The Argentine rock idol Charly García and the former leader of the British group The Police, Sting, announced on Monday a collaboration that will see the light in October 2025.
“I am doing it in my way,” Garcia wrote in a publication shared with the official Sting account on the Instagram social network.
The publication includes a video of a fixed plane of a window and the light of the street that filters inside an apartment through an American blind. With the overwhelming sound of background traffic, the video announces: “Charly García & Sting. October 2025”.
According to the local press, the collaboration between the two would result in a joint song, which would be published during the first days of next month.
The publication of both on Instagram quickly obtained almost fifty thousand ‘like’ and more than two thousand comments, including one of Sting himself, who called Garcia “brother”, and others from musicians such as Fito Páez and Pedro Aznar.
During Sting’s last visit to Buenos Aires, last February, he shared with Garcia a talk between Camarines and then a dinner with friends.
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The match occurred in the framework of the Sting 3.0 tour, an intimate devars in which the British reviews the great hits of his career in the company of guitarist Dominic Miller and drummer Chris Maas.
Throughout his career, Sting pushed the limits of musical innovation, with songs like ‘Roxane’, ‘Message in A Bottle’, ‘Walking on the Moon’, ‘So Lonely’, ‘Englishman in New York’ and ‘Event Breath you take’.
Recognized for his revolutionary work as a solo artist and as the vocalist and composer of the group The Police, he won 17 Grammy Awards and sold one hundred million albums worldwide.
In 1988, Sting and García shared the stage in the Human Rights already, Amnesty International.
García, author of historical songs such as ‘Demoling Hotels’, ‘I pray for you’ and ‘They continue to hit us down’, he has dozens of studio albums behind them, including fundamental pieces of Latin American rock as ‘modern clicks’ (1983) and ‘Say no More’ (1996).
Last month, the Argentine musician was recognized with a title Honoris Causa from the University of Buenos Aires (UBA), an institution that stressed that “Charly García was a key piece of the Argentine, Latin American and Hispanic Rock Movement.”
With EFE information.
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