It has a certain Sting to it
Singers would have given Lorde their Grammy spot
TORONTO — If Sting and Shaggy had their way, singer Lorde would have been given their performing slot at the recent Grammy Awards.
The English rock legend and the Jamaican dance hall reggae star performed together at last month’s show to promote their upcoming album, 44/ 876. They also appeared in a comedic bit with host James Corden, and Sting presented the song- of- the- year award.
Meanwhile, Lorde wasn’t asked to perform solo that night, even though she was the only female nominee for album of the year.
“That really surprised me, that an artist who was up for ( album) of the year didn’t get a slot, and I can’t quite understand why that would have happened. But of course we didn’t know that,” Sting said in a phone interview.
“If she’d told us that, we would have said, ‘ Please take our spot, we don’t need it,’ ” added the 16- time Grammy Award winner.
Shaggy said he was sitting with Lorde at Clive Davis’s pre- Grammys party but “had no idea” she hadn’t been asked to perform solo.
“I knew she was up for ( album) of the year. I just thought ( letting her perform solo) would have been the natural thing to do, but we didn’t know,” said the singer behind such hits as Oh Carolina and It Wasn’t Me. “They just invited us to sing and we came and did our thing and took the opportunity to do our new song.”
This year’s Grammys drew criticism for a lack of female representation.
Sting said he and Shaggy “didn’t have much to do with” the amount of screen time they got.
“They just threw us on there,” said the former Police frontman. “We were happy with the real estate. It was fun.”
44/ 876 is due out April 20. Sting and Shaggy said they’d love to tour together; they just need to figure out logistics.
The numbers in the album title represent the country codes of the U. K. and Jamaica. Jamaica is the setting for the video for the first single, Don’t Make Me Wait.
The video is intended to “showcase the culture, the warmth of the people, the energy, the magic of the country,” said Shaggy.
That magic is still there, despite recent reports of a state of emergency declared in certain areas in Jamaica amid a rise in violent crime, he added.