57th & 9th
57th & 9th is the twelfth solo studio album by English singer-songwriter Sting, released on 11 November 2016 by A&M and Interscope Records.[1][2] Named for the intersection of West 57th Street and Ninth Avenue in Manhattan, New York City—a route Sting traversed daily to reach the recording studio—the album represents his return to pop and rock songwriting after more than a decade emphasizing jazz, classical, and musical theater projects.[1][3] Produced by Martin Kierszenbaum, it comprises ten tracks, including lead single "I Can't Stop Thinking About You," and draws inspiration from events such as the death of David Bowie and concerns over climate change, resulting in a collection noted for its urgent, guitar-driven energy and lyrical potency.[4][3] The record debuted at number eight on the US Billboard 200 chart, reached the top ten in several European countries, and has sold over 600,000 copies worldwide, spawning a supporting tour that showcased intimate theater and arena performances.[5][6][7]Background
Development and inspiration
Following the 2014 release of The Last Ship, a musical soundtrack project that diverged from his earlier pop-rock catalog, Sting sought to revive the high-energy rock style associated with his Police era, marking a deliberate shift after over a decade without a comparable album. This motivation emerged after his 2003 release Sacred Love, during which he explored classical interpretations (as in 2009's If on a Winter's Night...) and theatrical works, but he later reconsidered his 2013 statement dismissing further rock songwriting in favor of personal, band-oriented expression.[8][9] Sting's daily routine in New York City provided foundational inspiration, with the album's conceptualization drawing from his routine crossings of the 57th Street and 9th Avenue intersection en route to his studio, capturing the city's dynamic pulse amid urban navigation. This local immediacy intertwined with global catalysts, including the 2015 Bataclan theater attacks in Paris and ensuing refugee movements, alongside 2016 political shocks like Brexit and the U.S. presidential election, fostering a heightened awareness of societal fragility.[10][11] The deaths of contemporaries such as David Bowie in January 2016 and Prince in April 2016 intensified personal reflections on mortality and rock's vitality, while environmental threats like climate change underscored thematic urgency, prompting Sting to compose with uncharacteristic speed over roughly ten weeks rather than his typical open-ended approach. These elements converged to drive an impulsive creative surge, prioritizing raw expression over prolonged refinement.[11][12][13]Title significance
The title 57th & 9th derives from the intersection of West 57th Street and Ninth Avenue in Manhattan's Hell's Kitchen neighborhood, a location Sting traversed daily while walking to the recording studio during the album's creation in 2016.[1] [14] This geographical reference symbolizes the album's spontaneous genesis, as Sting described crossing the junction en route to sessions that yielded the project.[11] Sting has emphasized the title's reflection of routine urban navigation amid creative output, tying it directly to the New York studio environment without broader symbolic overlays in his verified statements.[10] The choice underscores a return to rock-oriented improvisation, contrasting his prior jazz and classical explorations, as the proximity facilitated collaborative energy with musicians like guitarist Lyle Workman.[15]Composition
Musical style
57th & 9th marks Sting's return to a rock-oriented sound after preceding works emphasizing jazz and classical elements, featuring prominent guitar riffs, dynamic drumming, and bass lines reminiscent of his 1980s output with the Police.[1] The album's instrumentation centers on electric guitars providing fizzing, energetic textures, rollicking drum patterns that drive the tempo, and fluid bass grooves that underpin the rhythmic foundation.[16] These elements evoke a live-band immediacy, with production choices highlighting organic interplay over layered orchestration, drawing from 1970s and 1980s rock conventions such as punchy choruses and arpeggiated guitar figures without overt retro styling.[17] Tracks like "I Can't Stop Thinking About You" exemplify the album's upbeat pop-rock core through bluesy rock guitar counterpoint, percussive propulsion, and driving bass rhythms akin to Police-era grooves.[17] [18] In contrast, "Heading South on the Great North Road" shifts to balladry with acoustic guitar-led arrangements and a restrained, folk-inflected pace, incorporating subtle rhythmic inflections that nod to reggae-tinged roots while maintaining a rock framework.[17] [19] This blend underscores the album's genre influences, prioritizing rhythmic vitality and instrumental directness over experimental abstraction.[20]Lyrics and thematic content
