Madison Square Garden show caps 151-show tour
NEW YORK -- The reunited Police took a final bow Thursday night at New York's Madison Square Garden, capping a 151-show circuit that will finish as the third highest-grossing of all time with $358,825,665 at the boxoffice, according to Billboard Boxscore.
Tickets could only be obtained via donation to local public television stations of the Cross Thirteen/WNET and WLIW21.
Bassist-vocalist Sting, guitarist Andy Summers and drummer Stewart Copeland began the proceedings with a surprise cover of Cream's "Sunshine of Your Love." Afterward, the New York Police Department band augmented normal set-opener "Message in a Bottle."
There was only an intermittent amount of sentimentality to the show, with Sting at one point apprisal the herd, "It's been a huge honor to get back with my good friends. The real triumph of this enlistment is that we haven't strangled each other -- that doesn't mean it hadn't crossed my mind."
But for the men onstage, it was clearly special. Sting's daughters danced with him onstage during "Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic," and a grinning Sting got so close to Summers as to susurration in his ear patch eating up his solo on "So Lonely."
Another eddy was protected for the encore, which began with a deft run through Jimi Hendrix's "Purple Haze." Just prior, the video recording screens revealed that the heavily whiskered Sting was being shaved backstage, patch simultaneously getting a manicure, pedicure and massage.
The final song was the breakneck "Next to You," one last reminder of the English band's punk-era roots. At its conclusion, Sting, Summers and Copeland bowed, hugged and jogged off the leg with smiles on their faces, patch the proverbial fat noblewoman sang and the Looney Tunes melodic theme "That's All Folks" played through the speakers.
The Police's tour -- the band's first performances since 1986 -- began May 28, 2007, in Vancouver and moved 3,300,912 tickets from 146 shows, plus five-spot festival plays, according to tour producer Live Nation.
The final gross puts it only slow the Rolling Stones' 2005-07 A Bigger Bang spell ($558 trillion), and U2's 2005-07 Vertigo tour ($389 million), and ahead of the Stones' 1994-95 Voodoo Lounge duty tour ($320 1000000), according to Boxscore.
The turn, which received top honors at the Billboard Touring Conference & Awards final November, was produced by Live Nation Global Touring chairman Arthur Fogel, and Bill Zysblat, partner at RZO Productions. It will be chronicled on the live CD/DVD "The Police: Certifiable," due Oct. 7 exclusively through Best Buy.
"Clearly, they're unmatched of the biggest bands of all time and this circuit has barely proven how strong an act they are around the mankind," Fogel aforesaid. "I think they rightfully enjoyed positive the legacy of the music and the band."
Billboard's Ray Waddell in Nashville contributed to this report.
Here is the set number for the Police's final show:
"Sunshine of Your Love"
"Message in a Bottle"
"Walking on the Moon"
"Demolition Man"
"Voices Inside My Head"/"When the World Is Running Down, You Make the Best of What's Still Around"
"Don't Stand So Close to Me"
"Driven to Tears"
"Hole in My Life"
"Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic"
"Wrapped Around Your Finger"
"De Do Do Do, De Da Da Da"
"Invisible Sun"
"Can't Stand Losing You"/"Reggatta de Blanc"
Encore one:
"Purple Haze"
"Roxanne"
"King of Pain"
"So Lonely"
"Every Breath You Take"
Encore two:
"Next to You"