Synchronicity II
"Synchronicity II" is a song written by Sting for the English rock band the Police, serving as the third single from their fifth and final studio album, Synchronicity, which was released on June 17, 1983, by A&M Records.[1][2][3] The track was issued as a single on October 21, 1983, and achieved commercial success, peaking at number 16 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart and number 17 on the UK Singles Chart.[4][2][3] Lyrically, the song draws on Carl Jung's concept of synchronicity—the occurrence of meaningful coincidences without causal connection—by contrasting the stifling frustrations of a suburban family man with the parallel awakening of a monstrous creature from Loch Ness, symbolizing repressed energies bursting forth amid environmental unrest.[4] Sting has described the narrative as linking everyday domestic tensions to larger, mythical forces, with the "picket lines" protesting pollution serving as a catalyst for the creature's emergence.[4] Musically, it features the band's signature new wave rock style, blending driving rhythms, layered guitars by Andy Summers, and dynamic drumming by Stewart Copeland, contributing to the album's overall theme of psychological and cosmic interconnectedness.[5] The single's music video, directed by Godley & Creme, depicts a surreal, monochromatic performance by the band interspersed with dramatic reenactments of the lyrics, including suburban scenes and the Loch Ness monster, and was noted for its artistic critique of MTV's commercialism at the time.[4] "Synchronicity II" helped propel the Synchronicity album to global number-one status, selling over 8 million copies in the US alone and marking the Police's commercial peak before their 1984 disbandment.[1]Development and recording
Background
"Synchronicity II" is the second track on The Police's fifth and final studio album, Synchronicity, released on June 17, 1983, by A&M Records. The song emerged during a period of intense band tensions in 1982-1983, as the group's dynamics deteriorated under the strain of Sting's increasing dominance in songwriting and production decisions, leading to creative disputes with drummer Stewart Copeland and guitarist Andy Summers. These conflicts, which ultimately contributed to the band's breakup shortly after the album's release, marked a challenging phase in their collaboration.[6][7] The conceptual roots of "Synchronicity II" stem from Sting's fascination with Carl Jung's theory of synchronicity, a concept of meaningful coincidences that connect seemingly unrelated events, which Andy Summers had introduced to him. Sting linked this idea to themes of everyday alienation in modern life and a corresponding mythical awakening, using the song to parallel mundane domestic struggles with ancient, primal forces stirring beneath the surface. This Jungian influence permeated the entire album, shaping its title and overarching narrative of interconnected psychological and archetypal experiences.[3][4] Sting composed the lyrics for "Synchronicity II" in relative isolation while staying at GoldenEye, Ian Fleming's former estate in Jamaica, during the Falklands War in 1982, a time when he was also navigating his divorce from Frances Tomelty. Drawing from observations of suburban domesticity and its underlying frustrations, as well as elements of Scottish folklore such as the Loch Ness Monster legend, Sting crafted a narrative that juxtaposed contemporary alienation with mythical resurgence. This solitary writing process reflected his broader approach to the album, where he developed most material independently before involving the band.[4][3][8] Band collaboration began with initial demos created by Sting, which were then refined through contributions from Copeland and Summers despite ongoing disputes over direction and credit. Summers' interest in Jung provided early input on the thematic framework, while Copeland added rhythmic ideas, though the sessions highlighted the growing rift as Sting's vision prevailed. These pre-production efforts at Sting's setups laid the groundwork for the track, setting the stage for the album's tense recording phase.[3][6]Recording process
The primary recording sessions for "Synchronicity II" took place at AIR Studios in Montserrat, beginning in December 1982 and extending into January 1983, utilizing the studio's Neve 8078 console for capturing the band's backing tracks on 24-track analog tape.[9][10] Overdubs and final mixing occurred subsequently at Le Studio in Morin-Heights, Quebec, from mid-January to February 1983, employing an SSL console with automation to refine the layers.[9][7] The sessions were marked by significant challenges stemming from interpersonal friction within the band, which prolonged the recording of basic tracks and necessitated an unusual setup where members performed in isolated rooms—drums in the dining area, guitar in the main studio, and bass/vocals in the control room—connected only by video link and talkback to minimize direct confrontations.