Credit
the musicians’ energy for bringing 90 minutes of their greatest hits to life
before an enthusiastic and slightly older crowd. Whether it was “Walking on the
Moon,” “Demolition Man,” “Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic,” “Roxanne,”
“Don’t Stand So Close to Me,” “Every Breath You Take” or “King of Pain,” the
trio never held back, playing to win the hearts of the audience. Those efforts,
without a doubt, succeeded beyond expectation.
Sting
remains the face and voice of the band, and his showmanship and humor offered
constant guidance throughout the evening. He several times introduced his
bandmates but never once was subject of an introduction himself. One supposes
that since he has remained a vibrant solo artist all these years, he truly is a
performer who needed no introduction.
But
Sting would not have succeeded without Summers’ searing guitar and, especially,
Copeland’s wildly evocative drumming. Part of the evening’s credit also goes to
the superb audiovisual support, which filmed the talented percussionist up
close and personal, including shots taken through the bottom and clear head of
his tom-tom, with Copeland furiously pounding away on the other side. His
inventory of instruments is staggering, and seeing him play each and every one,
courtesy of the huge digital projection screen behind the stage, gave the
concert as much visual appeal as aural.
“This
is your chance,
He
needn’t have leveled the challenge. The crowd had reached that goal two songs
ago.
One
has to pity poor Elvis Costello and the Imposters, whose 50-minute opening set
was bereft of much of the technical support from which The Police benefited,
and suffered the indignity of being a daylight performance for a sparsely
filled house. A great performer in his own right, Costello offered up his own
hits, including “Watching the Detectives” and “Pump It Up,” but he only seemed
to catch most of the audience’s attention when Sting wandered out to sing a
duet version of “Alison.” The song gained an entirely new dimension thanks to
the pair’s harmonies.







