Skip to content

CLICK HERE FOR IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR STING.COM ACCOUNT

  • Home
  • News
  • Community
  • Tour
  • Media
  • Discography
  • Biography
  • Help
  • Store
Log in

Country/region

  • Afghanistan AFN ؋
  • Albania ALL L
  • Algeria DZD د.ج
  • Andorra EUR €
  • Angola USD $
  • Anguilla XCD $
  • Antigua & Barbuda XCD $
  • Argentina USD $
  • Armenia AMD դր.
  • Aruba AWG ƒ
  • Australia AUD $
  • Austria EUR €
  • Azerbaijan AZN ₼
  • Bahamas BSD $
  • Bahrain USD $
  • Bangladesh BDT ৳
  • Barbados BBD $
  • Belarus USD $
  • Belgium EUR €
  • Belize BZD $
  • Benin XOF Fr
  • Bermuda USD $
  • Bhutan USD $
  • Bolivia BOB Bs.
  • Bosnia & Herzegovina BAM КМ
  • Botswana BWP P
  • Brazil USD $
  • British Virgin Islands USD $
  • Brunei BND $
  • Bulgaria EUR €
  • Cambodia KHR ៛
  • Cameroon XAF CFA
  • Canada CAD $
  • Cape Verde CVE $
  • Caribbean Netherlands USD $
  • Cayman Islands KYD $
  • Central African Republic XAF CFA
  • Chad XAF CFA
  • Chile USD $
  • China CNY ¥
  • Colombia USD $
  • Comoros KMF Fr
  • Costa Rica CRC ₡
  • Côte d’Ivoire XOF Fr
  • Croatia EUR €
  • Curaçao ANG ƒ
  • Cyprus EUR €
  • Czechia CZK Kč
  • Denmark DKK kr.
  • Djibouti DJF Fdj
  • Dominica XCD $
  • Dominican Republic DOP $
  • Ecuador USD $
  • Egypt EGP ج.م
  • El Salvador USD $
  • Equatorial Guinea XAF CFA
  • Eritrea USD $
  • Estonia EUR €
  • Eswatini USD $
  • Ethiopia ETB Br
  • Fiji FJD $
  • Finland EUR €
  • France EUR €
  • French Guiana EUR €
  • French Polynesia XPF Fr
  • French Southern Territories EUR €
  • Gabon XOF Fr
  • Gambia GMD D
  • Georgia USD $
  • Germany EUR €
  • Ghana USD $
  • Gibraltar GBP £
  • Greece EUR €
  • Greenland DKK kr.
  • Grenada XCD $
  • Guadeloupe EUR €
  • Guatemala GTQ Q
  • Guernsey GBP £
  • Guinea GNF Fr
  • Guinea-Bissau XOF Fr
  • Guyana GYD $
  • Haiti USD $
  • Honduras HNL L
  • Hong Kong SAR HKD $
  • Hungary HUF Ft
  • Iceland ISK kr
  • India INR ₹
  • Indonesia IDR Rp
  • Iraq USD $
  • Ireland EUR €
  • Israel ILS ₪
  • Italy EUR €
  • Jamaica JMD $
  • Japan JPY ¥
  • Jersey USD $
  • Jordan USD $
  • Kazakhstan KZT ₸
  • Kenya KES KSh
  • Kiribati USD $
  • Kosovo EUR €
  • Kuwait USD $
  • Kyrgyzstan KGS som
  • Laos LAK ₭
  • Latvia EUR €
  • Lebanon LBP ل.ل
  • Lesotho USD $
  • Liberia USD $
  • Libya USD $
  • Liechtenstein CHF CHF
  • Lithuania EUR €
  • Luxembourg EUR €
  • Macao SAR MOP P
  • Madagascar USD $
  • Malawi MWK MK
  • Malaysia MYR RM
