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CD
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| CD - Remastered | $47.99 |
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| 7 | Prelude to the End of the Game 0:20 |
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Since he struck commercial and critical gold with The Police's combination of reggae rhythms and English new wave over 20 years ago, Sting has embraced a vision of pop music that blurs the boundaries of jazz, soul, rock, and world music. Powered by this ambitious alchemy -- which sometimes obscures the line between sophistication and pretension -- Sting's first album since 1996's reflective Mercury Falling finds the king of pain shooting for the stars again. Joined by an ace cast of singers and players -- Stevie Wonder, James Taylor, Branford Marsalis, and Algerian rai singer Cheb Mami -- Brand New Day is stuffed with internationalist musical flavor. "Desert Rose" provides a technofied take on North African dance-pop. "Big Lie, Small World" is a lightly strummed acoustic bossa nova. "Perfect Love Gone Wrong" is late-night jazz-pop touched with French rapping. "Fill Her Up" even sets down in the dusty deep South for a nice bit of faux honky-tonk in which the accomplished actor assumes the role of a gas station attendant with dubious dreams of getting the hell outta Dodge. Conversely, in "Tomorrow We'll See," he sings of a hooker on the prowl and the results are much less compelling. But for the most part, his songwriting remains in the safe confines of the healing love lyric. "How many people out there/ Been hurt in some kinda love affair," Sting sings on the gospel-tinged title track. He doesn't have an answer, but he sure will heal some wounds. Jon Dolan, Barnes & Noble