This page will contain external links about sting, as they become available.

Sting

Sting in Budapest, 2000

Gordon Matthew Sumner, CBE (born October 2, 1951), usually known by his stage name Sting, is an English musician from Newcastle upon Tyne. Prior to a distinguished solo career, he was the lead singer, principal composer and bassist of the 1970s/1980s rock band The Police.

Biography

Sumner was born in Wallsend, near Newcastle upon Tyne, in North-East England to Audrey (a Protestant) and Ernest Sumner (a Catholic via his own mother, Agnes White, whose father was an Irish stevedore). Ernest was a milkman, and raised his children as Roman Catholics. From an early age, Sumner knew that he wanted to be a musician. He attended St Cuthbert's grammar School, in Newcastle upon Tyne, and then the University of Warwick, but did not graduate. From 1971 to 1974, he attended Northern Counties Teacher Training College. He is the oldest of four children and has a brother, Philip, and two sisters, Angela and Anita. Philip owns a pub in Newcastle, Angela works for British Airways, and Anita is an artist. Both Audrey and Ernest Sumner died of cancer, but Sting did not (or could not) attend either funeral.

Before playing music professionally, Sumner worked as a ditch digger and a music teacher at a Catholic primary school. His first music gigs were wherever he could get a job. He played with local jazz bands such as the Phoenix Jazzmen and Last Exit. He has stated that he gained his nickname while with the Jazzmen. He once performed wearing a black and yellow jersey with hooped stripes that fellow band member Gordon Solomon had noted made him look like a bumblebee, thus he became "Sting." He uses Sting almost exclusively, except on official documents.

The Police

In 1977, Sting, Stewart Copeland, and Andy Summers formed the rock/pop band The Police in London. The group had several chart topping albums and won six Grammy Awards in the early 1980s. Although they jumped on the punk bandwagon early in their career, they soon abandoned that sound in favor of reggae-tinged rock and minimalist pop. Their last album, Synchronicity which included one of their most successful songs, Every Breath You Take, was released in 1983.

The Police performed together at some of the shows on the 1986 Amnesty International A Conspiracy of Hope Tour alongside U2 and other artists. Their performances were just for the benefit shows and were not part of an intended permanent reunion. To help promote a greatest hits album that year they also made a re-recording of a new arrangement of one of their hits "Don't Stand So Close to Me '86" as a special bonus track to be included on the album.

Solo

In September 1981, Sting made his first-ever solo live performance performing on all four nights of the fourth Amnesty International benefit The Secret Policeman's Other Ball at the invitation of producer Martin Lewis. He perfomed solo versions of "Roxanne" and "Message in a Bottle" He also led an all-star band (dubbed "The Secret Police") on his own arrangement of Bob Dylan's "I Shall Be Released". The band included Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck, Phil Collins and Bob Geldof all of whom (except Beck) later worked together on "Live Aid". His performances were prominently featured in the album and movie of the show and drew major critical attention for Sting. Sting's participation in The Secret Policeman's Other Ball was the beginning of his growing involvement in raising money and consciousness for political and social causes.

In 1982 he released a solo single, "Spread A Little Happiness" from the Dennis Potter television play Brimstone and Treacle. The song was a re-interpretation of a song from the 1920s musical Mr Cinders by Vivian Ellis, and was a surprise top twenty hit.

1985's The Dream of the Blue Turtles, featuring a star-studded cast of jazz musicians, was Sting's first solo album. It included the hit single "If You Love Somebody Set Them Free". Within a year, it reached Triple Platinum. He also sang the introduction and chorus to "Money for Nothing", a groundbreaking song by Dire Straits. Sting released Nothing Like the Sun (1987), including the hit songs "We'll Be Together" and "Be Still My Beating Heart", dedicated to his recently deceased mother. It eventually went Double Platinum and was recognized as one of the most important rock & roll albums of the 1980s. Soon thereafter, in February of 1988, he released Nada Como el Sol — a selection of five songs from Nothing Like the Sun sung (by Sting himself) in Spanish and Portuguese.

Throughout the 1980s, Sting strongly supported environmentalism and humanitarian movements, such as Amnesty International. With long-time girlfriend Trudie Styler and Raoni Metuktire, a Kayapó Indian leader in Brazil, he founded the Rainforest Foundation to help save the rainforests. His support for these causes continues to this day.

His most high-profile contribution to the human rights cause came in 1988, when he joined a team of major musicians and rising stars — including Peter Gabriel and Bruce Springsteen — assembled under the banner of Amnesty International for the 6-week world Human Rights Now! Tour celebrating the 40th anniversary of the signing of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Sting's 1991 album The Soul Cages was dedicated to his recently deceased father and included the top 10 song "All this Time" and the Grammy winning "Soul Cages". The album eventually went Platinum. The following year, he married Trudie Styler and was awarded an honorary doctorate degree in music from Northumbria University. In 1993, he released the album Ten Summoner's Tales, which went Triple Platinum in just over a year. The hit single "Fields of Gold" has since become a "standard", and very well known via versions by Eva Cassidy and Verity Keays.

In May 1993, he released a remix of the classic Police song from the Ghost In The Machine album, "Demolition Man" for the Demolition Man film, starring Sylvester Stallone, Wesley Snipes, Sandra Bullock and Benjamin Bratt.

Sting reached a pinnacle of success in 1994. Together with Bryan Adams and Rod Stewart, they performed the chart-topping song "All For Love" from the film The Three Musketeers. The song stayed at the top of the U.S. charts for five weeks and went Platinum; it is to date Sting's only song from his post-Police career to top the U.S. charts. In February, he won two more Grammy Awards and was nominated for three more. The Berklee College of Music gave him his second honorary doctorate of music degree in May. Finally in November, he released a greatest hits compilation called Fields of Gold: The Best of Sting, which was eventually certified Double Platinum.

Sting's 1996 album, Mercury Falling debuted strongly, but dropped quickly on the charts. Yet, he reached the Top 40 with two singles the same year with "You Still Touch Me" (June) and "I'm So Happy I Can't Stop Crying" (December). (Sting was also featured on Toby Keith's country cover-version of "I'm So Happy I Can't Stop Crying", on Keith's 1997 Dream Walkin' album.) In 1998, he appeared in the Guy Ritchie film Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels.

Sting made a (partial) comeback with the September 1999 album Brand New Day, including the Top 40 hits "Brand New Day" and "Desert Rose" (Top 10). The album went Triple Platinum by January 2001. In 2000, he won Grammy Awards for Brand New Day and the song of the same name. At the awards ceremony, he performed "Desert Rose" with Cheb Mami. For his performance, the Arab-American Institute Foundation gave him the Kahlil Gibran Spirit of Humanity Award.

In February 2001, he added another Grammy to his collection. His song "After The Rain Has Fallen" made it into the Top 40. On September 11, he recorded a new live album in Italy, but the Internet simulcast was canceled after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attack. Later, Sting performed "Fragile" for the fundraiser America: A Tribute to Heroes. His live album, All This Time, recorded on a moonlit night in Tuscany, was released in November but did not generate healthy sales. All This Time featured jazzy reworkings of Sting favorites such as "Roxanne" and "If You Love Somebody Set Them Free".

2002 was a year of awards for Sting. He won a Golden Globe Award and was nominated for his second Academy Award for his song "Until..." from the film Kate & Leopold. In June, he was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame. Late in the year, it was announced that The Police would be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in March 2003. In the summer, Sumner was awarded the "CBE" - the Commander of the British Empire.

Sting kicked off 2003 with a performance during the Super Bowl's half time show. During that performance Sting performed a duet with Gwen Stefani of "Message in a Bottle". 2003 also saw the release of Sacred Love, an original studio album with racier beats and experiments collaborating with hip-hop artist Mary J. Blige and sitar maestro Anoushka Shankar. His autobiography Broken Music was published in October. Sting embarked on a Sacred Love tour in 2004 with performances by Annie Lennox. Also in 2004, his song "You Will Be My Ain True Love" for the Cold Mountain soundtrack was an Oscar nominee, and was performed at the awards by Alison Krauss, with Sting accompanying on a hurdy-gurdy.

