this post was submitted on 22 Feb 2025
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70s Music

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[–] jimmydoreisalefty 2 points 22 hours ago (2 children)

Great song!

Thanks for sharing it with us!

“Message in a Bottle” is the first track and Grammy Award-winning single off of The Police’s second album Regatta de Blanc.

At the start, the song explores themes of being stuck on a deserted island. It follows into a metaphor that aims to explain the pitfalls of being heartbroken and alone. At the end, the protagonist learns he’s not the only lonely person. Sting shared:

I like the idea that while it’s about loneliness and alienation it’s also about finding solace and other people going through the same thing.

It was The Police’s first #1 song in the UK, Ireland and Spain and it reached the top 5 in six other countries, but in the US it peaked at #74.

In 2000, the band discussed “Message In A Bottle” with Revolver magazine:

Summers: I’ve always said it was Stewart’s finest drum track, plus great guitar riffs, lyrics, the song – it was one track where everything came together. We had also just learned the trick of playing a song two or three times in a row to let the energy build, then we’d come straight in for another take with the tape still rolling.

Copeland: It was also a great way of getting the tempo up to where I like – which is really fast.

Sting: That’s what he thought. We were actually trying to tire Stewart out so we could slow it down a bit.

Next in the interview, Sting is asked about the song’s lyrics:

Sting: As a narrative, it had a beginning, middle and an end. The story actually developed. It wasn’t just ‘I’m lonely, isn’t it terrible!’ – which is what a lot of my other songs were about. If I’m lonely, but I realize everybody else is too. I feel better. I think the Germans call that Schadenfreude – enjoying the misery of others.

Copeland: My favorite thing about ‘Message In A Bottle’, apart from all the money we made off it, was hearing cover bands trying to play my drum parts. I’d overdubbed about six different parts, and to watch some band in a Holiday Inn struggling to play all those overdubs still gives me great joy. Now that is really Schadenfreude.^[[1] https://genius.com/The-police-message-in-a-bottle-lyrics]

[–] [email protected] 2 points 21 hours ago (1 children)

After Synchronicity was released, I knew Stewart had to have some issues when I heard his song "Mother."

[–] jimmydoreisalefty 1 points 20 hours ago* (last edited 20 hours ago)

Wow!

TIL

Composed by guitarist Andy Summers, “Mother” is track four on 1983’s Synchronicity. Featuring lyrics focused on a character’s portrayal of an overbearing mother and the resulting paranoia that engulfs them.

Musically the track is very diverse, featuring an Arabian-tinged arrangement with horns, minimal percussion, an unconventional 7/8 time signature, and Andy Summers’s vocal stylings. His manic portrayal of the character is one of the song’s highlights, as well as his impressive guitar/sitar solo in the middle of the track.^[[1] https://genius.com/The-police-mother-lyrics]


Random thoughts:

Listening to Mother reminded me of:

Suicidal Tendencies - "Institutionalized" | 04:16 | https://youtu.be/LoF_a0-7xVQ

Then:

Ramones - I Wanna Be Sedated (Official Music Video) | 02:31 | https://youtu.be/bm51ihfi1p4


Edit: forgot to add source to the end of the quotes