Andy Summers
Born
  in Poulton-le-Fylde, The United Kingdom
    
        December 31, 1942
    
  Website
  
  |   | One Train Later: A Memoir by 
          
                
              —
                published
               2006
              —
              21 editions
          
         |  | 
|   | Andy Summers. I'll Be Watching You. Inside The Police 1980?1983 (Taschen Artists Edition) 
          
                
              —
                published
               2007
              —
              6 editions
          
         |  | 
|   | One Train Later: A memoir |  | 
|   | Throb 
          
                
              —
                published
               1983
              —
              9 editions
          
         |  | 
|   | Fretted and Moaning 
          
                
              —
                published
               2021
              —
              2 editions
          
         |  | 
|   | Andy Summers: A Certain Strangeness |  | 
|   | A Series of Glances |  | 
|   | Desirer Walks the Streets 
          
                
              —
                published
               2009
              —
              3 editions
          
         |  | 
|   | Mitigation in the Law of Damages |  | 
|   | Highway to Adventure 
          
                
              —
                published
               2015
          
         |  | 
      “Death is never more than a breath away from the act of playing music. Each note on a guitar represents a small curve: birth, life, and death-and then you start over.”
    
―
  ―
      “at least once in my life make something that would go around the world, create a lick that guitarists everywhere would play, be number one in America, be heard at weddings, bar mitzvahs, births, funerals, be adapted into the repertoire of brass bands in the north of England, and make my mum and dad proud.”
    
― One Train Later: A Memoir
  ― One Train Later: A Memoir
      “What if I hadn’t sold my guitar to Eric? Maybe it would all have turned out differently, and the Les Paul would have been merely another interesting historical clunker rather than a cultural icon.”
    
― One Train Later: A Memoir
  ― One Train Later: A Memoir
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