Personal life

Sting married actress Frances Tomelty, a Catholic from Northern Ireland, on May 1, 1976. The couple had two children, Joseph (born 1976), and Fuchsia Katherine (born 1982), before they divorced in 1984. In 1982 - shortly after the birth of his second child - Sting separated from Tomelty and began living with actress (and later film producer) Trudie Styler, but the two did not marry until 1992. Sting and Trudie have four children: Bridget Michaela (aka "Mickey", born 1984), Jake (born 1985), Eliot Paulina ("Coco," born 1990), and Giacomo Luke (born 1995). Sting's lookalike son Joseph is following in his father's musical footsteps and is a member of the band, Fiction Plane. [1] Although Sting also owns properties in Salisbury, Wiltshire, England, and Malibu, California, he currently calls Tuscany his home.

It is unclear whether he was serious or not when he referred to himself as manic-depressive. He has written a song entitled "Lithium Sunset" which appears to refer to lithium carbonate, a treatment for the disorder. According to some reports, he did this because he wanted to help people who really have this disease. In an interview given by Sting, he also referred to what he believed was the natural occurrence of lithium in the brain when one views a sunset, but this may have been a confusion with endorphins. Although Sting was long reputed to be a devotee of tantric sex, he has more recently claimed that it was an interview prank, or a dinner-party joke that took on a life of its own.

To keep physically fit, for years Sting ran (5 miles a day) and did aerobics. However, around 1990 he met Danny Paradise who introduced him to yoga. Soon after, Sting began a regular yoga practice. His practice consists primarily of a Ashtanga Vinyasa series, though he has experimented with other forms.

In early 2005, Sting proclaimed that he admires Hinduism, wants to spend a lot more time in India and that he loves Indian culture. His words in an interview were:

In a sense I am more of a Hindu... I like the Hindu religion more than anything else at the moment I have become addicted to India ... I would want to spend the rest of my life discovering your beautiful country. [2]

Trivia

  • In his Live8 performance he changed the lyrics to his song 'Every Breath You Take' from "I'll be watching you” to "we'll be watching you" — meant for the men of the G8.
  • Sting was also the inspiration for the comic book character John Constantine (from Hellblazer).
  • The prologue to the Dire Straits' recording "Money for Nothing" that features Sting singing the words "I want my MTV" was at the invitation of Dire Straits leader Mark Knopfler. Sting came up with the musical motif to use for the words - and it was (probably consciously) musically identical to the melody line in his own Police song "Don't Stand So Close To Me" from the album Zenyatta Mondatta. Even though the prologue only occupies a few seconds at the start of the recording - Sting's music publisher Virgin Music insisted that Sting be credited (and paid) as though he had written half of the entire song. Sting and Knopfler remained friends despite this difference between their two music publishers and the fact that half of the writer's share of Knopfler's biggest hit goes to Sting for a contribution of just six musical notes out of the entire song.
  • Sting also made a cameo appearance in the movie, The Adventures of Baron Munchausen [3].
  • The song "Russians" from The Dream of the Blue Turtles utilized a theme by Russian composer Sergei Prokofiev. Sting's fondness for Prokofiev manifested itself subsequently when he served as narrator for Peter and the Wolf: A Prokofiev Fantasy [4] - one of the many versions of Prokofiev's "Peter and the Wolf" that have been recorded by celebrities.
  • He appeared as himself in an episode of The Simpsons, taking part in the charity song for a boy who supposedly fell down a well, "We're Sending Our Love Down The Well".
  • Sting's song "Desert Rose" was used in many Jaguar commercials because of the fact that he drove a Jaguar during Desert Rose's music video. The song is still widely associated with Jaguar.
  • A Colombian tree frog was named for him in appreciation of his environmental activities: Hyla stingi. [5]
  • Was at one time close to becoming Gil Farrington in a motion picture of the same name, until Sir Ridley Scott terminated the project.
  • Sting famously claimed to have had tantric sex with his wife for 24 hours.
  • Sting was nominated for Academy Award for his song "You Will Be My Ain True Love" from the movie "Cold Mountain" performed by Alison Krauss.
  • Sting's song "Desert Rose" is also used as XM Satellite Radio's technical difficulties music.
  • Sting, who had a small acting career, had a small part in Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back as an AT-AT Commander.

Discography

(Albums released after going solo.)

  • 1985 The Dream of the Blue Turtles #3 UK, #2 US, US Sales: 3,000,000
  • 1986 Bring On the Night #16 UK
  • 1987 Nothing Like the Sun #1 UK, #9 US, US Sales: 2,000,000
  • 1988 Nada Como el Sol
  • 1991 Soul Cages #1 UK, #2 US, US Sales: 1,000,000
  • 1993 Ten Summoner's Tales #2 UK, #2 US, US Sales: 3,000,000
  • 1994 Fields of Gold: The Best of Sting 1984-1994 #2 UK, #7 US, US Sales: 2,000,000
  • 1996 Mercury Falling #4 UK, #5 US, US Sales: 1,000,000
  • 1997 The Very Best of Sting & The Police #1 UK, #46 US (both positions for the 2002 re-issue)
  • 1999 Brand New Day #5 UK, #9 US, US Sales: 3,000,000
  • 1999 At the Movies (Japanese release)
  • 2001 All This Time (live) #3 UK, #32 US, US Sales: 500,000
  • 2003 Sacred Love #3 UK, #3 US, US Sales: 1,000,000

Singles

From Ten Summoner's Tales

  • 1992 "It's Probably Me" (with Eric Clapton) #30 UK
  • 1993 "If I Ever Lose My Faith in You" #14 UK, #17 US
  • 1993 "Seven Days" #25 UK
  • 1993 "Fields of Gold" #16 UK, #23 US

Non-album single; soundtrack from the film of the same name

  • 1993 "Demolition Man" #21 UK

From The Three Musketeers soundtrack

  • 1994 "All for Love" (with Bryan Adams and Rod Stewart) #2 UK, #1 US

From Ten Summoner's Tales

  • 1994 "Nothing 'Bout Me" #32 UK

From Fields of Gold: The Best of Sting 1984-1994

  • 1994 "When We Dance" #9 UK, #38 US
  • 1995 "This Cowboy Song" (feat. Pato Banton) #15 UK

From Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls soundtrack

  • 1996 "Spirits in the Material World" (Pato Banton feat. Sting) #36 UK

From Mercury Falling

  • 1996 "Let Your Soul Be Your Pilot" #15 UK, #86 US
  • 1996 "You Still Touch Me" #27 UK, #60 US
  • 1996 "I Was Brought to My Senses" #31 UK
  • 1996 "I'm So Happy I Can't Stop Crying" #94 US

From The Very Best of Sting & The Police

  • 1997 "Roxanne '97" (remix) (with The Police) #17 UK, #59 US

From Brand New Day

  • 1999 "Brand New Day" #13 UK, #100 US
  • 2000 "Desert Rose" (feat. Cheb Mami) #15 UK, #17 US
  • 2000 "After the Rain Has Fallen" #31 UK

From Slicker Than Your Average (Craig David album)

  • 2003 "Rise & Fall" (Craig David feat. Sting) #2 UK

From Sacred Love

  • 2003 "Send Your Love" #30 UK
  • 2003 "Whenever I Say Your Name (ft. Mary J. Blidge)" #60 UK
  • 2004 "Stolen Car (Take Me Dancing)" #60 UK

From the Racing Stripes soundtrack

  • 2005 "Taking the Inside Rail" #? US, #? UK

Acting career

Sting has occasionally ventured into acting. He made his film debut with 1979's Quadrophenia.

Notable roles include:

  • Ace The Face, the King of The Mods, aka The Bell Boy in the movie adaptation of The Who album Quadrophenia (1979)
  • Martin Taylor, a drifter in Brimstone and Treacle (1982)
  • Feyd-Rautha in the movie Dune (1984)
  • Mick, a black-marketeer in Plenty (1985)
  • Baron Frankenstein in The Bride (1985)
  • An "heroic officer" in The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (1988)
  • Finney, a nightclub owner in Stormy Monday (1988)
  • The voice of Zarm on Captain Planet and the Planeteers, a 1990s television show.
  • JD, Eddie's father and owner of a bar, in Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels (1998)

Sting has also made appearances on television (including guest spots on The Simpsons and Ally McBeal) and the stage. Most of his later film and TV credits are for his music.


