Jean Roussel - piano on "Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic".Stewart Copeland – drums, miscellaneous percussion, keyboards, drum programming on "Don't Stand So Close to Me '86".Andy Summers – electric guitar, keyboards.
Sting – lead and backing vocals, bass, keyboards.Re-recording of song from Zenyatta Mondatta "Don't Stand So Close to Me '86" made it into the UK Top 25.Īll tracks are written by Sting. Following the release of the album, the Police effectively disbanded.Įvery Breath You Take: The Singles reached No. "De Do Do Do De Da Da Da" was also recorded but the band was unsatisfied with the result, and as such it was shelved, only to be subsequently included on the DTS-CD release of the Every Breath You Take: The Classics album in 1995.Īs to signify the poor atmosphere pervading the session, the three band members did not appear together in the photograph on the album cover, nor in the video shot by Godley & Creme to promote "Don't Stand So Close to Me '86". " Don't Stand So Close to Me '86" was released in October 1986 as the final single from The Police. In a Qantas inflight radio program named "Reeling in the Years", Copeland was quoted as saying that the argument over Synclavier versus Fairlight drums was "the straw that broke the camel's back," and that this led to the group's unravelling. Copeland ultimately finished the drum programming and claimed that the Fairlight's "Page R" (the device's sequencing page) saved his life and put him on the map as a composer. As the group's engineer found the Synclavier's programming interface difficult, it ended up taking him two days to complete the task. Copeland opted to use his Fairlight CMI to program the drum tracks but Sting pushed to use the drums on his Synclavier instead. It was an empty exercise." With Copeland unable to play the drums, the short-lived reunion resulted in an attempt to re-record some of their previous hits. Anyway, it was clear Sting had no real intention of writing any new songs for the Police. The night before we went into the studio Stewart broke his collarbone falling off a horse and that meant we lost our last chance of recovering some rapport just by jamming together. In the liner notes to the Police's box set Message in a Box, Summers recalled: "The attempt to record a new album was doomed from the outset. In July the band booked time in the studio to record a new album. And then we symbolically handed our instruments over to U2, because they were about to become what we were - the biggest band in the world". U2 were there as well and as we closed our set with " Invisible Sun", Bono came out and sang it with us. We'd broken up, then sort of reformed to do the Amnesty Tour. According to Sting, "It was a very symbolic moment. About one year later Summers scored the soundtrack for the film Down and Out in Beverly Hills.īy the time the trio reconvened to play three concerts for the Amnesty International A Conspiracy of Hope Tour in June 1986, the atmosphere was tense. In 1985 Copeland started working on The Rhythmatist, an ambitious project that led him to spend a significant amount of time recording and filming in Congo. The album was followed by an extensive promotional tour, that resulted in a double live album, Bring on the Night. In 1985 Sting released his first solo album, The Dream of the Blue Turtles, with great critical and commercial success.
Stewart Copeland worked on the soundtrack of the Francis Ford Coppola's film Rumble Fish, with the single " Don't Box Me In" peaking at No. The same year Andy Summers released a second album of instrumental music with Robert Fripp, Bewitched. In the aftermath of their Synchronicity Tour in 1984, The Police announced that they were taking a pause of reflection before recording a new album.