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2016 studio album by Sting

57th & 9th is the twelfth solo studio album by British singer-songwriter Sting, his first rock album in 13 years, released on 11 November 2016.[2][3] The album sold over 600,000 copies worldwide in 2016[4] and contains "The Empty Chair" which earned Sting his 4th nomination for Best Original Song at the 89th Academy Awards (but lost to "City of Stars" from La La Land).

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Álbums chronology

The Last Ship
The Last Ship
20/9/2013
57th & 9th
57th & 9th
11/11/2016
44/876
44/876
20/4/2018

57th & 9th

Sting

2016 Estudio
  • Fecha Lanzamiento: 11 Noviembre 2016 · Fecha Grabación: Enero 2016 -
    Discográfica: Cherrytree, Interscope, A&M · Estudio de grabación: Avatar, New York City; Sear Sound, New York City · Productor: Martin Kierszenbaum
    01
    I Can't Stop Thinking About You
    StingSting • 2016
    3:31
  • 02
    50,000 (new Version)
    StingSting • 2016
    4:17
  • 03
    Down, Down, Down
    StingSting • 2016
    3:48
  • 04
    One Fine Day (new Version)
    StingSting • 2016
    3:14
  • 05
    Pretty Young Soldier
    StingSting • 2016
    3:06
  • 06
    Petrol Head
    StingSting • 2016
    3:32
  • 07
    3:18
  • 08
    If You Can't Love Me
    StingSting • 2016
    4:34
  • 09
    Inshallah
    StingSting • 2016
    4:56
  • 10
    The Empty Chair
    StingSting • 2016
    2:50
  • 11
    3:38
  • 12
    Inshallah (berlin Sessions Version)
    StingSting • 2016
    4:58
  • 13
    Next To You (live At Rockwood Music Hall)
    StingSting / The Last Bandoleros • 2016
    2:54
  • Singles


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    Singles

    The Last Ship
    The Last Ship
    20/9/2013
    57th & 9th
    57th & 9th
    11/11/2016
    44/876
    44/876
    20/4/2018
    57th & 9th
    Studio album by
    Released11 November 2016 (2016-11-11)
    RecordedSummer 2016[1]
    Studio
    GenrePop rock
    Length37:05
    LabelCherrytree, Interscope, A&M
    ProducerMartin Kierszenbaum
    Sting chronology
    The Last Ship
    (2013)
    57th & 9th
    (2016)
    44/876
    (2018)
    Singles from 57th & 9th
    1. "I Can`t Stop Thinking About You"
      Released: 1 September 2016
    2. "50,000"
      Released: 22 September 2016

    Review

    2016 studio album by Sting

    57th & 9th is the twelfth solo studio album by British singer-songwriter Sting, his first rock album in 13 years, released on 11 November 2016.[2][3] The album sold over 600,000 copies worldwide in 2016[4] and contains "The Empty Chair" which earned Sting his 4th nomination for Best Original Song at the 89th Academy Awards (but lost to "City of Stars" from La La Land).

    Leer más

    Background and release

    The album was recorded over a period of three months. Sting has said of the tight deadline: "Artificially reintroducing that pressure gave the album a kind of urgency it wouldn`t have had otherwise."[5]

    The album title is a reference to the New York intersection Sting crossed every day to get to Avatar Studios in Hell`s Kitchen where much of the album was recorded.[2][3]

    From late 2015 and throughout the first half of 2016, images of Sting working in the studio were periodically published across his various social media outlets. The resultant album was eventually announced on 18 July 2016. In a teaser video published subsequently, Sting described the album as having a spontaneous feel, featuring "a lot of rock `n` roll" with themes of searching, travelling, the road and the pull of the unknown.[6]

    Music and lyrics

    Sting wrote "50,000" the week of Prince`s death, and in memory of several famous musicians who died in late 2015 and 2016: Prince, David Bowie, Glenn Frey, and Lemmy.[7]

    "One Fine Day" is a plea for sanity regarding anthropogenic climate change.[8]

    According to Rolling Stone magazine on 11 November 2016, Sting "offers a kind of travelogue through his own musical past, from the Chaucer-y balladry of `Heading South on the Great North Road` to `If You Can’t Love Me,` a mordantly Kafkaesque echo of the jazz rock Sting made in the Eighties."[8]

