Synkronized
Synkronized is the fourth studio album by the English funk and acid jazz band Jamiroquai.[1] It was released on 8 June 1999 in the United States by Work Group and on 14 June 1999 in the United Kingdom by S2 Records.[1][2] The album incorporates elements of funk, disco, and electronic music, featuring production by Jay Kay and Al Stone.[3] Its lead single, "Deeper Underground", was released in 1998 as a bonus track on the UK edition and became Jamiroquai's first number-one single on the UK Singles Chart, also appearing on the soundtrack for the film Godzilla.[4] Subsequent singles from Synkronized include "Canned Heat", which peaked at number four on the UK Singles Chart and number one on the US Billboard Dance Club Songs chart, "Supersonic", reaching number 22 in the UK, and "King for a Day".[5][6] Synkronized debuted at number one on the UK Albums Chart and number 28 on the US Billboard 200. It has been certified platinum by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) in the United Kingdom and sold over 1.9 million copies worldwide.[7][8] The album received generally positive reviews from critics, who praised its groovy, danceable tracks and blend of acid jazz with contemporary electronic influences, though some noted it as less innovative than prior works.[3]Background
Album conception
Following the success of their third album, Travelling Without Moving (1997), which sold over 8 million copies worldwide, Jamiroquai's frontman Jay Kay sought to create a more immersive recording environment to better capture the band's live energy. Inspired by the residential studio experience at Great Linford Manor during the previous album's sessions, Kay conceived the idea for a custom home studio mid-flight in 1997, sketching initial plans on a napkin. He invested half of the £2 million advance for the album (approximately £1 million) to convert a poolside building at his Buckinghamshire estate into Chillington Studios, equipped with an SSL 4000 E console and a large live room designed to facilitate band performances.[9][10] The conception of Synkronized began in earnest at Chillington Studios in 1998, with initial sessions yielding about nine tracks featuring the core lineup, including longtime bassist Stuart Zender. However, production was abruptly halted when Zender departed the band in late 1998 amid disputes over songwriting credits and financial splits. To avoid potential legal complications from Zender's contributions, Kay and the remaining members—keyboardist Toby Smith, guitarist Simon Katz, drummer Derrick McKenzie, and didgeridoo player Wallis Buchanan—discarded the existing material and rewrote the album from scratch with new bassist Nick Fyffe. This restart infused the project with a sense of urgency, resulting in a tighter, more aggressive sound compared to prior releases.[11][12] Musically, Kay envisioned Synkronized as a shift toward a disco-infused direction, emphasizing radio-friendly tracks and remixes suitable for large venues and club play. Drawing from influences like Earth, Wind & Fire, Donald Byrd, Sly Stone, and Stevie Wonder, the album retained Jamiroquai's acid jazz and funk roots while incorporating more electronic and dance elements to broaden commercial appeal. Kay aimed explicitly for chart success, stating his goal was "a number one album and single here and a top 10 album in America." The sessions, produced by Al Stone, were completed in five months at Chillington, allowing for a focused creative process where writing and recording were separated to enhance quality.[12][9] Reflecting on the album years later, Kay expressed some dissatisfaction with its lyrical depth, noting in 2001 that he "never really locked into that album, lyrically. I wasn't there. I listen to it now, and it's a good album, but I didn't write it with my heart and soul like I did the others," attributing this partly to the turmoil of the lineup change and rushed rewrite. Despite these challenges, Synkronized marked a pivotal evolution for the band, blending their established sound with a more polished, stadium-ready aesthetic.[13]Band lineup changes
During the recording of Synkronized in 1998, founding bassist Stuart Zender departed the band amid tensions with frontman Jay Kay. The split was also attributed to disputes over album royalties.[12][11] Nick Fyffe was brought in as Zender's replacement, contributing bass parts to complete the album and joining for subsequent live performances. While Zender had laid down initial bass tracks during early sessions, these were largely overdubbed or removed in the final mix, with Fyffe's playing featured prominently on tracks like "Canned Heat."[11] The rest of the core lineup—drummer Derrick McKenzie, keyboardist Toby Smith, guitarist Simon Katz, and didgeridoo player Wallis Buchanan—remained intact from prior albums, maintaining continuity in the band's sound.[14]Recording and production
