Sting May Be Reuniting With The Police

Chadman

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Please, say it IS so...I would love to see this show, all three musicians are far more accomplished now than then, and to hear them now would be pretty cool.

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Sting May Be Reuniting With The Police
Monday, January 15, 2007
By Roger Friedman, AP

It?s looking more certain than ever that Sting is about to reunite with his original band, The Police.

The signs are strong, with enough clues available so that even Colonel Mustard could figure it out. Here?s one: Yesterday, former Policemen Andy Summers and Stewart Copeland were guests, with their families, at a Malibu birthday party for Sting?s better half, Trudie Styler. Their appearance caused quite a stir.

And on Thursday night at the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, Sting dedicated a lute version of ?Message in a Bottle? to the pair of former comrades who happened to be seated in the auditorium.

Further investigation: Although Sting and his camp remain mum on the subject, sources do tell me that the Police will reunite this summer to celebrate their 30th anniversary.

Such a tour makes sense for everyone, since a reunited Police would probably mean sold-out stadiums and arenas around the world. An announcement could come at any time.

And think of it: With U2 and the Rolling Stones having exhausted their audiences by now, the Police would have a clear shot this summer for record-breaking box-office numbers.


The Police only recorded five albums before breaking up in 1982, but their greatest hits remain radio staples a quarter century later. Since then, Sting has gone on to have an unparalleled hit solo career, while Summers and Copeland have concentrated on jazz and soundtrack composing.

Still, the group?s songs are widely known even to a new generation. ?Every Breath You Take,? ?Roxanne? and ?Don?t Stand So Close to Me? are known to many different age groups.

If the Police do reunite ? and there?s every reason to think they will ? the impetus may have come from a documentary Copeland showed last year at the Sundance Film Festival called ?Everyone Stares.? Icy relations among the three thawed when Sting attended a screening of the film.

Since then, Sting released his classical album, "Songs From the Labyrinth," which held the top spot on Billboard?s classical chart for 12 weeks.

Insiders say that Sting?s former reluctance to rejoin his mates is gone now that he?s accomplished pretty much everything he could in his solo career, at least for the moment.
 

IntenseOperator

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phin8181

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The Police to reunite for Grammy Awards
?80s band to open 49th annual show; won?t comment on rumors of tour.


NEW YORK - The Police will reunite to perform at this year?s Grammys ceremony, the Recording Academy announced Tuesday.

The award-winning group, which won five Grammys and turned out hits such as ?Roxanne? and ?Every Breath You Take,? will open the event ? 23 years after breaking up amid internal conflict.

The band ? singer Sting, drummer Stewart Copeland and guitarist Andy Summers ? fused reggae with pop and rock, and last performed together in 2003 when they were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

Sting fanned speculation of a Police reunion and tour when he told the Television Critics Association earlier this month that he and his former bandmates were ?talking about? doing something to commemorate their 30th anniversary.

After the band split in 1984, he went on to more success as a solo artist and put out dreamy singles such as ?Fields of Gold? and ?Desert Rose.? His latest album, a collection of 16th-century classical music called ?Songs From the Labyrinth,? was released in October.
Copeland examined his life in the Police in his music documentary ?Everyone Stares: The Police Inside Out,? which premiered at last year?s Sundance Film Festival.

CBS will air the 49th annual Grammy Awards ceremony live from Los Angeles on Feb. 11.
 

Blitz

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Police reunion set for the Grammys

January 30, 2007 11:43 AM
by Kym Kilgore
LiveDaily Contributor

It's no longer a rumor: Sting, Stewart Copeland and Andy Summers will take the stage together once again as The Police (music). The trio is confirmed to open the Grammy Awards Feb. 11 at Los Angeles' Staples Center. What happens after that is still on the down low.

However, the rumor mill is abuzz that The Police are gearing up for a major tour to celebrate the band's 30th anniversary. A local news radio station in Vancouver, British Columbia, recently reported that the musicians have been spotted around town and that large semi trucks were seen unloading gear adorned with Police logos at Lion's Gate Studios.

Side-Line Music magazine is reporting that the Grammy performance will be followed by about 80 live shows.

According to Copeland's website, no live shows are confirmed as of yet, but "A&M (Records) will release some new interesting and great items that will see the light during the year."

Those items include '80s video "The Police Around The World" re-released on DVD and the band's second box set, the sequel to 1993's "Message in a Box."

