I played in a Police cover band and spent years dissecting his: tone, effects, chords and playing style, He is a great influence & inspiration to me as a musician. Andy is a phenomenal guitar player.
I still feel badly The Police didn't find their way back to each other more permanently. I never cared about solo Sting for some reason. That was a special band.
To be fair they did try in 2007 to write new music during the reunion phase, according to John Mayer. Word is they couldn't get along well enough to make it happen. There is some evidence for that as Andy Summers wrote a bunch of songs that were meant for a new Police album that ended up on his Circa Zero record.
bloody sick of all these songs being overplayed. All three of them are dealing with Stingo's betrayal trauma upon them. Stewart and Andy were injured deeply emotionally and its a pity that Stings plain won't crash.
I don’t think many people realize that Andy Summers came up with the arpeggio for the most played song in radio history “Every Breath You Take”. Yes, Sting wrote the generic chord progression and incredible lyrics. And Sting is one of the greatest songwriters in history (I’m a daft fan) but Andy’s (and Stewart’s) contributions seem under appreciated. Outstanding documentary!!
I've long said that too, that he's one of the most talented guitarists and yet somehow under-rated. His book is great; he's one of the few UK brit guitarists of his generation that wasn't interested in ripping off standard blues. He's the much needed antidote to Clapton; rather than playing long blues leads, he re-fingered chords to make them full, gorgeous, layered and (before the internet) impossible to duplicate. No one knew how to play Police songs exactly like Andy! Thanks for this!
MATE! This doc is incredible. I have been a fan of The Police since 1980. Since then, they have been my favorite band of all time. I started playing bass because of Sting. And when I got my first electric guitar, there were two songs I wanted to learn how to play first. First is my favorite song of all time, Every Breath You Take and second, Messege in a Bottle. You discussed things here that I didn't even know. Thank you so much for putting this together and sharing it!
Ive fell down the Police rabbit hole 2 weeks ago. Doesnt happen everyday that a musician has such a huge impact on me after such a short time. His playing, phrasing, choice of notes and overall musicianship is second to none. The is nothing short of a spectecular artist and he was always way ahead of his time. Some of his solos are so avant garde that i could have never come up with this stuff on the fly. One of my new heroes for sure. Cant wait to read his book.
Oh man, you said it so well! Nobody seems to be influenced by Andy, but we all know he's a genius, especially on rhythm guitar and when we got older we all at some point look at his work. And dabble in it and then you really realise how, clever the man is. The chorus sound he got from that Telecaster, in the POLICE is uniquely identifiable as Andy.
Message in a bottle, the guitar is awesome, and the lyrics made the hairs on the back of my neck as an eleven-year-old child stand up on end with a shiver running up and down my spine when I first heard it in the late seventies. The twist in the lyrics was that the person in the song was not the only person alone in the world, many more people were also very alone in this world✌...deep.
Thank you for all of this incredible content Ramon!, you truly have such a diverse and unique sound and style when you play!...I’ve learned so much from you and your channel over the years, and the time, care, and energy you put into each and every video you post is remarkable and greatly appreciated by so many!, God Bless You Ramon! Best regards my friend!
Excellent video about the legend and great job on playing those classic Police Songs, especially Every Breath You Take! That opening guitar riff always haunts and grows the back hairs in me He is definitely in my top 10 guitarists of all time, he’s the reason I still use a Telecaster and used to use a Roland Jazz Chorus
Keep in mind the piece of gear that to me is absolutely iconic to Andy’s sound on “Don’t Stand So Close to Me” and much of Ghost in the Machine and Synchronicity that pretty much NO ONE mentions: his trusty Roland G-303 guitar and Roland GR-300 guitar synthesizer (blue pedal board on the floor pictured above @ 15:34 to the left). It’s THE sound on the “Don’t Stand So Close to Me” solo as well as on “Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic”, “Omegaman”, “Synchronicity 1”, and “Walking In Your Footsteps” among others. It’s also THE guitar sound on the intro to “Secret Journey”. I really wish there were more videos or discussion concerning Andy’s use of the GR-300, both in the Police and his and Robert Fripp’s use on the Bewitched album. Also heard on King Crimson’s Discipline album as well as some of Daryl Stuermer’s work with Phil Collins, it’s a somewhat piercing, shrill 80’s guitar sound that you may have heard without recognizing it, and that, again, I truly wish were discussed more often!
