono mines all this desolation with an intense, thoroughgoing vein of stark archetypes and Biblical imagery. The grandiloquent, churchy-glow intro of "Where the Streets Have No Name" is soon sparked by the Edge's gyrating guitar arpeggios. It propels Bono to a baptism of fire in the rugged purity of "a desert plain," a retreat from man's destructive compulsions ("I want to reach out/ And touch the flame.../ I want to take shelter from the poison rain"). In "Bullet the Blue Sky," as the Edge hurls furious slide-guitar shrapnel into the hellish abyss ploughed open by Adam Clayton's thundering bass-line and Larry Mullen Junior's fierce snare- drum wallop, Bono howls out in indignation at America's part in the violence south of the border: "driving nails into souls on the tree of pain" ("Plant a demon seed, you raise a flower of fire/ See the burning crosses, see the flames higher and higher"). On "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For," he explains, "I believe in the Kingdom Come / Then all the colours will bleed into one / But yes I'm still running," as an hyponotic, locomotive rhythm revolves around a hymnlike vocal. Ultimately, U2's songs combine as well - into a big picture of enduring faith in a desert of sin. U2's refreshingly collective spirit sacrifices individual egos and solos to the song as a whole, crafting it out of simple, yet evocative parts: the Edge's stirring eighth-notes on the mournful elegy "One Tree Hill;" Clayton's gently shifting bassline anchoring "With or Without You;" the harrowing thrash of "Exit." An ecstatic, folky stomp celebrating the double-edge of temptation, "Trip Through Your Wires" suggests Bono's favorite group, The Waterboys. U2 has a grungy new realism, a sparser and rougher-edged, albeit sensitive approach. Experience has given U2 the power to evoke both the pitfalls and the blessings of life of these wastelands. Bono's heartbreaking cries in "Red Hill Mining Town" portray a tragedy of relationships strained by layoffs ("I'm hanging on / You're all that's left to hold on to"). Yet, as the Edge's uplifting, ecstatic guitar wails out "In God's Country," a Promised Land of avarice and wasted freedom (of "sad eyes, crooked crosses"), Bono is still compelled remind us: "She itg Liberty / And she comes to rescue me/ Hope, faith, her vanity.../ I stand with sons of Cain / Burned by the fire of love." U2 has touched the flame of: America, and their epic gestures are reassuringly sincere. U2 still wants to believe. -Michael Fischet I DEPAU L I G4 9 e a CO Ug1LA'TION QcGRA'UAPES Complimentary champagne split with dinner to aftgraduates, so bring your diploma or wear your cap andgown to .1shfeys for your graduation cefebration. Friday & Saturday Night 14 oz. T RIM RIBE JI INNEIQ $12.95 7 oz. 'RIME RI BDINNTR$9.95 Dinner 'till:0 p.m. UN IV E R SI T Y L A 5h 0I v ," S \ FOR INFORMATION CALL: 936-4327 SUMMER IN CHICAGO Take care of liberal arts requirements and lighten your course load for next year, while you enjoy Chicago. DePaul's College of Liberal Arts and Sciences offers a wide range of transferable courses at convenient times for working students. Sciences/Mathematics: a full year of credit in ten weeks ... Calculus, Physics, Organic Chemistry Modern Languages: a full year of French in ten weeks . .. a full year of Spanish in one intensive month Computer Science: 5 week courses ranging from introductory to advanced level Other 5-week courses in Art, Biology, Communications, English, Geography, History, Mathematics, Philosophy, Politi- cal Science, Psychology, Religious Studies, and Sociology REGISTRATION'S A (Lake Michigan) BREEZE Register now, by mail. Classes begin June 17. Just call TOLL FREE 1-800-4DEPAUL or return the coupon to: DePaul University Office of Admissions 25 E. Jackson Blvd. Chicago, Illinois 60604 .---------------------------------me----------- 338 S. State ,ft . ':a 996-9191 SUMMER IN CHICAGO me summer registration materials. 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