This page about sting includes information from a Wikipedia article.
Additional articles about sting
News stories about sting
External links for sting
Videos for sting
Wikis about sting
Discussion Groups about sting
Blogs about sting
Images of sting

Most of his later film and TV credits are for his music. However, mares produce a much lower yield of milk than do cows. Sting has also made appearances on television (including guest spots on The Simpsons and Ally McBeal) and the stage. They may let it ferment to produce kumys. Notable roles include:. Mare's milk is used by peoples with large horse-herds, such as the Mongols. He made his film debut with 1979's Quadrophenia. It is also commonly found in commercially produced pet food.

Sting has occasionally ventured into acting. Although consumption by humans is considered abhorrent by some people in the United Kingdom, the US and Australia, it is eaten in many other parts of the world and is an export industry in the USA. From the Racing Stripes soundtrack. Horse meat has been used as food for animals and humans throughout the ages. From Sacred Love. See: Horse (Zodiac). From Slicker Than Your Average (Craig David album). According to Chinese folklore, each animal is associated with certain personality traits, and those born in the year of the horse are: intelligent, independent and free-spirited.

From Brand New Day. The horse features in the 12-year cycle of animals which appear in the Chinese zodiac related to the Chinese calendar. From The Very Best of Sting & The Police. However, several other explanations are equally plausible. From Mercury Falling. The common European practice and tradition of saddling and mounting the horse from the lefthand side is often said to originate from the need to avoid inadvertantly striking the horse with a carried sword in the process. From Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls soundtrack. "Heavy" or draft horses such as Clydesdale, Draft, Percherons, and Shire horses weigh up to 2800lbs (about 907kg).

From Fields of Gold: The Best of Sting 1984-1994. Light horses such as Arabians, Morgans, Quarter Horses, Paints and Thoroughbreds weigh up to 1300lbs (about 590kg). From Ten Summoner's Tales. Both groups agree that 'genuine abuse' should be ended within the industry. From The Three Musketeers soundtrack. Horse professionals that understand equine psychology and care claim they know what is best for horses than rights activists that live horseless lives and are easily influenced by propaganda. Non-album single; soundtrack from the film of the same name. Animal living conditions vary, but many rodeo stock live on open ranches when not working on the weekend.

From Ten Summoner's Tales. Sports like rodeo and racing are closely monitored by veterinarians to prevent and treat injuries if they occur. (Albums released after going solo.). Most horse owners that compete in sports, however, does not force-breed, kill unprofitable horses, or have poor living conditions for their horses. [2]. They also cite psychological harm, poor living conditions, forced-breeding, and the killing of unprofitable horses as forms of abuse. I would want to spend the rest of my life discovering your beautiful country. Activists claim rodeos turn a blind eye to minor injuries which do not impair performance.

I like the Hindu religion more than anything else at the moment I have become addicted to India .. Rodeos claim that an injured horse is less profitable than a healthy horse. In a sense I am more of a Hindu.. This brings a dilemma; If a horse gets an injury while competing, is this immoral? If a horse slips in its pasture while playing, is this ok?. His words in an interview were:. All sports are dangerous, but then one observing horses in nature can see more terrible injuries occurring than occur in sports. In early 2005, Sting proclaimed that he admires Hinduism, wants to spend a lot more time in India and that he loves Indian culture. Such extreme viewpoints are rare, however, and many people are more reasonable and worried that sports may cause injuries to horse atheltes, just as they do for human athletes.

His practice consists primarily of a Ashtanga Vinyasa series, though he has experimented with other forms. Animal rights activists have the general viewpoint that all animal ownership is wrong, and thus using horses for riding and sports is also wrong, but these events are 'softer targets' than trail riding or 'refined' sports like dressage. Soon after, Sting began a regular yoga practice. One problem is a disagreement about terms like abuse. However, around 1990 he met Danny Paradise who introduced him to yoga. Both sides provide contradictory evidence. To keep physically fit, for years Sting ran (5 miles a day) and did aerobics. Rodeo and racing professionals do have a strong case against radical claims.

Although Sting was long reputed to be a devotee of tantric sex, he has more recently claimed that it was an interview prank, or a dinner-party joke that took on a life of its own. It is difficult for average people (or even experts) to differentiate between normal equine abilities and actual abuse. In an interview given by Sting, he also referred to what he believed was the natural occurrence of lithium in the brain when one views a sunset, but this may have been a confusion with endorphins. Horse racing and rodeo are more easily targeted because of their extensive use of animals in sport. According to some reports, he did this because he wanted to help people who really have this disease. Most animal rights groups such as the Humane Society of the United States and People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, which advocate against animal ownership, target wilder horse "sports", with claims of cruelty. He has written a song entitled "Lithium Sunset" which appears to refer to lithium carbonate, a treatment for the disorder. Competitions exist in the following forms:.

It is unclear whether he was serious or not when he referred to himself as manic-depressive. Riders can choose any color, and optionally accoutrements such as chaps, bolo ties, belt buckles, and (shiny) spurs. [1] Although Sting also owns properties in Salisbury, Wiltshire, England, and Malibu, California, he currently calls Tuscany his home. The riders must wear cowboy boots, jeans, a shirt with long sleeves, and a cowboy hat. Sting's lookalike son Joseph is following in his father's musical footsteps and is a member of the band, Fiction Plane. But show -- in the form of outfit (and silver ornaments on saddle and tack) -- forms part of Western riding. Sting and Trudie have four children: Bridget Michaela (aka "Mickey", born 1984), Jake (born 1985), Eliot Paulina ("Coco," born 1990), and Giacomo Luke (born 1995). In dressage all riders wear the same to prevent distraction from the riding itself.

In 1982 - shortly after the birth of his second child - Sting separated from Tomelty and began living with actress (and later film producer) Trudie Styler, but the two did not marry until 1992. The outfit of the competition Western rider differs from that of the dressage or 'English' rider. The couple had two children, Joseph (born 1976), and Fuchsia Katherine (born 1982), before they divorced in 1984. Technically, fewer differences between 'English' and Western riding exist than most people think. Sting married actress Frances Tomelty, a Catholic from Northern Ireland, on May 1, 1976. The cowboy's boots, which have high heels of an uncommon shape, also feature a specific design to prevent the cowboy's foot from slipping through the stirrup. Also in 2004, his song "You Will Be My Ain True Love" for the Cold Mountain soundtrack was an Oscar nominee, and was performed at the awards by Alison Krauss, with Sting accompanying on a hurdy-gurdy. The Western saddle has a very much more substantial frame (traditionally made of wood) to absorb the shock of roping, a prominent pommel surmounted by a horn (a big knob for snubbing the lasso after roping an animal), and, frequently, tapaderos ("taps") covering the front of the stirrups to prevent the cowboy's foot from slipping through the stirrup in an accident and resulting in a frightened horse dragging him behind it.

Sting embarked on a Sacred Love tour in 2004 with performances by Annie Lennox. These multiple work needs mean that cowboys require different tack, most notably a curb bit (usually with longer bars than an English equitation curb or pelham bit would have) which works by leverage, long split reins (the ends of which can serve as an impromptu quirt) and a special kind of saddle. His autobiography Broken Music was published in October. Working with half-wild cattle, frequently in terrain where one cannot see what lurks behind the next bush, means the ever-present very great danger of becoming unseated in an accident miles from home and friends. Blige and sitar maestro Anoushka Shankar. For roping calves, the horse learns to pull back against the calf, which falls to the ground, while the cowboy dismounts and ties the calf's feet together so that he can be brand it, treat it for disease, and so on. 2003 also saw the release of Sacred Love, an original studio album with racier beats and experiments collaborating with hip-hop artist Mary J. Once the cowboy has twirled the lariat and thrown its loop over a cow's head, he must snub the rope to the horn of his saddle.

During that performance Sting performed a duet with Gwen Stefani of "Message in a Bottle". That means that horses must learn to neck rein, that is, to respond to light pressure of the slack rein against the horse's neck. Sting kicked off 2003 with a performance during the Super Bowl's half time show. The cowboy must control the horse with one hand and use the lariat with the other hand. In the summer, Sumner was awarded the "CBE" - the Commander of the British Empire. A main differentiating factor comes from the need of the cowboy to rope cattle with a lariat (or lasso). Late in the year, it was announced that The Police would be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in March 2003. Western riding evolved stylistically from traditions brought to the Americas by the Spanish, and its skills stem from the working needs of the cowboy in the American West.

