((free)) | The Police - Concert Rockpalast -flac--tntvillage-
of this concert has ever been sold by The Police or WDR. Therefore, any “FLAC” copy you find from TntVillage is derived from:
A Rockpalast performance captures them in their "battle armor" phase. Sting’s voice is a ragged shout of perfection, Copeland’s drumming is a frantic, percussion-heavy assault, and Summers’ guitar work is a masterclass in using effects pedals to create texture out of minimalism. For fans, a recording from this period isn't just a concert; it is evidence of the band defining their legacy.
The phrase refers to a high-fidelity digital archive of one of rock history's most electrifying performances: The Police’s appearance on the legendary German television show Rockpalast in 1980. The Police - Concert Rockpalast -Flac--TntVillage-
Connecting these dots: fans are looking for a of The Police’s Rockpalast performance, previously traded on TntVillage. But before you head down that road, let’s be clear: much of what circulated on TntVillage was either unofficial audience recordings or broadcast rips that violate copyright. Worse, some files claimed to be FLAC but were transcoded from lossy sources.
The search for the specific archive "The Police - Concert Rockpalast -Flac--TntVillage-" of this concert has ever been sold by The Police or WDR
Important clarification: The Police played the Rockpalast series that was professionally multi-tracked for broadcast, though several radio broadcasts exist. The most famous and sought-after is:
For the uninitiated, this looks like digital gibberish. But for audiophiles, bootleg collectors, and fans of the legendary rock trio, this string represents a specific, high-quality artifact of a bygone era. It signifies a meeting point between one of the biggest bands in the world, a revolutionary German television show, the audiophile standard of FLAC, and the legendary "TNT Village" torrent community. For fans, a recording from this period isn't
No. The May 20, 1983, show (often confused with Rockpalast) circulates as an FM broadcast. Some fans have recorded it from radio in high bitrate MP2 or FLAC, but again, no official release.
The audio from these broadcasts is considered "Soundboard" quality—meaning it was taken directly from the mixing desk. This makes the Rockpalast tapes vastly superior to most bootlegs of the era, which were often recorded on cheap cassette tapes from the back of a muddy room. The Rockpalast recordings offer a clean, crisp separation of instruments that allows the listener to hear every nuance of Summers' chord inversions and Copeland’s hi-hat work.
Yes, 1979—right after the release of their second album Reggatta de Blanc (November 1979? Wait, check: Reggatta came out Oct 1979, but this concert was April 1979, so they were still touring Outlandos d’Amour ). Correct date: April 7, 1979. Setlist included “Can’t Stand Losing You,” “Roxanne,” “Next to You,” “So Lonely,” “Truth Hits Everybody,” “Born in the 50’s,” “Peanuts,” and “Landlord.”