concert reviews
Show Date1979-09-23
LocationLondon
VenueHammersmith Odeon
TourThe 'Reggatta' years 1979/80



LONDON: Hammersmith Odeon

Police conquer London...

This was the last of the Police's two nights at the Hammy Odeon, and a fitting finale to their sell out UK tour.

The band bounded onstage to ecstatic whoops and cheers, the audience immediately surged towards the front of the stage. It was going to be a special night.

The only sign of fatigue after their rigorous string of dates was a pair of flashy sunglasses to hide an eye infection, and a touch of 'flu that made those top notes just that little bit difficult to reach, both afflictions courtesy of Sting.

But eyerything else was perfect. Polished and tight the Police have honed their live act to a fluid, immensely enjoyable set.

They have such a strong roster of songs that they can afford to play blockbusters like 'Message In A Bottle' and 'Roxanne' in the middle of their set and still build the pitch up towards the encore.

Even the new numbers were greeted with rapturous cheers, especially deservedly so on 'Walking On The Moon' and 'The Bed's Too Big Without You'. The latter produced the finest live dub session I've ever witnessed, proving again how essential Copeland's excellent drumming is to the band.

Three encores before the audience would let them go, finishing with the odd 'Be My Girl' - still a strong crowd favourite.

Now they're off to conquer America, the cheers from the Odeon still ringing in their ears. Let's hope it's not too long before they're back.

© Superpop by Tony Dorkin (with thanks to Dietmar)



LONDON: Hammersmith Odeon

Sting's ain't what they used to be...

"EEOOAA, EEOOAA, eeooaa," chants white man on stage at Hammersmith Odeon. "Eeooaa, eooaa, eeooaa," replies capacity crowd with feeling.

So the Police return triumphant to this country and play two nights at London's top venue. America loves them and London is determined to love them too. The seal of approval has been struck.

The audience is an accurate reflection of the band's across-the-board appeal. Last year's punk jostle with this year's mods and last decade's hippies. Cubby boys with their shirts off and eight pints tucked away inside their bulging bellies dance drunkenly in the aisles. Everyone is on his feet from the start of the set to the very end... and to anyone who supported the band from the early days this seems nothing less than justice.

But even Stewart Copeland, one times Sounds drum reviewer, couldn't have known, in his supreme confidence about the band's long term prospects, that the rise of bassist Sting as a film star and popular hero would coincide so fortuitously with America's embracing of The Police as The Acceptable Face Of The British New Wave, with its carbon copy implications for Britain. But these lads leant a long ago that if you've got it, you should flaunt it.

So Sting is very much the frontman, Copeland and guitarist Andy Summers very much the backing group tonight. Look at him out there basking in the glory, not to mention the three spotlights that track his every move lest we should miss a single twitch of his perfectly formed features. And the act is very much the same; only the shades have been changed to protect the innocent.

As a performing unit, The Police are almost immaculate. Not quite, not tonight anyway because a lot of the time Andy's guitar isn't as loud as it should be and the snare drum is too loud, the result being a distinct bias towards Sting's wailing vocals and the thrum-thrum of his bass guitar. But then perhaps that's intentional. Sting, after all, is the star. He gives us what we want.

"Eeooaa, eeooaa,eeooaa." You want tribal chants? We got plenty. They fill out the numbers nicely, see; bring a touch of style, a certain je ne sais quoi to that distinctive ethnic style (don't call it white reggae - people might be offended).

You want musicianship? We got plenty of that. Andy Summers' understated, almost lazy guitar work is as much an essential characteristic of the sound as Sting's powerful falsetto. Copeland's drumming draw heavily on the particular syncopations of reggae and exploits to the full the gadgetry and gimmickry with which a successful percussionist can surround himself these days.

But somehow, despite the set's blend of new material and golden oldies like 'Roxanne' and 'Can't Stand Losing You', both classics of the genre, I find I can't entirely dispel the impression that to a large extent, the band are simply going through the motions. Try as I might, I couldn't detect any real emotion behind tonight's performance. Perhaps it's all happened too fast for them and they're having to resort to a safe formula in order to cope.