Throughly enjoyed this Ramon as all your documentary videos are so wonderfully put together:) Be cool to see Mike Oldfield in the 80s guitar heros series as there's not enough in the guitar tuition world on his and great documentarys like this :-)
Thanks for the history. I’ll have to get out my old synchronicity album and give it a listen. Don’t know why I looked past Andy. He is one of the masters.
That "American Lady" was Robin Lane (Robin Lane & The Chartbusters) who introduced Andy to her friend after their divorce who Andy married. The Police were my first listening and later I found a couple RL&TC vinyl albums (Imitation Life & 5 Live) that I listened to a lot. I had no idea of the connection between the two until years later. RL&TC aren't everyone's cup of tea per sé but they were one of the first bands that had their video (When Things Go Wrong) played on MTV. The band was tight and sounded really good as a unit. I just found it really odd that during the 80s, with The Police at their height, I stumbled across two albums in the discount bins from a band I never heard of with a connection to Andy Summers, listening to both bands at the same time. I'd say both bands had an influence on my guitar playing. I still find myself playing "For You" (RL&TC) from time to time. Great video as usual. I always come here every few months to see what's new and it's almost always about someone I like and/or love. Stephen
I love The Police. Andy Summers provided a beautiful array of sounds and his beautiful arrangement of chords is heard on 'Every Breath You Take', which remains as one of the most memorable one! Listen & see the 'Police around the World' video, it's such a lovely one!
Found this video searching for Zoot Money, who is in the first part of the book; 'One Train Later' by AndySummers. Love this book, so many stories... Cool that there is now a video telling this story about before the Kevin Coyne period and of course the Police. . Thumbs up :-)
Thanks for your upload I enjoyed this, I've always said that he really is so underated as a guitarist, he is a true one off and a seriously great musician
I am actually trying to recreate Andy's sound on my Line 6 Pod Go and this was extremely helpful thank you. I could find all the effects and amp models mentioned in this video in said Pod Go. Now for the actual tweaking! This is going to be fun.
Andy is two years younger than my Mom and I'm near my mid 60's.. No idea until recently that he was 9 or 10 years older than Sting and Stewart. Freaked me out that knew Clapton and Hendrix really well.
Andy was the reason I picked up guitar to begin with, but there were *three* big names who drove those sounds, although one of them is only really being recognized now. They were Andy Summers, the Edge and Alex Lifeson. Those guys drove the effected, shimmering delayed sounds everyone else copied.
Not many people know about the Clapton, Gibson Les Paul connection. That story alone was responsible for changing the sound of rock guitar. I'd like to know what inspired Andy to aquire his Les Paul in 1965. It wasn't a popular guitar at the time.
Great Stuff ! Grew up in the 80's listening to the police and other bands at that time. Never got to see them live unfortunately.. Thanks for this !! 👍
Andy is such a true artist; injecting such art and musicality into pop hits. The Police were also a killer live band. Ramon; did you get your name from Paul Ramon? 😉. Great video!! Thank you!!
Glad Andy Summers is getting some attention-no one better to do this than you mate. The Police were so sleek and modern sounding by the time of Regatta de Blanc they made all of the 70s bands sound old fashioned and stodgy. They created the sound of the 80s, crisp metronomic drumming and clever minimalist guitar parts using 9ths and Sus chords with stereo chorus and tap tempo delays. In fact Andy may have been the first guitarist to properly exploit the notion of a 'Stereo' signal that Holdsworth, Metheny and Landau took further. His Monk and Mingus tribute albums are well worth checking out.
I would have wished there would have been more coverage of his solo work which is just astonishing. Knowing most of his body of work, the police was important no doubt, but there was so much more. He worked with legends of Jazz and Rock in his solo career. For me, from a musical point of view his body of work was even more important than with the police and showed his genius and artistry of music.
I think Andy thinks his Flanger was a chorus, or doesn’t really see the distinction. At least that’s the impression I’ve gotten from interviews. He did use the Flanger like a chorus
Cool video, however there are a couple of things that aren't quite correct: 1.) Andy's always been saying his Tele had already had all the modifications when he bought it; However, there's pre-Police footage on youtube where it still has the original 3-saddle bridge on it. 2.) It wasn't the humbucker but the bridge single-coil that eventually got replaced; Andy described in his bio 'One Train Later' how he and Sting had leaned their guitars against some kind of electrical device in their dressing room before a gig, which resulted in the bridge pick-up being dead when the time came for them to hit the stage.