The lyrics of 57th & 9th explore themes of mortality, personal obsession, urban transience, and global humanitarian crises, often blending introspective narratives with activist impulses. Sting has described the album's overarching motif as one of "travel and motion," reflecting a restless search for meaning amid life's impermanence. This is evident in tracks like "I Can't Stop Thinking About You," where lyrics grapple with aging and the elusive pursuit of inspiration, portraying the creative process as an obsessive hunt akin to tracking elusive prey.[14] In "50,000," Sting confronts mortality through a tribute to recently deceased musicians including David Bowie, Leonard Cohen, and Prince, written in the week following Prince's death on April 21, 2016. The song enumerates "50,000 voices" lost to time, evoking a collective historical reflection on cultural icons' fragility rather than a direct 9/11 reference, though its elegiac tone underscores broader human transience without delving into causal origins of death.[21] Similarly, "Petrol Head" delves into personal introspection via automotive metaphors, depicting an adrenaline-fueled escape—"Lay down, and rest your head / Stretch your body across my bed / Just close your eyes, I'll take you there"—symbolizing a lover's obsessive drive, yet revealing underlying tensions between thrill-seeking autonomy and relational dependency.[22] Activist themes emerge in songs addressing geopolitical strife, such as "The Empty Chair," co-written with J. Ralph for the 2016 documentary Jim: The James Foley Story about the American journalist beheaded by ISIS in Syria on August 19, 2014. Sung from Foley's perspective, the lyrics plead for recognition of absent victims—"If I fall on the journey / And I miss my home / Is there an empty chair for me / Where I used to be"—highlighting the refugee crisis's human cost, though the approach prioritizes empathetic portrayal over analysis of conflict's root causes like ideological extremism or failed state interventions.[21] "Inshallah," meaning "God willing" in Arabic, similarly invokes the European migrant crisis of 2015–2016, drawing from scenes of overcrowded boats, but its choral invocation risks simplifying complex migrations driven by war and economics into a call for passive compassion.[23] Sting's songwriting process for the album emphasized forcing completion through disciplined routines, such as writing in cold environments to capture ephemeral sparks, yet this yields occasional preachiness in global-themed tracks, where celebrity advocacy—rooted in personal witnessing rather than systemic policy—may amplify awareness without addressing causal realism, such as the inefficacy of lyrical pleas in altering entrenched geopolitical incentives. Personal narratives, like urban reflections in "Heading South on the Great North Road," contrast with these by rooting in autobiographical causality, avoiding romanticized victimhood and instead tracing individual agency amid societal flux.[24] This duality reveals unresolved tensions: introspective songs prioritize self-examination, while activist ones lean toward moral signaling, potentially diluting focus on verifiable drivers of human conflict over emotional appeals.[8]Production
Recording process
The recording sessions for 57th & 9th occurred primarily in three studios situated in New York City's Hell's Kitchen neighborhood during 2016.[14][25] Sting commuted daily to these facilities on foot, carrying his guitar and traversing the intersection of West 57th Street and 9th Avenue, which directly influenced the album's nomenclature.[1] The process emphasized rapidity and improvisation, with the bulk of the work completed in mere weeks to preserve an unrefined, energetic essence over elaborate orchestration.[26][27] Producer Martin Kierszenbaum adopted a minimalist methodology, prioritizing sparse arrangements that highlighted live-band dynamics and immediate musical interactions among collaborators.[1][28] This approach marked a departure from prior productions, fostering a rock-oriented vitality absent in Sting's preceding releases.[1] Subsequent adjustments addressed format-specific requirements, such as adaptations for vinyl mastering and the inclusion of bonus material in deluxe variants, though core tracking remained anchored in the initial New York captures.[27]Key personnel and contributions
