1 Std. 1 Min.

Stewart Copeland Broken Record with Rick Rubin, Malcolm Gladwell, Bruce Headlam and Justin Richmond

    • Musik

Anhören in Apple Podcasts
Erfordert ein Abo und macOS 11.4 (oder neuer)

Famed drummer for the Police and composer Stewart Copeland has one of the more fascinating bios in modern music. His father was a founding member of the CIA and his mom worked in British Intelligence.

After playing in the successful UK prog rock band Curved Air in the mid 70s, Stewart started a new band called the Police with bassist and lead singer, Sting—and eventually guitarist Andy Summers. Over the next decade the Police would go on to become one of the top-selling rock bands of all time, selling over 75 million records.

Last year Stewart released the book, “Stewart Copeland’s Police Diaries,” which includes his personal notes dating back to the band’s formation in 1976 through 1978, when they started to take off.

On today’s episode Bruce Headlam talks to Stewart Copeland about the first time he saw Sting play and how he was able to successfully lure him into his then non-existent band. Stewart also explains why he and Sting eventually had a musical falling out, and how the Arabic rhythms he heard growing up influenced his highly lauded drumming style.

You can hear a playlist of some of our favorite songs from Stewart Copeland and The Police HERE.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Famed drummer for the Police and composer Stewart Copeland has one of the more fascinating bios in modern music. His father was a founding member of the CIA and his mom worked in British Intelligence.

After playing in the successful UK prog rock band Curved Air in the mid 70s, Stewart started a new band called the Police with bassist and lead singer, Sting—and eventually guitarist Andy Summers. Over the next decade the Police would go on to become one of the top-selling rock bands of all time, selling over 75 million records.

Last year Stewart released the book, “Stewart Copeland’s Police Diaries,” which includes his personal notes dating back to the band’s formation in 1976 through 1978, when they started to take off.

On today’s episode Bruce Headlam talks to Stewart Copeland about the first time he saw Sting play and how he was able to successfully lure him into his then non-existent band. Stewart also explains why he and Sting eventually had a musical falling out, and how the Arabic rhythms he heard growing up influenced his highly lauded drumming style.

You can hear a playlist of some of our favorite songs from Stewart Copeland and The Police HERE.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

1 Std. 1 Min.

Top‑Podcasts in Musik

Musik ist eine Waffe – Die Geschichte von Ton Steine Scherben
radioeins (rbb)
Reflektor
Jan Müller & Studio Bummens
Urban Pop -  Musiktalk mit Peter Urban
NDR Info
Der Animus Podcast
Animus
Alben für die Ewigkeit
audiowest, Freddy Kappen, Stephan Kleiber, Dieter Kottnik
The Story of Classical
Apple Music

Mehr von Pushkin Industries

The Happiness Lab with Dr. Laurie Santos
Pushkin Industries
Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford
Pushkin Industries
Deep Cover: The Nameless Man
Pushkin Industries
Broken Record with Rick Rubin, Malcolm Gladwell, Bruce Headlam and Justin Richmond
Pushkin Industries
Revisionist History
Pushkin Industries
The Last Archive
Pushkin Industries