    "Inshallah" is a Middle East-tinged refugee`s prayer.[8][9] The Arabic word "Inshallah" means "If God wills", or in Sting`s words: "If it`s God`s will then it shall be".[9]

    "The Empty Chair" is a song inspired by American journalist James Foley who was kidnapped and killed by Daesh (a.k.a. Islamic State of Iraq or ISIS).[10]

    Promotion

    Sting debuted the studio version of "I Can`t Stop Thinking About You" – and performed the song live – on 31 August 2016 in the Red Bull Sound Space at L.A. radio station KROQ.[7][11]

    On 22 September 2016, Sting released for free on YouTube the audio version of "50,000".[12]

    Sting performed the song "One Fine Day" live for the first time 6 October 2016 on Deutscher Radiopreis.[13]

    On 27 October 2016, Sting released for free on YouTube an acoustic version of "I Can`t Stop Thinking About You".[14]

    On 3 November 2016, Sting released for free on YouTube the audio version of "Petrol Head".[15]

    Sting performed two shows on 9 November 2016 at Irving Plaza, a small (only one thousand-people capacity) music venue in Manhattan, New York City, playing songs from 57th & 9th for the first time live in concert: a "57th & 9th iHeartRadio Album Release Party" show (scheduled at 8PM, indeed occurring at 7PM) and a Sting.com Fan Club Member Exclusive Show (scheduled at 11PM, indeed occurring at 10PM).[16][17]

    Backed by a 3-piece band including Dominic Miller (guitar), Vinnie Colaiuta (drums) and Rufus Miller (guitar), Sting performed on 12 November 2016 a (one hour and a half) concert in Paris for the re-opening of the Bataclan, performing even songs from 57th & 9th.[nb 1] The Police`s former guitar player, French native Henry Padovani, joined the band on stage for "Next to You", one of the final encore.[nb 2][18][19][20]

    Supporting tour

    Sting embarked on the 57th & 9th Tour. The tour began on 1 February 2017, at the Commodore Ballroom in Vancouver.[21]

    Critical reception

    Professional ratings
    Aggregate scores
    SourceRating
    AnyDecentMusic?5.9/10[22]
    Metacritic67/100[23]
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic[24]
    The Guardian[25]
    The Independent[26]
    Rolling Stone[27]

    57th & 9th received generally positive reviews from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalised rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 67, which indicates "generally favorable reviews", based on 8 reviews.[23]

    Track listing

    Ten new tracks were announced[2][3] and officially revealed on 31 August 2016.[28]

    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    1."I Can`t Stop Thinking About You"Sting3:38
    2."50,000"Sting, Dominic Miller, Lyle Workman, Josh Freese4:17
    3."Down, Down, Down"Sting, Miller, Vinnie Colaiuta3:48
    4."One Fine Day"Sting, Miller, Workman, Freese3:14
    5."Pretty Young Soldier"Sting, Miller, Workman, Freese3:06
    6."Petrol Head"Sting, Miller, Workman, Freese3:32
    7."Heading South on the Great North Road"Sting3:18
    8."If You Can`t Love Me"Sting, Miller, Colaiuta4:34
    9."Inshallah"Sting4:56
    10."The Empty Chair"Sting, J. Ralph2:49

    Deluxe and Super Deluxe Edition bonus tracks
    No.TitleLength
    11."I Can`t Stop Thinking About You" (LA version)3:38
    12."Inshallah" (Berlin sessions version)4:58
    13."Next to You" (with The Last Bandoleros (live at Rockwood Music Hall))2:54

    Japan Tour Edition bonus tracks
    No.TitleLength
    14."Fragile" (Live at the Bataclan)4:11
    15."Message in a Bottle" (Live at the Bataclan)5:48
    16."I Can`t Stop Thinking About You" (Live at the Bataclan)3:47
    17."One Fine Day" (Live at the Bataclan)3:13
    18."Englishman in New York (Reggae Version)" (Live at the Bataclan)5:15
    19."Every Breath You Take" (Live at the Bataclan)5:30

    Personnel

    Source:[2][3]