In June, he was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame. Dressage, jumping and cross-country offer forms of what Americans refer to as 'English riding' (although the United States has a strong following of riders in those disciplines). He won a Golden Globe Award and was nominated for his second Academy Award for his song "Until..." from the film Kate & Leopold. The three following count as Olympic disciplines:. 2002 was a year of awards for Sting.
. All This Time featured jazzy reworkings of Sting favorites such as "Roxanne" and "If You Love Somebody Set Them Free". In France they also race under saddle.

His live album, All This Time, recorded on a moonlit night in Tuscany, was released in November but did not generate healthy sales. Standardbred trotters and pacers race in harness with a sulky or racing bike. Later, Sting performed "Fragile" for the fundraiser America: A Tribute to Heroes. It occurs most commonly in the United Kingdom. On September 11, he recorded a new live album in Italy, but the Internet simulcast was canceled after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attack. Steeplechasing involves racing on a track where the horses also jump over obstacles. His song "After The Rain Has Fallen" made it into the Top 40. Quarter Horses traditionally raced for a quarter mile, hence the name.

In February 2001, he added another Grammy to his collection. Thoroughbreds have a pre-eminent reputation as a racing breed, but Arabians, Quarter Horses, and Appaloosas also race on the flat in the United States. For his performance, the Arab-American Institute Foundation gave him the Kahlil Gibran Spirit of Humanity Award. In harness:. At the awards ceremony, he performed "Desert Rose" with Cheb Mami. Under saddle:. In 2000, he won Grammy Awards for Brand New Day and the song of the same name. Today, several categories of racing exist:.

The album went Triple Platinum by January 2001. Humans have always had a desire to know which horse (or horses) could move the fastest, horse-racing has ancient roots. Sting made a (partial) comeback with the September 1999 album Brand New Day, including the Top 40 hits "Brand New Day" and "Desert Rose" (Top 10). The list of horse breeds provides a partial alphabetical list of breeds of horse extant today, plus a discussion of rare breeds' conservation. (Sting was also featured on Toby Keith's country cover-version of "I'm So Happy I Can't Stop Crying", on Keith's 1997 Dream Walkin' album.) In 1998, he appeared in the Guy Ritchie film Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels. They show more excitability, and often more dominance; and the longer you ride them, the more excited they become, instead of merely getting tired (although any breed of horse can succumb to fatigue). Yet, he reached the Top 40 with two singles the same year with "You Still Touch Me" (June) and "I'm So Happy I Can't Stop Crying" (December). True hotbloods usually offer greater riding challenges than other horses, especially the coldblood.

Sting's 1996 album, Mercury Falling debuted strongly, but dropped quickly on the charts. The term "warmbloods" covers everything else, but the term also specifically refers to the European breeds, such as the Hanoverian, that have dominated dressage and show jumping since the 1950s. Finally in November, he released a greatest hits compilation called Fields of Gold: The Best of Sting, which was eventually certified Double Platinum. The slow, heavy draft horses class as "coldbloods", as they usually possess a quite calm temperament. The Berklee College of Music gave him his second honorary doctorate of music degree in May. The Thoroughbred is also included in the "hotblood" category. In February, he won two more Grammy Awards and was nominated for three more. The Arabian horses, whether originating on the Arabian peninsula or from the European studs (breeding establishments) of the 18th and 19th centuries, gained the title of "hotbloods", for their fiery temperaments.

charts. Some other breed registries allow artificial insemination, embryo transfer, or both. charts for five weeks and went Platinum; it is to date Sting's only song from his post-Police career to top the U.S. A foal born of two Thoroughbred parents, but by means of artificial insemination, is barred from the Thoroughbred studbook. The song stayed at the top of the U.S. For example, all Thoroughbred registries require that a registered Thoroughbred be a product of a natural mating. Together with Bryan Adams and Rod Stewart, they performed the chart-topping song "All For Love" from the film The Three Musketeers. Breed registries also differ as to their acceptance or rejection of breeding technology.

Sting reached a pinnacle of success in 1994. Still other breeds, such as most of the warmblood sporthorses, require individual judging of an individual animal's quality before registration or breeding approval. In May 1993, he released a remix of the classic Police song from the Ghost In The Machine album, "Demolition Man" for the Demolition Man film, starring Sylvester Stallone, Wesley Snipes, Sandra Bullock and Benjamin Bratt. Other breeds tolerate limited infusions from other breeds—the modern Appaloosa for instance must have at least one Appaloosa parent but may also have a Quarter Horse, Thoroughbred, or Arabian parent and must also exhibit spotted coloration to gain full registration. The hit single "Fields of Gold" has since become a "standard", and very well known via versions by Eva Cassidy and Verity Keays. Some breeds have closed studbooks; a registered Thoroughbred, Arabian, or Quarter Horse must have two registered parents of the same breed, and no other criteria for registration apply. In 1993, he released the album Ten Summoner's Tales, which went Triple Platinum in just over a year. The modern landscape of breed designation presents a complicated picture.

The following year, he married Trudie Styler and was awarded an honorary doctorate degree in music from Northumbria University. During the late middle ages the Carthusian monks of southern Spain, themselves forbidden to ride, bred horses which nobles throughout Europe prized; the lineage survives to this day in the Andalusian horse or caballo de pura raza español. The album eventually went Platinum. The Arabs had a reputation for breeding their prize mares to only the most worthy stallions, and kept extensive pedigrees of their "asil" (purebred) horses. Sting's 1991 album The Soul Cages was dedicated to his recently deceased father and included the top 10 song "All this Time" and the Grammy winning "Soul Cages". The idea of a "purebred" animal gained importance in Europe during the 19th century but selective breeding has occurred almost everywhere man has kept horses. His most high-profile contribution to the human rights cause came in 1988, when he joined a team of major musicians and rising stars — including Peter Gabriel and Bruce Springsteen — assembled under the banner of Amnesty International for the 6-week world Human Rights Now! Tour celebrating the 40th anniversary of the signing of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. See: Domestication of the horse.

His support for these causes continues to this day. Finally, certain geneticists have started evaluating the DNA and mitochondrial DNA to construct family trees. With long-time girlfriend Trudie Styler and Raoni Metuktire, a Kayapó Indian leader in Brazil, he founded the Rainforest Foundation to help save the rainforests. A second school -- the "Single Foundation" -- holds only one breed of horse underwent domestication, and it diverged in form after domestication through human selective breeding (or in the case of feral horses, through ecological pressures). Throughout the 1980s, Sting strongly supported environmentalism and humanitarian movements, such as Amnesty International. One school, which we can call the "Four Foundations", suggests that the modern horse evolved from two types of early domesticated pony and two types of early domesticated horse; the differences between these types account for the differences in type of the modern breeds. Soon thereafter, in February of 1988, he released Nada Como el Sol — a selection of five songs from Nothing Like the Sun sung (by Sting himself) in Spanish and Portuguese. These schools grew up reasoning from the type of dentition and from the horses' outward appearance.

It eventually went Double Platinum and was recognized as one of the most important rock & roll albums of the 1980s. Several schools of thought exist to explain how this range of size and shape came about. Sting released Nothing Like the Sun (1987), including the hit songs "We'll Be Together" and "Be Still My Beating Heart", dedicated to his recently deceased mother. The Patagonian Fallabella, usually considered the smallest horse in the world, compares in size to a German Shepherd Dog. He also sang the introduction and chorus to "Money for Nothing", a groundbreaking song by Dire Straits. The draft breeds can top 20 hands (80 inches, 2 metres) while the smallest miniature horses can stand as low as 5.2 hands (22 inches, 0.56 metres). Within a year, it reached Triple Platinum. Horses come in various sizes and shapes.

It included the hit single "If You Love Somebody Set Them Free". Another that has numerous photographs of various colors and markings is Equine color. 1985's The Dream of the Blue Turtles, featuring a star-studded cast of jazz musicians, was Sting's first solo album. Another good resource for horse color is: Horse color, markings, and genetics. The song was a re-interpretation of a song from the 1920s musical Mr Cinders by Vivian Ellis, and was a surprise top twenty hit. For horse color and marking genetics see Equine coat color genetics. In 1982 he released a solo single, "Spread A Little Happiness" from the Dennis Potter television play Brimstone and Treacle. Elsewhere:.