I'd like to believe otherwise, because I'm as much a sucker for their comfortably universal appeal as the next man, but what am I supposed to think, when the biggest change I can detect since I witnessed their first appearance at CBGBs a year ago is that they're louder now and have a bigger lighting rig?

I mean, does Andy still enjoy doing his northern monologue in the middle of 'Be My Girl'? To me it's all getting a bit too much like a later Marx Brothers movie where Groucho is the real star but Chico always gets to do one piano number and Harpo always gets to do one harp number.

The Police are capable of a lot, but on the strength of this show, their spirit of adventure seems to be taking something of a backseat while their record sales do the driving down a rather safe and predictable path.

© Sounds by Tony Mitchell (with thanks to Dietmar)

Tour List


Tour Dates for the Tour


04/28/80Newcastle
04/19/80Hannover
04/17/80Amsterdam
04/16/80Rotterdam
04/15/80Brussels
04/14/80Paris
04/11/80Barcelona
04/08/80Lyon
04/06/80Berlin
04/04/80Turin
04/03/80Reggio Emilia
04/02/80Milan
03/31/80Athens
03/30/80Athens
03/28/80Cairo
03/26/80Bombay
03/24/80Brisbane
03/23/80Sydney
03/22/80Sydney
03/21/80Sydney
03/19/80Perth
03/17/80Adelaide
03/15/80Melbourne
03/14/80Melbourne
03/13/80Canberra
03/12/80Sydney
02/29/80Christchurch
02/27/80Hong Kong
02/26/80Hong Kong
02/20/80Kyoto
02/19/80Osaka
02/18/80Nagoya
02/17/80Tokyo
02/15/80Tokyo
02/14/80Tokyo
02/08/80Honolulu
02/03/80Vancouver
02/03/80Portland
02/02/80Vancouver
02/01/80Seattle
01/31/80Salt Lake City
01/30/80Denver
01/26/80New Orleans
01/25/80Memphis
01/24/80Madison
01/22/80Ann Arbor
01/21/80Cleveland
01/20/80Buffalo
01/11/80Hamburg
12/22/79London
12/20/79Leicester
12/19/79London
12/18/79London
12/18/79London
12/17/79Brighton
12/16/79Southampton
12/15/79Birmingham
12/13/79Bridlington
12/12/79Glasgow
12/11/79Deesside
12/10/79Leeds
12/07/79Dusseldorf
12/05/79Bremen
12/04/79Aachen
12/03/79Paris
12/01/79Philadelphia
11/30/79Ithaca
11/29/79New York City
11/27/79Boston
11/24/79San Francisco
11/22/79Hollywood
11/21/79Riverside
11/20/79San Diego
11/19/79San Pedro
11/17/79Montreal
11/16/79Toronto
11/14/79Buffalo
11/13/79Pittsburgh
11/11/79Youngstown
11/10/79Detriot
11/09/79Chicago
11/08/79Milwaukee
11/07/79St. Paul
11/06/79De Kalb
11/04/79Lawrence
11/03/79Tulsa
11/02/79Dallas
11/01/79Houston
10/31/79Austin
10/28/79Orlando
10/27/79Orlando
10/26/79Miami
10/19/79Davidson
10/17/79Marietta
10/15/79Nashville
10/14/79Tuscaloosa
10/12/79Atlanta
10/11/79Columbia
10/09/79Virginia Beach
10/08/79Washington
10/06/79Brown's Mills
10/05/79Passaic
10/04/79Hartford
10/03/79Albany
10/02/79Roslyn
09/30/79Providence
09/29/79New York City
09/28/79New York City
09/27/79New York City
09/23/79London
09/22/79London
09/21/79Brighton
09/19/79Cardiff
09/18/79Swansea
09/16/79Leicester
09/15/79Oxford
09/14/79Southampton
09/13/79Birmingham
09/11/79Blackburn
09/10/79Derby
09/07/79Voorburg
09/04/79Wiesbaden
09/03/79Munich
09/01/79Hamburg
08/24/79Reading
08/17/79Bilzen