Sting The Dream of the Blue Turtles (CD, A&M Records, 1985) ****
Sting Bring on the Night (CD, A&M Records, 1986) ****
Places I remember: Kings Recording (Abu Dhabi)
Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: If You Love Somebody Set Them Free (The Dream...)
Gear costume: Bring on the Night/ When the World is Running Down...(Bring on the Night)
Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: If You Love Somebody Set Them Free (The Dream...)
Gear costume: Bring on the Night/ When the World is Running Down...(Bring on the Night)
They loom large in his legend (The Album Collection playlists): Part 1; Part 2; Part 3; Part 4; Part 5; Part 6
Active compensatory factors: One way to beat the eighties traps in music is to veer away from expectations into a different genre - jazz in Sting's example.
Active compensatory factors: One way to beat the eighties traps in music is to veer away from expectations into a different genre - jazz in Sting's example.
He'd built a lot of momentum through the Police years with a continued string of hits. So, his solo debut was widely anticipated. And he delivered!
There were five successful singles lifted from the album - If You Love Somebody Set Them Free, Fortress Around Your Heart, Russians, Moon Over Bourbon Street, and Love Is the Seventh Wave..
The double live album followed - Bring on the Night. I played this a lot while living in The Middle East. The touring band never put a foot wrong on this set. No surprise as it features jazz musicians Branford Marsalis on tenor and soprano saxophones, Darryl Jones (bass), Kenny Kirkland (keyboards), and Omar Hakim (drums).
Where do they all belong? Sting has released a lot of albums but this jazz diversion was the only part of his career that I was interested in.

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