Synchronicity I
"Synchronicity I"
Experience the explosive energy of The Police's "Synchronicity I"! Kicking off their massive 1983 album Synchronicity, this driving New Wave track blends intricate rhythms with urgent vocals and atmospheric guitars. It’s a complex, powerful opening statement setting the stage for one of rock's most iconic albums.
- TITLE: Synchronicity I
- BAND: The Police
- GENRE: New Wave
- RELEASEDAY: June 17
- YEAR: 1983
The opening statement on The Police's chart-topping 1983 album Synchronicity, "Synchronicity I" immediately grabs the listener with its propulsive force. Written by Sting, this high-energy New Wave track showcases Stewart Copeland's complex polyrhythms, layered synthesizer textures, Andy Summers' atmospheric guitar work, and Sting's intense vocal delivery, creating a sound both urgent and sophisticated, representative of their mature style.
Lyrically exploring Carl Jung's concept of meaningful coincidences ("Synchronicity"), the song juxtaposes this idea against frantic images of societal unease and control. While not released as a commercial single itself, "Synchronicity I" is critically lauded for its musical complexity and effectively establishing the themes of the massively successful album it introduces, remaining a powerful fan favorite today, April 13, 2025.
SONG MEANING: "Synchronicity I" directly references psychologist Carl Jung's theory of synchronicity – the concept of meaningful, acausally connected events ("A connecting principle / Linked to the invisible / Almost imperceptible"). The frantic lyrics contrast this potential for underlying connection and meaning with disturbing snapshots of societal breakdown, control, and alienation ("Subhuman scraps... Daddy falling," "packed like lemmings into shiny metal boxes"), questioning human connection amidst modern chaos.
"The Police"
- TITLE: The Police
- ACTIVE: 1977–1984 (1977), 1986, 1992, 2003, 2007–2008 (2007)
- BAND: The Police
"Murder By Numbers"
- TITLE: Murder By Numbers
- BAND: The Police
- GENRE: New Wave, Pop Rock, Post-punk
- RELEASEDAY: May 20
- YEAR: 1983