Sting performed lead vocals, bass guitar, and additional guitar parts across the album, while also co-producing to align the recordings with his vision of energetic, rock-driven arrangements.[29][1] Martin Kierszenbaum, Sting's manager, co-produced all tracks except one, focusing on raw, impulsive takes to capture a spontaneous rock feel, and contributed keyboards and organ on select songs.[29][1] The core instrumental support featured longtime collaborator Dominic Miller on guitar for multiple tracks, delivering melodic and rhythmic foundations suited to the album's pop-rock style.[29][1] Guitarist Lyle Workman provided additional guitar work, including co-writing credits on songs like "Down, Down, Down," enhancing the rock backbone with versatile session contributions.[30] Drummer Zach Jones handled percussion on at least one track, such as "Petrol Head," supporting the album's driving rhythms, while other drummers like Vinnie Colaiuta and Josh Freese contributed to various cuts for dynamic variation.[30][4] Notable guest inputs included Jerry Fuentes on guitar and vocals for "Heading South on the Northern Route," adding a raw edge, and Sting's son Joe Sumner on backing vocals for "Petrol Head."[29] The Last Bandoleros provided backing vocals on tracks like "50,000," integrating Tex-Mex influences under shared management with Sting.[1] Engineers such as Donal Hodgson and Clif Norrell handled primary recording duties at studios including Avatar in New York, ensuring fidelity to the live-band energy.[29] Robert Orton mixed the tracks, and Bob Ludwig mastered the final product for release on November 11, 2016.[29]Release and promotion
Singles and marketing
The lead single from 57th & 9th, "I Can't Stop Thinking About You", was released digitally on September 2, 2016, serving as an uptempo rock track to signal Sting's return to pop-rock roots after over a decade.[31] This was followed by "50,000" on September 23, 2016, a guitar-driven song inspired by the deaths of musicians like David Bowie and Prince, further building anticipation through its raw energy and thematic reflection on mortality.[32] [33] "The Empty Chair", co-written with J. Ralph, functioned as a promotional single tied to the HBO documentary Jim: The James Foley Story, addressing themes of loss and captivity; it earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Song in 2017, amplifying visibility via Sting's live performance at the Oscars on February 26, 2017.[34] [35] Marketing efforts emphasized Sting's rock revival narrative through music videos for the lead single, webisodes previewing the recording process, and targeted interviews, including an October 21, 2016, appearance on AOL's BUILD Series where Sting highlighted the album's urgent songwriting amid global events like Brexit and the Bataclan attack.[36] [37] Pre-order campaigns on platforms like Amazon and the official store integrated these elements to generate early buzz, with sequential single drops spaced roughly three weeks apart to sustain momentum toward the November 11 release.[38] The album launched in multiple formats to target diverse buyers and incentivize physical purchases: standard and deluxe digital/CD editions, 180-gram black vinyl, limited-edition blue vinyl, and a super deluxe box set featuring bonus tracks, an exclusive DVD of live performances, and collectible prints, which aimed to drive collector-driven initial sales through scarcity and added value.[39][40][2]Commercial rollout
57th & 9th was released on November 11, 2016, through Interscope Records, Cherrytree Records, and A&M Records, marking Sting's first full-length rock album in 13 years following Sacred Love in 2003.[41][38] The rollout occurred simultaneously across global markets, with standard editions available in CD and digital download formats, alongside physical vinyl pressings on 180-gram heavyweight discs in gatefold sleeves.[30][41] Deluxe CD versions included three bonus tracks, while limited-edition blue vinyl variants were offered in select regions including the UK and US. Initial market metrics indicated strong uptake, with the album selling over 600,000 copies worldwide during 2016.[6] Availability emphasized major territories such as the US and UK, where vinyl formats catered to renewed interest in analog media.[42][43]Critical reception
Praise and achievements
Critics praised 57th & 9th for its energetic return to rock roots, the first such full effort from Sting in 13 years since Sacred Love in 2003, emphasizing guitar-driven tracks that evoked a vibrant, live-wire intensity. AllMusic highlighted the album's "sharply crafted songs" that build "a head of steam" on selections like "I Can't Stop Thinking About You," with insistent pulses and riffs reminiscent of Synchronicity-era Police energy, crediting the studio band's dynamic contributions including guitarist Lyle Workman.[44] The Los Angeles Times lauded the "taut, scruffy, even punky" sound, full of "snarling guitars and hurtling tempos" that delivered straightforward melodies with raw propulsion.[45] Rolling Stone appreciated Sting "flex[ing] [his] rock muscles," marking a welcome shift from lute-infused experiments to more immediate, muscular rock.[46] A key achievement was the nomination of "The Empty Chair"—co-written by Sting and J. Ralph for the 2016 documentary Jim: The James Foley Story—for Best Original Song at the 89th Academy Awards on February 26, 2017.[47] Sting performed the poignant ballad acoustically at the ceremony, amplifying its tribute to journalist James Foley and hostages held by ISIS.[34] While aggregate critic scores averaged 67 on Metacritic—indicating generally favorable but mixed professional reception—user ratings skewed more positively at 57% favorable, reflecting stronger fan endorsement for the album's rock vitality as Sting's most commercially and stylistically potent solo release in over two decades.[48][49]Criticisms and shortcomings