    • Sting – vocals, bass (1–6, 8, 9), acoustic piano (4), guitars (7, 9, 10), percussion (9)
    • Martin Kierszenbaum – organ (1–5, 8, 11), acoustic piano (4), Mellotron (5), keyboards (9, 12)
    • Rob Mathes – acoustic piano (8)
    • Percy Cardona – accordion (13)
    • Dominic Miller – guitars (1–9, 11, 12), 12-string guitar (3), shaker (9)
    • Lyle Workman – guitars (2, 4, 5, 6)
    • Jerry Fuentes – backing vocals (2), guitars (10, 11, 13)
    • Jean-Baptiste Moussarie – guitars (12)
    • Razan Nassreddine – zither (12), vocals (12)
    • Derek James – guitars (13)
    • Diego Navaira – bass (11), guitars (13)
    • Vinnie Colaiuta – drums (1, 3, 8, 9)
    • Josh Freese – drums (2, 4, 5, 6)
    • Zach Jones – drums (11)
    • Emilo Navaira – drums (13)
    • Rhani Krija – percussion (1, 3, 8, 11, 12)
    • Salam Al Hassan – percussion (12)
    • Accad Al Saed – percussion (12)
    • Thabet Azzawi – oud (12)
    • Nadim Sarrouh – oud (12)
    • Nabil Alchami – clarinet (12)
    • Marion Enachescu – violin (12)
    • The Last Bandoleros [Jerry Fuentes, Derek James and Diego Navaira] – backing vocals (1, 11), vocals [with Emilo Navaira] (13)

    Live Track Credits (14–19)

    • Sting – vocals, guitars, bass
    • Dominic Miller – guitars
    • Rufus Miller – guitars, backing vocals
    • Vinnie Colaiuta – drums
    • Mäel Guézel – darbuka
    • Ibrahim Maalouf – trumpet

    Production

    • Martin Kierszenbaum – producer (1–12, 14–19)
    • Jerry Fuentes – producer (13)
    • Donal Hodgson – recording (1–6, 8, 9, 12, 13)
    • Tony Lake – recording (1–13), mixing (11), additional mix engineer (14–19)
    • Clif Norrell – recording (2, 4, 5, 6)
    • Philip Krause – recording (12)
    • Thomas Dappelo – recording (14–19)
    • Thom Beemer – assistant engineer
    • Jeff Citron – assistant engineer
    • Tyler Hartman – assistant engineer
    • Richard Kinnon – assistant engineer
    • Owen Mulholland – assistant engineer
    • Grant Valentine – assistant engineer
    • Robert Orton – mixing (1–10, 12, 13), mastering (14–19)
    • Bob Ludwig – mastering (1–13)
    • Danny Quatrochi – guitar technician for Sting
    • Lawrence Azerrad – art direction, design
    • Eric Ryan Anderson – photography
    • Cherrytree Management – management

    Studios

    • Recorded at Avatar Studios and Sear Sound (New York, NY).
    • Additional recording at Rockwood Music Hall (New York, NY); Nightbird Studios (West Hollywood, CA); Emil Berliner Studios (Berlin, Germany).
    • Tracks 14–19 recorded at Le Bataclan (Paris, France).
    • Tracks 14–19 mixed at Studio De La Grande Armée (Paris, France).
    • Tracks 1–13 mastered at Gateway Mastering (Portland, ME); Tracks 14–19 mastered at Studio De La Grande Armée.

    Charts

    Certifications

    Region

    CertificationCertified units/sales

    France

    25,000[59]

    Poland (ZPAV)[60]

    2× Platinum

    40,000‡

    Summaries

    Worldwide

    600,000[4]

    ‡ Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

    2016 studio album by Sting

    57th & 9th is the twelfth solo studio album by British singer-songwriter Sting, his first rock album in 13 years, released on 11 November 2016.[2][3] The album sold over 600,000 copies worldwide in 2016[4] and contains "The Empty Chair" which earned Sting his 4th nomination for Best Original Song at the 89th Academy Awards (but lost to "City of Stars" from La La Land).

