Sting - If I Ever Lose My Faith In You < HIGH-QUALITY >
How Sting Changed Gears With 'If I Ever Lose My Faith in You'
It could be all of those things, I don't define it. I think it's important not to define it because once you can define something, Ultimate Classic Rock Sting - If I Ever Lose My Faith In You
: The song won Sting the Grammy Award for Best Male Pop Vocal Performance in 1994 and was the most played record on American radio in 1993. It reached number one in Canada and the Top 20 in both the UK and US. How Sting Changed Gears With 'If I Ever
The Anchor in a Lost World: Analyzing Sting’s "If I Ever Lose My Faith in You" The Anchor in a Lost World: Analyzing Sting’s
"If I Ever Lose My Faith in You" remains one of Sting's most enduring works because it balances cynicism with necessity. It suggests that while the world may be "lost" and its institutions crumbling, survival depends on pinning one's faith to a personal, sacred connection—regardless of how one chooses to define it.
: The song opens with a flattened fifth, also known as a tri-tone. Sting chose this specifically because it was historically banned by the church as "the devil’s music," using it to immediately put the listener "ill at ease".