Recording sessions
The recording sessions for Synkronized took place entirely at Chillington Studios, a newly built complex within Jay Kay's Buckinghamshire country house in England, marking the first Jamiroquai album to be produced in this private facility.[14] The sessions spanned approximately five months starting in 1998, allowing the band to work in a relaxed, self-contained environment with 30 rooms available for various recording needs.[14] Unlike prior albums, which involved external studios, this setup enabled a more organic process without the constraints of time limits or outside schedules.[14] The project faced significant disruption when founding bassist Stuart Zender departed midway through. Zender left in late 1998 due to disputes over monetary splits and royalties.[15] This prompted a complete rewrite of the material to circumvent potential legal disputes over credits and royalties. Initially composed with Zender's input, the album was redone from scratch, resulting in a tighter, more aggressive sound infused with influences from Kay's personal life, including two romantic tracks inspired by his then-partner Denise van Outen. New bassist Nick Fyffe joined to fill the role, contributing to tracks alongside core members Jay Kay on vocals, Derrick McKenzie on drums, Toby Smith on keyboards, Simon Katz on guitar, and Wallis Buchanan on didgeridoo.[14] Producer Al Stone oversaw the sessions, emphasizing live band performances over isolated layering to capture a spontaneous, ensemble feel.[14] Tracks were developed without pre-existing demos, starting from improvisational jamming sessions that blended live instrumentation with sampled elements.[14] The studio's technical setup included an SSL mixing console for primary tracking, two Studer A827 24-track analogue tape machines for multitrack recording, a Pro Tools system for editing, and valve outboard gear like compressors and equalizers to warm the sound.[14] Drums were captured using a MIDI pad kit for initial programming, later enhanced with live takes, while guitars and keyboards were often processed through effects like the Mutronics Mutator filter for distinctive tonal shifts.[14] Vocals were recorded directly in the control room using an AKG C12 microphone pre-amped through valve gear, with Kay performing without headphones to maintain natural phrasing and energy.[14] Specific tracks exemplified this approach; for instance, "Supersonic" emerged from extended jams incorporating Buchanan's didgeridoo and Katz's sampled guitar riffs, evolving into a high-energy funk piece over multiple iterations.[14] Similarly, "Planet Home" and the title track relied heavily on sampled sounds manipulated in real-time, showcasing the band's experimental side amid the live foundation.[14] The process prioritized quick experimentation, with minimal sequencing to preserve the raw, disco-inflected grooves that defined the album's direction.[14]Production techniques
The production of Synkronized marked a shift for Jamiroquai, as it was the band's first album recorded entirely in-house at Jay Kay's newly built Chillington Studios in Buckinghamshire, England, a residential complex spanning 30 rooms designed to foster a relaxed creative environment.[14][9] Engineered and produced by Al Stone over five months in 1998, the sessions emphasized spontaneous collaboration among the band members, eschewing pre-written demos in favor of evolving jams that captured a live ensemble feel.[14] This approach allowed tracks like "Supersonic" to develop organically, starting from improvised elements such as didgeridoo, drums, and keyboards before layering additional instruments.[14] The studio's core setup revolved around analogue recording technology to preserve warmth and dynamics, utilizing two Studer A827 24-track 2-inch tape machines for multitrack capture.[14][9] Mixing occurred on a second-hand SSL E-Series console with G-Series automation, enabling precise control over the dense funk and jazz arrangements.[9] Drums were recorded using a combination of MIDI pads for programming and full kits miked with 7-8 overheads and close mics, often in simpler configurations to maintain punch; bass was primarily direct-injected (DI) for clarity.[14] Vocals, led by Jay Kay, were tracked with a vintage AKG C12 valve microphone, incorporating subtle distortion and effects like the Mutronics Mutator for tonal variation, particularly in breakdowns.