When I was a youngster during The Police era, I used to think, in my innocence, that their trade-mark guitar sounds came from Andy's guitar skills, and not electronic boxes of tricks. Just saying..
I played in a Police cover band and spent years dissecting his: tone, effects, chords and playing style, He is a great influence & inspiration to me as a musician. Andy is a phenomenal guitar player.
great! what amplifier and speaker did Andy Summer use to record Message in a Bottle in the studio?
Andy had an original sound and style, Stewart was equally unique, and Sting’s voice was unlike any other - Im glad they found each other!!!
I still feel badly The Police didn't find their way back to each other more permanently. I never cared about solo Sting for some reason. That was a special band.
I did like his first solo one 'The Dream Of The Blue Turtles', but otherwise the same here!
I love all of Sting's musical works.
All three were talented in their own right and instrument. It's hard to play second fiddle when you're the best.
To be fair they did try in 2007 to write new music during the reunion phase, according to John Mayer. Word is they couldn't get along well enough to make it happen. There is some evidence for that as Andy Summers wrote a bunch of songs that were meant for a new Police album that ended up on his Circa Zero record.
bloody sick of all these songs being overplayed. All three of them are dealing with Stingo's betrayal trauma upon them. Stewart and Andy were injured deeply emotionally and its a pity that Stings plain won't crash.
Yeah Andy Summers is a great guitarist, the sound he had with The Police was like no other.
I agree!!! I love him!
Excellent!!! Andy was and is totally unique!!! The Police-stuff is all amazing and Andy's solo albums quite innovative 😊
Thanks !
I don’t think many people realize that Andy Summers came up with the arpeggio for the most played song in radio history “Every Breath You Take”.
Yes, Sting wrote the generic chord progression and incredible lyrics. And Sting is one of the greatest songwriters in history (I’m a daft fan) but Andy’s (and Stewart’s) contributions seem under appreciated.
Outstanding documentary!!
It's crazy to think Andy was 41 when Every Breath You Take and Synchronicity were world wide phenomena.
wow - thats crazy!
@@TheGuitarShow
Yeah it's mental
Andy and SRV got me through the '80s. I am still chasing his sound and style. Excellent documentary.
Thanks Glenn
SRV?
@@rossydv Stevie Ray Vaughn, ha!
Andy rocks, legendary player. Thank you for this homage.
Pleasure
Great vid. Andy Summers is one of the all time greats. His solo stuff after the Police is fantastic.
Couldn't agree more! Thanks Roger
I've long said that too, that he's one of the most talented guitarists and yet somehow under-rated. His book is great; he's one of the few UK brit guitarists of his generation that wasn't interested in ripping off standard blues. He's the much needed antidote to Clapton; rather than playing long blues leads, he re-fingered chords to make them full, gorgeous, layered and (before the internet) impossible to duplicate. No one knew how to play Police songs exactly like Andy! Thanks for this!
MATE! This doc is incredible. I have been a fan of The Police since 1980. Since then, they have been my favorite band of all time. I started playing bass because of Sting. And when I got my first electric guitar, there were two songs I wanted to learn how to play first. First is my favorite song of all time, Every Breath You Take and second, Messege in a Bottle. You discussed things here that I didn't even know. Thank you so much for putting this together and sharing it!
Andy was a huge inspiration for me when I was starting to play guitar in the 70s, loved is style@
Andy will ALWAYS be my hero!
Long life to you my friend!
Thanks
Thanks for another great video, Ramon. I'm quite a big Andy Summers fan - I'll take him over any 100 notes per second shredder any day!
Great comment - thanks!
This is really fantastic! Thank you for the video. I love Andy. Hard to believe he just turned 80. What a great guitarist and artist.
Anyone watching this who hasn't read One Train Later should do so straight away.
Agreed
Great video! The Police is one of my all time fave bands! Andy being one of my favorite guitarists of all time! Thanks for this great video!
Pleasure - Andy is such a legend!
@@TheGuitarShow Agreed!!! 😀
Yes, I'd have to agree. Absolutely first rate guitar player.
