by jerseyfan on 26 Aug 2013 21:27
Have you guys read "broken music," Sting's book?
You may find this book excerpt interesting, especially in the context of this thread.
Below is how Sting describes the first time he and Stewart played together. This happened after an unemployed Sting drove to Stewart's Green Street neighboorhood in Mayfair and cold-called Stewart from a pay phone. Before this, they had only met once briefly when Stewart was in Newcastle the previous month playing with Curved Air.
Stewart saw Sting playing with Last Exit, was impressed with Sting and give him his phone number.
When Sting arrived they almost immediately start playing. "Grab that bass over there, let's play," said Stewart.
Here's the excerpt from Sting's book:
He starts at a blistering pace, so I just settle myself behind the engine and wonder where this ride will take me. Off we go, riffing and pumping with his machine gun intensity, the bass weaving like a python through a jungle of thythm and splashing cymbals.
Even at this very early moment of our relationship, it is clear that there is something going on, some chemistry, some understanding, some recognition, a rapport and a tension between the amphetamine pulse of his kick drum and the shifting, rolling ground of the bass. It is like two dancers finding a sudden and unexpected harmony in the middle of their steps, or the sexual rhythms of natural lovers, or the synchronized strokes of a rowing team in the flow of a fast river. Such rapport is not common, and I realize very quickly that this guy is the most exciting drummer I’ve ever worked with, almost too exciting. I also realize that tempos will be abandoned as easily as loose baggage on that runaway train, and whatever music I shall manage to make with this whirlwind, it will not be gentle or easy, it will be a wild ride to hell and back.