Sting 3.0

Jul
21
2025
Rattvik, SE
Dalhalla

We need to talk about the love for Sting...


Sting is back in Dalhalla for the third time.


How should I start when I am now going to write about Sting again, as I have done so many times? I may, like my male colleagues who have reviewed Håkan Hellström or Bruce Springsteen, do so with a great deal of self-confidence. No bravado. Still, I must address the complication.


People, colleagues in my opinion-making industry, think that my positive attitude towards Sting is a gimmick. Faithful readers of Expressen's culture page know that my love for Sting is well-founded and sincere. In 2004, the then head of culture, Per Svensson, who sadly passed away a few weeks ago, wrote a column by the head of culture in my defense for "outing" myself as a Sting fan. Svensson wrote that "The contempt for Sting is a fairly typical expression of the ritualized self-contempt of the homework-reading middle class." When Sting received the Polar Prize, I appeared on a P1 program with the headline “We must talk about the Sting hate.” Explain that to the audience in Dalhalla, someone.


Because last night we, the homework-reading middle class, gathered to eat refined pop at the bottom of the large Dalhalla limestone quarry in Rättvik, a stop on a seemingly endless world tour. With him, Sting has his permanent guitarist and wing man, guitarist Dominic Miller, who some time ago had an acclaimed gig at Fasching in Stockholm with his own jazz quartet. Chris Maas shines behind his drum kit and it is of course not just because he has assembled his instruments with the discerning eye of a Michelin chef. 


So there are three musicians, a set-up that is deceptively similar to The Police, who play songs from Sting's enormous song catalog, half of which comes from The Police era. And it simply sounds insanely good. 


Sting's songs, well-composed with verses, choruses and bridges, always open up in an unexpected direction. Many, actually excellent, pop songs today lack a bridge. They just go on and on. No elevation, no opening, no relaxation. Sting writes songs with the aim of surprising and in a musical tradition with roots in folk songs, the Beatles, Bach and jazz. When the listener expects something – he gives them something else. It is admirably difficult to categorize popular music. In Dalhalla performed by incredible instrumentalists. 


The mobile cameras go up during “Englishman in New York”, “Shape of my heart” and “Every breath you take”. The audience loves it. Other songs creep up on you, like the fateful “Never coming home” from the album “Sacred love” (2003) and the unfathomable “A thousand years” from the album “Brand new day” (1999). Goosebumps. Sting’s music is never boring. The chord progressions, the melodies, the riff, the bass lines, the arrangements, everything is refined. And he has kept his bright, penetrating, slightly raspy voice. The stomach support too.


But something has actually happened. Sting has never been an audience tamer but rather a bit of an introvert on stage. But already during the first song he invites the audience to sing along, and then it keeps going. Sting feels more open than he usually does. He chats a little. Flirts. At the end he even makes heart hands towards the audience. Everyone stands up and sings.


We need to talk about the love of Sting.


(c) Expressen by Gunilla Brodrej

Comments
0

PHOTOS

img
img