maxmox (Broome, Western Australia) | | Posted: Mar 28, 2013 - 18:13 | |
Everyone (nearly) in my village likes this with apologies to the 'EVERY'? one police
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tulfan
| | Posted: Feb 25, 2013 - 07:23 | |
I am not sure why but I still crank this one... |
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martinc (Ottawa Canada) | | Posted: Nov 23, 2012 - 07:25 | |
dwlangham wrote: Good list. Add Styx and Foreigner. Add Police. |
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dwlangham (Nowhere to be found) | | Posted: Jul 18, 2012 - 07:07 | |
Sasha2001 wrote: Comments like this get my salivary glands juiced! So what you're saying is, of all the bands to make it to the big time, The Police and AC/DC were the worst. For you to accept this you would have had to have been exposed to the tiniest of musical samplings. Here's a list of "Big Time" (your words) musical acts that I think are WORSE then your choices. In no particular order:
Whitney Houston Phil Collins solo Later Genesis Lionel Richie (but not the Commodores) REO Speedwagon Garth Brooks Journey New Kids On the Block Bon Jovi Huey Lewis & the News Chicago (Chicago 17) Def Leppard
And this list is based on the best selling albums of the 1980s only.
Good list. Add Styx and Foreigner. |
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iTuner
| | Posted: May 15, 2012 - 22:24 | |
Back in 1981 this was pretty much the slickest thing out there.
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(former member) (hotel in Las Vegas) | | Posted: May 15, 2012 - 22:20 | |
Everybody in my hotel room loves this song...
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raewah (Somewhere where the mountains meet the plains) | | Posted: Apr 16, 2012 - 11:41 | |
Well. Put.
MiracleDrug wrote:timeless. brilliant. |
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MiracleDrug (Earth) | | Posted: Mar 13, 2012 - 13:19 | |
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shemp (orange, california) | | Posted: Feb 10, 2012 - 18:59 | |
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randyblew (Raleigh, NC) | | Posted: Dec 11, 2011 - 11:46 | |
I don't care how much these guys get overplayed anywhere. They are still amazing. I love all of their stuff, and GITM was a great, spiritual/political pop album. And they ROCKED at the New Orleans Arena in 2007 - ahhhhh, memories....sigh
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Sasha2001 (I can see Zabars from my window) | | Posted: Nov 07, 2011 - 13:05 | |
Xeric wrote: No! The Police? Repetitive? No!
(The Police are second to AC/DC as the worst band ever to make the big time. If you ask me. Which you didn't, of course. Nobody ever does. I can't understand why.)
Comments like this get my salivary glands juiced! So what you're saying is, of all the bands to make it to the big time, The Police and AC/DC were the worst. For you to accept this you would have had to have been exposed to the tiniest of musical samplings. Here's a list of "Big Time" (your words) musical acts that I think are WORSE then your choices. In no particular order: Whitney Houston Phil Collins solo Later Genesis Lionel Richie (but not the Commodores) REO Speedwagon Garth Brooks Journey New Kids On the Block Bon Jovi Huey Lewis & the News Chicago (Chicago 17) Def Leppard And this list is based on the best selling albums of the 1980s only. Here's my take on The Police: Quite often bands hit it big because they land on a sound through their own evolution, a sound that finds them aligned with popular tastes at that particular moment in history. The Police are such a band. Experimental enough to satisfy purists but at the time less raw then punk. Appealing to both genders with the convergence of video and audio media. Sting became a bona fide sex symbol, and the Hugh Padgham produced, easy listening masterpiece, "Synchronicity," exploded onto television sets and AM/FM radios everywhere. For those of us who saw them in a small club or cozy theater setting, the Police were as tight and high-energy an outfit as any power trio out there. Although lyrically clunky, owing to Sting's famed "gay wadness," they often transcended this high-minded posing with songs that felt original and fresh in 1980. With Sting's thinly veiled jazz leanings, Copeland's classical underpinnings, and Summers' weird tonal proclivity, the Police were unlike any other band of their era. Besides the much publicized animosity between the mates, they're break-up always seemed like a forgone conclusion to me. The pop bloat that found it's way into songs like "Every breath you take" became like a platinum-selling cancer, threatening all future creativity. To me, the break-up was only further evidence that these guys were for real. |
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Proclivities (Carrboro, NC) | | Posted: Nov 07, 2011 - 12:02 | |
freddyfender wrote: Yeah, totally. AC/DC, The Police and Guns and Roses cannot hold a candle to the musical genius that was/is the great imports from Sweden; the one, the only, often imitated, never duplicated.........ABBA. You're right, none of them can, though your beloved AC/DC did release the second-largest-selling album in history. |
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abbey_normal
| | Posted: Nov 07, 2011 - 12:02 | |
Hate when they try to "jailya"... it's always such a "failya".
