Sting - Bring On The Night (1986) {1998, Remastered}
Artist: Sting
Title: Bring On The Night
Year Of Release: 1986 / 1998
Label: A&M Records #540 994-2
Genre: Jazz Rock, Fusion, New Wave
Quality: EAC Rip -> FLAC (Tracks+Cue+m3u, Log) / MP3 CBR320
Total Time: 2CD (00:40:40 + 00:42:31)
Total Size: 614 / 233 Mb (Full Scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
Bring on the Night is a 1986 live album by Sting recorded over the course of several live shows in 1985 and released in 1986. The title is taken from a song by The Police from their 1979 album Reggatta de Blanc. The songs performed include Sting's early solo material from the studio album The Dream of the Blue Turtles, and from his time with The Police, with a few of the performances played as medleys of the two. The touring band features the prominent jazz musicians Branford Marsalis, Darryl Jones, Kenny Kirkland, and Omar Hakim. Despite not featuring any hit singles, the album reached number 16 on the UK Album Charts and won Sting a Grammy Award in 1988 for Best Pop Vocal Performance, Male.Title: Bring On The Night
Year Of Release: 1986 / 1998
Label: A&M Records #540 994-2
Genre: Jazz Rock, Fusion, New Wave
Quality: EAC Rip -> FLAC (Tracks+Cue+m3u, Log) / MP3 CBR320
Total Time: 2CD (00:40:40 + 00:42:31)
Total Size: 614 / 233 Mb (Full Scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
Sting really got carried away with the idea that his supporting crew for Dream of the Blue Turtles was a real jazz band, and technically, he was kind of right. He did pluck them straight out of Wynton Marsalis' backing band (thereby angering Wynton and emboldening his anti-rock stance, while flaring up a sibling rivalry between the trumpeter and his saxophonist brother Branford -- a veritable hat trick, that), and since he was initially a jazz bassist, it seemed like a good fit. At the very least, it seemed like a monumental occasion because he documented the entire development of the band and making of Dream with a documentary called Bring on the Night, releasing a double live album as its soundtrack just a year after the debut hit the stores. This could be called hubris (and it will be called that here), especially because the appearance of the live album feels like a way of showcasing Sting's jazz band and jazz chops. Most of the songs run around five minutes long and there are no less than three medleys, two of which marry an old Police number with a tune from Dream. Arriving as a second solo album, it can't help but feel a little unnecessary, even if the loose, rather infectious performances show what Sting was trying to achieve with his debut. Even so, this is a record for the cult, and while it will satisfy them, to others it will seem like, well, hubris.
~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music
Track List CD1:
01. Bring On The Night / When The World Is Running... [0:11:40.00]
02. Consider Me Gone [0:04:54.01]
03. Low Life [0:04:03.13]
04. We Work The Black Seam [0:06:55.22]
05. Driven To Tears [0:06:58.63]
06. The Dream Of The Blue Turtles / Demolition Man [0:06:08.24]
Track List CD2:
01. One World (Not Three) / Love Is The Seventh Wave [0:11:11.42]
02. Moon Over Bourbon Street [0:04:17.65]
03. I Burn For You [0:05:37.68]
04. Another Day [0:04:42.37]
05. Children's Crusade [0:05:22.49]
06. Down So Long [0:04:54.51]
07. Tea In The Sahara [0:06:24.56]
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