Author Topic: The Police Roll-Call  (Read 5793 times)

vansmack

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Re: The Police Roll-Call
« Reply #30 on: June 14, 2007, 04:55:00 pm »
Stewart Copeland interview in the New York Post
 
 Police Presence - Legendary trio improving 'new music', friendshp for reunion tour...
 
 Most of the Police fans who helped the band sell out its summer reunion tour think they're going to see the classic pop-rock trio revisit glory days. But Stewart Copeland says they're in for a surprise.
 
 "It's all-new music we'll be playing," he says.
 
 What? When the Police headline the Live Earth festival on July 7 and play their sold-out solo dates at Madison Square Garden (Aug. 1 and 3) and Giants Stadium (Aug. 5), there won't be any 'Roxanne', 'Don't Stand So Close to Me' or 'King of Pain'?
 
 Not exactly.
 
 In a band comprising three musicians famously obsessed with their craft - including Sting on bass and vocals and Andy Summers on guitar - drummer Copeland is actually referring to group's effort to return to the virtuoso form it attained before breaking up in 1985.
 
 "Basically, the band's agenda is delivering energy and excitement in the service of really great songs," Copeland says. "It's all new music we'll be playing, but not new songs. We're not ready for new songs, we don't even deserve new songs yet."
 
 Yeah, right. Like Sting, Copeland and Summers are just another neighborhood bar band.
 
 They deserve respect for refusing to take their classic status for granted. The band could get drunk, drop acid and slam out sloppy versions of 'Every Breath You Take' and 'Invisible Sun', and fans would still go wild. But two decades later, they're still perfectionists.
 
 "We're still getting our act together and finding our groove as a band," Copeland says. "Last time we toured together, we were 24 years old. After all this time [apart], we had a lot of melding to do. We can see and hear where our weaknesses are and what we need to work on."
 
 That dedication helped make the band one of the most distinctive voices to emerge from England's punk rock scene of the late '70s. While early incarnations of the Sex Pistols and the Clash championed amateurism, the Police harnessed profound musicianship to the energy of the times in singles like 'Fall Out' and 'So Lonely'. They even played ballads, although 'Roxanne' did tweak the genre by being an aching love letter to a prostitute.
 
 In its sinewy melding of island rhythms with jazz-inflected guitar and Brechtian drama, 'Roxanne' came to reflect everything that was revolutionary about the Police.
 
 In a succinct moment of self-assessment, Copeland says, "Our biggest innovation was the introduction of reggae into white mainstream pop."
 
 As the band's founder and drummer, Copeland ought to be able to take credit for it, but he bristles at the notion.
 
 "It was really a team effort - it's impossible to differentiate where one band member's contribution began and the other's ended," he says. "Reggae doesn't work until you have three elements together. The drum part alone isn't reggae until you get the guitar up-chick supported by the proper bass line. The Police were always a team, and we're learning to be a team again."
 
 Teamwork, though, wasn't always the trio's strongest trait. With each player so accomplished in his own right, the Police's creative process was fractious. But Copeland says the group's infamous quarreling - which occasionally led to backstage fistfights - has been overstated.
 
 "We used to read in the papers about how we were fighting all the time," he says. "I don't know what we were doing, but it wasn't fighting. When we did argue, it wasn't about petty stuff, it was about the music, because we're passionate about what we do."
 
 That was then - before Sting went solo and the band dissolved. While the group made a few impromptu reunions at parties and weddings, the full-scale assault it is now undertaking has brought back a few old feelings.
 
 "It was harder to get back together than any of us thought it would be," Copeland says. "Sting, Andy and I have each been master of his own universe for more than 20 years and we've not used to collaborating."
 
 It's been even tougher for Sting.
 
 "The difference between solo Sting and band Sting is noticeable," Copeland says. "He's a very different character when he's doing his own music than when he's doing Police songs. When he finally gives himself to the band and relinquishes total ownership of everything, he becomes loose, relaxed."
 
 Fans, of course, want to see that old Sting, the one who used to dance crazily to 'Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic' or 'De Do Do Do, De Da Da Da'. The tour doesn't start until next week, but the band has already netted 8 million in combined ticket presales.
 
 Without having even played a club gig, the Police have already got the biggest tour of 2007. And while they'll be visiting huge stadiums, Copeland says the shows will be stripped-down affairs.
 
 "We haven't got a floating pig," he says, referring to Pink Floyd's famous concert accessory. "The stage setup is really simple - it's the music that's complex."
 
