by Wait and See on 11 Jun 2007 03:45
32--the Police were big on the radio and with my older brother's friends during my formative years, so I've always been familiar with their music. Around 13 I started playing guitar, and have been very serious about it and playing in bands up until recently when it's started to get lost in a combination of not fitting into my life and a general loss of interest in the direction music has taken. No inspiration out there. Seems like everything has been done already. I have some facility on a variety of instruments, and some experience on the production/recording side.
In the process of being obsessed with music, over the years I amassed a CD collection approaching 1,000, covering pretty much every artist of any significance in almost every genre.
The more I listened to what others were doing, the more I began to appreciate the Police, and they have been one of my favorite bands for a long time now. The hardest thing to do from a musical standpoint is to come up with something new. The Police are in a rare category--they do not sound like anyone who came before or after them. Their sound is totally unique. Andy and Stewart have highly distinct, idiosyncratic approaches to their instruments, and Sting's voice is also pretty unusual. Combining those elements with Sting's basic sense for pop songwriting is what set them apart.
Also, as I've stated here before-- Stewart is, in my opinion, the best rock drummer there has ever been, period. The only other drummer who I would throw into a debate against him is John Bonham, but I give the nod to Stewart because I like his style better.
I think a lot of musicians appreciate the Police because of the above factors. People always raise the question of why they don't seem to have had many imitators, and the answer is because you can't imitate them. Their sound is a direct result of the combination of three unique individuals who each have their own style. You can't point to previous bands and say "this is where they got it from" (with the partial exception of Bob Marley). They came up with their own totally original sound, as Stewart has said--by accident--which is probably the highest praise you could give any group.