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A live performance (circa 1980) of "Driven to Tears" is the opening number of the film Urgh! A Music War. Sting played "Driven to Tears" at the Live Aid concert in 1985. [12] He also released a live version on his solo album Bring on the Night in 1986. [7] That version included a solo by saxophone player Branford Marsalis. [7]
Police guitarist Andy Summers considers "When the World Is Running Down, You Make the Best of What's Still Around" to be one of the promising songs Sting had written in advance of the Zenyatta Mondatta sessions and which form the "meat" of the album, the others being "Driven to Tears" and the hit singles "De Do Do Do, De Da Da Da" and "Don't ...
Robert Downey, Jr. Sings With Sting And Absolutely Kills It. A video from Sting's 60th birthday concert surfaced over the weekend and it's surprising everyone.
Zenyatta Mondatta also saw the band's lyrics turning towards political events, with Sting's "Driven to Tears" commenting on poverty and Copeland's "Bombs Away" referring to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. [8] [10] These themes became more prevalent on the Police's next album, Ghost in the Machine.
Sarah Jessica Parker and Robert Downey Jr. in 1988 The former couple actually met up in 2015 to get closure on their tumultuous relationship — and, by all accounts, it went well.
Here's everything you need to know about the ongoing debate over Downey's use of blackface in the 2008 comedy.
Despite not featuring any hit singles, the album reached number 16 on the UK Album Charts [4] and won Sting a Grammy Award in 1988 for Best Pop Vocal Performance, Male. Bring On the Night is also a 1985 documentary directed by Michael Apted covering the formative stages of Sting's solo career—released as DVD in 2005.
Downey Jr. was 28 at the time, and struggled with a drug addiction. “I was young and crazy,” Downey Jr. said during an interview on The View on Wednesday, January 24. He told cohost Joy