Dubai Telegraph - Sting finds fractured modern music scene 'quite odd'

EUR -
AED 4.184807
AFN 72.928132
ALL 93.948008
AMD 419.56817
ANG 2.040159
AOA 1045.485843
ARS 1687.793052
AUD 1.654166
AWG 2.051095
AZN 1.933925
BAM 1.955057
BBD 2.295698
BDT 140.428482
BGN 1.926753
BHD 0.429742
BIF 3391.881238
BMD 1.139497
BND 1.475459
BOB 7.893312
BRL 5.898837
BSD 1.139767
BTN 107.857675
BWP 15.44774
BYN 3.341374
BYR 22334.140497
BZD 2.292259
CAD 1.622029
CDF 2592.35535
CHF 0.922372
CLF 0.026658
CLP 1049.192366
CNY 7.741685
CNH 7.741759
COP 3937.451995
CRC 519.695662
CUC 1.139497
CUP 30.19667
CVE 110.228431
CZK 24.255162
DJF 202.970882
DKK 7.474513
DOP 67.945074
DZD 151.758515
EGP 56.110201
ERN 17.092454
ETB 182.441973
FJD 2.561304
FKP 0.85991
GBP 0.861693
GEL 3.008524
GGP 0.85991
GHS 12.904927
GIP 0.85991
GMD 83.752993
GNF 9991.466055
GTQ 8.695657
GYD 238.418811
HKD 8.935645
HNL 30.498811
HRK 7.538002
HTG 149.025329
HUF 356.233528
IDR 20399.274652
ILS 3.395074
IMP 0.85991
INR 107.855724
IQD 1493.152222
IRR 1567947.822786
ISK 144.009172
JEP 0.85991
JMD 179.581755
JOD 0.807874
JPY 185.088451
KES 147.519107
KGS 99.648929
KHR 4587.437828
KMF 492.262918
KPW 1025.547667
KRW 1767.222732
KWD 0.352959
KYD 0.949877
KZT 546.179629
LAK 25563.621729
LBP 102069.042163
LKR 382.9795
LRD 206.913119
LSL 18.652221
LTL 3.364639
LVL 0.68927
LYD 7.322442
MAD 10.713045
MDL 20.140142
MGA 4835.226149
MKD 61.67325
MMK 2392.359585
MNT 4081.745568
MOP 9.207226
MRU 45.543493
MUR 53.77304
MVR 17.616485
MWK 1976.426962
MXN 19.902967
MYR 4.653721
MZN 72.756699
NAD 18.652957
NGN 1574.678344
NIO 41.944612
NOK 11.306373
NPR 172.53973
NZD 2.013406
OMR 0.438141
PAB 1.139802
PEN 3.895471
PGK 5.006251
PHP 69.925266
PKR 316.941327
PLN 4.294889
PYG 6931.578741
QAR 4.166345
RON 5.244763
RSD 117.330574
RUB 89.05205
RWF 1670.731062
SAR 4.282529
SBD 9.190089
SCR 15.67518
SDG 684.268451
SEK 11.09306
SGD 1.475506
SHP 0.85075
SLE 28.260681
SLL 23894.685765
SOS 651.37247
SRD 42.724869
STD 23585.286522
STN 24.490693
SVC 9.973472
SYP 125.95099
SZL 18.649749
THB 37.87682
TJS 10.531806
TMT 3.999634
TND 3.377916
TOP 2.743636
TRY 53.169044
TTD 7.736162
TWD 36.278622
TZS 2991.182984
UAH 51.080157
UGX 4177.54075
USD 1.139497
UYU 45.754821
UZS 13682.440125
VES 709.044603
VND 29985.862611
VUV 136.686136
WST 3.168873
XAF 655.733701
XAG 0.019858
XAU 0.000286
XCD 3.079548
XCG 2.054101
XDR 0.816149
XOF 655.727949
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.881663
ZAR 18.652141
ZMK 10256.843451
ZMW 20.545004
ZWL 366.917558
  • BCC

