To be honest, I learned about the release of this album by stopping to gaze at the display window of my trusted newsstand, where a copy of the historic music magazine Ciao 2001 was prominently displayed with a photo of Sting on the cover alongside the news of an imminent live release. The tour supporting "The Dream of the Blue Turtles" began after three warm-up shows the band held at the Ritz in New York in February 1985, starting in May and concluding in June 1986 with an appearance at the McNichols Sports Arena in Denver (Colorado).

The album accurately reflects a period in Sting's career where he surrounded himself with tireless musicians, further grounding his new journey as a solo artist. A perfect collage of tracks where, even though the leadership of the group is never in question, the remarkable talent of the musicians allows each to shine without limits. A unique enjoyment and experience exudes from the grooves of this double live album, which led the impeccable Weather Report drummer Omar Hakim to declare that the band assembled by Sting was the best he had ever played with!

The thirteen tracks (not reflecting the official track-list) leave the successful coupling of "Bring on the Night/When the World is Running Down... Around" (from the December 23, 1985, concert at the Palais Omnisports de Bercy) with the task of bursting elegantly through the stereo speakers, making the listener feel like an integral part of the Parisian performance. From "The Dream of the Blue Turtles," the first taste comes with the sophistication of "Consider Me Gone," moving through the delicate interpretation of "We Work the Black Seam" and the same title-track masterfully blended with a renewed version of the evergreen "Demolition Man." The pleasant resurrection of the Police repertoire, albeit in a more personal style, continues with the unexpected "I Burn for You" from the OST "Brimstone & Treacle" (known in Italy as "Le due facce del male"), faithful to the original in the first part and a showcase for the astonishing Hakim in the second, while "One World (Not Three)" pairs - albeit predictably - with "Love Is The Seventh Wave" in a version lasting more than eleven minutes. More Police with "Low Life" alongside "Another Day" (excluded from "The Dream...Turtles") from the December 4, 1985, concert at Palaeur, the same Capitol temple that hosted the Police back in January 1984. The subdued atmosphere of "Moon Over Bourbon Street" couldn't be missing, nor could the gratitude Sting shows to the blues with the classic "Down so Long" (complete with a necessary band introduction), leaving the closing of the show to the suppleness of "Tea in the Sahara," dispelling any doubts as to why Brandford Marsalis considered it among his favorite tracks by the incomparable Police.

The simultaneous cinematic release of a film light show stirs even more interest around the irresistible success the former English teacher encountered over the past twelve months. A documentary-reality through which viewers are privileged to witness the making of a track before its complete composition, the making of "The Dream ...," as well as interviews with the musicians and group rehearsals conducted in a relaxed atmosphere in a castle on the outskirts of Paris. From the same French capital, the live act comes when the debut album was yet to be released, although the succession of tracks doesn't match the album, offering us even unreleased episodes like the performances of "Roxanne" or "Message in a Bottle." The choice to include images of the birth of Jake, Sting's son with Trudie Styler, also provides us with a private aspect the artist wanted to strongly share with the public at that precise moment.

M. Le Sting et Les Tortues Blue (this was meant to be the original title of "BOTN," whose only flaw is - perhaps - not reflecting the sequence of tracks performed during the concerts) represents a true compendium of the most significant live moments the group experienced over more than a year of dates, touring arenas, theaters, and stadiums. A particular moment in the career of the English musician and his stellar band, capable of surprising and captivating through a personal interpretation of a musical formula that is a meeting point of multiple cultures, exquisitely held together by a compelling pop taste that extraordinarily elevates its quality.

To be listened to without prejudice... to be owned without a doubt!

Tracklist and Lyrics

01   Bring On the Night / When the World Is Running Down You Make the Best of What's Still Around (11:40)

02   Consider Me Gone (04:54)

03   Low Life (04:03)

The fatal fascination for the seedy part of town
You walk down the street and your head spins round and round
Don't be seen alone without your friends at night
Take a gun or a knife to the low life

You don't have to be born into this society
You pay for love but the hate comes free
So bring enough money for the rest of your life
Don't bring your wife to the low life

Bringing us there to the degredation
Always keep your back to the wall
No rewards for your infatuation
Low life
No life at all

Yeah, low life, low life

In here to long to be afraid anymore
You can't reach the bed so you sleep on the floor
You get so stoned you think you could fly
But you won't get high on the low life

Low life, low life
Low life, low life
Low life, low life
Low life, low life

04   We Work the Black Seam (06:55)

This place has changed for good
Your economic theory said it would
It's hard for us to understand
We can't give up our jobs the way we should
Our blood has stained the coal
We tunnelled inside the nation's soul
We matter more than pounds and pence
Your economic theory makes no sense

One day in a nuclear age
They may understand our rage
They build machines that they can't control
And bury the waste in a great big hole
Power was to become cheap and clean
Grimy faces were never seen
But deadly for twelve thousand years is
carbon fourteen

We work the black seam together

The seam lies underground
Three million years of pressure packed it down
We walk through ancient forest lands
And light a thousand cities with our hands
Your dark satanic mills
Have made redundant all our mining skills
You can't exchange a six inch band
For all the poison streams in Cumberland

One day in a nuclear age
They may understand our rage
They build machines that they can't control
And bury the waste in a great big hole
Power was to become cheap and clean
Grimy faces were never seen
But deadly for twelve thousand years is
carbon fourteen

We work the black seam together

Our concious lives run deep
You cling onto your mountain while we sleep
This way of life is part of me
There is no price so only let me be
And should the children weep
The turning world will sing their souls to sleep
When you have sunk without a trace
The universe will suck me into place

One day in a nuclear age
They may understand our rage
They build machines that they can't control
And bury the waste in a great big hole
Power was to become cheap and clean
Grimy faces were never seen
But deadly for twelve thousand years is
carbon fourteen

We work the black seam together

05   Driven to Tears (06:58)

How can you say that you're not responsible?
What does it have to do with me?
What is my reaction, what should it be?
Confronted by this latest atrocity

Driven to tears

Hide my face in my hands, shame wells in my throat
My comfortable existance is reduced to a shallow meaningless party
Seems that when some innocent die
All we can offer them is a page in a some magazine


Too many cameras and not enough food
'Cos this is what we've seen

Driven to tears

Protest is futile, nothing seems to get through
What's to become of our world, who knows what to do

Driven to tears

06   The Dream of the Blue Turtles / Demolition Man (06:07)

Loading comments  slowly

Other reviews

By Nero

 Useless album, if you want to listen to Police songs live, buy the Police live albums.

 If you're in the car and they play "Love is the 7th wave" on the radio, turn it off immediately.