[14][9] Effects processing was judicious, prioritizing the natural band interplay over heavy digital intervention, though a Pro Tools system and digital tools like the Roland VP9000 sampler were integrated for experimentation and sampling acoustic elements, such as guitars run through samplers.[14][9] Reverb was applied minimally—often via Lexicon 480 units flicked on and off—to avoid muddiness, while compression (using Dbx 160RM and Quad Eight units) and light EQ ensured the rhythmic drive of bass and drums cut through.[14] Keyboards and vintage synths, including the Memorymoog and Roland System 100M, were recorded live to tape, blending analogue authenticity with occasional digital overdubs.[9] The final mixes were mastered from half-inch analogue tape, contributing to the album's polished yet organic sound.[14] This hybrid analogue-digital workflow, supported by tie-lines connecting the control room to various house spaces, allowed for flexible recording environments that enhanced the album's energetic, improvisational quality.[9]Composition
Musical style
Synkronized exemplifies Jamiroquai's signature blend of acid jazz, funk, and electronic music, rooted in 1970s soul and disco influences.[16] The album maintains the band's fascination with club-oriented grooves while incorporating modern electronic elements and polished production, resulting in a sound that balances vintage appeal with contemporary dance sensibilities.[3] Tracks like "Canned Heat" evoke a "big-hair orchestral disco boogie pastiche of the 70s," complete with infectious rhythms and a vintage feel that prioritizes dancefloor energy.[17] The album's versatility shines through its integration of diverse stylistic elements, including throbbing basslines inspired by hip-hop (as in "Planet Home," with a bassline reminiscent of Notorious B.I.G.'s "Hypnotize" with added saucy samba), trippy space-funk instrumentals ("Destitute Illusions"), and ethnic textures featuring didgeridoo ("Supersonic").[17] More introspective moments, such as "King for a Day," employ dramatic piano and sympathetic strings to create a lush, soulful atmosphere, highlighting Jay Kay's vocal range and the band's ability to shift from high-energy funk to emotive ballads.[17] Overall, Synkronized represents a maturation in Jamiroquai's sound, becoming "smarter and more complex" compared to earlier works, while retaining core funk-pop foundations.[18]Lyrics and themes
The lyrics on Synkronized mark a shift from the overt environmental activism of Jamiroquai's earlier albums toward more personal and confessional territory, influenced by frontman Jay Kay's experiences with fame, relationships, and band internal conflicts, while retaining subtle nods to broader societal concerns like millennial anxiety and planetary care.[19] Produced amid lineup changes, the album's words often convey resilience and introspection, blending funk-infused optimism with underlying tension.[20] The opening track and lead single "Canned Heat" captures a theme of defiant perseverance, with Kay declaring his commitment to music and dance amid adversity—"All the nasty things that people say, well I'm gonna make it anyway"—as a response to public and personal criticisms.[19] Similarly, "Soul Education" celebrates the liberating power of the dancefloor as an escape and life philosophy, urging listeners to embrace rhythm over rigid societal norms.[20] These upbeat anthems prioritize feel-good escapism, reflecting Kay's acknowledgment that heavier topics might not always translate to the dancefloor.[19] Romantic introspection features prominently in tracks like "Falling" and "Butterfly," both penned as tributes to Kay's then-partner, television presenter Denise van Outen, exploring vulnerability and emotional connection amid his high-profile life.[19] In contrast, the closing ballad "King for a Day" delivers a bitter, confessional critique of betrayal, widely interpreted as a veiled reference to the recent exit of longtime bassist Stuart Zender, lamenting the "damage done" by a once-essential collaborator.[20] Environmental consciousness, a hallmark of Jamiroquai's oeuvre, appears more subdued but persists in "Planet Home," where Kay evokes nostalgia for Earth as humanity's sole sanctuary—"You know, there's no place like planet home / Nowhere else I'd rather be"—warning against its degradation while tying it to themes of belonging and return.[19] "Black Capricorn Day" adds a layer of personal turmoil and astrological introspection, with its raw vocals conveying emotional unrest.[20] Overall, the album's themes underscore synchronization not just musically but existentially, grappling with change in a pre-millennium world fraught with uncertainty, as Kay referenced apocalyptic predictions from Nostradamus tied to global conflicts.[19] The instrumental "Destitute Illusions" stands apart, offering wordless reflection on illusion and reality without lyrical narrative.Release and promotion
