A laugh a line

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Spiced with Variety

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A Finely Tuned Wordsmith

"The Police" concern at Madison Squa...

Sting has followed a path steered by his proven affinity with the written word. The course of his musical career traces an evolving relationship with language, as he finds new ways to record and interpret his experiences, thought processes and creativity in a finely tuned, honest approach.

The words of a song can influence, guide, heal, enlighten and move. Sting uses the powerful format of writing to encase new scenes and situations in single songs, covering a breadth of emotion. From flurries of fury and impassioned pleas to carefree meanderings in sunset barley fields; an inherent talent has been cultivated, capturing emotion, setting mood and communicating concepts with chords and lyrical content that when played, pinpoints exactly what it means to be alive.

He always manages to create meaningful pieces, infused with relatable content that are almost engineered to last as classics. Whether personal or abstract; Sting isn’t afraid to experiment with his musical style. His song writing skills seem completely transferable, from orchestral interpretations and soul renditions to the early origins of his pop and rock days together with the later sounds of  jazz and folk influences; Sting manages to incorporate a medley of  genres comfortably across albums and within individual songs, offering an eclectic energy that completely captivates the listener.

Welcome Home, Sting

A view of the Sage Gateshead along with the ty...

Recently I saw Sting perform in Gateshead as he celebrated 25 years as a solo artist, with his Back to Bass tour. What struck me, even before he sang a single note, was his natural way with words. It was clear that his ability to transcribe his thoughtful nature so precisely is what has earned him his right to decades in the spotlight. Slipping into storytelling quite easily he quickly built a rapport with the Newcastle audience from which he originated. Reaffirming the audiences’ affections, with real warmth and humour, Sting shared anecdotes of walking alongside the river with his youngest daughter just days before, as he showcased the gems of his city. Walking beside the Tyne evoked a flood of memories as he reminisced about going to the market as a small boy on a Sunday with his father, who would buy him a token toy. It was almost as though he could sense the  silent attentiveness of the crowd, as we proudly witnessed a homegrown talent leave us in no doubt as to why he is now known the world over.

The local newspaper’s review the next day summed the night up perfectly, proudly concluding, ‘A great night with a band of awesome musicians, and a charismatic singer-songwriter who’s lost none of his powers. Welcome home, Sting.’ 

Read the full article here.

During the gig, Sting told us that when sitting down to write a song he would first write the music and then let the lyrics fall into place, an unconventional method but one that has proved monumentally successful nonetheless. Together he would walk us through his memories, of where he was when he penned the first lines of a song, which then made each of the following performances even more powerful and vivid, as the images he had given us unfolded in what seemed like technicolour, while the music’s beats and chords intensified the messages.

In his eclectic set was a song that I hadn’t heard before, and one that stood out as a tragedy. Distinctly the song depicted the determination and unity that existed between two foxes. The ‘End of the Game’  throws the listener into a fast pace chase as two foxes flee for their lives, inspired he said from living in the countryside and directly, from trying to find new ways to barricade wild foxes out of his chicken enclosure, with comically put, varying degrees of success. The song however is full of sadness and urgency, as the pair try to outrun their inevitable fate. The music depicts the dramatic dash that ensues, conveying the ebb and flow of their energy levels, as well as the thoughts that run parallel through the minds of the foxes, while Sting narrates the story as they draw closer to their deaths.

What makes the song so moving is the ways in which the foxes are portrayed as romantic partners, spurring themselves on by envisioning a fantastical future together, running away side by side through forests, streams, fields and brambles, heading to the shore while being poetically ‘Carried to the great ocean by the drag of the moon ’. Their determination to escape eventually becomes replaced by an acceptance of the reality that dawns and they run instead into their dreams and finally on into the heavens.

In the video below shows Sting perform ‘End of the Game’ accompanied by the might that is the Philharmonic Orchestra. Sting takes the opportunity to incorporate an Oscar Wilde quote into his introduction; his love for words is apparent, his whole view of life is guided my the power and magic they can bestow. He owes his livelihood, his lifestyle to the art of words and his fans their delight, to his poetic perspective.

