[quote="jerseyfan"]sockii, thanks for the link.
I just found out two amazing facts. First, Andy Summers was going to be in Animal Logic. Wow! I always thought that Stewart and Andy should find another singer- similar to what Van Halen did- and put out albums and tour as a band with a different name. So this all leads to another question: What happened to Andy Summers? Why did he drop out? That would have been an awesome group? Was is creative differences?
The second amazing fact in that article is that Miles Copeland was having financial trouble. How is that possible? At that point Miles had been Sting's manager for ten years. What did he do with all money he made with Sting and with the Police? We're talking about millions and millions of records sold, at least 1,000 sold out concerts and millions of dollars made from T-Shirt sales. What about the money he made with Squeeze, the Go-Go's and all those other groups he had?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cT8CY7m9HmE[/quote]
Jerseyfan,
quote "I always thought that Stewart and Andy should find another singer- similar to what Van Halen did- and put out albums and tour as a band with a different name".
At that time The Police was technically still a band and hadn't broken up! Stewart and Andy were busy with their solo careers.
This is my perspective, several decades after the fact, on Andy's non involvement in Animal Logic.
Andy Summers had toured in Brazil and had been invited back by the promoter there to do a few shows in the fall of 1989?? (help me Dietmar or Giovanni). After being asked by Andy if he'd be interested in performing on the tour, Stewart recruited Stanley to join them as a trio. Not being a big fan of the all instrumental concept Stewart campaigned hard to add a vocalist so, as Deborah points out in her interview, he listened to and went to see numerous singers until he came across her demo tape. The trio listened to and liked her material and vocals which resulted in a live audition and Deborah being added to the band. During those shows in Brazil, under the name "Rush Hour", they performed a few of her songs as well as material from Stewart, Stanley and Andy. After returning to the states Stewart and Miles wanted the band to rehearse and go into the studio to record. I believe Andy was more interested in pursuing his own material and was not in a POP frame of mind, so he bowed out. Stewart, Stanley and Deborah arranged, rehearsed and recorded two tracks: "Firing Up The Sunset Gun" and "There's A Spy (In The House Of Love)". The rhythm tracks were recorded at A&M studios in Hollywood with overdubs being added at various studios employing the guitar work of Michael Thompson. Miles signed the band as "Animal Logic" to IRS Records on the strength of those tracks after which they proceeded to record the album followed by some promotional touring.
Regarding your comment about Miles having financial trouble. Financial trouble comes in all shapes and sizes as evidenced by our Government's woes. In most cases a record label or business venture is the entity responsible for an artists career not an individual. Hope this helps.