Album release
Synkronized was released in the United States on 8 June 1999 by Work Group, a Sony Music imprint, and in the United Kingdom on 14 June 1999 by S2 Records.[1] The album debuted at number one on the UK Albums Chart the following week.[7] Internationally, releases occurred around the same period, including in Japan on 7 June 1999 via Epic Records.[7][1] The album was issued in multiple formats, including standard CD, vinyl LP (often in gatefold sleeves), cassette, and MiniDisc, with variations by region.[1] Limited editions featured bonus content, such as a second CD in Australia and the UK containing additional tracks.[1] Sony Music handled distribution globally under various sublabels like Columbia and Sony Soho Square.[1] Promotion for Synkronized included the inclusion of the 1998 single "Deeper Underground"—originally recorded for the Godzilla film soundtrack—as a bonus track on UK and Australian editions, helping to leverage the song's prior chart success.[21] Some international versions also added "Getinfunky" as an exclusive track to encourage regional sales.[1] These strategies, combined with pre-release press packs and promotional singles, supported the album's launch amid lineup changes within the band.[22]Singles
To promote Synkronized, Jamiroquai released five singles between 1998 and 1999, with most achieving notable success on international charts, particularly in the UK and US dance markets. The lead single, "Deeper Underground", was initially tied to the soundtrack for the 1998 film Godzilla before being included as a bonus track on the album, marking the band's first UK number-one hit. Subsequent releases like "Canned Heat" and "Supersonic" emphasized the album's funk and acid jazz elements, while "King for a Day" and the Japan-only "Black Capricorn Day" rounded out the campaign. The following table summarizes the official singles:| Single Title | Release Date | UK Peak Position | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Deeper Underground | July 13, 1998 | 1 | Lead single; peaked at number 22 on US Dance Club Songs chart; featured on Godzilla soundtrack.[23] |
| Canned Heat | May 24, 1999 | 4 | Second single; reached number one on US Dance Club Songs; accompanied by a music video directed by Mark Szaszy. |
| Supersonic | September 13, 1999 | 22 | Third single; promoted with a video directed by Howard Greenhalgh, featuring futuristic visuals. |
| King for a Day | November 29, 1999 | 20 | Fourth single; included remixes and a video with Jay Kay in historical attire. |
| Black Capricorn Day | November 3, 1999 | N/A | Japan-only release; peaked at number 14 on the Japan Hot 100; intended for wider distribution but limited; performed live during promotional tours. |
World tour
The Synkronized Tour was Jamiroquai's worldwide promotional trek for their 1999 album Synkronized, spanning from June to December 1999 and encompassing approximately 62 performances across four continents.[24] The tour kicked off in the United Kingdom with a series of arena shows, including dates at the Brighton Centre on June 9, Manchester's MEN Arena on June 11, and two nights at London's Wembley Arena on June 19–20, before expanding to North America in July.[24] It featured high-profile appearances such as a performance at Woodstock '99 in Rome, New York, on July 23, and concluded with holiday-season shows in the UK, including television spots on programs like Top of the Pops.[24] The itinerary covered diverse regions, with 20 shows in Europe (primarily the UK, France, Germany, Italy, and the Netherlands), 15 in North America (USA, Canada, and Mexico), 8 in South America (Brazil, Uruguay, and Argentina), and 4 in Asia (Japan).[24] Notable venues included the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles on July 7, where around 6,000 fans attended a 105-minute set emphasizing funk-driven tracks from Synkronized; the National Auditorium in Mexico City for two nights on September 1–2; Luna Park Stadium in Buenos Aires for three consecutive shows from August 27–29; and Tokyo Dome on November 17–18.[25][24] The band, consisting of vocalist Jason Kay, guitarist Simon Katz, bassist Nick Fyffe, drummer Derrick McKenzie, percussionist Sola Akingbola, didgeridoo player Wallis Buchanan, and DJ D-Zire, incorporated exotic instrumentation like the didgeridoo alongside standard funk elements such as horns and keyboards to create an energetic, dance-oriented atmosphere.