The Police - 'One World (Not Three)' (1981 - Ghost In The Machine)
This one's a right cracker, with Stewart's drumming taking center stage. In a truly fucking majestic bastardization of reggae and pop/rock themes, he shifts from drops on the third beat of the bar over and into straight 4/4 bridges like he's taking a walk. Flurries of paradiddles on the hi-hats in between the vocal lines keep it steady but greasy and he erupts into drum-breaks in the most surprising of tight spaces, focusing attention away from the song and lyric and off into the whole new paradigm for the cosmos he invented and called his own.
There's only one Stewart Copeland, and without him Sting and Andy's careers might well have taken different turns.
That said, each of the three players have their own unique styles, it's just amazing they all made room for each other in so many three-minute wonders.
Important to remember too that when laying his drums, most of these songs weren't even fully finished, yet the drums ALWAYS went to tape first.
Sting and Andy often changed whole chunks of the original takes, sometimes even deleting their entire input and re-recording them in a different key.
The tension in the studio was often fraught with violence and Sting and Stewart in particular went at each other more often than they ever admitted.
So much talent in one little band of three blokes from radically different backgrounds:
Sting's old man was a shipbuilder from Newcastle, they were a staunch working class family and his first job was as a teacher, first band a jazz orchestra.
Andy was a top session player for years before he met the other two, ten years older - he covered the blues scene as well as many forays into progressive rock.
Stewart was also a progressive rock player with Curved Air before he met Sting, then they began a career as a session rhythm section before starting The Police.
The first album 'Outlandos D'Amour' had a punk element to it, mixed with distant strains of reggae from Stewart which heralded the style of the next album.
'Regatta De Blanc' was the cornerstone of their 'new' sound with a few Number One hits in 'Walking On The Moon' and

'Message In A Bottle'.
'Ghost In The Machine' showed signs of what ultimately became the very thing that destroyed the band: Stewart and Andy trying to remain vital/central.
Then 'Synchronicity' cemented their demise: none of them liked the end result and it broke the band in the end.
The Police were the first pop/rock band that captivated me, I knew I'd never hear another group break all the barriers these three did.
I studied every one of their records and played along with them until my fingers bled, then some more.
There are still elements of Stewart's playing style in evidence on pretty much every record I've played on, such was his influence.
But these days there are multiple renowned drummers copying/lifting Stewart's style, and many tend to fail: they try too hard, and it shows.
Still, I occasionally stick on the albums when I'm painting and sketching, and they still inspire me even today, over forty years since they were laid.