Sting's participation in The Secret Policeman's Other Ball was the beginning of his growing involvement in raising money and consciousness for political and social causes. On the legs:. His performances were prominently featured in the album and movie of the show and drew major critical attention for Sting. On the face:. The band included Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck, Phil Collins and Bob Geldof all of whom (except Beck) later worked together on "Live Aid". In fact, one will often refer to a horse in the field by his or her coat color rather than by breed or by gender. He perfomed solo versions of "Roxanne" and "Message in a Bottle" He also led an all-star band (dubbed "The Secret Police") on his own arrangement of Bob Dylan's "I Shall Be Released". Horses exhibit a diverse array of coat colors and distinctive markings, and a specialized vocabulary has evolved to describe them.

In September 1981, Sting made his first-ever solo live performance performing on all four nights of the fourth Amnesty International benefit The Secret Policeman's Other Ball at the invitation of producer Martin Lewis. Horses older than colts and fillies become known as horses and mares respectively. To help promote a greatest hits album that year they also made a re-recording of a new arrangement of one of their hits "Don't Stand So Close to Me '86" as a special bonus track to be included on the album. Thoroughbred racing defines a colt as a male horse less than five years old and a filly as a female horse less than five years old; harness racing defines colts and fillies as less than four years old. Their performances were just for the benefit shows and were not part of an intended permanent reunion. In horse racing the definitions of colt, filly, mare, and horse differ from those given above. The Police performed together at some of the shows on the 1986 Amnesty International A Conspiracy of Hope Tour alongside U2 and other artists. You can view an entire equine dictionary at: The Horse Dictionary.

Their last album, Synchronicity which included one of their most successful songs, Every Breath You Take, was released in 1983. For details, see Horse gaits. Although they jumped on the punk bandwagon early in their career, they soon abandoned that sound in favor of reggae-tinged rock and minimalist pop. Some horses, called Gaited Horses, have gaits other than the most common four above. The group had several chart topping albums and won six Grammy Awards in the early 1980s.
Other gaits. In 1977, Sting, Stewart Copeland, and Andy Summers formed the rock/pop band The Police in London. Although a race track is an enclosed area, it is designed for a horse to gallop around, without being too enclosed which may cause the horse to slip while turning.

He once performed wearing a black and yellow jersey with hooped stripes that fellow band member Gordon Solomon had noted made him look like a bumblebee, thus he became "Sting." He uses Sting almost exclusively, except on official documents. However, one would not gallop a horse during training in a ring or enclosed area, due to the fact that the horse may slip in attempting to gallop in such an area. He has stated that he gained his nickname while with the Jazzmen. The gallop is usually used in races or fox hunting. He played with local jazz bands such as the Phoenix Jazzmen and Last Exit. To get a horse into gallop, the rider must alter their position so they are slightly more forward in the saddle, then they should allow the horse to head and gently kick the horse's sides. His first music gigs were wherever he could get a job. Horses that usually are galloped in a straight line need to be caused to alternate leads so that they do not suffer a muscular imbalance and subsequent difficulty making turns in one direction or the other.

Before playing music professionally, Sumner worked as a ditch digger and a music teacher at a Catholic primary school. In turning at a very rapid rate, it is even more important that the horse use the appropriate lead, leading with the left leg if making a left turn, and the right leg if making a right turn, since the faster the turn the more the horse needs to lean into the turn. Both Audrey and Ernest Sumner died of cancer, but Sting did not (or could not) attend either funeral. The gallop also involves having a leading leg. Philip owns a pub in Newcastle, Angela works for British Airways, and Anita is an artist. The gallop is another "four beat" gait which follows a similar progression to the canter, except the two paired legs land separately, the hind leg landing slightly before the foreleg. He is the oldest of four children and has a brother, Philip, and two sisters, Angela and Anita.
The gallop.

From 1971 to 1974, he attended Northern Counties Teacher Training College. The canter is not a natural gait, but a restrained form of a gallop. He attended St Cuthbert's grammar School, in Newcastle upon Tyne, and then the University of Warwick, but did not graduate. Also called "lope" when riding in a Western show class. From an early age, Sumner knew that he wanted to be a musician. To get a horse to canter from gallop, one must alter the position of the body slightly back in the saddle, then you must place the outside leg behind the girth to allow the horse to canter on the correct leg, and apply pressure on the reins. Ernest was a milkman, and raised his children as Roman Catholics. To get a horse to canter on the correct leg from trot, one must go into sitting trot, place their outside leg slightly behind the girth and squeeze with the inside leg.

Sumner was born in Wallsend, near Newcastle upon Tyne, in North-East England to Audrey (a Protestant) and Ernest Sumner (a Catholic via his own mother, Agnes White, whose father was an Irish stevedore). In making a fairly tight turn, the inside leg (the one nearest to the center of the turn) should lead, as this prevents the horse from "falling in". . In the arena, the horse should canter on the inside lead. Prior to a distinguished solo career, he was the lead singer, principal composer and bassist of the 1970s/1980s rock band The Police. When cantering in a straight line, it does not usually matter which foreleg (or leading leg) goes first, but both leads should receive equal practice time, as otherwise the horse may become "one-sided" or develop a reluctance to canter on a specific lead. Gordon Matthew Sumner, CBE (born October 2, 1951), usually known by his stage name Sting, is an English musician from Newcastle upon Tyne. the rhythm should be 1-2-3, 1-2-3, etc.

JD, Eddie's father and owner of a bar, in Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels (1998). A cantering horse will first stride off with the outside hind leg, then the inside hind and outside fore together, then the inside front leg, and finally a period of suspension in which all four legs are off the ground. The voice of Zarm on Captain Planet and the Planeteers, a 1990s television show. A canter is a "three beat" gait in which a foreleg and opposite hindleg strike the ground together, and the other two legs strike separately. Finney, a nightclub owner in Stormy Monday (1988).
The canter/lope. An "heroic officer" in The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (1988). There are two types of trot a rider can perform; these are called posting trot, in which the rider stands up slightly in the saddle each time the animal's outside front leg goes forward, and sitting trot, in which the rider sits in the saddle and matches the horse's movement.

Baron Frankenstein in The Bride (1985). A rider on a walking horse initiates a trot by reducing tautness on the reins and applying more leg pressure. Mick, a black-marketeer in Plenty (1985). In this gait, each leg bears weight separately, making it ideal to check for lameness or for stiffness in the joints. Feyd-Rautha in the movie Dune (1984). A trot is a "two beat" diagonal gait in which a foreleg and opposite hindleg (often called "diagonals") touch the ground at the same time. Martin Taylor, a drifter in Brimstone and Treacle (1982).
The trot/jog.

Ace The Face, the King of The Mods, aka The Bell Boy in the movie adaptation of The Who album Quadrophenia (1979). To initiate a walk when a horse is trotting, the rider gently applies pressure on the reins. 2005 "Taking the Inside Rail" #? US, #? UK. A rider on a trained horse gently squeezes the sides of the animal and releases the pressure on its reins in order to initiate a walk from a stationary position. 2004 "Stolen Car (Take Me Dancing)" #60 UK. The walking horse will lift first a hind leg, then the foreleg on the same side, then the remaining hind leg, then the foreleg on the same side. Blidge)" #60 UK. A walk is a "four-beat" lateral gait in which a horse must have three feet on the ground and only one foot in the air at any time.

Mary J.
The walk. 2003 "Whenever I Say Your Name (ft. All horses move naturally with four basic gaits; these are referred to as the walk, the trot, the canter/lope ("canter" in English riding, "lope" in Western), and the gallop. 2003 "Send Your Love" #30 UK. Breeders of miniature horses favor that name because they strive to reproduce horse-like attributes in a much smaller animal, even though their horses undeniably descend from ponies. Sting) #2 UK. Several small breeds are referred to as "horses" or "ponies" interchangeably, including the Icelandic, Fjord, and Caspian types.

