You know, at the time they were popular, The Police were like no one else - they had a new and unique sound that no one else had. And while it is true that Sting wrote the lion's share of the songs, Sting was not the ONLY reason that band was what it was.
I was talking about Sting, and how he was with The Police back in the day... My friend said, "Gosh, I didn't know Sting was a policeman!"
This is a girl who graduated with a 4.0 double major in math and comp sci. Hehe.
This right here is just sad. Please, send her to YouTube and get her to watch the videos for "Every Little Thing She Does is Magic", "Wrapped Around Your Finger", and "Synchronicity II", at minimum. Although "Roxanne", "Every Breath You Take", "Don't Stand So Close to Me", and "Message in a Bottle" should be findable in good quality too.
Tell her that this is essential viewing, as these videos pretty much dominated MTV in the early 80's. Especially those videos from the
Synchronicity album were played by MTV, like, hourly in the 1984 timeframe. I know, because I had MTV on all the time back in those days.
To this day, when I think of MTV in the early 80's, the first mental picture that enters my mind is Sting, running up and down among all those candles.
Just ordered my vinyl version of Live on Ten Legs for my fellow Jammers.
You know, I have read that Eddie Vedder is a huge vinyl freak. But I'm just curious - do all bands put stuff out on vinyl again now? Or is it just PJ because of Ed's obsession with vinyl? And is it easy to find turntables now? Because I sure don't have one!
Given this little resurgence, I wonder if all my old vinyl albums are worth anything. I think I have all the Police's albums, for example, in pristine condition on vinyl....I have a ton of albums from the early 80's in that category - I took very good care of my stuff...and I collected a ton of albums back then.
^ I was toying with getting the vinyl release myself, but the cheapest I can find it in the UK is 40 quid, and that's just the normal vinyl, not even the collector's set.
Don't want to get it from the US, had some bad experiences with LPs coming over the atlantic.
Plus I just bought 2 Queen vinyl remasters at the weekend, so i'm feeling like i've spent too much.
Wow - that's a lot of money for a record! I have not looked at the vinyl price here in the US....I was just planning to go and buy the CD tomorrow...but I'm really curious to hear the case you guys might make for purchasing PJ vinyl - is it to actually listen to? Or are you buying the vinyl as a collector's item, and also buying the CD to actually listen to/load to an MP3 player?
I must be WAY behind on this whole issue of vinyl - can one of you guys enlighten me?
Either way, I am so excited about LOTL! PJ live is just the BEST.
Part of the reason, in fact, Pearl Jam and Springsteen are my two favorite bands is because they both are REALLY, REALLY truly awesome...and REALLY, REALLY care about their fans - all of which is made abundantly obvious at live shows.
It's a rare band that sounds as good live as they do on studio albums - but Pearl Jam and Springsteen are both in that category. And I consider that a sign of a really good band - I mean, some bands rely way too much on studio mixing and retake after retake to make them sound talented when they are really not.
In fact, I would argue that Pearl Jam sounds BETTER live than they do on their studio albums. Because it's only then that they kick out the jams. And not only on the song by that name, either!
