Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Soul Cages is a concept album focused on the death of Sting's father. [17] Sting had developed a writer's block shortly after his father's death in 1987; the episode lasted several years, until he was able to overcome his affliction by dealing with the death of his father through music. [18]
A promotional disc was made where Sting discusses some of the songs on the album. There was also an unofficial live album produced during the Ten Summoner's Tales era, entitled Meadowlands of Gold , which contained 13 tracks performed at the Meadowlands Arena on February 26, 1994, in East Rutherford, New Jersey.
The Soul Cages "Mad About You" 1991 56 109 71 — 59 13 — 44 — — "The Soul Cages" 57 135 47 — — — — 77 — — "Why Should I Cry for You" — — 46 38 — — — — — — "It's Probably Me" (with Eric Clapton) 1992 30 23 12 4 22 1 17 7 16 — Lethal Weapon 3 soundtrack "If I Ever Lose My Faith in You" 1993 14 41 1 39 31 1 28 ...
Since 1990, he has recorded and toured with Sting. [6] [7] He co-wrote the hit song "Shape of My Heart" with Sting. He released his debut solo album, First Touch, in 1995, followed by Second Nature and Third World. [8] In 2003 he released the classical album Shapes, with interpretations of Bach, Beethoven, Edward Elgar, and Tomaso Albinoni.
"The Soul Cages" possibly served as the basis for Oscar Wilde's fairy tale "The Fisherman and his Soul", or so it has been contended by literary critic Richard Pine. [22] The musician Sting released his album "The Soul Cages" in 1991. The album was an attempt by Sting to deal with his father's death and references his upbringing in Newcastle ...
The Top 8 contestants took the stage for the first live episode of Season 26, in which each hopeful sang twice: a solo performance and a special duet covering a Sting classic. ... but the soul ...
Acoustic Live in Newcastle is the second live album released by Sting. It was recorded and released shortly after the studio album The Soul Cages, at the Buddle Arts Centre in Newcastle upon Tyne, England, on 20 April 1991. The album includes four tracks from The Soul Cages, as well as a cover of the Bill Withers song "Ain't No Sunshine".
"All This Time" opened the set on The Soul Cages tour. After this, the song was not performed again until 2000 during the Brand New Day tour. [4] The song lent its name to the ...All This Time live album which was recorded in September 2001 at Sting's villa in Tuscany. [citation needed]