New "Police" Album May Be In Works

Andy Summers Says 30th Anniversary Tour Has Sharpened Group's Skills





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Stewart Copeland, left, Sting, center, and Andy Summers, right, have not discussed a new album in detail.  (AP Photo)



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(AP)  Will the curtain close again on The Police when their reunion tour ends? Andy Summers says the fractious trio could have a new album in them.
"It's sort of like living with the elephant in the room. I
would see it as a challenge, to make an absolutely brilliant pop
album at this stage of our career, and that would be something
quite remarkable," Summers, 64, said.
The Police broke up in 1984 following five albums and a
relationship-wrecking world tour. Their hits include "Roxanne"
and "Every Breath You Take."
Since then, frontman Sting, 56, has sustained solo stardom.
Guitarist Summers and drummer Stewart Copeland, 55, have pursued
their own, much more low-key recording projects.
They reunited for a 30th-anniversary world tour that began in
May and is scheduled to run into next year.
Summers said the trio has yet to discuss in any detail the
prospect of recording a new album together. But he said the tour
had sharpened their group skills - and, four months into the
reunion, creating something new together would make sense.
The Police performed a sold-out concert Saturday in Dublin's
82,000-seat Croke Park that received praise from critics and the
largely 30-something crowd alike.
Summers - whose percussive guitar style is an important part of
The Police's sound-fusing pop, punk, jazz and reggae - said the
tour is a full-time workout.
"Right now it is just the tour and holding everything together,
mentally, physically and musically. The tour and the traveling and
the playing and the tension you have to keep to do it every night
is all-devouring," he said. "It is just too much."
Summers spoke to reporters in a central Dublin park, where he
was signing copies of "I'll Be Watching You: Inside The Police
1980-1983," his personal photographic record of the band's glory
years. Last year he published his autobiography, "One Train Later:
A Memoir."






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