A Quarter of a Century

In the video below, Sting looks back on a career that spans a staggering 25 years. He is still prone to deep reflection and by his own self admission, at 60, has not yet arrived at a place where he thinks he has it all figured out. Sting is obviously intelligent but an emotional intelligence is what really shines through, especially when he describes and responds to his environment; combining eloquence with a down-to-earth delivery that is part of a formula which allows him to write songs we can appreciate and value. In the opening to this interview Sting becomes entirely engaging as he returns to storytelling mode.

His first musical memory is described as a scene full of movement and feeling, as he watched his mother play the piano; “I’d be on the floor, the pedals were odd, the loud and the soft pedals, they moved kind of a-rhythmically”. Sting went on to talk about the importance of listening, which is often key when finding the inspiration that in needed for creative writing, “It’s a receptive organ, it’s a feminine organ, we get information…… then we use our hands.”

He goes on to talk about spirituality and the death of his father, together with a desire to dedicate a song to him,“I knew I had to write something because that’s always been my therapy, the way of processing emotion”. He constantly finds value in new subject matters, and even admits to the experience of writers block“My whole being that was involved in being creative, suddenly had gone!”, but is comforted when he is able to draw from a past that is already easily accessible. A writer’s block is not a sign of a bad writer, merely that a new source needs to be tapped into; a creative challenge can often result in some of our best work as it stretches our abilities as writers, resulting in better outcomes. He reminisces about the ship building on his street, a subject that he describes wistfully and enigmatically, comparing his own life to their birth and journey out to sea,“so big it would just blot out the sun, and these ships of course would never come back, once they were launched they would leave, and that became very symbolic I suppose, of my own life”.

A Life in Songs

The next video shows a snippet from Sting’s recent 60th birthday concert, where he gathered famous friends together to sing songs from his huge  back catalogue. Here, Wonder joins the stage to sing ‘Fragile’ and immediately and inimitably injects an infectious soulfulness, stamping his own identity onto the classic song to showcase the full potential of masterful lyrics. Sting is clearly in awe of Wonder, and too, seems to take something fresh from the song. The performance is a testament to both Wonder and Sting’s immense talents. What better way to see your song writing ability praised than have the legend that is Stevie Wonder sing it for you; it all comes to life right in front of him as he shares the stage. What a tribute and a well deserved one. Here’s to song writing!

All for Love

Photo of statue titled "The Kiss

A few days ago I stumbled across a video with an interesting title ‘The Brain in Love’, clicking on it, I was then completely drawn into a lecture, given by biological anthropologist Helen Fisher. I felt as though I was sat there in amongst the audience, silent and transfixed in the dimly lit theatre. The topic was love, which is intriguing enough in itself but that steadily grew into sixteen minutes of fascination, time that I would gladly spare all over again. She took advantage of a popular subject laced with deep emotion by partnering fact with feeling. She chose to piece the lecture together with examples of literature that enriched it all. Nearly every quote and tale of romance left you hanging on her every word, sending you into a state of calm contemplation. With her Canadian lilt, the audience were led whimsically into the inner workings of love, humanely dissected, without stripping away too much of its magic.

Kissing couple.

Whether we like to admit it or not, love is a need or at best a want, like a thirst that needs to be quenched we are all driven to seek it out. It’s what we live for. Without it we are spared heartache but experience loneliness, with it we are engulfed in the most intense highs and locked into the deepest lows. One of Fisher’s opening sentences really stood out for me, not just because it’s so poetic but because it is such a truism,

All around the world people love, they sing for love, they dance for love, they compose poems and stories about love, they tell myths and legends about love, they pine for love, they live for love, they kill for love and they die for love.”

This lists the ways that romantic love can impact and shatter lives, from the production of pure happiness and creativity to extreme sacrifice and suffering – it can possess, inspire and alter our state of mind, our entire world. It is obvious Fisher is engrossed by the subject, at first she looks nervous but is then propped up by a confidence in her audience’s ability to relate to her subject so completely, as they warm to her. She believes everyone’s desire for love is inbuilt from birth, as she presents it as a complex contradiction, both a universal affliction and a remedy.