🎸🙏
Ive fell down the Police rabbit hole 2 weeks ago. Doesnt happen everyday that a musician has such a huge impact on me after such a short time. His playing, phrasing, choice of notes and overall musicianship is second to none. The is nothing short of a spectecular artist and he was always way ahead of his time. Some of his solos are so avant garde that i could have never come up with this stuff on the fly. One of my new heroes for sure.
Cant wait to read his book.
Thanks for the comment - Ill do a little lesson soon on Andy Summers for those who are not familiar with his playing! Thanks for reminding me!
I always loved Andy's inventiveness and musicality, thanks.
Me too. Pleasure!
Oh man, you said it so well! Nobody seems to be influenced by Andy, but we all know he's a genius, especially on rhythm guitar and when we got older we all at some point look at his work. And dabble in it and then you really realise how, clever the man is. The chorus sound he got from that Telecaster, in the POLICE is uniquely identifiable as Andy.
Truly one of the guitar greats, in the club alongside Rory Gallagher, Peter Green, Steve Hackett, Steve Howe and Robert Fripp. The man is class
Nice job on this documentary! Thanks!
Thanks for this. I had no idea Andy Summers had such an impressive history.
Pleasure
Great vid - thanks for doing it. I love Andy Summers' playing and sounds.
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks
Hey Ramon! Thank you for all the great info here on Andy’s number one guitar and all of his fx. I’m a big fan as well! This was extremely informative
Pleasure Lucas!
I never heard soft machine with him but the new animals was dantalions chariot ..and his sig sound started with them
Message in a bottle, the guitar is awesome, and the lyrics made the hairs on the back of my neck as an eleven-year-old child stand up on end with a shiver running up and down my spine when I first heard it in the late seventies. The twist in the lyrics was that the person in the song was not the only person alone in the world, many more people were also very alone in this world✌...deep.
great comment - thanks!
Thank you for all of this incredible content Ramon!, you truly have such a diverse and unique sound and style when you play!...I’ve learned so much from you and your channel over the years, and the time, care, and energy you put into each and every video you post is remarkable and greatly appreciated by so many!, God Bless You Ramon! Best regards my friend!
Thanks so much for a wonderful comment Paul
THANKS, THE GUITAR SHOW!
Pleasure bro
At 2:44, I am wondering if that guy second from the left is Rod Stewart.
Excellent video about the legend and great job on playing those classic Police Songs, especially Every Breath You Take! That opening guitar riff always haunts and grows the back hairs in me
He is definitely in my top 10 guitarists of all time, he’s the reason I still use a Telecaster and used to use a Roland Jazz Chorus
Thanks and I agree those Roland amps are so good
Great video! Thank you very much!
my pleasure
Keep in mind the piece of gear that to me is absolutely iconic to Andy’s sound on “Don’t Stand So Close to Me” and much of Ghost in the Machine and Synchronicity that pretty much NO ONE mentions: his trusty Roland G-303 guitar and Roland GR-300 guitar synthesizer (blue pedal board on the floor pictured above @ 15:34 to the left). It’s THE sound on the “Don’t Stand So Close to Me” solo as well as on “Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic”, “Omegaman”, “Synchronicity 1”, and “Walking In Your Footsteps” among others. It’s also THE guitar sound on the intro to “Secret Journey”.
I really wish there were more videos or discussion concerning Andy’s use of the GR-300, both in the Police and his and Robert Fripp’s use on the Bewitched album.
Also heard on King Crimson’s Discipline album as well as some of Daryl Stuermer’s work with Phil Collins, it’s a somewhat piercing, shrill 80’s guitar sound that you may have heard without recognizing it, and that, again, I truly wish were discussed more often!
Thank you! Brilliant insight into a too-much-overlooked guitarist.
Happy 80th birthday tomorrow Andy! Can’t believe it.
Throughly enjoyed this Ramon as all your documentary videos are so wonderfully put together:) Be cool to see Mike Oldfield in the 80s guitar heros series as there's not enough in the guitar tuition world on his and great documentarys like this :-)
That's an excellent idea... Let me look into it
@@TheGuitarShow Many thanks and best wishes
Thanks for the history. I’ll have to get out my old synchronicity album and give it a listen. Don’t know why I looked past Andy. He is one of the masters.
Pleasure Lance 🎸🙏
@@TheGuitarShow
Now I need to get out my Telecaster!!
Andy is 3 years older than Clapton... despite the fact that he is an "80s" guitarist... never give up on your dreams.
so true
Absolute precision Your description !
Andy The King !
Thank you
My favorite guitar player of all time!!!
That "American Lady" was Robin Lane (Robin Lane & The Chartbusters) who introduced Andy to her friend after their divorce who Andy married. The Police were my first listening and later I found a couple RL&TC vinyl albums (Imitation Life & 5 Live) that I listened to a lot. I had no idea of the connection between the two until years later. RL&TC aren't everyone's cup of tea per sé but they were one of the first bands that had their video (When Things Go Wrong) played on MTV. The band was tight and sounded really good as a unit. I just found it really odd that during the 80s, with The Police at their height, I stumbled across two albums in the discount bins from a band I never heard of with a connection to Andy Summers, listening to both bands at the same time. I'd say both bands had an influence on my guitar playing. I still find myself playing "For You" (RL&TC) from time to time.
Great video as usual. I always come here every few months to see what's new and it's almost always about someone I like and/or love.
Stephen
Thanks for the info Stephen
I love The Police. Andy Summers provided a beautiful array of sounds and his beautiful arrangement of chords is heard on 'Every Breath You Take', which remains as one of the most memorable one! Listen & see the 'Police around the World' video, it's such a lovely one!
Great video, Ramon. Andy definitely seems to have lived an interesting life!
Thanks Henry 🙏🎸
Andy is the man and have met him many many times over the years. Seen him play live many times with his solo jazz shows.
Found this video searching for Zoot Money, who is in the first part
of the book; 'One Train Later' by AndySummers. Love this book,
so many stories...
Cool that there is now a video telling this story about before the
Kevin Coyne period and of course the Police.
.
Thumbs up :-)
Thanks for this!
The primary inspiration for my learning to play many years ago
Thanks for your upload I enjoyed this, I've always said that he really is so underated as a guitarist, he is a true one off and a seriously great musician
I am actually trying to recreate Andy's sound on my Line 6 Pod Go and this was extremely helpful thank you. I could find all the effects and amp models mentioned in this video in said Pod Go.
Now for the actual tweaking! This is going to be fun.
Excellent documentary. Thanks for posting.
Would you do one on Johnny Marr? Thanks
Andy is two years younger than my Mom and I'm near my mid 60's.. No idea until recently that he was 9 or 10 years older than Sting and Stewart. Freaked me out that knew Clapton and Hendrix really well.
Very nice & documented. Can you believe he will be 78 at the end of the month ?? Forever young... ;-)
Yes he is older than Keith Richards!
Still can't quite believe Andy is 80!
He has more hair now than I did at 21.
Brilliant Guitarist you do history guitar on Andy Summers
Another very interesting video Ramon 👍
Thanks Derek 🙏🎸
Thanks Ramon! Andy is one of my favorites. It's really his fault I own so many time based pedals!
So cool 🙏🎸
What amp and cabinet andy summer records studio "massage in a bottle"? Marshall 4x12 celestion?
Id guess at this point it was a 100watt marshall + 4x12 cab
Andy was the reason I picked up guitar to begin with, but there were *three* big names who drove those sounds, although one of them is only really being recognized now. They were Andy Summers, the Edge and Alex Lifeson. Those guys drove the effected, shimmering delayed sounds everyone else copied.
Thanks for this great comment!
Great. Thanks. Can someone help me and give me the name of the reggae song played at 30th second ? Many thanks in advance
Agree. A lot of guys were influenced by his sound. Never made the Def Lepard connection before.
Not many people know about the Clapton, Gibson Les Paul connection. That story alone was responsible for changing the sound of rock guitar. I'd like to know what inspired Andy to aquire his Les Paul in 1965. It wasn't a popular guitar at the time.
Criminally underrated player
Ok, so you have a superb songwriter/ bass player & drummer, but being a 3 piece, that still left a massive space that Andy more than filled. A master.
Great documentary as usual!
Thank you brother
@@TheGuitarShowWell deserved.. If didn't really like your work, I wouldn't have referred you to you know who ..
@@TheGuitarShow I am also a huge A Summers fan.. The reason I got my self a tele style guitar and a Roland Jazz chorus amp is due to him..
Thank you ❤
Great Stuff ! Grew up in the 80's listening to the police and other bands at that time. Never got to see them live unfortunately.. Thanks for this !! 👍
The same as you Davey! Thanks
Bang on Ramon,Happy festivus \m/
Thanks Clive happy Christmas 🙏🤶🎸
one of the greatest guitarists of all time, in any genre
Still my guitar hero.
Minee too
Hey Ramon- any more on this series? He would be great for an FX history documentary as well!
Andy is such a true artist; injecting such art and musicality into pop hits. The Police were also a killer live band.
Ramon; did you get your name from Paul Ramon? 😉. Great video!! Thank you!!
Thanks.. Ah as in Paul McCartney?
@@TheGuitarShow yes! And did you know that’s how punk band The Ramones got their name too; in homage to Sir Paul’s nickname...😉
Besides the single repeat echo, does anyone know how Andy set his delays that are being referred to around 13.59? Specifically the multi-tapped ones
What about the roland jazz chorus in the last picture?
Yes thats also called a JC-120 - great amps!
Guitar heroes of the 80s? You mean of all time! ❤️
Exactly!
What an Fing great video I so pleased that you found AS he is the most pronounced awesome guitarist dot forget the animals
Thanks for the history lesson. Always thought Andy is brilliant. Wonder how classical guitar changed the way he played?
Glad Andy Summers is getting some attention-no one better to do this than you mate. The Police were so sleek and modern sounding by the time of Regatta de Blanc they made all of the 70s bands sound old fashioned and stodgy. They created the sound of the 80s, crisp metronomic drumming and clever minimalist guitar parts using 9ths and Sus chords with stereo chorus and tap tempo delays. In fact Andy may have been the first guitarist to properly exploit the notion of a 'Stereo' signal that Holdsworth, Metheny and Landau took further. His Monk and Mingus tribute albums are well worth checking out.
Many thanks indeed - Im honoured!
Great job Ramon ;-)
Thank you! Cheers!
he inspired me to play guitar!
Andy❤nWe always Love you
Since i was 11 years❤❤❤❤❤😢😊😅❤🎉🎉🎉
Super
Thanks
Can you please do a video on John McGeoch of Siouxsie & The Banshees and Magazine he's very important to post punk
What was the second song played? Please tell me the name!
is it bring on the night?
I don’t think that’s the one 😰
The marker is 0:28!
@@KunalSinghMusic "so Lonely" ... My favourite ever song.. Look for the live version pre '85
Thank you very much!! I’ll check it out for sure 😃
I would have wished there would have been more coverage of his solo work which is just astonishing. Knowing most of his body of work, the police was important no doubt, but there was so much more. He worked with legends of Jazz and Rock in his solo career. For me, from a musical point of view his body of work was even more important than with the police and showed his genius and artistry of music.
Musical genius
Well said
Very Interesting
Thanks 🙏🎸
Great post 👍I love Andy and he seems like a cool nice man .? But what do I know 😩😩👍
Pleasure Judd 🎸🙏
Great Guitarist the Police were a Great band .
Agreed Will 🙏
I've always thought Andy was heavily influenced by John Martyn. His book, One Train Later, is probably the most interesting rock bio I have read.
fantastic guitar player, love his stuff with the police
Will we be expecting a Johnny Marr episode in the future?
yes hes coming very soon
@@TheGuitarShow right on man
First album I ever had was Synchronicity
Good man
I think Andy thinks his Flanger was a chorus, or doesn’t really see the distinction. At least that’s the impression I’ve gotten from interviews. He did use the Flanger like a chorus
great comment - thanks
Cool video, however there are a couple of things that aren't quite correct: 1.) Andy's always been saying his Tele had already had all the modifications when he bought it; However, there's pre-Police footage on youtube where it still has the original 3-saddle bridge on it. 2.) It wasn't the humbucker but the bridge single-coil that eventually got replaced; Andy described in his bio 'One Train Later' how he and Sting had leaned their guitars against some kind of electrical device in their dressing room before a gig, which resulted in the bridge pick-up being dead when the time came for them to hit the stage.
Thanks for this
@@TheGuitarShow - No worries 😀
Meravigliosi
Thanks
Thanks dude! Very informative vid. Perfect music porn 🖤 Love the Andy!
When I was a youngster during The Police era, I used to think, in my innocence, that their trade-mark guitar sounds came from Andy's guitar skills, and not electronic boxes of tricks.
Just saying..
I agree!
that kid must be proud to sell his guitar to andy!
this is great work a 27 year old says!