[11][9] This isolation contributed to extended takes, with the first 10 days yielding no usable material, exacerbating the album's overall tensions that had been building since its conceptual inception.[11][7] Specifically, Stewart Copeland's drum parts required multiple overdubs to achieve the desired intensity, while Andy Summers added layered guitar treatments during the Quebec phase to enhance the track's textural depth.[9][7] Engineer and co-producer Hugh Padgham played a pivotal role in navigating these difficulties, overseeing the integration of the band's reggae-rock foundation with dub-inspired electronic elements, such as atmospheric effects and synthesized swells, to create a cohesive yet sparse sound across the album's tracks, including "Synchronicity II."[9] His approach emphasized high-fidelity capture of the core instrumentation—Sting on bass and lead vocals, Copeland on drums, and Summers on guitar—while mediating conflicts to ensure completion.[11][9] The final mixes for "Synchronicity II" were completed in February 1983 at Le Studio, resulting in a polished track that balanced the band's live energy with studio enhancements before the album's release in June.[9][7]Musical composition
Structure and style
"Synchronicity II" employs a conventional verse-chorus structure typical of new wave and reggae-influenced rock, comprising an intro, two verses separated by a pre-chorus, corresponding choruses, a bridge, and an outro. The song's total runtime is 5:04, allowing for a narrative progression that builds through its sections.[12] Composed in F♯ minor, the track maintains a mid-tempo pace of 159 beats per minute, which fuses the offbeat syncopation characteristic of reggae rhythms with the propulsive drive of rock energy. This tempo supports the song's tense atmosphere, enabling a steady forward momentum that underscores its thematic unease without overwhelming the melodic lines.[13][14] Stylistically, "Synchronicity II" exemplifies The Police's signature blend of new wave and reggae elements through a prominent driving bassline that anchors the groove, syncopated drum patterns emphasizing offbeats, and atmospheric guitar riffs that create a sense of looming tension. These traits contribute to the genre's hybrid sound, where reggae's laid-back pulse intersects with new wave's angular, urgent edge. The instrumentation—featuring bass, drums, and guitar—further enhances this fusion, as explored in greater detail in the Instrumentation and production section.[1][15] Harmonically, the song relies on minor chord progressions in F♯ minor to cultivate a pervasive sense of unease, with the verse drawing primarily from Mixolydian mode for a modal flavor. The pre-chorus introduces chromatic alterations including a raised leading tone, flattened third, and flattened sixth, heightening instability, while the chorus features a flatward shift through a descending tetrachord (i–♭VII–♭VI–V) that resolves to the dominant, amplifying dynamic contrasts in intensity across sections.[16]Instrumentation and production
"Synchronicity II" features the core instrumentation of The Police's lineup, with Sting delivering lead vocals and prominent fretless bass lines that drive the song's rhythmic foundation, often employing single-note patterns in A Mixolydian mode to underscore the narrative tension.[17] Stewart Copeland's drum kit contributes a dynamic, intricate performance, utilizing multiple tracks—including ride cymbal bell accents on offbeats and restless ride patterns during verses—to create rhythmic complexity, with the overall drum sound influenced by the gated reverb techniques Padgham developed in collaborations with Phil Collins on albums like Face Value.[9][18] Andy Summers provides electric guitar overlays, recorded in stereo through a Roland JC-120 chorus unit for a shimmering texture, including 12-string plucking, strumming, and manipulated feedback effects that evoke synth-like atmospheres in the intro and transitions.[9][17] Production techniques emphasize separation of the band members during recording at AIR Studios in Montserrat to optimize individual sounds, with Sting tracking bass directly from the control room to achieve a tight reggae-inflected bottom end, while Copeland's drums were captured in an adjacent wooden dining room for a more live, resonant quality amid the studio's humid conditions.[18] Vocals received reverb treatment to impart an ethereal quality, enhancing the song's atmospheric dread, complemented by subtle synth pads that fill the sonic space without overpowering the core trio. Layered percussion elements, derived from Copeland's multi-tracked drums spanning eight or nine tape tracks, add depth to the rhythmic drive, incorporating tribal toms and high-hat flourishes for added complexity.[9] Sound innovations include the application of gated reverb on the drums, a hallmark of Padgham's engineering pioneered with Peter Gabriel and Phil Collins, which delivers a crisp, explosive punch that propels the track's urgent energy and ties into the broader 1980s production aesthetic.[18] Mixing decisions, handled on an SSL console with automation at Le Studio in Quebec, prioritize the bass groove's prominence alongside the kick drum, creating a balanced yet propulsive mix that maintains clarity across the instrumentation while building to an unresolved fade-out in A minor with Phrygian inflections, leaving a sense of lingering tension.[9][17]Lyrics and themes
Narrative elements
"Synchronicity II" presents two parallel narratives that interweave throughout the song, contrasting the everyday turmoil of a suburban family's morning routine with the awakening of a primordial creature in the misty Scottish highlands. The human storyline follows a middle-aged man grappling with domestic dissatisfaction, as his wife voices her boredom and frustration, his elderly mother screams incoherently, and his teenage daughter experiments with an older boyfriend amid the household chaos. This mundane crisis escalates with the man's dread of his commute and workday, culminating in his drive past picket lines protesting industrial pollution at his factory job. In counterpoint, the mythical narrative depicts a Loch Ness-like monster stirring from the depths of a dark Scottish lake, sensing an external disturbance and beginning to emerge into the light, its movements echoing the man's rising inner unrest.[4][15] The lyrics progress through verses that alternate focus between the family scenes and the creature's realm, starting with the chaotic breakfast tableau in the first verse, transitioning via the chorus to the monster's initial stirrings, and building tension in subsequent verses as the father retreats into isolation before venturing out. The chorus serves as a recurring bridge, invoking "many miles away" to spatially and thematically link the disparate stories, with its repetition underscoring the simultaneous unfolding of events and emphasizing the concept of synchronicity as meaningful coincidence. This structure mirrors a brief nod to Jungian ideas of interconnected archetypes, though the narrative remains grounded in literal description.[5][19] Vivid imagery, such as the "din of our Rice Krispies" capturing auditory overload or the "shadow on the door of a cottage on the shore" evoking eerie isolation, heightens the contrast between ordinary frustration and supernatural emergence. The repetitive phrasing in the chorus, like the echoed "many miles away," reinforces the parallel progression without resolution, while the verses employ an ABAB rhyme scheme and steady iambic meter that align with the song's reggae-inflected rhythm, propelling the dual plots forward in sync.[4]Interpretations and influences
The core theme of "Synchronicity II" revolves around Carl Jung's concept of synchronicity, which posits meaningful coincidences that connect events without causal links, bridging the mundane world of everyday life with deeper archetypal forces.[3] Sting drew direct inspiration from Jung's 1952 book Synchronicity: An Acausal Connecting Principle, using the song to dramatize parallel events—a father's mounting frustration at home and a creature stirring in a Scottish loch—as symbolically intertwined rather than logically related.[4] In a 1983 interview, Sting elaborated: "Jung believed there was a large pattern to life, that it wasn’t just chaos... Our song 'Synchronicity II' is about two parallel events that aren't connected logically or causally, but symbolically."[3] Psychologically, the song's suburban narrative illustrates modern alienation and the awakening of repressed primal instincts, with the protagonist's domestic discontent mirroring the loch creature's emergence as a manifestation of suppressed anxiety.[4] This reading portrays the family home as a pressure cooker of unspoken tensions, where the father's paranoia symbolizes broader existential unease in contemporary society, potentially leading to a breakdown if unaddressed.[3] Sting has described the monster as "a symbol of the man’s anxiety," emphasizing how personal turmoil can evoke archetypal imagery from the collective unconscious.[3] The lyrics incorporate cultural nods to Scottish folklore, particularly the highlands and lochs evoking myths like the Loch Ness Monster, which underscores themes of ancient mysteries resurfacing amid modern industrialization.[4] This setting reflects Sting's British roots, blending regional heritage with environmental decay—the polluted waters awakening the beast—to critique 1980s societal disconnection from nature.[3] Within the album Synchronicity, the track parallels "Synchronicity I" by extending the exploration of meaningful coincidences, creating thematic unity that ties personal psychological states to larger cosmic patterns across the record.[4] This interconnection reinforces the album's overarching interest in Jungian ideas, positioning "Synchronicity II" as a narrative complement that deepens the conceptual framework.[3]Release and promotion
Single formats
"Synchronicity II" was released as a single on October 21, 1983, in the United States and October 28, 1983, in the United Kingdom by A&M Records, serving as the third single from the album Synchronicity.[20] The single was primarily issued in vinyl formats, including 7-inch 45 RPM singles and 12-inch 45 RPM maxi-singles. The standard 7-inch release featured "Synchronicity II" (5:04) on the A-side, written by Sting, backed by the non-album B-side "Once Upon a Daydream" (3:28), with music by Andy Summers and lyrics by Sting.[21][22] This configuration was consistent across major markets, including the UK (A&M AM 153), the US (A&M AM-2571), Australia (A&M K-9280), Canada (A&M AM-2571), and various European countries such as Germany and France (A&M AMS 9747).[23][24] The 12-inch maxi-single, available in the UK (A&M AMX 153) and other regions like Spain (A&M AMS 12.9748), replicated the same track listing as the 7-inch version without an extended mix or additional tracks on the original 1983 pressings.[25][26] Promotional copies, including mono/stereo promos and test pressings, were also produced for radio stations, particularly in the US, to support airplay.[27] Regional variations were minimal, with the core track pairing remaining uniform; however, pressing plants differed, such as Pitman or Monarch for US editions, and picture sleeves often incorporated the album's iconic blue-tinted photographic artwork by Duane Michals.[21] The single's promotion emphasized radio exposure and integration with the band's ongoing Synchronicity world tour, though no unique B-sides appeared in specific international markets.[28]Commercial performance
"Synchronicity II" was released as a single in October 1983 and entered the UK Singles Chart on 5 November 1983, where it peaked at number 17 and spent a total of 4 weeks on the chart.[2] Internationally, the single achieved modest success, reaching number 16 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart and number 9 on the Mainstream Rock Tracks chart, while peaking at number 21 on the Canadian RPM Top Singles chart, number 12 on the Irish Singles Chart (IRMA), and number 17 on the Dutch Top 40.[4] The single did not receive any specific certifications, though the parent album Synchronicity was certified eight-times platinum by the RIAA in the US, contributing to the track's enduring exposure. As of 2025, "Synchronicity II" has accumulated over 47 million streams on Spotify, reflecting boosted digital consumption tied to the album's legacy sales of more than 8 million copies in the US alone.[29][30] In the long term, the song has seen resurgence in the digital era, frequently appearing on rock compilation albums such as The Police's Greatest Hits (1992) and maintaining chart presence in retrospective rock playlists and year-end compilations from 1983.Critical reception and legacy
Initial reviews
Upon its release in 1983 as part of The Police's album Synchronicity, "Synchronicity II" received positive attention from Rolling Stone, where critic Stephen Holden awarded the album 4 out of 5 stars and described the track as a "dark, brooding rocker" with "a churning, ominous undertow" that paints a "suburbanite’s nightmare of domestic entrapment," contributing to the album's exploration of personal and social disintegration.[31] In the UK, New Musical Express (NME) lauded the song's dual storytelling as a bold innovation, describing it as "the best metal pop you could imagine" for blending heavy riffs with intricate, symbolic lyrics that mirrored Jungian concepts of synchronicity. The review emphasized how the track's interwoven tales of a frustrated family man and a lurking monster elevated The Police's songwriting beyond conventional rock.[32] However, some UK critics were less enthusiastic; in Melody Maker, Adam Sweeting critiqued the album's calculated approach in his June 1983 review, noting that while the record impressed with its ambition, the band's meticulous planning made it hard to connect emotionally. Sweeting contrasted this with more instinctive rock, suggesting the album lacked immediate appeal.[33] Reviews often contextualized "Synchronicity II" within the album's praise for thematic cohesion, with Holden in Rolling Stone summarizing Synchronicity as a unified exploration of psychological and cosmic connections, where the track exemplified the blend of personal alienation and broader archetypes. Sting himself commented in a 1983 Time interview on the song's intent, explaining it depicted "two parallel events that aren't connected logically or causally, but symbolically," underscoring its conceptual layers.[31][34]Cultural impact and covers
"Synchronicity II" has contributed to the popularization of Carl Jung's concept of synchronicity within mainstream rock music and broader pop culture, illustrating parallel events that connect symbolically rather than causally.[1] The track's narrative has sparked ongoing discussions about meaningful coincidences and psychological patterns in everyday life.[15] The song has inspired several notable cover versions across genres. Progressive metal band Queensrÿche included a rendition on their 2007 covers album Take Cover, emphasizing the track's driving rhythm and atmospheric tension.[35] Brazilian power metal group Angra performed live covers during their 2015 tours.[35] Additionally, Sting performed a live version during his 2016 shows at the Bataclan in Paris, highlighting the song's enduring personal resonance.