She picks her quotes well to round off a chosen story or poem. The partnership between the written word and love has always been symbiotic, as it allows us to express the depth and breadth of our feelings, comparing it to the deepest oceans and the widest of skies. Her lecture is supported by phrases and rhymes that speak honestly about real, rather than imagined experiences.

Some great quotes include:

“You can’t stop thinking about another human being, somebody is camping in your head’’

Fisher says this, describing how someone lives in your head, staying with you even when they’re not with you, pitching there permanently or until you move on and essentially force them out from your thoughts; a simple analogy that strikes a chord straight away.

The past is not dead, it’s not even the past” – (Faulkner)

– This describes how time can seem to stand still when you’re in love and the past is just as much a part of the present. It shapes the present in so much as it deepens love, the past makes present feelings possible.

“The less is my hope, the hotter my love” – (Roman Poet, Terence)

– This refers to one of the cruel elements of love, where the experience of rejection or unrequited love fuels the flames of passion, as our wants or not met, spurring us on hopelessly which only inflicts further pain. This idea is where the phrase “treat ‘em mean, keep ‘em keen” originates.

 “The God of love lives in a state of need” – (Plato)

– an insatiable appetite is key for ongoing passion and for love to thrive, keeping us driven and wanting more.

“Parting is all we need to know of hell” – (Emily Dickinson)

– A quote that Fisher used well to bookend a sad poem stood out as a simple yet powerful statement, full of wisdom. This is all it takes to activate the onset of despair as we are thrown from our own corner of earthly heaven with the one we love, straight into a hell without them. Because love deals in extremes, when we are happy in love we experience an abundance of blissful contentment, so when it is taken away, all that is left is a barren wasteland we have to endure alone. Usually we don’t know what we’ve got until it’s gone.

Romantic stories remind you why love is so sought after. The Mayan story told by Fisher works as a perfect introductory tale that seems to confirm the existence of everlasting love, something that human nature wants but can’t always deliver, another challenge love presents. The story carves out the shape of an ideal love, transcending the physical realm, where a Sun king and queen still want to return each other’s affections, a fairytale that demonstrates love’s reach, which is seen and interpreted by others today, helping to keep faith in true love alive.

A poem that is obviously close to Fisher’s heart is read out. She introduces it as the most powerful love poem on earth. If you’re not convinced by reading it or even hearing it, try reading it aloud, it seems to take on a new dimension, especially when the final line is spoken:

Fire runs through my body with the pain of loving you,

Pain runs through my body with the fires of my love for you,

Pain like a boil about to burst with my love for you

Consumed by fire with my love for you

I remember what you said to me,

I am thinking of your love for me,

I am torn by your love for me,

Pain and more pain –

Where are you going with my love?

I am told you will go from here,

I am told you will leave me here

My body is numb with grief

Remember what I said my love,

Goodbye my love, Goodbye.

English: a love heart in water

The poem focuses on the pain and suffering that comes with love. It’s certainly not a wine and roses account. The poet’s pain is then replaced with emptiness, and the intensity vanishes along with the loved one, which brings a new level of hurt. It almost documents a case of ‘Cant live with you, can’t live without you.’ Fisher’s voice wavers at the end of this poem and she is visibly moved as the poem is so sad, filled with panic, desperation, fear and dependency, all the things we put aside when in hot pursuit of love, but then it is suddenly replaced by a crippling loneliness, making you wonder which is best. A shameless vulnerability is exposed, as love claims another victim indiscriminately. It highlights just how easily love can come and go.

The character of love seems unchanged over time. It continues to both hurt and heal us; it builds us up and knocks us down. People give up everything and go to great lengths all in the name of love. It can prove to be our greatest strength and our greatest weakness. Love can save the day or ruin it. It can make perfect sense and at the same time, no sense at all. It’s hard not to sound too clichéd when talking about love, enough to say, that it can push us to the extremes of our emotional capabilities, test us mercilessly and make us do things that we would never normally consider. It can change us for the better or the worst, but without it wouldn’t we miss out on our earthly right to try and live life to its very fullest?

See Helen Fisher deliver her inspiring lecture, making the faces of her audience smile and nod in agreement. Here’s ‘The Brain in Love’: