Recommendations of the Editorial team
The best sting songs ever
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Sting – Fields of Gold
Paul McCartney once said this was one of the songs that he would have liked to write. You can understand why. The melody is beautiful.
Sting – Desert rose
Sting’s 2000-hit “Desert Rose “relevant to Multi-Platinian success of the album “Brand New Day”. Together with Cheb Mami, Sting recorded the song in 1999 – And although mom in Arabic Improvised and Sting did not understand a word, both sang about the same thing: romantic love.
The best sting songs ever
Sting – Englishman In New York
“Be yourself,, NO matter what all Say “: As simple, as insistent and as strong as Brandford Marsalis Legendary Saxophone melody, Sting speaks about the initial difficulties of his friend Quentin Crisp. The eccentric entertainer Had inspired him to the text when Crisp in New York company had to fight for acceptance because of his openly homosexual manner. Sting Get to know him during the album recordings and admire Crisp for his courage to stand by his opinion despite the hostility. Absolute classic.
“Be still My Beating Heart”
Sting: “Be Still My Beating Heart” (from “Nothing Like the Sun”, 1987). If you want to hate sting, you could feel confirmed here. In this tropical sultry bluespop, the singer tries to calm his feelings of love by devoting himself to the academic reading: “I’ve been to every single book i know, to soothe the thoughts that plague me so”. Arrogant Tyo? Great song!
“I burn for you” (The Police)
The Police: “I Burn for You” (from “Bring on the Night”, 1986). The policy outtake is such an incredibly magical, hot, smoldering song that the second part of the sun, inspired by African choirs, almost looks like cooling.
“The Lazarus Heart”
Sting: “The Lazarus Heart” (from “Nothing Like the Sun”, 1987). The album Opener, written for the late mother, tells of the most joyful tones, driven by Branford Marsalis’ Saxophone, about the resurrection-and the power of education.
The best sting songs ever
“Russians”
Sting: “Russians” (from “The Dream of the Blue Turtles”, 1985). In the Cold War, Sting appeals to the responsibility stone of parents on both sides of the Iron Curtain. A synth opera and pronounced polite letter to “Mr. Reagan” and “Mr. Krushchev”. Never before and afterwards Sting sang so loudly and clearly; He illustrates the “unknown Russian” with excerpts from music from Prokofiev.
“Fragile”
Sting: “Fragile” (from “Nothing Like the Sun”, 1987). Stings filigree song art in completion. The thought comes from a poem by TS Eliot, a mini album contains “fragile” and some other pieces in Portuguese.
“Love is the Seventh Wave”
Sting: “Love is the Seventh Wave” (from “The Dream of the Blue Turtles”, 1985). The only disguised reggae and an unusually happy sting piece on “Blue Turtles”.
“Little Wing”
Sting: “Little Wing” (from “Nothing Like the Sun”, 1987). Together with Gil Evans and his orchestra, Sting balanced between Big Band, Calypso and Rock. Jazz, of course, too, Sting was still slowly moving back then. The most beautiful is the place where his guitar merges into the saxophone.
“When the Angel’s Fall”
Sting: “When the Angel’s Fall” (from “The Soul Cages”, 1991). Confession to atheism? Fear of the hell fire? Fear of the dead father because the mourning is over? In one of his most undetected songs, Sting God speaks the power and literally appears naked: “THESE ARE My Feet, thesis are my hands these are my children and this is my demand”
Sting: “Saint Agnes and the Burning Train” (from “The Soul Cages”, 1991). Agnes was a grandmother, and an anecdote after it was sitting in a burning train. The short flamenco song, one of Sting’s few instrumental, forms the curious center of his sad “Soul Cages” album: farewell, nostalgia, family history.
“All this time”
Sting: “All This Time” (from “The Soul Cages”, 1991). The first single in four years and an end to the writer Block: Sting completes the mourning phase around the father: “I’m bury the old man, I’m bury Him at Sea”. The singer also wonders in the positive as well as the small town and small-town song how he could just succeed: “Father, if Jesus exists, that how come He never lived here?”

