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Synchronicity (album)

 

Synchronicity (album)


Synchronicity is the fifth album by The Police, released in 1983 (see 1983 in music). Their most popular release together, Synchronicity includes perhaps their best-known single, "Every Breath You Take". The album's title, as well as the two eponymous songs, are references to Carl Jung's theory of synchronicity.

Synchronicity topped both the Billboard Pop Albums and Billboard 200 charts. It won a Grammy Award for Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal.

In 2003 the TV network VH1 named Synchronicity the 50th greatest album of all time.

The album marked a complete break with the reggae influences of the band's first four records, instead featuring production-heavy textures and liberal use of synthesizers that, at times, drove entire songs ("Synchronicity I", "Wrapped Around Your Finger"). Sting's material dominates the album, with the two short tracks by Andy Summers ("Mother") and Stewart Copeland ("Miss Gradenko") being seen by the band themselves as concessions.

"Synchronicity I" starts the album off with a catchy sequencer line that repeats throughout the song. "Walking in Your Footsteps" features lyrics concerning the relation between extinct dinosaurs and nuclear weapon-wielding humans, and is followed by the jazziest song on the album, "O My God". "Mother" features strange, Indian-like sounds and screamed vocals, and "Miss Gradenko" is a two-minute song about a woman in some sort of dystopian future. "Synchronicity II" features extensive use of feedback, and is one of the heaviest songs on the record.

"King of Pain" features a large amount of lyrical imagery, and uses numerous effects and instruments. "Wrapped Around Your Finger" uses subdued keyboards to create a mystical air, and the record's closer, "Tea in the Sahara", is a quiet, eerie song about two women who are deceived by a prince and left in the desert, where they meet their death. "Murder By Numbers" was added to the CD and cassette versions of the album, and has an odd time signature and lyrics detailing the development of a serial killer.

"Every Breath You Take", which begins Side Two of the record, is almost without question the Police's best-known song, with Sting's eerie vocals on top of a steady rhythm featuring picked guitar, strong bass, and controlled drumming. Orignally, the song was what Andy Summers called a "Hammond organ thing that sounded like Billy Preston." The guitarist came up with a more interesting guitar riff, which, next to the vocals, is perhaps the most distinctive part of the piece. The song, released before the album, immediately went to #1 on both the U.S. and U.K. charts, aided by a black and white video directed by Godley and Creme.

"King of Pain" and "Wrapped Around Your Finger" also made it into the Top Ten, and "Synchronicity II" reached the Top Twenty. Synchronicity managed to make it to number one for several weeks in 1983.

Track listing

"Synchronicity I" (Sting) - 3:23"Walking in Your Footsteps" (Sting) - 3:36"O My God" (Sting) - 4:02"Mother" (Summers) - 3:05"Miss Gradenko" (Copeland) - 1:59"Synchronicity II" (Sting) - 5:02"Every Breath You Take" (Sting) - 4:13"King of Pain" (Sting) - 4:59"Wrapped Around Your Finger" (Sting) - 5:13"Tea in the Sahara" (Sting) - 4:19"Murder by Numbers" (Sting, Summers) - 4:36

Personnel

  • Stewart Copeland - drums, vocals
  • Sting - bass, vocals
  • Andy Summers - guitar, vocals
  • The Police - noise

    Production

  • Producers: The Police, Hugh Padgham
  • Engineer: Hugh Padgham
  • Mastering: Dave Collins, Bob Ludwig
  • Art direction: Jeffrey Kent Ayeroff, Norman Moore, Vartan
  • Design: Jeffrey Kent Ayeroff, Norman Moore
  • Photography: Duane Michals

    Charts

    Album - Billboard (North America)

    Singles - Billboard (North America)

    Awards

    Grammy Awards


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