People in the music industry can be rather impressive. The ability for someone to grab onto an artistic outlet, master various skills that go along with it, and then use that to compose beautiful sounds is just thoroughly impressive.
When you take those skills and use them to blast off into stardom during your work with, let's say, The Police, no one is going to doubt your prowess.
But I'm never shocked when someone with talent and skill decides to take money to compose an anthem for a new corporate flagship product. Rather, I'm just always impressed by another skill that many musicians seem to be able to perform naturally--knowing how to grab at cash when it's dangled in their faces.
Stewart Copeland has proven that he has the skill. He decided to compose a theme, and various other alerts, for the new Blackberry Bold.
The best part about the compositions is how generic they sound. They sound like every other silly built in ring tone you have ever heard. If you weren't outright told who they were done by you wouldn't care in the least, and you probably won't care anyway. I know I don't.
