>>>Yup. (And neither are we.) <<<
Yeah...I was 2.
>>>He plays really good, now if he can lead the 2 others in the direction some musicians noticed in this board.<<<
The problem is, he can only go so far. Can't push too hard. Got to keep things running smoothly.
>>>I do have to agree on this, even though I know it's not to all folks' taste.<<<
Definitely not mine. They need to ROCK. That's what's lacking right now.
If anybody wants, go back and watch what happens from about 3:08 to 3:36 in that video. Halfway through Andy's guitar solo, Stewart TAKES OFF. By the time they get to the chorus, they're going 100 mph. Then when the chorus is over he breaks it down, nice and laid back. He does that several times over the course of the song.
Apparently the only response this has ever gotten from Andy and Sting is annoyance. They used to go along with it, but now they just crap on it. It's genius. And it probably wasn't pre-planned either, it was just what sounded right. I went through some of this repeatedly when I used to be in bands, except I played guitar and the issues were volume and taking off down rabbit holes and expecting everybody else to follow. Well guess what? What I was doing usually worked, and I could outplay everybody else in the band. I probably appreciate Stew's approach for that reason. The dude is the Jimi Hendrix or Eddie Van Halen of drums. You can't tie his hands. Most bands have a lead guitar player, the Police have Stewart Copeland.
Ah well. Gotta keep everybody happy or there's no band. Maybe that's why I quit and Stew's on a world tour. He figured out you have to give in sometimes, even if you're usually right.
Can't take anything away from Sting either. You can be the greatest player ever, but if you don't have songs and somebody who can sing them, you're not going anywhere.