  • Maldives MVR MVR
  • Mali XOF Fr
  • Malta EUR €
  • Martinique EUR €
  • Mauritania USD $
  • Mauritius MUR ₨
  • Mayotte EUR €
  • Mexico USD $
  • Moldova MDL L
  • Monaco EUR €
  • Mongolia MNT ₮
  • Montenegro EUR €
  • Montserrat XCD $
  • Morocco MAD د.م.
  • Mozambique USD $
  • Myanmar (Burma) MMK K
  • Namibia USD $
  • Nauru AUD $
  • Nepal NPR Rs.
  • Netherlands EUR €
  • New Caledonia XPF Fr
  • New Zealand NZD $
  • Nicaragua NIO C$
  • Niger XOF Fr
  • Nigeria NGN ₦
  • Niue NZD $
  • Norfolk Island AUD $
  • North Macedonia MKD ден
  • Norway USD $
  • Oman USD $
  • Pakistan PKR ₨
  • Palestinian Territories ILS ₪
  • Panama USD $
  • Papua New Guinea PGK K
  • Paraguay PYG ₲
  • Peru PEN S/
  • Philippines PHP ₱
  • Poland PLN zł
  • Portugal EUR €
  • Qatar QAR ر.ق
  • Réunion EUR €
  • Romania RON Lei
  • Russia USD $
  • Rwanda RWF FRw
  • Samoa WST T
  • Saudi Arabia SAR ر.س
  • Senegal XOF Fr
  • Serbia RSD РСД
  • Sierra Leone SLL Le
  • Singapore SGD $
  • Sint Maarten ANG ƒ
  • Slovakia EUR €
  • Slovenia EUR €
  • Somalia USD $
  • South Africa USD $
  • South Korea KRW ₩
  • South Sudan USD $
  • Spain EUR €
  • Sri Lanka LKR ₨
  • St. Helena SHP £
  • St. Lucia XCD $
  • St. Martin EUR €
  • St. Pierre & Miquelon EUR €
  • Sudan USD $
  • Suriname USD $
  • Svalbard & Jan Mayen USD $
  • Sweden SEK kr
  • Switzerland CHF CHF
  • Taiwan TWD $
  • Tajikistan TJS ЅМ
  • Tanzania TZS Sh
  • Thailand THB ฿
  • Timor-Leste USD $
  • Togo XOF Fr
  • Tokelau NZD $
  • Tonga TOP T$
  • Trinidad & Tobago TTD $
  • Tristan da Cunha GBP £
  • Tunisia USD $
  • Türkiye USD $
  • Turkmenistan USD $
  • Turks & Caicos Islands USD $
  • Tuvalu AUD $
  • U.S. Outlying Islands USD $
  • Uganda UGX USh
  • Ukraine UAH ₴
  • United Arab Emirates AED د.إ
  • United Kingdom GBP £
  • United States USD $
  • Uruguay UYU $U
  • Uzbekistan UZS so'm
  • Vanuatu VUV Vt
  • Vatican City EUR €
  • Venezuela USD $
  • Vietnam VND ₫
  • Western Sahara MAD د.م.
  • Yemen YER ﷼
  • Zambia USD $
  • Zimbabwe USD $
Sign In (opens in new tab) Sign Up (opens in new tab)
Sting.com
Sign In (opens in new tab) Sign Up (opens in new tab)
  • Home
  • News
  • Community
  • Tour
  • Media
  • Discography
  • Biography
  • Help
  • Store
Log in Cart
Access Denied
IMPORTANT! If you’re a store owner, please make sure you have Customer accounts enabled in your Store Admin, as you have customer based locks set up with EasyLockdown app. Enable Customer Accounts