Critics noted that 57th & 9th often exhibited a ponderous quality, particularly as Sting delved into weightier themes, resulting in tracks that felt overly serious and lacking in dynamism.[46] The Guardian characterized the album's rock elements as "Wembley-sized plodding," portraying its arena-scale pacing as cumbersome and deficient in urgency, exemplified by the awkward execution of "Pretty Young Soldier."[18] Several reviewers highlighted a dated sensibility, with echoes of 1980s stylistic and thematic tropes pervading the material, such as in "50,000," which evoked a "strong whiff of the 1980s" in its approach to global concerns.[18] This reliance on familiar formulas was seen as limiting innovation, with songs like "I Can’t Stop Thinking About You" and "If You Can’t Love Me" drawing direct parallels to earlier Police-era compositions without injecting fresh energy.[18] In activist-oriented tracks addressing issues like climate change and refugee crises, such as "Inshallah," the presentation was critiqued as more mournful than incisively analytical, potentially skirting deeper causal examination in favor of emotional resonance.[18] Overall, the album was faulted for a polished safety that diluted the sharper edge of Sting's Police work, yielding a "limp return to rock" rather than a revitalized solo statement.[18][46]Commercial performance
Chart positions
The album 57th & 9th debuted and peaked at number 9 on the US Billboard 200 chart on December 3, 2016, spending two weeks in the top 50.[5][50] In the United Kingdom, it peaked at number 15 on the Official Albums Chart, with seven weeks on the chart.[51]| Country | Peak position |
|---|---|
| France | 5 |
| Belgium (Wallonia) | 4 |
| Netherlands | 7 |
| Sweden | 6 |
| Belgium (Flanders) | 8 |
Sales figures and certifications
In its release year of 2016, 57th & 9th sold 600,000 copies worldwide.[53] In the United States, the album debuted with 28,000 equivalent album units, encompassing traditional sales, track equivalent albums, and streaming equivalent albums.[54] No gold or platinum certifications were awarded by major industry bodies such as the RIAA, BPI, or BVMI, consistent with its overall sales trajectory falling short of thresholds in those markets (500,000 units for RIAA gold, 100,000 for BPI gold, and 200,000 for BVMI gold).[55]Touring and live performances
57th & 9th Tour
The 57th & 9th Tour was Sting's world tour supporting his 2016 album 57th & 9th, spanning 104 concerts across 41 countries from February to October 2017.[56] It opened on 1 February 2017 at the Commodore Ballroom in Vancouver, Canada, with an initial North American leg emphasizing intimate club and theater venues before expanding to arenas and amphitheaters.[57] Subsequent legs included Europe starting in March, a return to North America in summer, and extensions to Asia and Latin America.[58] Sting performed with a compact four-piece rock band configuration, featuring longtime collaborator Dominic Miller on guitar, Rufus Miller on guitar and backing vocals, and Josh Freese on drums, reviving a guitar-driven format distinct from his prior jazz-influenced outings.[7] Venues varied in scale, from capacity-limited spots like the Aragon Ballroom in Chicago (March 3) and The Fillmore in Philadelphia (March 11) to larger arenas such as Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Connecticut (March 9), and outdoor sites including Saratoga Performing Arts Center (August 30).[59][60][61] Sets typically opened with the album track "Heading South on the Great North Road" and integrated staples like "I Can't Stop Thinking About You" and "50,000" alongside Police-era classics such as "Synchronicity II" and "Spirits in the Material World," maintaining a high-energy pace without strict chronological sequencing.[62] European dates, including L'Olympia in Paris (April 13), followed similar structures amid the tour's progression to broader international routing.[63] The tour concluded its European segment on 3 August 2017 with shows in Colmar, France, and Uelzen, Germany.[64]Live recordings and extensions
