
Don't Stand So Close To Me
The Police
Zenyattà Mondatta (1980)
Sting
Listen to the Song
Summary
Released in 1980 as the lead single from Zenyatta Mondatta, "Don't Stand So Close to Me" became The Police's third UK number one and the best-selling single of the year in Britain. Drawing on Sting's own experience as a schoolteacher and referencing Nabokov's Lolita, the song blends post-punk energy with reggae rhythms to create one of the defining tracks of the early 1980s new wave movement.
Musical Analysis
The harmony of 'Don't Stand So Close to Me' is deceptively sophisticated beneath its pop-rock surface. The use of the mediant (iii) chord in the verse is unusual for mainstream rock and creates harmonic ambiguity that mirrors the song's thematic tension. The r…
Chords
History
Sting wrote "Don't Stand So Close to Me" drawing on his pre-Police career as an English teacher. The song tells the story of a teacher struggling with inappropriate attraction to a young female student, exploring themes of lust, fear, and guilt. The literary r…
“The line rhyming 'shake and cough' with 'Nabokov' was criticized, to which Sting responded that he had used 'that terrible, terrible rhyme technique a few times'”
Full Musical Analysis
The harmony of 'Don't Stand So Close to Me' is deceptively sophisticated beneath its pop-rock surface. The use of the mediant (iii) chord in the verse is unusual for mainstream rock and creates harmonic ambiguity that mirrors the song's thematic tension. The reggae-influenced rhythmic delivery of the verse chords adds further complexity, while the chorus strips back to a definitive IV-V-I cadence, providing the anthemic hook. The contrast between the verse's harmonic uncertainty and the chorus's resolution is central to the song's effectiveness.
Sting wrote "Don't Stand So Close to Me" drawing on his pre-Police career as an English teacher. The song tells the story of a teacher struggling with inappropriate attraction to a young female student, exploring themes of lust, fear, and guilt. The literary reference to Nabokov's Lolita in the line "Just like the old man in that book by Nabokov" anchors the narrative in a broader cultural tradition of examining forbidden desire. Sting described the song's progression as "the teacher, the open page, the virgin, the rape in the car, getting the sack."
Released in 1980 as the lead single from Zenyatta Mondatta, "Don't Stand So Close to Me" became The Police's third UK number one and the best-selling single of the year in Britain. Drawing on Sting's own experience as a schoolteacher and referencing Nabokov's Lolita, the song blends post-punk energy with reggae rhythms to create one of the defining tracks of the early 1980s new wave movement.
Deep Analysis Available
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Song DNA
Genre
Rock
Era
80s
Mood
Dark
Tempo
Mid-tempo
Key
Major
Texture
Full Band
Sound
Guitar-driven
Feel
Syncopated
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Statistics
4.2M
Plays
829K
Listeners
271K
Genius Views
17
Annotations
100%
Popularity
4:00
Duration
4/4
Time
Credits
Written by
Produced by
From the album Zenyattà Mondatta