    -0.3900

    78.87

    -0.49%

  • CMSD

    0.0700

    21.95

    +0.32%

  • CMSC

    -0.0128

    21.68

    -0.06%

  • BCE

    -0.2100

    22.05

    -0.95%

  • RIO

    0.6800

    94.97

    +0.72%

  • RELX

    0.0950

    31.385

    +0.3%

  • NGG

    -0.7000

    83.06

    -0.84%

  • VOD

    -0.5250

    13.165

    -3.99%

  • RBGPF

    0.6100

    65.61

    +0.93%

  • RYCEF

    0.4000

    19.15

    +2.09%

  • BTI

    -0.1450

    62.595

    -0.23%

  • BP

    -0.3100

    37.04

    -0.84%

  • GSK

    -0.9700

    51.84

    -1.87%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    12.89

    +0.23%

  • AZN

    -2.3850

    188.565

    -1.26%

Sting finds fractured modern music scene 'quite odd'
Sting finds fractured modern music scene 'quite odd' / Photo: John Parra - GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP

Sting finds fractured modern music scene 'quite odd'

British singer-songwriting legend Sting finds the multiple genres and streaming platforms of the modern music scene "quite odd", but still believes in the power of song to unite people.

Text size:

In an interview with AFP, the 74-year-old with 17 Grammy Awards and sales of over 100 million albums also spoke about his worries about Artificial Intelligence (AI) as a tool for repression, as well as politicians "whose idea is to separate us all".

The former frontman of The Police was speaking in Paris ahead of the French debut of his partly biographical musical "The Last Ship", which is set in his hometown of Wallsend in northeast England.

It tells the story of the decline of shipbuilding in Wallsend's naval yards on the river Tyne and is intended as a tribute to the working class area that Sting left to pursue his music career.

- Why did you got back to your roots for this show? -

My entire life has been about escaping from what was offered to me. At a certain point, I realised that what I was given as a child was very valuable: a community, a family, a town with a purpose, and that had been taken away.

My way of repaying the debt to my community was to tell a story of an industry that was shut down by the government, and the betrayal, but also to weave in a love story.

I also think it's about many universal problems we face in society. Many communities are losing work because of technology, AI, and so I think it's highly relevant to what's going on politically.

It's an act of resistance for people, and I think we need to resist what's happening. So the play is a kind of political statement.

- Can music and art be a form of resistance? -

I think art is a machine for empathy, where we can see the world through other people's eyes, you can step into someone else's shoes and see their point of view. That is very valuable because there are politicians in the world at the moment whose idea is to separate us all, to say: 'You belong to this club and you can't come in here.'

That separation is not useful for society. It's certainly not good for peace. So I think art has a place in fighting against that trend. This is why these politicians want to get rid of art, and education, and science, and diplomacy. All of these things I personally value, and I think art is my way of contributing to that feeling.

- Why do you place so much value on work? -

Human beings need to do something with their hands. I'm very lucky. I use my hands every day to play the bass. I think human beings need to build things, to make things, to feel dignity, the sense of self.

I'm lucky that I'm just enjoying myself. But it's work. It's hard work. But I would do it for nothing. I would do it for no money. Like a fish has to swim, I have to sing.

- How do you feel about what the music industry has become? -

What I believe now is that there are separate ecologies in music. Whereas before, the number one song in France or England, everybody knew it. Now there are so many genres and so many different streaming systems. It's quite odd.

I'm lucky in that I came up at a time when it was a monoculture. Everybody knows The Police. So I still trade on that. I'm famous because of that. But now you can be successful in a niche and nowhere else. It's not better or worse, it's just different.

- Are you worried about AI and the music industry? -

I'm not afraid, yet. I think it produces an interesting facsimile, but it does not feel emotion. So what can it really give us? It can give us a trick. A mirror. I think there's a way of using it for medical research. But to actually produce art that we'd want to see or listen to, I'm not sure.

I'm worried more politically about what AI can do, the harm, in the wrong hands. Leaders who will use it for increased surveillance of society. It's a very useful tool to keep people observed and controlled. I fear that more than I fear an artistic invasion of my life.

S.Mohideen--DT