    Background and release

    The album was recorded over a period of three months. Sting has said of the tight deadline: "Artificially reintroducing that pressure gave the album a kind of urgency it wouldn`t have had otherwise."[5]

    The album title is a reference to the New York intersection Sting crossed every day to get to Avatar Studios in Hell`s Kitchen where much of the album was recorded.[2][3]

    From late 2015 and throughout the first half of 2016, images of Sting working in the studio were periodically published across his various social media outlets. The resultant album was eventually announced on 18 July 2016. In a teaser video published subsequently, Sting described the album as having a spontaneous feel, featuring "a lot of rock `n` roll" with themes of searching, travelling, the road and the pull of the unknown.[6]

    Music and lyrics

    Sting wrote "50,000" the week of Prince`s death, and in memory of several famous musicians who died in late 2015 and 2016: Prince, David Bowie, Glenn Frey, and Lemmy.[7]

    "One Fine Day" is a plea for sanity regarding anthropogenic climate change.[8]

    According to Rolling Stone magazine on 11 November 2016, Sting "offers a kind of travelogue through his own musical past, from the Chaucer-y balladry of `Heading South on the Great North Road` to `If You Can’t Love Me,` a mordantly Kafkaesque echo of the jazz rock Sting made in the Eighties."[8]

    "Inshallah" is a Middle East-tinged refugee`s prayer.[8][9] The Arabic word "Inshallah" means "If God wills", or in Sting`s words: "If it`s God`s will then it shall be".[9]

    "The Empty Chair" is a song inspired by American journalist James Foley who was kidnapped and killed by Daesh (a.k.a. Islamic State of Iraq or ISIS).[10]

    Promotion

    Sting debuted the studio version of "I Can`t Stop Thinking About You" – and performed the song live – on 31 August 2016 in the Red Bull Sound Space at L.A. radio station KROQ.[7][11]

    On 22 September 2016, Sting released for free on YouTube the audio version of "50,000".[12]

    Sting performed the song "One Fine Day" live for the first time 6 October 2016 on Deutscher Radiopreis.[13]

    On 27 October 2016, Sting released for free on YouTube an acoustic version of "I Can`t Stop Thinking About You".[14]

    On 3 November 2016, Sting released for free on YouTube the audio version of "Petrol Head".[15]

    Sting performed two shows on 9 November 2016 at Irving Plaza, a small (only one thousand-people capacity) music venue in Manhattan, New York City, playing songs from 57th & 9th for the first time live in concert: a "57th & 9th iHeartRadio Album Release Party" show (scheduled at 8PM, indeed occurring at 7PM) and a Sting.com Fan Club Member Exclusive Show (scheduled at 11PM, indeed occurring at 10PM).[16][17]

    Backed by a 3-piece band including Dominic Miller (guitar), Vinnie Colaiuta (drums) and Rufus Miller (guitar), Sting performed on 12 November 2016 a (one hour and a half) concert in Paris for the re-opening of the Bataclan, performing even songs from 57th & 9th.[nb 1] The Police`s former guitar player, French native Henry Padovani, joined the band on stage for "Next to You", one of the final encore.[nb 2][18][19][20]

    Supporting tour

    Sting embarked on the 57th & 9th Tour. The tour began on 1 February 2017, at the Commodore Ballroom in Vancouver.[21]

    Critical reception

    Professional ratings
    Aggregate scores
    SourceRating
    AnyDecentMusic?5.9/10[22]
    Metacritic67/100[23]
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic[24]
    The Guardian[25]
    The Independent[26]
    Rolling Stone[27]

    57th & 9th received generally positive reviews from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalised rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 67, which indicates "generally favorable reviews", based on 8 reviews.[23]

    Track listing

    Ten new tracks were announced[2][3] and officially revealed on 31 August 2016.[28]

    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    1."I Can`t Stop Thinking About You"Sting3:38
    2."50,000"Sting, Dominic Miller, Lyle Workman, Josh Freese4:17
    3."Down, Down, Down"Sting, Miller, Vinnie Colaiuta3:48
    4."One Fine Day"Sting, Miller, Workman, Freese3:14
    5."Pretty Young Soldier"Sting, Miller, Workman, Freese3:06
    6."Petrol Head"Sting, Miller, Workman, Freese3:32
    7."Heading South on the Great North Road"Sting3:18
    8."If You Can`t Love Me"Sting, Miller, Colaiuta4:34
    9."Inshallah"Sting4:56
    10."The Empty Chair"Sting, J. Ralph2:49

    Deluxe and Super Deluxe Edition bonus tracks
    No.TitleLength
    11."I Can`t Stop Thinking About You" (LA version)3:38
    12."Inshallah" (Berlin sessions version)4:58
    13."Next to You" (with The Last Bandoleros (live at Rockwood Music Hall))2:54

