Acoustic Live in Newcastle

Acoustic Live in Newcastle is the second live album released by Sting. It was recorded and released shortly after the studio album The Soul Cages, at the Buddle Arts Centre in Newcastle upon Tyne, England, on 20 April 1991. The album includes four tracks from The Soul Cages, as well as a cover of the Bill Withers song "Ain't No Sunshine".

Acoustic Live in Newcastle
Live album by
ReleasedNovember 1991
Recorded20 April 1991, Buddle Arts Centre, Newcastle-upon-Tyne
GenreJazz, Pop
LabelA&M
ProducerHugh Padgham
Sting chronology
The Soul Cages
(1991)
Acoustic Live in Newcastle
(1991)
Ten Summoner's Tales
(1993)

Background

Acoustic Live in Newcastle was only released as a limited edition box set in the United Kingdom, Germany, Australia, and Japan, and is therefore much sought-after by fans. The venue where the album was recorded is near Sting's birthplace, and the show was an intimate, closed performance for friends, family, and other invited guests. The sound quality is excellent as is typical of Sting recordings. Sting used select musicians from the Soul Cages tour, including Northumbrian smallpipe artist Kathryn Tickell.

Box set features

The box set of Acoustic Live in Newcastle includes an 89-page book entitled The Illustrated Lyrics that features visual interpretations of several Sting songs by artist Roberto Gligorov. The art is in different styles, including comic book art.

Track listing

  1. "Mad About You" (Sting)
  2. "Ain't No Sunshine" (Withers)
  3. "Island of Souls" (Sting)
  4. "The Wild Wild Sea" (Sting)
  5. "The Soul Cages" (Sting)

These recordings were also released as B-sides to the "Seven Days" CD single (tracks 1-2 on one version, tracks 3-5 on another).

Credits

gollark: Financial incentives are especially good if you want people to do potentially boring/unpleasant-in-some-way work, for long periods.
gollark: Yes, that is good.
gollark: No. It does help, though.
gollark: I mean, their economic worth, *basically* yes.
gollark: It disincentivizes doing more.
  • Sting.com A review of the entire show, included unrecorded songs.
  • Stingoop.com Release details at "Sting out of print"
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.