Stewart Copeland’s Wild Concerto: How animals became his latest bandma | Music | Entertainment
The voice on the end of the phone is deceptively friendly. âNice to speak to you again, Garry,â Stewart Copeland says, pausing a beat before adding, âI havenât forgotten what you wrote about my band 48 years agoâŚâ Ridiculous. It was 47 years. But whoâs counting? Criticising The Police was like firing peanuts at a Panzer tank. The world-conquering trio Copeland formed in 1977 notched up five multi-platinum studio albums, 18 hit singles and five Number Ones â including Every Breath You Take, the most played song in radio history. Since then, square-jawed Stewart has written film scores, operas, and ballets. His latest album stars animals â actual wildlife, not badly behaved rockânârollers. He’s gone from De Do Do to De Do Dolittle.
Stewart, 72, rated one of the worldâs best drummers, has never lost his combative edge. An articulate enthusiast for free enterprise, he was one of the few 80s stars who dared to question the music industryâs left-wing orthodoxy, taking part in a 1986 debate for Melody Maker with Red Wedge â a pro-Labour pop star led campaign. âIt was like taking candy from a baby,â he tells me. âI challenged Paul Weller on socialism, I asked him if he paid his crew as much as he paid the band.â As an ardent advocate for capitalism, Virginia-born Stewart is not sold on his tariff-crazed President. When I mention Trumpâs name, he repeats âI shall not be triggeredâ seven times as a calming mantra.Â
Copeland and Sting never saw eye-to-eye on politics but he swears he only broke one of the singerâs ribs accidentally in a play-fight. There is less creative friction with his latest band mates who include an owl, a hyena, six croaking frogs, two wolves, and a white throated sparrow. His Wild Concerto album fuses his orchestral compositions with authentic animal sounds recorded in the field by The Listening Planetâs Martyn Stewart, nicknamed âThe David Attenborough of Soundâ. âI had the easy job. I built the music around these amazing noises â Martyn had to go out on his hands and knees, getting bitten by all-comers, to get them.â Thereâs atmospheric jungle-scape backdrop; rhythmic, repetitive bird calls, and melodic âdivas, like white-throated sparrows; their singing isnât strictly pitched, but the human brain creates a pitch, so when I put a flute next to a red-breasted nuthatch, the brain combines the two.â
Copelandâs first score for Francis Ford Coppolaâs 1983 film Rumble Fish married music with street sounds, dogs barking, glass breaking, and traffic. Heâs scored more than sixty since, including Oliver Stoneâs Wall Street, but stopped twenty years ago. âFilm studios and the rat race drove me nuts,â he says.
Stewartâs parents were Miles Copeland, a key US World War II intelligence officer who co-founded the CIA, and Aberdeen-born Lorraine, an archaeologist working for British Intelligence. The family moved to Cairo when he was two months old, then Beirut. At 14, they were evacuated to London. âI grew up there â I came from the woodâŚSt Johnâs Wood,â he jokes. âIâm from the wrong side of the tracks â the Bakerloo line tracks. Iâm more of a âteabagâ than you think.â Boarding at Millfield public school in Somerset on a scholarship, he says, âI was âthe Americanâ and had to speak up for myself as an American. Then the accent was an affectation, now itâs real.â Unlike his British accents which he acknowledges âall sound like Dick Van Dyke nowâ.
Stewart was 12-years-old when his band the Black Knights first performed at the US Embassy beach club in Beirut, playing tracks by The Animals and James Brownâs I Feel Good. At their next show, at the British Embassy beach club, he noticed 15-year-old Janet. The attraction was instant but one-sided. He recalls, âShe was completely out of my league â until I started banging the drums. She was dancing to a groove I was making. I was a scrawny kid, but behind the drums I was an 800-lb silverback.â His career path was set. At 22, Copeland joined faltering British prog rock band Curved Air, later marrying singer Sonja Kristina. âAs I told Sonja, I was the last rat to jump onto a sinking ship, but we had a great time on tour, we always went down a storm.â
After they disbanded in late 1976, Stewart started putting The Police together. He replaced his first guitarist Henry Padovani with Andy Summers in August 1977 but still needed a bassist. Sonja reminded him of an amazing chap theyâd seen in Newcastle jazz band, The Last Exit â Gordon Sumner, aka Sting. The Policeâs punky debut single Fall Out was greeted with indifference in February 1977, and times were tough. Copeland was living off his savings from Curved Air, hiring amps and trucks for gigs. A Wrigleyâs TV ad inspired The Policeâs blond look. Booked as a wild rock star, Sting volunteered Andy and Stewart as the band. âTo make us look wilder they peroxided and spiked up our hair. A cool look. The ÂŁ50 they paid each of us kept us going for a month.â
Copeland had a minor hit with Donât Care as Klark Kent in 1978, appeared on Top Of The Pops with Sting cavorting in a gorilla mask. âIâm glad you brought that up,â he says, grinning broadly. âThanks to me, his first TV appearance was in a gorilla mask miming a bass line. I had the first laugh, but he got the last laugh â by writing all those hits for The Police.â
After signing to A&M, the trio broke through with Roxanne months later. Within five years they were headlining New Yorkâs Shea Stadium, playing to 60,000 people. âIt didnât feel like five years, it seemed like a lifetime,â says Stewart. âEvery little step was incremental.â They were booked to support Alberto Y Lost Trios Paranoias on a UK tour when Canât Stand Losing You went Top 3. âThe first night it was jammed. Their manager said âWe shouldâve charged you for thisâ, but they soon realised who the crowd had come for. We went out as a support act and all we heard was the shrill, high-pitched scream of teenage girls. If piranhas could make a sound, thatâs what theyâd sound like.â Their toughest gig was in America, when the Ramones opened for them. âThey came out and just burnt it up. We were cold, tired, and hungry after seven hours of driving. We just couldnât get it up that night.â An Italian show was delayed by a riot. âOur dressing room was underground and the tear gas still reached us; but we did go on stage eventually.â
The Police clocked off in 1984, not properly re-uniting until their 2007 Reunion Tour which grossed more than their entire previous income. âI take pride in the Police with those two mother-******s, Iâm very proud of that. Opera is more obscure. I learned how to write operas from doing film work. Thereâs a synergy between music and drama. I love operatic singing. My wife Fiona says âWhy are you writing opera? None of our friends like operaâ. But opera houses are beautiful. Itâs all about art. Their business model is to lose money.â
Copelandâs compositions range from concertos to 2021âs Grammy-winning new age album Divine Tides with Ricky Kej. If his music career had crashed, heâd have probably been a journalist â he had reviewed instruments for Sounds in the 70s. But writing advertising jingles was more lucrative. His Mountain Dew ads for the Super Bowl paid âsix figures for 60 secondsâ. BlackBerry paid him a fortune for a five-note earworm. âThe pay for each note would have put my kid through private school for a year.â He has seven children, three with Fiona. Whatâs he like to live with? âIâm an interrupter â something my kids beat me up about all the time. The boys are older. Theyâre heard my jokes. I love my eldest daughterâs first boyfriend. He still laughs at them.â Heâll be performing his Wild Concerto in London on April 22 and is working on one final opera before finishing two ballets. He wants to conduct more, heâs writing a book, The Young Rock Starâs Handbook, and will bring his spoken word tour back here this Autumn. âDoing stuff keeps you fit. I still want to burn the house down,â he says. âI still want to bang s***!â
Stewart Copelandâs Wild Concerto is released on Friday April 18 on Platoon Records.Â