![]() Fields of Gold: The Best of Sting 1984-1994 $13.98 The unhurried pace of `When We Dance', the opener to a decade's anthology of Sting's best work, could serve as an icon for the artist's contribution to serious popular music. Pensive, elegant, emotionally resurgent, the song captures the burden of the man's music. Perhaps the highest compliment this reviewer can pay the collection and the reservoir from which it was drawn is just this: unlike the figures in Sting's balladic poetry, the music refuses to grow old. The title track, `Fields of Gold', is another of Sting's story-spinning masterpieces. Elevating his and his lover's bond to mythic levels by contrast to the `jealous sun', Sting writes the poetry of love song better than any of his contemporaries. The musical phrasing plays its role flawlessly as well, brief instrumental interlude occuring at exactly the right moment and without overstaying its welcome. `All This Time' is perhaps the closest thing to a creed that one will find in Sting's repertoire. Brilliantly written, cunningly skeptical, deeply individualist, resonant almost of Emerson, it turns a phrase as well as any. Speaking of two priests who've turned up to administer last rites to a dying man, Sting sees them, unsympathetically, `Fussing and flapping in priestly black // Like a murder of crows'. The entire song deserves quotation: I looked out across The river today I saw a city in the fog and an old church tower Where the seagulls play I saw the sad shire horses walking home In the sodium light I saw two priests on the ferry October geese on a cold winter's night And all this time, the river flowed Endlessly to the sea Two priests came round our house tonight One young, one old, to offer prayers for the dying To serve the final rite One to learn, one to teach Which was the cold wind blows Fussing and flapping in priestly black Like a murder of crows And all this time, the river flowed Endlessly to the sea If I had my way I'd take a boat from the river And I'd bury the old man, I'd bury him at sea Blessed are the poor, for they shall inherit the earth Better to be poor than a fat man in the eye of a needle And as these words were spoken I swore I hear The old man laughing 'What good is a used up world and how could it be Worth having' And all this time the river flowed Endlessly like a silent tear And all this time the river flowed Father, if Jesus exists, Then how come he never lived here The teachers told us, the Romans built this place They built a wall and a temple, an edge of the empire Garrison town, They lived and they died, they prayed to their gods But the stone gods did not make a sound And their empire crumbled, 'til all that was left Were the stones the workmen found And all this time the river flowed In the falling light of a northern sun If I had my way I'd take a boat from the river Men go crazy in congregations But they only get better One by one One by one... The enigmatic `Be Still, My Beating Heart' brings artistic and emotional discernment to the task of sorting out the opportunity cost of speaking, of understanding, of opening up, of choosing to love or to flee the prospect of being loved. The anthology includes Sting's most potent political statement, one that demonstrates the power of art to change minds. `They Dance Alone' tells the story of bereaved Chilean mothers whose children have been `disappeared' under the Pinochet regime. Weaving the story of these sad-eyed women who `dance alone' because their men have gone into a slow dance suffused with hope transposes Sting's gift for chronicling love and love's loss into a new key. `If I Ever Lose My Faith in You' is Sting's iconic declaration of this love for this woman a thing that eclipses Everything Else. It is vintage Sting, without which no compilation of his work would deserve the name. `Fragile' is an act of the most intelligent brooding. Spare orchestration befits its single, gloomy thought: If blood will flow when flesh and steel are one Drying in the colour of the evening sun Tomorrow's rain will wash the stains away But something in our minds will always stay Perhaps this final act was meant To clinch a lifetime's argument That nothing comes from violence and nothing ever could For all those born beneath an angry star Lest we forget how fragile we are On and on the rain will fall Like tears from a star like tears from a star On and on the rain will say How fragile we are how fragile we are On and on the rain will fall Like tears from a star like tears from a star On and on the rain will say How fragile we are how fragile we are How fragile we are how fragile we are FIELDS OF GOLD reminds Sting fans that it was indeed a remarkable decade. Sting lifted our hearts and filled our minds inimitably or--as the artist himself might have it--in my fashion. ![]() If On A Winter's Night [Amazon.com Exclusive CD/DVD Deluxe Edition] $24.98 Well, I like listening to archaic songs from Sting. But... He should take into account, that human beings are not bears that hibernate... There's only ONE "vivace" song in the album... And to take a humorous look at the matter, it is a song of beggars! (Soul Cake) The remaining 15 songs are all like lullabies, which you shall listen to, before going to bed for sleep... So, are we bears that hibernate in winter time? Don't we have any vivid pastimes in front of a fireplace? I think, Sting should think more, before deciding on the repertoire of an album... ![]() Sting: A Winter's Night...Live from Durham Cathedral $24.98 Sting, who likes to fashion himself as a member of the enlightened intellectual elite, admitted in a November 19, 2009 interview with the UK Daily Telegraph that he once saw a ghost, heard noises and saw objects fly around the room. Um...okay. And we are supposed to trust this guy when it comes to global warming. Sting is looking more like a wrinkled lumberjack everyday, which should be insulting to wrinkled lumberjacks. This concert DVD is painful to watch as I think he is going to cut down all those trees on the cover of his companion CD. But he won't do that because he already has several mansions and doesn't need more wood to construct new ones so he is perfectly fine with keeping environmental restrictions on people who want to build their own homes. Hypocrite! ![]() Ten Summoner's Tales $13.98 This album marks the beginning of the hunt for the many different countries that will release a Sting album adding unreleased tracks. In this case, Australasia has the extra track "Everybody laughed but you". If you're a collector and you have followed this artist from the Police, you my have found that he has enjoyed releasing great songs as B-sides on 45 issues. Well, that has never stopped. His first solo release lacks the studio release of "Another day" which is only found on the EP release of "Set them free". With his ...Nothing like the sun release, his first single featured "We'll be together" on a cd single 3 inch with a b-side "Conversation with a dog". I imagine someday he will satisfy a recording contract and release a compiled collection of his b-sides, but until then, look out for those foreign releases. |
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