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Don't Stand So Close to Me

"Don't Stand So Close to Me"
Don't Stand So Close to Me UK.jpg
1980 single cover
Single by The Police
from the album Zenyatta Mondatta
B-side "Friends"
"A Sermon" (US 7")
Released 19 September 1980
January 1981 (US)
Format Vinyl record (7")
Recorded 1980
Genre
Length 4:02
Label A&MAMS 7564
Writer(s) Sting
Producer(s)
The Police singles chronology
"The Bed's Too Big Without You"
(1980)
"Don't Stand So Close to Me"
(1980)
"De Do Do Do, De Da Da Da"
(1980)
Alternative cover
US 7-inch cover
"Don't Stand So Close to Me '86"
Don't Stand So Close to Me 86.jpg
Single by The Police
from the album Every Breath You Take: The Singles
B-side "Don't Stand So Close To Me" (Live)
Released October 1986 (1986-10)
Format 7"/CD single
Recorded 1986
Genre
Length 4:51
Label A&M
Writer(s) Sting
Producer(s)
The Police singles chronology
"King of Pain"
(UK, 1984)
---
"Wrapped Around Your Finger"
(US, 1984)
"Don't Stand So Close to Me '86"
(1986)
"Can't Stand Losing You (live)"
(1995)
"Don't Stand So Close to Me"
Single by Glee cast
from the album Glee: The Music, Volume 2
B-side "Young Girl"
Released 2009
Format Digital download
Recorded 2009
Genre Pop
Label Columbia
Writer(s) Sting
Producer(s) Ryan Murphy, Adam Anders
Glee cast singles chronology
"I'll Stand by You"
(2009)
"Don't Stand So Close to Me" / "Young Girl"
(2009)
"Crush"
(2009)

"Don't Stand So Close to Me" is a hit single by the British rock band The Police, released in September 1980 as the lead single from their third album Zenyatta Mondatta. It concerns a schoolgirl's crush on her teacher which leads to an affair, which in turn is discovered. The Police won the 1982 Grammy Award for Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal for this song.

The music and lyrics of the song were written by the lead singer of The Police, Sting. The song deals with the mixed feelings of lust, fear and guilt that a female student has for a school teacher and vice versa, and inappropriateness leading to confrontation which is unravelled later on in the song. The line "Just like the old man in that book by Nabokov" alludes to Vladimir Nabokov's novel Lolita, which covers somewhat similar issues. After being criticised for rhyming "cough" with "Nabokov," Sting replied, "I've used that terrible, terrible rhyme technique a few times. Technically, it's called a feminine rhyme – where it's so appalling it's almost humorous. You don't normally get those type of rhymes in pop music and I'm glad!"

Before joining The Police, Sting had previously worked as an English teacher. Sting said of the song in 1981:

I wanted to write a song about sexuality in the classroom. I'd done teaching practice at secondary schools and been through the business of having 15-year-old girls fancying me – and me really fancying them! How I kept my hands off them I don't know... Then there was my love for Lolita which I think is a brilliant novel. But I was looking for the key for eighteen months and suddenly there it was. That opened the gates and out it came: the teacher, the open page, the virgin, the rape in the car, getting the sack, Nabokov, all that.

In 1993, however, he said of the song's inspiration, "You have to remember we were blond bombshells at the time and most of our fans were young girls so I started role playing a bit. Let's exploit that." in a 2001 interview for the concert DVD ...All This Time, Sting denied that the song is autobiographical.


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Wikipedia

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