Ghost In The Machine

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (130 ratings)
Ghost In The Machine album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK
  • Artist: The Police (See All Albums by The Police)
  • Date Released: Mar 4, 2003

  • Genre: Rock/Pop, Style: Rock

  • Label: A&M

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 41:10

eMusic Review 0

Avatar Image
Wayne Robins

eMusic Contributor

Wayne Robins has been a journalist specializing in music for more than 40 years. Since his first paid assignment, reviewing the Rolling Stones 1969 Oakland show...more »

11.16.10
A bleak vision of a stark future
2003 | Label: A&M

A concept album with an iconic cover: three primitive digital-looking representations of the band members (I believe that left to right, it's Summers, Sting and Copeland). Anyway you slice it, it's a bit ahead of its time in its theme: a complaint about media overload ("Too Much Information") more than a decade before the Internet would become the centerpiece of planetary communication and knowledge. Heck, the Sony Walkman hadn't been invented yet. But the Caribbean-soul horns on the track represented a new wrinkle. "Rehumanize Yourself" was about the debilitating effects of work; though true to its time, the central image is the soul-numbing effect of "working all day in the factory." That's hardly the case in the western world these days, so it's a reminder to be careful what you wish for.

The album was recorded at AIR Studios in Montserrat, and the album's biggest hit, "Every Little Thing She Does is Magic," captures the mood of an isolated but posh Caribbean resort island, complete with steel drums. Synthesizer sounds generate reggae beach visions on the seductive opener "Spirits in the Material World." Summers gets to inject some uncharacteristic but appealing metal riffs on "Demolition Man," while "One World (Not Three)"… read more »

Write a Review 5 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

My favorite Police album

Powerpop-aholic

I love this album. My favorite song is: "Re-Humanise Yourself". I wish it had been a single so more people had heard it. The concept of this album aside, the production and themes sound current.

user avatar

Brilliant! This is art and skill.

EddieBaby

I'm in agreeement with the other reviewers, but I would add Invisible Sun to their list. Of course, all of the songs are great.

user avatar

Not Just GITM

ElectricLarry

This is another Police album that has great music overshadowed by radio hits. Check out their first three albums. All three are worth having the whole package.

user avatar

You will see light in the darkness...

EMUSIC-0032F299

Have to agree with 'schmo'. The album on the whole is great, but the last three tracks are incredibly good. I think Secret Journey is THE best Police song of all time. Everybody thinks Roxanne when they hear 'The Police'. I think Secret Journey.

user avatar

listen to the last 3

schmo

While many hits came from this CD, the last three songs are my favorite Police songs. The Omegaman, Secret Journey, and Darkness are classics - and some of the finest songs from the '80's.

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

Icon: Sting & the Police

By Wayne Robins, eMusic Contributor

It was early 1979. The Police's debut album, Outlandos d'Amour had just been released. The band was on their round of debut performances in the United States, playing such showcase clubs as the Bottom Line in Manhattan and My Father's Place in Roslyn, Long Island. Most everyone in those 300-500 seaters who saw the Anglo-American trio of Stewart Copeland on drums, Andy Summers on guitar and Gordon "Sting" Sumner on bass and lead vocals -… more »

They Say All Music Guide

For their fourth album, 1981′s Ghost in the Machine, the Police had streamlined their sound to focus more on their pop side and less on their trademark reggae-rock. Their jazz influence had become more prominent, as evidenced by the appearance of saxophones on several tracks. The production has more of a contemporary ’80s sound to it (courtesy of Hugh Padgham, who took over for Nigel Gray), and Sting proved once and for all to be a master of the pop songwriting format. The album spawned several hits, such as the energetic “Spirits in the Material World” (notice how the central rhythms are played by synthesizer instead of guitar to mask the reggae connection) and a tribute to those living amid the turmoil and violence in Northern Ireland circa the early ’80s, “Invisible Sun.” But the best and most renowned of the bunch is undoubtedly the blissful “Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic,” which topped the U.K. singles chart and nearly did the same in the U.S. (number three). Unlike the other Police releases, not all of the tracks are stellar (“Hungry for You,” “Omegaman”), but the vicious jazz-rocker “Demolition Man,” the barely containable “Rehumanize Yourself,” and a pair of album-closing ballads (“Secret Journey,” “Darkness”) proved otherwise. While it was not a pop masterpiece, Ghost in the Machine did serve as an important stepping stone between their more direct early work and their more ambitious latter direction, resulting in the trio’s exceptional blockbuster final album, 1983′s Synchronicity. – Greg Prato

more »