[35] In musical legacy, "Synchronicity II" has influenced alternative rock through its blend of narrative storytelling and experimental edges, appealing to audiences beyond mainstream pop.[36] It has been sampled in electronic music, notably by British duo Way Out West on their 1997 track "King of the Funk," which incorporated the song's bassline and rhythmic elements into a trance framework.[37] American producer Wagon Christ also sampled it in the 2004 electronic composition "Sorry I Make You Lush," adding glitchy textures to the original's intensity.[37] The track received renewed attention through The Police's reissues, including a 2010 remastered edition on SACD that restored its dynamic production for modern listeners, and a 2024 40th anniversary super deluxe edition featuring unreleased material.[38][39] Fan interpretations often link its themes of suburban frustration and inner turmoil to broader conversations on alienation and psychological strain in contemporary society.[40]Music video and live performances
Video production
The music video for "Synchronicity II" was directed by the duo Kevin Godley and Lol Creme, who had previously helmed the band's "Every Breath You Take" video, and was released in 1983 to promote the single from the album Synchronicity. Running 4:33, it debuted on MTV and showcased a grand-scale production focused on surreal, dystopian imagery to evoke the song's themes of psychological tension and meaningful coincidences.[4][41][42] Filming occurred primarily in a London studio, where each band member performed atop a 25-foot tower built from components of their respective instruments—drums for Stewart Copeland, guitars for Andy Summers, and bass elements for Sting—overlooking a set resembling a futuristic garbage dump. Exterior shots were captured in Scotland, including sequences on a boat crossing a misty lake and at Boleskine House near Loch Ness, to visualize the lyrics' depiction of a monstrous creature rising from a "dark Scottish loch." Godley later described the concept as building an "insane environment" to parallel the song's dual narratives of suburban domestic chaos and supernatural emergence, using practical effects like air blowers and dry ice for stormy atmospheres.[4] Key creative decisions emphasized visual synchronicity, intercutting the band's intense performance with vignettes of familial discord and the loch beast's awakening, achieved through dynamic cinematography via a Hot Head remote camera mount. An unplanned fire erupting beneath Copeland's tower during shooting was serendipitously retained in the edit, adding to the video's chaotic energy. The production wrapped with post-production in London, blending the studio and location footage into a cohesive, narrative-driven piece that underscored the track's Jungian influences.[4]Live renditions
"Synchronicity II" debuted live with The Police on the opening night of their Synchronicity Tour on July 23, 1983, at Comiskey Park in Chicago, Illinois, where it was performed as the third song in the setlist following "Voices Inside My Head" and "Synchronicity I". The song became a staple of the tour's setlists, appearing in over 100 shows across North America, Europe, and Australia through March 4, 1984, totaling 105 concerts in support of the album.[43] Early performances adhered closely to the studio arrangement, but later dates featured extended instrumental jams, particularly emphasizing Andy Summers' guitar work and Stewart Copeland's drumming, extending runtimes beyond the original 5:03 length.[44] Notable recordings from the tour include a high-energy rendition captured at Wembley Arena in London on December 28, 1983, which highlights the band's tight interplay and crowd engagement during the European leg.[45] The track's position early in the setlist often served as an energizer, drawing enthusiastic audience responses with sing-alongs on the chorus, as evidenced in fan-recorded audio from the era that captures palpable excitement.[46] The song reappeared during The Police's 2007–2008 Reunion Tour, where it was a consistent opener after "Message in a Bottle," performed at nearly all 151 dates worldwide and maintaining its role as a high-energy highlight with renewed vigor from the reformed lineup.[47] In Sting's solo career during the 2000s, "Synchronicity II" received prominent play, notably 128 times on the 2004 Sacred Love Tour and 33 times in 2006, often adapted for his band setup with occasional guest appearances, such as with Annie Lennox, emphasizing its enduring appeal in live contexts.[48] These solo renditions sometimes incorporated fuller band dynamics but retained the song's driving rhythm as a mid-set draw for audiences familiar with its narrative intensity.[49] The song continued to feature in Sting's live sets into the 2020s, including regular performances during his 2024–2025 Sting 3.0 Tour with a stripped-down trio, and was included on the live album STING 3.0 Live, released on April 25, 2025.[50]Personnel
- Sting – lead vocals, bass guitar, drum machine)
- Andy Summers – guitar, keyboards, guitar synthesizer[5]
- Stewart Copeland – drums[5]