Categories

  • 44/876 0
  • 57th & 9th 0
  • All News 0
  • Back To Bass Tour 0
  • Member Exclusive 0
  • My Songs 0
  • On Stage Together with Paul Simon 0
  • Rock Paper Scissors with Peter Gabriel 0
  • Sting 2024 0
  • Sting 3.0 0
  • Sting: 25 Years 0
  • Summer Tour 2012 0
  • Summer Tour 2015 0
  • Summer Tour 2016 0
  • Symphonicity 0
  • The Bridge 0
  • The Last Ship 0
  • The Police 0
  • Video 0

Sting's classical effect: The former Police front man is touring with the Royal Philharmonic Concert Orchestra. Unlike his former band's reunion tour, he is enjoying himself... reports The Los Angeles Times

June 14, 2010

Sting's classical effect...

The former Police front man is touring with the Royal Philharmonic Concert Orchestra. Unlike his former band's reunion tour, he is enjoying himself.

Reporting from New York - As the afternoon sun poured through the living room window of his grand apartment overlooking Central Park, Sting was calmly reflecting on his trying reunion with the Police, and anticipating, with genuine excitement, his current tour with the Royal Philharmonic Concert Orchestra, performing imaginative new versions of his solo and Police hits.

Sitting on a stately sofa with his back to the window, shadowed by the park's round green elm trees, the 58-year-old musician was the picture of the artist in repose. If Sting could appear glib when he was younger, he came across on this late April day, looking fit as an athlete, in gray running pants and V-neck white T-shirt, as genial and likable. Not that his yoga mellowness has drained him of strong opinions.

During his darkest hours on the road in 2007 and 2008 with Police mates Stewart Copeland and Andy Summers, Sting admitted he felt sick. "It was like going back to a dysfunctional marriage," he said. "Before the tour I asked myself, 'What should I do next? What would surprise people? What would surprise me?' One voice said, 'The biggest surprise you could throw right now is to re-form the Police.' Then another voice goes, 'No, no, don't do it!' "

What sickened him about the tour? "It was an exercise in nostalgia," he said. "And I'm not a terribly nostalgic person. It just seemed like an asset that needed to be realized. I have no regrets at all. But it was difficult. It was not a marriage made in heaven." According to Forbes, the tour allowed Sting and band mates to realize a net asset of 5 million.

It may seem like a contradiction, then, that Sting is mining his past songs for his current tour, which began last week in Vancouver, Canada, and continues next week at the Hollywood Bowl and Verizon Wireless Amphitheater in Irvine.

But that's not how he sees it. Playing 'King of Pain', for instance, with an orchestra, liberates the song from its Police incarnation.

"The song becomes new," he said. "Of course, writing new songs would be nice. But the old songs need to be kept alive, need to be regenerated, with new life blown into them. With an orchestra, a pallet that large, you can literally re-create everything. The whole of my 120 songs, or however many songs I've written, seems available. I'm intrigued to hear them all this way."

Watching Sting rehearse is a reminder of what a fine musician he is. In April in a New York studio, he bopped around on a stool and offered musical cues to dynamic New York-bred conductor Steven Mercurio and a contingent of classical players, many of whom performed with the Metropolitan Opera and New York Philharmonic.

Previously Sting had sent his songs to a host of arrangers, granting them creative carte blanche to reanimate the melodies, harmonies and beats with the strings, woodwinds and brass instruments of the orchestra. Once Sting was satisfied with each of the arrangements, which were worked out in rehearsal with the New York musicians, the final scores would be issued to London's Royal Philharmonic, which Mercurio is conducting on tour.

Just now the New York players were running through 'Russians' from Sting's first solo album, 'The Dream of the Blue Turtles'. Sting sang softly - a long day of rehearsal and an allergy had taken a toll on his voice - and accompanying singer, Jo Lawry, an Australian with a warm and alluring tone, carried the lyrics with wit and passion.

Mercurio had the idea to preface Vince Mendoza's stirring arrangement with the clamorous coronation scene from Mussorgsky's 'Boris Godunov', which granted the song a wonderfully ominous Russian setting. Which was fitting, as Sting originally crafted the song on a theme from Prokofiev's 'Lieutenant Kije Suite'.

Sting sipped tea at the song's conclusion. "Can you hold the last two notes on the trumpet?" he asked the horn player. Sting sang the notes with sustain. "It's much more lyrical that way."

Later the orchestra ran through a radical version of 'Moon Over Bourbon Street', the New Orleans jazz-flavored ballad from 'The Dream of the Blue Turtles'. Nicola Tescari, a fascinating composer from Italy, originally arranged the song for piano and voice for wondrous keyboard player Katia Labeque. (In one of his most piercing vocal performances, Sting sings the spare version on Labeque's album, 'Shape of My Heart'.)

For orchestra, Tescari remade the song as a Kurt Weill dirge, punctuated by a woozy Day of the Dead marching band. Sting clearly enjoyed singing the new arrangement and ended with a long wolf howl. Some of the orchestra members applauded.

Still, said Mercurio, the song "needs to be more 'horror movie.'" "Can we get a thunder machine?" Sting asked. "Perfect," said Mercurio. A thunder machine is a long sheet of metal that when shook makes the sound of spooky thunder.

