Difference between revisions of "1980-12 Jam"
From PoliceWiki
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|- style="background-color: #f9f9f9;" | |- style="background-color: #f9f9f9;" | ||
| <b>Length of feature:</b> | | <b>Length of feature:</b> | ||
− | | 2 pages | + | | 2 pages + cover + [[Zenyatta Mondatta]] review |
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=Quotes and noteworthy content= | =Quotes and noteworthy content= | ||
− | + | [[Image:1980_12_Jam_01.jpg|80px]] [[Image:1980_12_Jam_02.jpg|80px]] [[Image:1980_12_Jam_03.jpg|60px]] [[Image:1980_12_Jam_04.jpg|110px]] | |
=External links= | =External links= |
Revision as of 13:02, 6 May 2021
JAM | |
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Article title: | The Police: Conquerors Abroad Yet Prisoners At Home |
Artist or band featured: | The Police |
Year: | 1980 |
Month: | December |
Country (or countries) of publication: | USA |
Language(s): | English |
Author/interviewer: | David Huff |
Length of feature: | 2 pages + cover + Zenyatta Mondatta review |
In December 1980, The Police were featured in JAM.
Summary
This article is based on a Stewart Copeland interview in Dallas on 1980-11-12 and tells his (and The Police's) rise from struggling artists to becoming successful stars.
Quotes and noteworthy content
External links
This section needs more information.
References
This section needs more information.