Animosity among the members prompted The Police to go their separate ways following the 1984 tour to support their last studio album, "Synchronicity." The five-time Grammy-winning band did manage a one-night reunion when they were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2003.

Last year, Copeland put out the DVD "Everyone Stares: The Police Inside Out," which compiles his Super 8 footage of the band in the late '70s and early '80s.
 

IntenseOperator

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Everybody's Wallets Are Empty!

Everybody's Wallets Are Empty!

Jan 31, 4:23 PM EST

Eagles May Have New Album Soon

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -- After nearly 30 years, California's classic rock group the Eagles may soon release their first album of all-new music.

Founding member Don Henley said during a private weekend concert that the band was nearing completion on an album of all-new material, the Las Vegas Review-Journal reported on Tuesday.

"It's coming out in 60 to 90 days, if we don't kill each other first," Henley told the crowd Saturday at the MGM Grand Garden Arena.

Eagles and Henley spokesman Larry Solters said Wednesday there was no comment.

"The Long Run" in 1979 was the Eagles last album featuring all-new studio material. That album included the Grammy-winning single "Heartache Tonight."

The group officially disbanded in 1982, then they reunited in 1994 for a comeback tour featuring Henley, Glenn Frey, Joe Walsh, Timothy Schmit and Don Felder.

The band appeared together again in 1998, with past members Bernie Leadon and Randy Meisner, when they were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

Henley, 59, will be honored Feb. 9 as the 2007 MusiCares Person of the Year. The annual gala put on by the Recording Academy and the MusiCares Foundation is among the festivities leading up to the 49th Annual Grammy Awards at the Staples Center on Feb. 11.

Henley, who has a home in Dallas, was selected for his achievements as a musician and for his philanthropic work benefiting environmental issues and musicians' rights and concerns.

MusiCares, established by The Recording Academy in 1989, provides assistance to individuals in the music industry during times of need.
 

fatdaddycool

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The Police sucked twenty years ago and I can hardly wait to see what twenty years of solo sucking has morphed this lousy band into. One cannot imagine how much I am looking forward to the 2007 version of SOS as if there wasn't enough droning, drab, lollipop crap music in the world as it is.
 

IntenseOperator

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NY11402031234.html


LOS ANGELES (AP) -- The rumors were true. Van Halen will reunite with original singer David Lee Roth for a summer tour of North America.

"I am very excited to get back to the core of what made Van Halen," guitarist Eddie Van Halen said in a statement posted Friday on the band's Web site announcing a 40 city tour. No specific dates have been named.

It will be the first time that Roth performs live with the band since 1984, when he was replaced by Sammy Hagar. A brief reunion with Roth in 1996 resulted in two new songs but no tour.

Original bassist Michael Anthony will not be a part of the reunion. Late last year he was replaced by Eddie Van Halen's 15-year-old son Wolfgang.

On March 12 Van Halen will be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame at a ceremony in New York.
 
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Chadman

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The Police sucked twenty years ago and I can hardly wait to see what twenty years of solo sucking has morphed this lousy band into. One cannot imagine how much I am looking forward to the 2007 version of SOS as if there wasn't enough droning, drab, lollipop crap music in the world as it is.

Perhaps you would care to share your musical expertise with a few examples of non-crappy music creators? I doubt you know much about the solo works of these musicians from your post, and probably know very little about the actual work of the Police during their run.

The Police were - and are - extremely accomplished musicians, who created some amazing songs for a three person group. Pretty much any musical reference or expert would agree with that. I think the biggest laugh I had at your comment was inserting the term lollipop in measuring the work of the Police. About as far from lollipop as it gets.
 

fatdaddycool

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Perhaps you would care to share your musical expertise with a few examples of non-crappy music creators? I doubt you know much about the solo works of these musicians from your post, and probably know very little about the actual work of the Police during their run.

The Police were - and are - extremely accomplished musicians, who created some amazing songs for a three person group. Pretty much any musical reference or expert would agree with that. I think the biggest laugh I had at your comment was inserting the term lollipop in measuring the work of the Police. About as far from lollipop as it gets.