A live album titled 57th & 9th: Live From Chicago was released digitally on March 3, 2017, featuring recordings from Sting's performances at the Chicago Theatre on February 13–14, 2017, during the 57th & 9th Tour.[65] This fan-exclusive release, later issued on 12-inch vinyl on August 18, 2017, includes a mix of tracks from the studio album—such as "Heading South on the Great North Road" and "I Can't Stop Thinking About You"—interwoven with Police-era staples and solo hits, preserving the tour's high-energy rock arrangements and audience interaction.[66] Tracks from 57th & 9th continued to feature in Sting's setlists during the My Songs Tour, which spanned 2019 to 2024 across over 150 dates worldwide. Songs like "Heading South on the Great North Road" and "50,000" appeared in approximately 20–30% of shows, often rearranged for the tour's emphasis on career-spanning material, evidencing the album's songs' adaptability and sustained performance viability beyond the initial promotional cycle.[67] In August 2025, PBS affiliate WTVP aired Sting: Live at the Olympia, a concert special filmed during the 57th & 9th Tour at Paris's Olympia venue on November 12, 2016, commemorating the Bataclan reopening.[68] The broadcast, premiering on August 16, 2025, at 10:30 PM ET, showcased full tour renditions of album tracks alongside classics, extending archival access to the era's live interpretations for television audiences.[69]Legacy and impact
Awards and nominations
"The track 'The Empty Chair', co-written by Sting and J. Ralph for the HBO documentary Jim: The James Foley Story, received a nomination for Best Original Song at the 89th Academy Awards on February 26, 2017.[35][47] Sting performed the piano ballad acoustically with guitar accompaniment during the ceremony, marking his fourth such nomination in the category.[34] The song did not win the award, which went to 'City of Stars' from La La Land.[35] No Grammy Award nominations were received by the album or its tracks at the 59th Annual Grammy Awards in 2017, despite Sting's prior 17 wins across his career.[70] The album's release aligned with a period of renewed creative output for Sting, but it garnered no additional major industry honors such as Brit Awards or similar recognitions tied directly to 57th & 9th.[71]"Cultural and musical influence
The release of 57th & 9th marked Sting's return to a guitar-driven rock sound after over a decade focused on lute-infused and classical projects, reinvigorating his live repertoire with energetic, Police-esque tracks that blended seamlessly with earlier hits. During the subsequent 57th & 9th Tour, setlists incorporated up to four songs from the album, such as "I Can't Stop Thinking About You" and "Petrol Head," alongside staples like "Roxanne" and "Every Breath You Take," fostering a high-energy rock atmosphere that appealed to long-term fans seeking a departure from his experimental phases.[62][72] This integration helped sustain audience retention, as evidenced by tour reviews praising the "guitar-driven" delivery and career-spanning mixes that evoked Sting's rock origins without alienating core listeners.[58] Thematically, the album's motifs of resilience amid global upheaval—drawing from events like the 2015 Bataclan attack in "50,000" and broader meditations on mortality influenced by the deaths of David Bowie, Prince, and Lemmy—echoed post-2016 discourses on personal and societal endurance, though without spawning direct emulations in other artists' works.[73] While the title nods to the Manhattan intersection near the recording studio, evoking New York's post-9/11 grit for some interpreters, it did not catalyze wider cultural conversations tying urban resilience to rock narratives.[1] Despite these internal career effects, 57th & 9th exerted limited broader influence on the rock genre, lacking verifiable citations, covers, or stylistic adoptions by subsequent musicians, in contrast to Sting's earlier Police-era innovations that shaped new wave and punk derivatives. Reviews noted its competent revival of rock muscles but critiqued it as nostalgic rather than paradigm-shifting, aligning with mixed reception that did not elevate it to the enduring impact of cultural touchstones like Bowie's late works.[46][18] This underscores a pattern where veteran returns often prioritize artist reinvigoration over genre-wide ripples, particularly absent data on downstream artistic borrowings.Track listing
Standard edition
The standard edition of 57th & 9th features 10 tracks, all primarily composed by Sting.[44]| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | "I Can't Stop Thinking About You" | Sting | 3:30[41] |
| 2. | "50,000" | Sting | 4:17[41] |
| 3. | "Down, Down, Down" | Sting | 3:48[41] |
| 4. | "One Fine Day" | Sting | 3:14[41] |
| 5. | "Pretty Young Soldier" | Sting | 3:06[41] |
| 6. | "Petrol Head" | Sting | 3:32[41] |
| 7. | "Heading South on the Great North Road" | Sting | 3:18[41] |
| 8. | "If You Can't Love Me" | Sting | 4:34[41] |
| 9. | "Inshallah" | Sting | 4:56[41] |
| 10. | "The Empty Chair" | Sting | 2:49[41] |