    Japan Tour Edition bonus tracks
    No.TitleLength
    14."Fragile" (Live at the Bataclan)4:11
    15."Message in a Bottle" (Live at the Bataclan)5:48
    16."I Can`t Stop Thinking About You" (Live at the Bataclan)3:47
    17."One Fine Day" (Live at the Bataclan)3:13
    18."Englishman in New York (Reggae Version)" (Live at the Bataclan)5:15
    19."Every Breath You Take" (Live at the Bataclan)5:30

    Personnel

    Source:[2][3]

    • Sting – vocals, bass (1–6, 8, 9), acoustic piano (4), guitars (7, 9, 10), percussion (9)
    • Martin Kierszenbaum – organ (1–5, 8, 11), acoustic piano (4), Mellotron (5), keyboards (9, 12)
    • Rob Mathes – acoustic piano (8)
    • Percy Cardona – accordion (13)
    • Dominic Miller – guitars (1–9, 11, 12), 12-string guitar (3), shaker (9)
    • Lyle Workman – guitars (2, 4, 5, 6)
    • Jerry Fuentes – backing vocals (2), guitars (10, 11, 13)
    • Jean-Baptiste Moussarie – guitars (12)
    • Razan Nassreddine – zither (12), vocals (12)
    • Derek James – guitars (13)
    • Diego Navaira – bass (11), guitars (13)
    • Vinnie Colaiuta – drums (1, 3, 8, 9)
    • Josh Freese – drums (2, 4, 5, 6)
    • Zach Jones – drums (11)
    • Emilo Navaira – drums (13)
    • Rhani Krija – percussion (1, 3, 8, 11, 12)
    • Salam Al Hassan – percussion (12)
    • Accad Al Saed – percussion (12)
    • Thabet Azzawi – oud (12)
    • Nadim Sarrouh – oud (12)
    • Nabil Alchami – clarinet (12)
    • Marion Enachescu – violin (12)
    • The Last Bandoleros [Jerry Fuentes, Derek James and Diego Navaira] – backing vocals (1, 11), vocals [with Emilo Navaira] (13)

    Live Track Credits (14–19)

    • Sting – vocals, guitars, bass
    • Dominic Miller – guitars
    • Rufus Miller – guitars, backing vocals
    • Vinnie Colaiuta – drums
    • Mäel Guézel – darbuka
    • Ibrahim Maalouf – trumpet

    Production

    • Martin Kierszenbaum – producer (1–12, 14–19)
    • Jerry Fuentes – producer (13)
    • Donal Hodgson – recording (1–6, 8, 9, 12, 13)
    • Tony Lake – recording (1–13), mixing (11), additional mix engineer (14–19)
    • Clif Norrell – recording (2, 4, 5, 6)
    • Philip Krause – recording (12)
    • Thomas Dappelo – recording (14–19)
    • Thom Beemer – assistant engineer
    • Jeff Citron – assistant engineer
    • Tyler Hartman – assistant engineer
    • Richard Kinnon – assistant engineer
    • Owen Mulholland – assistant engineer
    • Grant Valentine – assistant engineer
    • Robert Orton – mixing (1–10, 12, 13), mastering (14–19)
    • Bob Ludwig – mastering (1–13)
    • Danny Quatrochi – guitar technician for Sting
    • Lawrence Azerrad – art direction, design
    • Eric Ryan Anderson – photography
    • Cherrytree Management – management

    Studios

    • Recorded at Avatar Studios and Sear Sound (New York, NY).
    • Additional recording at Rockwood Music Hall (New York, NY); Nightbird Studios (West Hollywood, CA); Emil Berliner Studios (Berlin, Germany).
    • Tracks 14–19 recorded at Le Bataclan (Paris, France).
    • Tracks 14–19 mixed at Studio De La Grande Armée (Paris, France).
    • Tracks 1–13 mastered at Gateway Mastering (Portland, ME); Tracks 14–19 mastered at Studio De La Grande Armée.

    Charts

    Certifications

    Region

    CertificationCertified units/sales

    France

    25,000[59]

    Poland (ZPAV)[60]

    2× Platinum

    40,000‡

    Summaries

    Worldwide

    600,000[4]

    ‡ Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

    DISCOGRAFÍA

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