Are you friggin kidding me? Why don't you give me the name of a musical expert? Have any? How about a scientific reference to back up the idiotic claim that any reference or expert blah blah blah. Amazing songs for a three person group? Like what? "I'm sending out an SOS, for your love"................."message in a bottle" ......oh yeah that is creative fuhking genius with the amazingly complicated bass lines. What the fuhk did they accomplish in the last twenty years in the musid industry................Hey maybe they're a hero to you and Jamiraquai or some other fat girl band but the truth is THEY SUCK. You want the name to some songwriters I like? Sure. I listen to alot of Muddy Waters, Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin, Joe Cocker, Ten Years After, I think Bernie Taupin is a good writer, I enjoy the creativity of U2 and their ability to stay on top. Big Neil Young fan also. Sorry that Genesis, Journey, and the Police don't do it for me, but then again I never got beat up in high school either. Good luck to you and make sure you really cheer hard for those searing guitar solos..........:142smilie
 

IntenseOperator

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Are you friggin kidding me? Why don't you give me the name of a musical expert? Have any? How about a scientific reference to back up the idiotic claim that any reference or expert blah blah blah. Amazing songs for a three person group? Like what? "I'm sending out an SOS, for your love"................."message in a bottle" ......oh yeah that is creative fuhking genius with the amazingly complicated bass lines. What the fuhk did they accomplish in the last twenty years in the musid industry................Hey maybe they're a hero to you and Jamiraquai or some other fat girl band but the truth is THEY SUCK. You want the name to some songwriters I like? Sure. I listen to alot of Muddy Waters, Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin, Joe Cocker, Ten Years After, I think Bernie Taupin is a good writer, I enjoy the creativity of U2 and their ability to stay on top. Big Neil Young fan also. Sorry that Genesis, Journey, and the Police don't do it for me, but then again I never got beat up in high school either. Good luck to you and make sure you really cheer hard for those searing guitar solos..........:142smilie

Does this mean "Do, do ,do....Da, da, da" isn't a good song?
 

Trampled Underfoot

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The Police sucked twenty years ago and I can hardly wait to see what twenty years of solo sucking has morphed this lousy band into. One cannot imagine how much I am looking forward to the 2007 version of SOS as if there wasn't enough droning, drab, lollipop crap music in the world as it is.

I agree.
 

Chadman

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Are you friggin kidding me? Why don't you give me the name of a musical expert? Have any? How about a scientific reference to back up the idiotic claim that any reference or expert blah blah blah. Amazing songs for a three person group? Like what? "I'm sending out an SOS, for your love"................."message in a bottle" ......oh yeah that is creative fuhking genius with the amazingly complicated bass lines. What the fuhk did they accomplish in the last twenty years in the musid industry................Hey maybe they're a hero to you and Jamiraquai or some other fat girl band but the truth is THEY SUCK.

Sorry that Genesis, Journey, and the Police don't do it for me, but then again I never got beat up in high school either. Good luck to you and make sure you really cheer hard for those searing guitar solos..........:142smilie

I respect your right to have an opinion, as music, much like art, is in the ear/eye of the beholder. The fact that you lump the Police in with Genesis or Journey pretty much tells me all I need to know about your rating system, however. I would even submit that some of the early Genesis stuff was pretty accomplished music, and Phil Collins is a pretty accomplished songwriter and musicaian, however.

You ask for an expert? How about writers for Rolling Stone? I would submit that in general, they have a pretty good handle and background on rating music. Here is a link to ratings of two of the Police albums - both were highly rated:

Zenyatta Mondatta (rated 5 stars out of 5)
http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/thepolice/albums/album/269241/review/6068151/zenyatta_mondatta

Here are a couple lines from this review:

"Zenyatt? Mondatta" offers near-perfect pop by a band that bends all the rules and sometimes makes musical mountains out of molehill-size ideas."

"The Police's secret weapon is Andy Summers, a remarkable musician whose resume reads like, a Who's Who of obscure English rock: Kevin Coyne, Kevin Ayers, Gong and one of Eric Burdon's last-gasp versions of the Animals. Unlike those power-trio guitarists who merely boost the volume to compensate for an absence of technique of a second guitar picker, Summers plays more like Jeff Beck and Jimi Hendrix"


Synchronicity
http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/thepolice/albums/album/269248/review/6067344/synchronicity

Here are a couple lines from this review:

"Few contemporary pop songs have described the nuances of sexual jealousy so chillingly."

"Synchronicity is a work of dazzling surfaces and glacial shadows."

You know, good stuff like that. I could find plenty more to back up my claim that they were a terrific band and that they didn't suck, according to people at the very top of the musical review game, but I doubt it can ever match your insightful commentary that "The Police SUCK."

:rolleyes:
 
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