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The Police - Ghost in the Machine (Remastered) (CD)

Ghost in the Machine (Remastered)
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4.7 out of 5.0 stars 10 Ratings (10 Reviews)

Album Details: Ghost in the Machine (Remastered)

Release Date:03/04/2003
Label:Universal Japan
UPC:4988005454317

Other Available Formats: Ghost in the Machine (Remastered)

User Reviews: Ghost in the Machine (Remastered)

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    A great "cocaine Lp"

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Jun 4, 2005

    Pros: songs, energy, experimentation

    Cons: Sting self-dubs harmonies a bit profusely

    Usually, post-fame 'cocaine albums' totally suck (Oasis anyone?) But here, fusing an increasingly coke-headed band with a technically gifted new producer somehow resulted in a unique, alluring balance. Uncontainable energy meets pea-soup te...xture. Very cool. Read more Less

  • Overall:

    Good, but not as good as the first 3

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Sep 18, 2001

    A good CD, but the only real standout song is the excellent Every Little Thing She Does is Magic

Pro Reviews: Ghost in the Machine (Remastered)

  • All Music Guide

    For their fourth album, 1981's Ghost in the Machine, the Police had streamlined their sound to focus more on their pop side and less on their trademark reggaerock. Their jazz influence had become more prominent, as evidenced by the appearance of saxophones on several tracks. The production has more of a contemporary '80s sound to it (courtesy of Hugh Padgham, who took over for Nigel Gray), and Sting proved once and for all to be a master of the pop songwriting format. The album spawned several hits, such as the energetic "Spirits in the Material World" (notice how the central rhythms are played by synthesizer instead of guitar to mask the reggae connection) and a tribute to those living amid the turmoil and violence in Northern Ireland circa the early '80s, "Invisible Sun." But the best and most renowned of the bunch is undoubtedly the blissful "Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic," which topped the U.K. singles chart and nearly did the same in the U.S. (number three). Unlike the othe...r Police releases, not all of the tracks are stellar ("Hungry for You," "Omegaman"), but the vicious jazzrocker "Demolition Man," the barely containable "Rehumanize Yourself," and a pair of albumclosing ballads ("Secret Journey," "Darkness") proved otherwise. While it was not a pop masterpiece, Ghost in the Machine did serve as an important stepping stone between their more direct early work and their more ambitious latter direction, resulting in the trio's exceptional blockbuster final album, 1983's Synchronicity. - Greg Prato, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

The Police

Nominally, the Police were punk rock, but that's only in the loosest sense of the term. The trio's nervous, reggaeinjected pop/rock was punky, but it wasn't necessarily punk. All three members were considerably more technically proficient than the average punk or new wave band. Andy Summers had a precise guitar attack that created dense, interlocking waves of sounds and... Read more