2003 "Rise & Fall" (Craig David feat. Many people consider the Shetland pony as the archetypal pony, as its proportions are so different from those of horses. 2000 "After the Rain Has Fallen" #31 UK. However, a distinct set of characteristic pony traits, developed in northwest Europe and further evolved in the British Isles, make it less clear whether it is more appropriate to use the word "pony" to describe a size or a type. Cheb Mami) #15 UK, #17 US. Thus normal variations can mean that a horse stallion and horse mare can become the parents of an adult pony. 2000 "Desert Rose" (feat. Below the threshold an animal is a pony, while above the threshold it is a horse.

1999 "Brand New Day" #13 UK, #100 US. The threshold is 14.2 hh (1.47 m) for an adult. 1997 "Roxanne '97" (remix) (with The Police) #17 UK, #59 US. Usually, size alone marks the difference between horses and ponies. 1996 "I'm So Happy I Can't Stop Crying" #94 US. By convention, 15.2 hh means 15 hands, 2 inches (1.57 m) in height. 1996 "I Was Brought to My Senses" #31 UK. Perhaps because of extensive selective breeding, modern adult horses vary widely in size, ranging from miniature horses measuring 5 hands (0.5 m) to draft animals measuring 19 hands (1.8 m) or more.

1996 "You Still Touch Me" #27 UK, #60 US. Horse height is measured at the highest point of an animal's withers. 1996 "Let Your Soul Be Your Pilot" #15 UK, #86 US. One hand is defined in British law as 101.6 mm, a figure derived from the previous measure of 4 Imperial inches. Sting) #36 UK. The English-speaking world measures the height of horses in hands. 1996 "Spirits in the Material World" (Pato Banton feat. Because horses and humans have lived and worked together for thousands of years, an extensive specialized vocabulary has arisen to describe virtually every horse behavioral and anatomical characteristic with a high degree of precision.

Pato Banton) #15 UK. For instance, if the majority of the herd wants to stop and eat, the whole herd follows suit and stops. 1995 "This Cowboy Song" (feat. Recently, researchers have observed that a form of "majority rule" appears to exist among horses. 1994 "When We Dance" #9 UK, #38 US. An alpha mare dictates the direction in which a family herd travels, while the stallion brings up the rear, "herding" his family. 1994 "Nothing 'Bout Me" #32 UK. A stallion is not usually successful in acquiring his own mares from other stallions until he reaches 7 or 8 years of age.

1994 "All for Love" (with Bryan Adams and Rod Stewart) #2 UK, #1 US. Once young males reach breeding age and begin to attempt to breed with mares or to challenge the herd stallion, the stallion drives them out of the herd to form "bachelor bands" with other young stallions. 1993 "Demolition Man" #21 UK. These normally consist of a mature stallion, his harem of about one to ten mares, and the mares' offspring. 1993 "Fields of Gold" #16 UK, #23 US. Horses live in family groups in primarily grassland habitats. 1993 "Seven Days" #25 UK. Even domesticated horses startle easily and must, for the safety of riders, undergo careful introductions to strange objects and situations.

1993 "If I Ever Lose My Faith in You" #14 UK, #17 US. Their eyes are located on the sides of their heads, providing a wide field of view while grazing (slightly less than 180 degrees to each side, overlapped in front and leaving a blind spot in the rear). 1992 "It's Probably Me" (with Eric Clapton) #30 UK. They have a natural tendency to flee from danger, though they will fight if cornered. 2003 Sacred Love #3 UK, #3 US, US Sales: 1,000,000. In nature, horses function as prey animals. 2001 All This Time (live) #3 UK, #32 US, US Sales: 500,000. Examples of extinct horse genera include: Propalaeotherium, Mesohippus, Miohippus, Orohippus, Pliohippus, Anchitherium, Merychippus, Parahippus, Hipparion and Hippidion.

1999 At the Movies (Japanese release). The genus Equus, to which all living equids belong, evolved a few million years ago. 1999 Brand New Day #5 UK, #9 US, US Sales: 3,000,000. Horse evolution was characterized by a reduction in the number of toes, from 5 per foot, to 3 per foot, to only 1 toe per foot. 1997 The Very Best of Sting & The Police #1 UK, #46 US (both positions for the 2002 re-issue). In the course of roughly a million years, horses evolved from leaf-eating forest-dwellers into fast grass-eating inhabitants of the Great Plains. 1996 Mercury Falling #4 UK, #5 US, US Sales: 1,000,000. One of the first true horse species was the tiny Hyracotherium, also known as eohippus, "the dawn horse".

1994 Fields of Gold: The Best of Sting 1984-1994 #2 UK, #7 US, US Sales: 2,000,000. Horses are believed by scientists to have first evolved in what is now North America. 1993 Ten Summoner's Tales #2 UK, #2 US, US Sales: 3,000,000. At one time there were twelve families of odd-toed ungulates, though today only three survive; tapirs and rhinoceroses are the closest living relatives of the modern horse. 1991 Soul Cages #1 UK, #2 US, US Sales: 1,000,000. Perissodactyls were the dominant group of large terrestrial browsing animals until the Miocene (about 20 million years ago), when even-toed ungulates, with stomachs better adapted to grass digestion, began to outcompete them. 1988 Nada Como el Sol. Horses and other equids are odd-toed ungulates of the order Perissodactyla, a relatively ancient group of browsing and grazing animals that first arose less than 10 million years after the dinosaurs became extinct.

1987 Nothing Like the Sun #1 UK, #9 US, US Sales: 2,000,000. All equids are part of the family Equidae, which dates back more than 50 million years. 1986 Bring On the Night #16 UK. Main article: Evolution of the Horse. 1985 The Dream of the Blue Turtles #3 UK, #2 US, US Sales: 3,000,000. Full species list:. Sting, who had a small acting career, had a small part in Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back as an AT-AT Commander. This will probably remain a novelty hybrid as these individuals tend to inherit some of the nervous, difficult nature of their zebra parent.

Sting's song "Desert Rose" is also used as XM Satellite Radio's technical difficulties music. Recently breeders have begun crossing various species of zebra with mares or female asses to produce "zebra mules"—zorses and zonkeys (also called zedonks). Sting was nominated for Academy Award for his song "You Will Be My Ain True Love" from the movie "Cold Mountain" performed by Alison Krauss. A hinny is the less common hybrid of a female ass and a stallion. Sting famously claimed to have had tantric sex with his wife for 24 hours. A mule is a hybrid of a male ass and a mare and is infertile. Was at one time close to becoming Gil Farrington in a motion picture of the same name, until Sir Ridley Scott terminated the project. The Donkey, Burro or Domestic Ass, Equus asinus, like the horse, has many breeds.

[5]. Other members of the horse family include zebras, donkeys, and hemionids. A Colombian tree frog was named for him in appreciation of his environmental activities: Hyla stingi. The Icelandic horse has a four-beat gait called the "tölt", which equates to the rack exhibited by several American gaited breeds. The song is still widely associated with Jaguar. Introduced by the Vikings into Iceland, Icelandic horses did not subsequently undergo the intensive selective breeding that took place in the rest of Europe from the Middle Ages onwards, and consequently bear a closer resemblance to pre-Medieval breeds. Sting's song "Desert Rose" was used in many Jaguar commercials because of the fact that he drove a Jaguar during Desert Rose's music video. The Icelandic horse (pony-sized but called a horse) provides an opportunity to compare contemporary and historical breed appearances and behaviour.

He appeared as himself in an episode of The Simpsons, taking part in the charity song for a boy who supposedly fell down a well, "We're Sending Our Love Down The Well". Feral horses may provide useful insights into the behavior of ancestral wild horses. Sting's fondness for Prokofiev manifested itself subsequently when he served as narrator for Peter and the Wolf: A Prokofiev Fantasy [4] - one of the many versions of Prokofiev's "Peter and the Wolf" that have been recorded by celebrities. Isolated feral populations are often named for their geographic location; in Namiba feral animals known as Namib Desert Horses live in the desert, while the Sable Island Horses are resident on Sable Island, Canada. The song "Russians" from The Dream of the Blue Turtles utilized a theme by Russian composer Sergei Prokofiev. Several populations of feral horses exist, including those in the West of the United States and Canada (often called "mustangs") and in parts of Australia ("brumbies") and New Zealand ("Kaimanawa horses"). Sting also made a cameo appearance in the movie, The Adventures of Baron Munchausen [3]. Wild animals, whose ancestors have never undergone domestication, are distinct from feral animals, who had domesticated ancestors but now live in the wild.

