The Police Tour

The Police Close Farewell Tour in New York City

Posted by Janice Bryant On August 8, 2008

The Police brought one of the most successful reunions of rock n roll to an end at Madison Square Garden, with a tribute for other famous trios as well as assistance from real cops and a shave that wasn’t particularly close.

The final show and 150th of their 14 month comeback tour was a benefit concert for two public television stations in New York. Sting, along with Andy Summers, guitarist, and Stewart Copeland, drummer, added in some silliness that comes from being on the end of a long road tour into their set list. They walked off to “that’s all, folks,” the signature line of Porky Pig.

Four songs into the concert, Sting thanked his fellow band mates for their musicianship, your friendship, your companionships and your understanding.

Sting added that the tour’s real triumph was that they hadn’t strangled each other. Not that it hasn’t cross my or Stewart’s or Andy’s mind.

Copeland and Sting both have volatile personalities. Before the band’s break up in 1984, at a time when the Police were on top of the world of rock n roll, the two almost drove each other insane. Time as well as the phenomenal business of the tour were the mellowing agents, and also saw the band continuing to add concert dates to the tour far beyond what they had originally intended.

Their comeback tour has the Police along with the Eagles standing as rock’s two most highly successful reformations. The Eagles are once again an active recording and touring unit. The Police have stated they are through.

The Police opened their concert with “Sunshine of Your Love,” from Cream. They later played “Purple Haze,” from the Jimi Hendrix Experience. Their covers gave a nod to two of the most famous trios of rock music.

Unlike other groups that use backing musicians to augment their sound, the Police returned as truly a trio. New York City’s Police band and a roadie taking a single swing on a gong were the only additional music makers that were allowed onstage. Their appearances were very brief.

Copeland sat atop his percussion mountain, with each of the band members seeming to be like separate countries of their own onstage. They used three different staircases for exiting twice during the concert. Their determined need for showing their skillfulness left some of the songs at times to meander well past their breaking point. It’s true that the Police is able to add jazz fusion with their well known reggae punky sound. However it did spoil the concert’s “Roxanne” version.

They are definitely not the party hearty group. One stretch of music included a consecutive group of songs concerning suicide, a hooker, the loneliness of “King of Pain,” and creepy obsessive relationship of “Every Breath You Take,” the band’s biggest hit.

However the Police were able to bring a drive to the songs of Sting that his mannered solo work is often missing. At almost 57 years of age, the man still rocks on his material like “Demolition Man,” an unexpectedly strong song. The years have not worn his voice down. Early material like “Next to You,” “So Lonely” and “Can’t Stand Losing You,” were pure distillation of the original sound of the Police, and the lesser known songs were able to stand their ground with the hits that came later.

Following the Cream cover, about two dozen police band members in full uniform were brought out for a very thunderous “Message in a Bottle” version that drew on of the loudest ovations of the night. As he sang Sting wore one of the caps of New York’s finest.

The tour finale in New York was intentional. Members of the band had wanted to end things in New York City, site of their first gig in the U.S. thirty years ago at the much smaller, but not just as famous CBGB nightclub, which is now closed.

The concert raised money for PBS stations Thirteen/WNET and WLIW-21 in New York. The gift was unexpected for the stations. According to a spokeswoman the offer was a complete surprise. It had been so successful that seats that were behind the stage were selling for $50 just a few days prior to the show.

While on break right before the encore, there was a camera that followed Sting while he was sitting shirtless backstage. Some very attractive female stylists shaved off his scraggly beard. And yes his yoga sessions are definitely doing him quite well. He never did put his shirt on again. The audience watched and laughed as the spectacle was shown on the video screens. Copeland went over and kissed the clean shaven singer.

There was still leftover shaving cream on the corner of Sting’s mouth when he came out singing “Roxanne.”

The show had some other lighthearted moments. During the song “Every Little Thing She Does is Magic,” three daughters of Sting crept up onstage and danced beside their father. At the end of the show a roadie dressed up as a fat, outrageous opera singer lip synched to an aria.

It was hard to miss the intentions behind the cliché. It really was over.

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