from the Joshua Tree Tour's first leg. on 9 May Like their previous tours, the Joshua Tree Tour was a minimalistic, austere production, One such issue was Arizona Governor
Evan Mecham's canceling the state's observance of
Martin Luther King Jr. Day. 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." 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. 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. 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. Bono sustained a second injury during the Washington concert, falling off the rain-slicked stage and dislocating his arm.
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. They were dissatisfied creatively, and Bono believed they were musically unprepared for their success. Drummer
Larry Mullen Jr. said, "We were the biggest, but we weren't the best", and for Bono the tour was "one of the worst times of [their] musical life". 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. ==Cover performances==