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HazzeSwede (Vinyl Land) | | Posted: Aug 05, 2011 - 04:07 | |
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ziakut (A place with air, water and chocolate.) | | Posted: May 02, 2011 - 14:16 | |
Musically this is brilliant. Lyrically not bad. Love the bassline and trance of the keyboard with that off center pulsating bass drum and kick snare before the chorus. Wahhhhhh!
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unclehud (300 feet above the planet) | | Posted: Feb 28, 2011 - 11:04 | |
tom-kenna wrote:AC/DC I will never understand the appeal. .....
AC/DC = Sex, drugs, and rock & roll. Pretty simple, I think. (pun) |
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CaptainPicard (The Netherlands) | | Posted: Jan 28, 2011 - 05:02 | |
paraclete wrote:I love Sting, and much of the Police, but this one song got WAY too much airplay back in the day, and so I am a bit burned out on it.
I had not heard this for a couple of years. Great to hear again, it still sounds fresh to me. |
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wotuzu17 (Innsbruck, Austria) | | Posted: Jan 28, 2011 - 05:01 | |
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paraclete (Citrus Heights, CA) | | Posted: Oct 25, 2010 - 12:07 | |
I love Sting, and much of the Police, but this one song got WAY too much airplay back in the day, and so I am a bit burned out on it.
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Rooney (Near Paradise) | | Posted: Sep 23, 2010 - 19:46 | |
Yep. I gave it an 8.  |
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number7
| | Posted: Aug 22, 2010 - 19:39 | |
The "Police" are the only band I turn OFF on the "WONDERFUL" RP.
I just don't like them, never have.
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Albert1967 (Leusden, the Netherlands) | | Posted: Jun 22, 2010 - 05:10 | |
Zigi wrote: If Stewart Copeland is a pretty good drummer then Beethoven was a pretty reasonable composer. A matter of taste, for: ignorance is infinite, knowledge is not. And: bad taste is taste as well . . . It comes down to taste right? What I know - facts - is they both had / have incredible musical skill. FYI: I enjoy both. An as for Beethoven: thus performed properly. Ouch, I guess that's taste as well. Enjoy your music! |
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peter_james_bond (The Burg) | | Posted: May 19, 2010 - 04:35 | |
crockydile wrote:Amazed at the negative comments on this song. Maybe it's the metaphysical content in a pop song that has always blown me away.
The lyrics still ring true (to me). If we could separate organized religion from the picture, I think our world would be a better place if we all believed that we are spirits in the material world. There is no political solution To our troubled evolution Have no faith in constitution There is no bloody revolution We are spirits in the material world Are spirits in the material world Are spirits in the material world Are spirits in the material world Our so-called leaders speak With words they try to jail you The subjugate the meek But it's the rhetoric of failure We are spirits in the material world Are spirits in the material world Are spirits in the material world Are spirits in the material world Where does the answer lie? Living from day to day If it's something we can't buy There must be another way We are spirits in the material world Are spirits in the material world Are spirits in the material world Are spirits in the material world
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Delboy77 (Vienna, Austria) | | Posted: May 19, 2010 - 04:28 | |
to hear this song is always a nice dose of energy, thanks r&b
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Zigi (Amsterdam, the Netherlands) | | Posted: May 19, 2010 - 04:28 | |
LastChance wrote:Stuart Copland is a pretty good drummer. . .
If Stewart Copeland is a pretty good drummer then Beethoven was a pretty reasonable composer. |
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crockydile (Outer Spiral Arm, Milky Way) | | Posted: Apr 19, 2010 - 15:50 | |
Amazed at the negative comments on this song. Maybe it's the metaphysical content in a pop song that has always blown me away.
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derekd (Just Visiting This Planet) | | Posted: Apr 19, 2010 - 15:48 | |
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LastChance (Fort Worth/Dallas) | | Posted: Apr 19, 2010 - 15:46 | |
Stuart Copland is a pretty good drummer. . .
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On_The_Beach (Vancouver BC, Bud) | | Posted: Mar 19, 2010 - 02:26 | |
freddyfender wrote:Xeric wrote: (The Police are second to AC/DC as the worst band ever to make the big time. If you ask me. Which you didn't, of course. Nobody ever does. I can't understand why.) SweTex wrote:Agreed...I'd add Gun's and Roses to the list, but no one ever asks me either. Probably for the same reason they dont ask you. Are we doing something wrong?
Yeah, totally. AC/DC, The Police and Guns and Roses cannot hold a candle to the musical genius that was/is the great imports from Sweden; the one, the only, often imitated, never duplicated.........ABBA. I gotta go with Rush and Kiss, hands down, no contest, but hey, that's just me. |
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garycha (Bristol, UK) | | Posted: Mar 19, 2010 - 01:43 | |
romeotuma wrote:
I have always loved the bass line in this song...
Me too. That and the off-beat drumming from Stuart Copeland gives this track a great feel. I remember seeing the Monseratt recording sessions on TV. |
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