 
 © New York Post by Dan Aquilant
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Mobius

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Re: The Police Roll-Call
« Reply #31 on: June 14, 2007, 10:37:00 pm »
This is very surprising.  I thought the whole idea of the reunion (other than making bank) was to revisit the energy of the glory days.  They may not like eachother (and Andy Summers may be 65 (!?) years old) but on the musical plain they connected on an intense level that was unique in each of their careers, had a defining mark on the culture (I think it can be said the Police were the biggest band of the early 80's era) and now I thought they wanted to recapture that.  But it seems like the whole thing is misconstrued.  Why would such smart musicians be so dumb when they have this opportunity?  Does the hate just run so deep that they can't stomach connecting even musically night in and night out?  Maybe.  I'd think they'd figure it out and it would click soon enough - but if they're heads are in the wrong place who knows . . . and you know what they say about horses and midstream.

vansmack

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Re: The Police Roll-Call
« Reply #32 on: June 15, 2007, 12:51:00 pm »
And here's where it tanks miserably, with no disrespect to the hardworking organizers of the festivals, but I fear for The Police in front of a load of late teenagers and early 20's folks - the types that normally go to festival shows.  With the bands current lack of energy and no sense of urgency, the kids with even a slightest recognition of their songs are going to hate the new show.  I am very interested to hear reports from Bonnarroo and the VFest (although I'm guessing that Bonnarroo will be an older crowd than VFest).
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bearman🐻

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Re: The Police Roll-Call
« Reply #33 on: June 15, 2007, 01:24:00 pm »
All it takes is one watch of the BBC Crown Jewels on VH1 Classic of a Police show from like '78. Raw, focused, three members of one band playing like a machine. It absolutely rocked. When I was 7 the first single I ever bought was "Don't Stand So Close to Me", and when I was 8 I bought "Ghost in the Machine", so Lord knows I've been a fan for a LONG time. I'm not seeing any of these reunion shows, and though I'm sure they're good and I hope everyone will have a great time, at the prices they are charging I wouldn't pay to see the Police version 2.0. Reminds me a bit of the rebirth of Spinal Tap doing their space odyssey free-form blues jam thing. New and improved? Please. I had ESPECIALLY hoped for more from Stewart.

westendgirl

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Re: The Police Roll-Call
« Reply #34 on: June 15, 2007, 04:58:00 pm »
Oh no...I was afraid of all of this. I'm going to Hershey too, 12th row.

kosmo vinyl

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Re: The Police Roll-Call
« Reply #35 on: June 17, 2007, 10:12:00 am »
delurking from the roo...
 
 pretty painful stuff delivered by the police  for the first hour... a almost on the dot 75 min set with a 30 encore..
 
 I spent part of the time trying to find a place where people were not socializing their set... of course music does take a back seat to hangin out
 
 there was a goodly number of people crowded near stage and people reacting postivitly  but it wasn't until roxanne that people in back of the field came to life.  by then I had enough..
T.Rex

HoyaSaxa03

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Re: The Police Roll-Call
« Reply #36 on: June 17, 2007, 12:03:00 pm »
Quote
Originally posted by bearman:
  Reminds me a bit of the rebirth of Spinal Tap doing their space odyssey free-form blues jam thing.
DEREK: David, we had a fifteen-year ride, mate. ??Mean, who wants to be a fuck??n forty-five year old rock??n??roller farting around in front of people less than half their age?....
 DAVID: So true, so true, yeah....
 DEREK: ...cranking out some kind of mediocre head-banging bullshit, you know, that we??ve forgotten...
 DAVID: It would b...it??s beneath us...who wants to see that... not me.
 DEREK: That??s right...absolutely right. I mean, we could take those projects that we thought, you know, we didn??t have time for....
 DAVID: Oh, there??s dozens, there??s so many dozens of projects.
 DEREK: You know, we didn??t have time for ??em because of Tap and bring ??em back to life maybe.
 DAVID: Do you remember what we were...do you remember the time?
 DEREK: At the Luton...at the Luton Palace...
 DAVID: Yes.
 DEREK: We were talking about a rock musical based on the life of Jack the Ripper...
 DAVID: Yeah, ??Saucy Jack.??
 DEREK: Right. ??Saucy Jack.?? Now??s the time to do that.
 DAVID: ??Saucy Jack, you??re a naughty one, Saucy Jack, you??re a haughty one, Saucy Jack.?
 DEREK: Right...
 DAVID: It??s a freein?? up, innit?
 DEREK: Yeah.
 DAVID: It??s all this free time. It??s suddenly time is so elastic..
 DEREK: It??s a gift, it??s a gift of freedom. You know.
 DAVID: I??ve always, I??ve always wanted to do a collection of my acoustic numbers with the London Philharmonic as you know.
 DEREK: We??re lucky.
 DAVID: Yeah.
 DEREK: I mean people...people should be envying us. You know.
 DAVID: I envy us.
 DEREK: Yeah.
 DAVID: I do.
 DEREK: Me too.
(o|o)

Brian_Wallace

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Re: The Police Roll-Call
« Reply #37 on: June 18, 2007, 12:37:00 pm »
The real shame of this is if the Police are a wash we could say "Hey, the Fratellis are a pretty tight, fun trio."  But they are only opening the Philly and Meadowlands shows.
 
 Were the Police duller than ummm....Fiction Plane?  You know for the price of these tickets, nepotism should be outlawed.
 
 Brian