What's not to like about Sting's 'Symphonicity'?
Unless you happen to be Beethoven, writing music for an orchestra is fraught
with danger. On many levels, Sting isn't Beethoven, nor, presumably, was the
transsexual prostitute's tale 'Tomorrow We'll See' (let alone the bog-standard
prostitute's tale 'Roxanne'), written with an orchestra in mind. No matter:
after all there is no obvious reason why a rich back catalogue and an
open-minded orchestra (the Royal Philharmonic) cannot make some kind of
accommodation.
That he has not released a straightforward pop album since 2003 suggests his
muse has taken flight, but Sting and self-belief remain on the most intimate of
terms. He may have turned 59 on Saturday, but on Friday he showed he can still
carry off spray-on trousers and still perform for an almost Tantric-length three
hours.
Often, the pop-meets-orchestra marriage breaks down at the point where bolted-on
classical players add a suggestion of class, but nothing else. Here, Sting won
by surrendering his songs to the orchestra, who in turn surrendered themselves
to exuberant presentation. 'Desert Rose', where Sting even allowed himself a wee
jiggle, was a riot of sound; 'Every Breath You Take' swung like it's never swung
before; 'Roxanne' sounded less shrill than usual and former lesser lights,
especially a heroic 'A Thousand Years', were picked apart, put back together and
emerged as genuine contenders.
Sting couldn't have been more Sting-like: shocking us by swearing like a naughty
schoolboy; curling up on stage like an overly contented cat (or George Galloway)
during 'An Englishman In New York's' clarinet solo and explaining how he helped
halt the Cold War before a magnificent, timpani-laden rendition of 'Russians'.
Portentous, pretentious and pompous: what's not to like?
© London Evening Standard by John Aizlewood
Sting needs more bite...
When a leading rock band split up, it's a big story. When they reform, it's a
big story all over again. When the reunion comes to an end, it's not a story at
all, but perhaps it should be, because the repercussions can be formidable.
The 2007 reunion tour by The Police was a monster hit, raking in �£225m, then the
third-highest gross for a single tour behind the Rolling Stone's 'A Bigger Bang'
and U2's 'Vertigo'. But it seems to have rebounded on Sting, who has said it was
like revisiting a dysfunctional marriage.
From the moment he walked out on The Police in 1984, his solo career had been
sure-footed. He made a jazzy album, then settled into a mellow pop-rock sound
that gave him room to dabble in roots and world music, He toured hard and sold
consistently: his first seven solo albums all went platinum in America.
The eighth, 'Songs From The Labyrinth' (2006), was never going to follow suit
being covers of Jacobean lute hits by John Dowland. But since then Sting has
been stranded on Planet Obscure. Last year he made a Christmas album, 'If On A
Winter's Night...', which was mostly classical, verging on funereal.
This year he released an album with the Royal Philharmonic Concert Orchestra,
reinterpreting some of his hits. Lumbered with the title 'Symphonicities', it
has gone platinum only in Poland. It's as if he is determined not to sell
records.
The accompanying world tour has been dogged by reports of poor sales. At the
Albert Hall, Sting manages two nights without filling every seat. But if he is
worried by the wobble in his fortunes, it doesn't show.
At 59m he is alarmingly lithe in his skinny jeans. Sharing a stage with 50
musicians can be awkward, but Sting stands very still and radiates assurance
while, just behind him, the conductor Steven Mercurio leaps around like a
frustrated rock star.
Some songs lend themselves to layers or orchestration, some don't and some are
little changed. An 'Englishman In New York', already much loved, gains from an
elegant clarinet solo. 'I Hung My Head', the song about manslaughter that was
covered by Johnny Cash, gets some dramatic colouring, which makes the words all
the more stark.
'Shape Of My Heart', a beautiful lament about professional gambling, becomes
sadder still with some gorgeous horns. But 'Roxanne', played early, falls flat,
not least because the orchestra is bathed in red light, as mentioned in the
lyrics. Memo to show designer: it's not that sort of red light.
The first half ends strongly with the limpid ease of 'Fields Of Gold' and the
soul song 'Whenever I Say Your Name'. As Sting duets with his backing vocalist,
the Australian jazz singer Jo Lawry, their voices rise and blend like smoke from
neighbouring chimneys.
It's a long show, and feels like it early in the second half as Sting indulges
in a couple of dirges, either side of a sharp, caberet-ish version of 'Moon Over
Bourbon Street'.
But he knows exactly how to time his sprint to the tape, with a punchy 'King Of
Pain' setting up the eternal centrepiece of 'Every Breath You Take', followed by
the Saharan exuberance of 'Desert Rose' and wispy beauty of Fragile.
By the end, the dominant instrument is not the massed violins but Dominic
Miller's guitar. He's a fine musician with a classical tone, but he has also
been the central figure in Sting's sound for decades, so the effect is to make
the use of an orchestra less audacious.
Between songs, as ever, Sting is half likeable, half plodding, explaining lyrics
that are over-explanatory as it is. He not only tells us that the song
'Russians' was about the Cold War; he also helpfully reminds us who the Cold War
was between.
The tunes, however, stand up well. led by the sinuous magic of 'Every Breath You
Take'. He used to say the song was dead simple and he could write another like
it whenever he wanted. Now might be a good time to prove it.
© The Mail on Sunday by Tim de Lisle