Sting and Knopfler remained friends despite this difference between their two music publishers and the fact that half of the writer's share of Knopfler's biggest hit goes to Sting for a contribution of just six musical notes out of the entire song. [1]. Even though the prologue only occupies a few seconds at the start of the recording - Sting's music publisher Virgin Music insisted that Sting be credited (and paid) as though he had written half of the entire song. Small wild breeding populations of this animal exist in Mongolia. Sting came up with the musical motif to use for the words - and it was (probably consciously) musically identical to the melody line in his own Police song "Don't Stand So Close To Me" from the album Zenyatta Mondatta. Mongolians know it as the taki, while the Kirghiz people call it a kirtag. The prologue to the Dire Straits' recording "Money for Nothing" that features Sting singing the words "I want my MTV" was at the invitation of Dire Straits leader Mark Knopfler. Przewalski's Horse (Equus ferus przewalskii), a rare Asian species, is the only true wild horse alive today.

Sting was also the inspiration for the comic book character John Constantine (from Hellblazer). Thanks to the efforts of the brothers Lutz Heck (director of the Berlin zoo) and Heinz Heck (director of Tierpark Munich Hellabrunn), the resulting Wild Polish Horse or Konik more closely resembles the tarpan than any other living horse. In his Live8 performance he changed the lyrics to his song 'Every Breath You Take' from "I'll be watching you” to "we'll be watching you" — meant for the men of the G8. Its genetic line is lost, but its phenotype has been recreated by a "breeding back" process, in which living domesticated horses with primitive features were repeatedly interbred. The tarpan, Equus ferus ferus, became extinct in 1880. For example, the Forest Horse (Equus ferus silvaticus, also called the Diluvial Horse) is thought to have evolved into Equus ferus germanicus, and may have contributed to the development of the heavy horses of northern Europe, such as the Ardennais.

Wild species continued to survive into historic times. Competing theories exist as to the time and place of initial domestication. The earliest evidence for the domestication of the horse comes from Central Asia and dates to approximately 4,000 BCE. .

Until the middle of the 20th century, armies used horses extensively in warfare; soldiers still refer to the groups of machines that have replaced horses on the battlefield as "cavalry" units, and sometimes preserve traditional horse-oriented names for military units (Lord Strathcona's Horse). Though isolated domestication may have occurred as early as 4500 BC, clear evidence of widespread use by humans dates to no earlier than 2000 BC, as evidenced by the Sintashta chariot burials, thus firmly establishing the domestication of the horse. In some human cultures, horses are also widely used as a source of food. Most notably, horses can be ridden by a person perched on a saddle attached to the animal, and are also widely harnessed to pull objects like wheeled vehicles or plows.

Horses have long been one of the most economically important domesticated animals, and have played an important role in the transport of people and cargo for thousands of years. The horse (Equus caballus) is a sizeable ungulate mammal, one of ten modern species of the genus Equus. Bull.Zool.Nomencl., 60:81-84. Usage of 17 specific names based on wild species which are pre-dated by or contemporary with those based on domestic animals (Lepidoptera, Osteichthyes, Mammalia): conserved.

Opinion 2027 (Case 3010). 2003. International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature. Equistar Publications, Ltd., 1996.

Hakola, B.S., R.N., C.M.I. and Susan E. Riegal, D.V.M. Illustrated Atlas of Clinical Equine Anatomy and Common Disorders of the Horse, by Ronald J.

(By members of the faculty and staff, University of California, Davis, School of Veterinary Medicine.) Harper Collins, 1996. Book of Horses: A Complete Medical Reference Guide for Horses and Foals, edited by Mordecai Siegal. Gymkhana. Steeplechase.

Vaulting (gymnastics and dance on horseback). Campdrafting. Polocrosse. 3-Day Eventing- a competition where you are judged on your total score from a day of dressage, stadium jumping and cross country.

The common clothes worn are usually brighter colors and less conservative. Cross Country Jumping, a jumping course that contains logs, and natural obstacles mostly. Show Jumping. Dressage.

Rodeo. Reining. Rapa das bestas. Polo, a team game played on horseback, involves riders using a long-handled mallet to drive a ball on the ground into the opposing team's goal while the opposing team defends their goal.

Hunter paces are usually a few miles long. Hunter paces are usually held in a series. Hunter Pacing, a sport where a trained rider rides a trail at speeds based on its condition and then people compete to ride closest to that perfect time. Jousting.

Horse show. Horse hacking. Fox hunting. Charreada, the highest form of Mexican horsemanship based on a mixture of Spanish and Native traditions.

Cavalry (sport). Bullfighting (rejoneo). It consists of bareback bronc riding and of saddle bronc riding. Bronc riding (riding a bucking "wild" horse for a timed duration) counts as a separate event, not considered part of Western riding as such.

In team roping, one horse and rider lassos a running steer's horns, while another horse and rider lassos the steer's two hind legs. In calf roping, the rider has to catch a running calf by the neck with a lasso, stop the animal in its tracks, rapidy dismount the horse and immobilize the calf by tying three of its legs together. Roping: also banned in Europe. While riding, the rider jumps off his horse onto a steer and 'wrestles' it to the ground.

Steer wrestling: Europe does not allow this activity because of animal welfare concerns, but it occurs in the United States of America, usually at rodeo events. Halter class is particularly popular with younger riders who do not yet have the skill or confidence to partake in other forms. Clothing of the handler and the halters tend to be more flashy in this discipline. In regular halter class, judges will put emphasis on the performance and build of the horse when awarding points, in 'showmanship at halter' the performance of the handler and horse are both judged equally.

The horse is taken through a short pattern where the horse and handler must demonstrate control during walk, jog and turns. The standard position of the handler is on the left side with the shoulder near the horse's eye. Halter class: here the horse is shown with only a halter and without a rider, but with a handler controlling the horse from the ground using a leadrope. In pole bending, horse and rider gallop the length of a line of six upright poles, turn sharply and weave through the poles, turn again and weave back, and gallop back to the start.

In a barrel race, horse and rider gallop around a cloverleaf pattern of barrels, making agile turns without knocking the barrels over. Barrel racing and pole bending: the timed speed/agility events of rodeo. The horses have to move sideways, make 90 degree turns while moving backwards, a fence has to be opened and/or closed while mounted, and more such maneuvers relevant to everyday ranch or trail riding tasks are demonstrated. Speed is not important, but total control of the horse is.

Trail class: in this event, the rider has to maneuver the horse through an obstacle course in a ring. The catch: the riders cannot close the gate to the pen till they have corralled all the cattle (and only the intended cattle) inside. Team penning: a popular timed event in which a team of 3 riders must select 3 to 5 marked steers out of a herd and drive them into a small pen. A jury awards points to the cutter.

The calf then tries to return to its herdmates; the rider loosens the reins and leaves it entirely to the horse to keep the calf separated, a job the best horses do with relish, savvy, and style. The horse and rider select and separate a calf out of a small group. Cutting: more than any other, this event highlights the "cow sense" prized in stock breeds such as the Quarter horse. Reining - considered by some the "dressage" of the western riding world, reining requires horse and rider to perform a precise pattern consisting of canter circles, rapid "spins" (a particularly athletic turn on the haunches), and the sliding stop (executed from a full gallop).

The horse must remain under control, with the rider directing minimal force through the reins and otherwise using minimal interference. Western pleasure - the rider must show the horse in walk, jog (a slow, controlled trot), trot and lope (a slow, controlled canter). Equitation classes occur in the Huntseat, Saddleseat, and Western disciplines. Equitation refers to those classes where judges assess the rider, not the performance of the horse.

Riders also commonly show Arabians and Morgans saddleseat in the United States. Saddleseat (also known as Park or English Pleasure riding), a uniquely American discipline, developed to show to best advantage the extravagantly animated movement of high-stepping gaited breeds such as the American Saddlebred and the Tennessee Walker. A winning show hunter has very good conformation, a smooth jumping style (with tightly-folded front legs), a good length of stride, and an appealing manner. Hunter classes in various divisions and fence heights demonstrate the horse's ability to jump smoothly and safely.

