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  1. Sting wrote “They Dance Alone” when he was in Chile while he was with The Police and saw that the wives and mothers of those who had disappeared put pictures of their loved ones on clothes...

  2. The song is a metaphor referring to mourning Chilean women (arpilleristas) who dance the Cueca, the national dance of Chile, alone with photographs of their disappeared loved ones in their hands. Sting was accompanied by Eric Clapton , Fareed Haque and Mark Knopfler on guitar, by Branford Marsalis on the saxophone, and with Rubén ...

  3. The Police - Mother [Synchronicity - 1983] Sebastián San Martín. 258 subscribers. 1.1K. 142K views 11 years ago. Miembros: - Sting.

  4. The mothers and wives of "the disappeared" do this amazing thing; they pin photographs of their loved ones to their clothes and go out in groups and do this folk dance with invisible partners in front of the police station.

  5. "Synchronicity II" is a song by the Police, and the third single from their album Synchronicity. Written by lead singer and bassist Sting, it was released as a single in the UK and the US by A&M Records, reached No. 17 in the UK Singles Chart and No. 16 on the Billboard Hot 100 in December 1983.

  6. The mothers and wives of "the disappeared" do this amazing thing; they pin photographs of their loved ones to their clothes and go out in groups and do this folk dance with invisible partners in front of the police station.

  7. 18 de jul. de 2018 · It was a straightforward song by The Police’s standards: “generic” and “rule-obeying” in Sting’s words. In the lyrics, Sting takes the part of a stalker or voyeur. “Can’t you see you belong...