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Zenyatta Mondatta
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Your Price:
$8.48
Retail Price:
$9.98
You Save:
$1.50 (15%)
Availability:
Usually ships in 1-3 business days.
Free Shipping on orders of $75 or more |
ORDER BY PHONE
1-800-336-4627
or 1-610-649-7565
Mon-Fri: 7am-9pm ET
Sat: 10am-9pm ET Sun: 10am-8pm ET
Item Number:
UNI 493597 |
Related products:
The Police: Sting (vocals, bass); Andy Summers (guitar); Stewart Copeland (drums).
Recorded at Wissellord Studios, Hilversum, Netherlands.
This is a Super Audio CD playable only on Super Audio CD players.
The Police: Sting (vocals, bass); Andy Summers (guitar); Stewart Copeland (drums).
Recorded at Wissellord Studios, Hilversum, Netherlands.
For their third album, the Police, now official megastars, began to move away from the new wave-reggae hybrid they introduced on their first two releases. There's a bit more funk in the rhythm section on tunes like "Driven To Tears" (a tune that also represents a heightened socio-political bent in the lyrics). Andy Summers' avant-garde roots are also more apparent here, as on the eastern-flavored "Behind My Camel," and the quirky, abstract tone of "Shadows in the Rain." On the ominous-but-catchy "Don't Stand So Close To Me" Sting plays Cole Porter, rhyming "shake and cough" with "Nabokov." The album is best known for the monster hit "De Do Do Do, De Da Da Da," ostensibly a nonsense song, but under the surface the lyrics bear a serious message about global alienation and postmodern disaffection.
For their third album, the Police, now official megastars, began to move away from the new wave-reggae hybrid they introduced on their first two releases. There's a bit more funk in the rhythm section on tunes like "Driven To Tears" (a tune that also represents a heightened socio-political bent in the lyrics). Andy Summers' avant-garde roots are also more apparent here, as on the eastern-flavored "Behind My Camel," and the quirky, abstract tone of "Shadows in the Rain." On the ominous-but-catchy "Don't Stand So Close To Me" Sting plays Cole Porter, rhyming "shake and cough" with "Nabokov." The album is best known for the monster hit "De Do Do Do, De Da Da Da," ostensibly a nonsense song, but under the surface the lyrics bear a serious message about global alienation and postmodern disaffection.
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