For equitation, see below. In the modern show ring hunters show "on the flat" at the walk, trot, and canter, and "over fences". Huntseat riding as a show discipline derived from English foxhunting and from the natural desire for people to prove that the superiority of their mount. In the last-named, the horses jump over fixed obstacles, unlike show jumping, where the majority of the obstacles will fall down or apart if hit by the horse.

"roads and tracks") and the "cross-country" jumping phase. Eventing, combined training, horse trials, "the Military," or "the complete test" as its French name translates, puts together the obedience of dressage with the athletic ability of show jumping, the fitness demands of a long endurance phase (a.k.a. At the Grand Prix level fences may reach a height of as much as 6 feet. Show jumping comprises a timed event judged on the ability of the horse and rider to jump over a series of obstacles, in a given order and with the fewest refusals or knockdowns of portions of the obstacles.

One dressage master has defined it as "returning the freedom of the horse while carrying the rider.". Competitive dressage has the goal of showing the horse carrying out, on request, the natural movements that it performs without thinking while running loose. Dressage ("training" in French) involves the progressive training of the horse to a high level of impulsion, collection, and obedience. The humans alternately run and ride.

Ride and Tie involves three equal partners: two humans and one horse. Ride and Tie (in North America, organized by Ride and Tie Association). Note especially the Tevis Cup. Races begin at 20 miles and peak at 100 miles.

Endurance races take place over a given, measured distance and the horses have an even start. The American Endurance Ride Conference organizes the sport in North America. Endurance riding, a sport in which the Arabian dominates at the top level, has become very popular in the United States and in Europe. Harness Racing in Europe, New Zealand and Australia.

The United States Trotting Association organizes harness Racing in the United States (although the horses may also pace). Arabian Horse Racing. Appaloosa Horse Racing. Quarter Horse Racing--mostly in the United States, and sanctioned there by the American Quarter Horse Association.

Thoroughbred National Hunt racing or steeplechasing in the UK. Thoroughbred flat racing; (under the aegis of the Jockey Club in the United Kingdom and the Jockey Club of North America). Whorls, coloquially known as "cow licks" - are divergent or convergent patches of hair found anywhere on the body but mostly on the head, neck and just in front of the stifles. Stocking (white marking that extends as high as the knee or hock).

Sock (white marking that does not extend as high as the knee or hock). Ermine marks (black marks on the white just above the hoof). White Face (sometimes called Bald Face). Blaze (broad white stripe down the middle of the face).

Stripe (narrow white stripe down the middle of the face). Snip (a white patch on the muzzle). Star (a white patch between the eyes). These horses have normal eye colour, and they stay white for life.

Rarely there are true white horses born and are documented to have a dominant white gene (see Gray (horse) for a discussion of these). All white, may be the result of overlapping pinto, appaloosa, or sabino markings. White - Any non-albino white horse is called a gray, even though they appear white. Tobiano - a genetic trait among horses which produces a characteristic white pattern in the coat.

Splash - a genetically controlled horse coat variation. Sorrel - a light brown coat with a flaxen mane and tail. This color occurs while the horse is "graying out.". Rose gray: a gray horse with a pinkish tinge to its coat.

Roans also have solid colored heads that do not lighten. Roans are distinguishable from greys because roans typically do not change colour in their lifetimes, unlike gray that gradually gets lighter as a horse ages. Roan can happen on any body color; for example, there are palomino roans and dun roans. Red roans are chesnut and white hairs, blue roans are black/bay with white hairs.

Roan - a color pattern that causes white hairs to be sprinkled over the horse's body color. Perlino - Exactly like a cremello but a bay horse with two dilute genes. Often cited as being a color "within three shades of a newly minted coin", palominos actually come in all shades from extremely light, to deep chocolate. Palomino-chestnut horse that has one cream dilute gene that turns the horse to a golden, yellow, or tan shade with a flaxen (white) mane and tail.

Today, Paint horses are the world's fifth most popular breed. Paint - In 1962, the American Paint Horse Association began to recognize pinto horses with known Quarter Horse and/or Thoroughbred bloodlines as a separate breed. Specific patterns such as tobiano, overo, and tovero refer to the orientation of white on the body. Piebald is black and white, while Skewbald is white and brown.

Pinto - a multi-colored horse with large patches of brown, white, and/or black and white. It is often a grayish/silver colored horse with dark dun factors. Grulla- A black horse with a dun gene. Some gray horses that are very light must wear sunscreen.

If you would define the horse as white it is still grey unless it is albino. Gray horses can be born any color, and eventually most will turn gray or white with age. Gray - A horse with black skin and clear hairs. Fleabitten gray - refers to usually red hairs flecked in the coat of a gray horse.

Dun - Yellowish brown with a dorsal stripe along the back and occasionally zebra stripings on the legs. Dapple gray: a gray colored horse with rings, or dapples, scattered throughout. There are no true albino horses. Often called pseudo albinos, they have blue eyes.

Cremello - A chestnut horse with two dilute genes that washes out almost all colour. Chestnut- A reddish body color with no black. Buckskin- A bay horse with a gene that 'dilutes' the coat colour to a yellow, cream, or gold while keeping the black points (mane, tail, ears, legs). Brown - A bay without any black points.

Usually for a horse to be considered black it must be completely black with no brown at all, only white markings. As their foal coat begins to shed out, their black color will show through,but jet black foals are born jet black. Black foals are usually born a mousy grey color. Jet black is a blue-black shade that is fadeproof.

Ordinary black horses will fade to a rusty brownish color if the horse is exposed to sunlight on a regular basis. Black- There are two types of black, fading black and jet black. Three types - Dark bay, blood bay, light bay and just bay. Bay- From light brown to very dark brown with black mane and tail with black points.

A true Appaloosa is actually a breed, not a color. There are different patterns: blanket- white blanket that typically starts around or behind withers with dark spots mostly over the hips, snowflake - solid with white spots over hips, and leopard - which is white with dark spots over all the coat. Appaloosa - a breed of horse with spots, any color mixed with white. yearling - male or female horse one to two years old.

weanling - a young horse that has just been weaned from their mother (usually 6 months or a little older). stallion - adult, male horse that is able to produce offspring. shelt or shelty - a Shetland pony. School Horse/Pony- A horse owned by a riding academy.

pony - equine 14.2 hh or less (58 inches, 1.47 metres). The word being derived from the latin for 'light horse'. palfrey - a smooth gaited type, a riding horse, often used incorrectly to mean a woman's horse, but in fact, was ridden by knights and ladies and instead refers to the light build of the riding horses body. nag - A rude term used to describe old horses, 'ugly' horses (but beauty is only skin deep) or skinny, sickly horses.

According to BLM, though, a mustang is an unclaimed, unbranded, free-roaming horse. mustang - a feral horse found in the western plains of North America. mare - adult female horse. jenny - a female donkey.

horse - adult equine of either sex over 14.2 hh (58 inches, 1.47 m). 10 cm). One hand is equal to 4 inches (appox. Hand - a unit of measuring used frequently to measure a horses height.

hackney - a specific breed of flashy, elegant driving pony. I'm going out on a hack.". eg. Generally used only by English-style riders.

Not a trail ride or schooling ride. hack - A horseback ride taken for the purpose of pleasure, either for horse or rider. green - a term used to describe an inexperienced horse. god dog - how the Apaches referred to horses.

gelding - a castrated male horse of any age. garron - small and disdained horse. foal - infant horse of either sex. filly - female horse from birth till the age of 4.

draught horse - heavy, muscular beast of burden. destrier - a heavy, strong medieval war horse not to be confused with a charger or palfrey. colt - an unaltered male horse from birth till the age of 4. cob - any horse of a short-legged, stout variety, with short legs, and a compact body, neck and back.

Charger - a medieval war horse of lighter build not to be confused with a destrier. Brumby - a wild or untrained Australian horse. Bronco - a wild, untamed horse, typically used in reference to the American mustang. Grevy's Zebra (Equus grevyi).

Plains Zebra (Equus quagga). Hartmann's Mountain Zebra (Equus hartmannae). Cape Mountain Zebra (Equus zebra). Kiang (Equus kiang).

Onager (Equus hemionus). Wild Ass (Equus africanus). Domesticated Donkey (Equus asinus). Przewalski's Horse (Equus ferus przewalskii).

Tarpan (Equus ferus ferus) (extinct). Wild Horse (Equus ferus)

    . Domesticated Horse (Equus caballus).