During a rehearsal break, Mercurio said he canceled his summer performances of 'Rigoletto' with Rome's Teatro L'Opera. "Conduct with Sting? It was such a rare chance that I couldn't pass it up," he said. Mercurio has conducted many of the world's best orchestras and recorded with Andrea Bocelli and Chick Corea. The key to the Sting concerts, he explained, was ensuring "the orchestra is not just humming along in neutral, playing whole notes behind pop tunes."

Just then music supervisor Rob Mathes, who had been noting the score changes, and who arranged Police rockers like 'Next to You' for the tour, joined the conversation. "Whenever there's something in the charts that's cheesy, Steven looks at me and goes, 'That's a little Velveeta.' "Mercurio laughed. "But we're editing all that frilly stuff out," Mathes said. "We don't want to sound like a Pops concert."

Back in his apartment, Sting said he conceived this tour, called 'Symphonicity', after feeling inspired by performing a set of his songs with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in 2009. The orchestra had invited him to perform a private concert for its corporate benefactors. Two major donors, billionaire hedge-fund managers, had requested Sting.

Sting has been a fan of classical music since he first started playing rock and jazz in his hometown of Newcastle, England, in the '70s. In part, he explained, he recorded 2006's 'Songs From the Labyrinth', a collection of ballads by Elizabethan lutenist John Dowland, and 2009's 'If on a Winter's Night', a set of beautifully played carols and reconfigured tunes by Bach and Schubert, to honor his native land and musical ancestry.

But, he offered with a touch of humility about his current project, "We're not doing here classical music here. We're making orchestral music out of pop music. And that's a different thing." A studio recording of 'Symphonicity' will be released this July.

Still, Sting relished the idea of crossing genres and exploding the strictures of rock. "I can't imagine a more conservative music than rock 'n' roll," he said. "It's tyranny in the backbeat. It's 4/4 time. It's the same three chords 'round and 'round. It's almost like a fundamentalist religion. Stravinsky is more rebellious than rock 'n' roll by far. Rock 'n' roll has become like a dead art."

The criticism Sting's endured over his long career for weaving jazz or Algerian music into rock has only inspired him. "People want to keep you in the box they've given you," he said. "It's a tribal consciousness. Stay in your class. Stay in your country. Because if you move you're trouble. But the fact is, that volatile molecule is the one that transforms everything for the better. So I think it's always worth doing."

© The Los Angeles Times by Kevin Berger

Back to blog

You must have a display name to comment. Follow the button below to create your display name.

CREATE A DISPLAY NAME

RECENT STORIES

Sting Docks Thrilling New Version of “The Last Ship” at Metropolitan Opera, with Shaggy and an Eye Popping Production... Jun 10, 2026

STING DOCKS THRILLING NEW VERSION OF “THE LAST SHIP” AT METROPOLITAN OPERA, WITH SHAGGY AND AN EYE POPPING PRODUCTION...

Sting’s Broadway musical, with a Tony nominated score, opened last night for nine performances in a triumphant return, its first since 2015. It’s not an opera, but it’s staged like one, with a brea...

Read more >
PBS New Hour: Why Sting challenges himself to push his artistry into new forms... Jun 03, 2026

PBS NEW HOUR: WHY STING CHALLENGES HIMSELF TO PUSH HIS ARTISTRY INTO NEW FORMS...

Sting’s music is known around the world. Over the course of his career, he has sold more than 100 million records, first as the frontman, principal songwriter and bassist for The Police, and later ...

Read more >
Invalid password
Enter
Flagship Logo
  • Accessibility
  • Email List
  • Terms + Conditions
  • Privacy
  • Dont sell or share my personal informationCalifornia Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) Opt-Out Icon
  • News
  • Community
  • Tours
  • Media
  • Discography
  • Bio
  • Help
  • Store
  • Account Info
  • Accessibility
  • Email List
  • Terms + Conditions
  • Privacy
  • Dont sell or share my personal informationCalifornia Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) Opt-Out Icon
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
© 2026, Sting.com Powered by Live Nation Entertainment.
  • Choosing a selection results in a full page refresh.
  • Opens in a new window.