[25] Setlists typically blended new material from Synkronized with earlier hits and covers, averaging around 15–20 songs per show. Highlights included performances of "Canned Heat," "Supersonic," and "Planet Home" from the album, alongside classics like "Light Years" and "Too Young to Die," as well as a cover of the Rolling Stones' "Miss You" to energize crowds.[25] At the Los Angeles date, Kay's frantic dancing and socially conscious lyrics on themes of environmentalism and mental exploration were central, though critics noted the show's reliance on Stevie Wonder-inspired grooves sometimes lacked originality.[25] The tour's global reach underscored Jamiroquai's rising international appeal, with strong turnouts in urban centers and festivals, though some European dates, like one in Cardiff on June 7, were cancelled.[24]Critical reception
Contemporary reviews
Upon its release in June 1999, Synkronized received mostly favorable reviews from music critics, who commended Jamiroquai's continued mastery of funk and acid jazz while noting the album's adherence to the band's established sound amid lineup changes, including the departure of bassist Stuart Zender. The record was seen as a reliable extension of their groove-oriented style, with strong emphasis on dancefloor appeal and production polish, though some outlets found it formulaic compared to the breakthrough Travelling Without Moving (1996). The BBC's Chris Charles praised the album for sticking to Jamiroquai's "successful formula" developed over seven years, opening with the hit single "Canned Heat," which evoked 1970s orchestral disco influences akin to Corduroy. He highlighted "Planet Home" for its samba-infused bassline borrowed from the Notorious B.I.G.'s "Hypnotize," "Black Capricorn Day" as an update to Marc Bolan's "Children of the Revolution," and the instrumental "Destitute Illusions" as the standout trippy space-funk track. Charles acknowledged Zender's absence but concluded that Synkronized would secure further commercial success through its accessible, no-surprises approach.[17] The Guardian awarded the album three stars out of five in a review tied to a live performance around its release. Reviewer Alexis Petridis noted tracks like "Supersonic," "Black Capricorn Day," and "Planet Home" as evidence of frontman Jay Kay and the band "moving on, getting smarter and more complex," building on the global sales of over seven million copies for the prior album and positioning Jamiroquai as a maturing act capable of sophisticated funk.[18] NME offered a more critical perspective, critiquing its occasional reliance on gimmicks, such as didgeridoos in "Supersonic" paired with speed-garage bass. Reviewer John Mulvey appreciated fleeting "inventive spasms" in the production but found the overall effort uneven, with the curious ethnic fusions and repetitive grooves failing to innovate beyond Jamiroquai's comfort zone.[26] Other outlets echoed this mixed but leaning-positive sentiment. Muzik magazine called it potentially "his strongest album yet" for fans, emphasizing its funky cohesion despite the band's internal shifts. The Daily Iowan assigned a B- grade, describing it as "still funkay, still discotheque-ish" with grooving beats, but sounding somewhat tired after the band's peak. Rolling Stone gave it three out of five stars, calling it "fifty minutes of sleek, sexy fun; a party album delivered with something like genuine conviction." AllMusic praised its groovy, danceable tracks and blend of acid jazz with contemporary electronic influences.[27][28][29][3]Retrospective assessments
In the years following its release, Synkronized has been reassessed as a pivotal entry in Jamiroquai's discography, often praised for blending their signature acid jazz-funk with late-1990s electronic and disco influences, marking a transitional phase before more pop-oriented albums. Critics highlight its buoyant energy and dancefloor appeal, with tracks like "Canned Heat" noted for its orchestral disco flair reminiscent of Chic and a modern take on Saturday Night Fever-era grooves, while "Soul Education" reinforces the album's emphasis on hedonistic escapism. The introduction of deeper electro basslines, as heard in "Planet Home" and "Deeper Underground," is credited with adding textural depth and foreshadowing the band's future sonic experiments.[20] Retrospective analyses also underscore the album's role in capturing the optimistic vibe of late-1990s British culture, positioning it as a nostalgic artifact that holds up well due to its varied pacing and jazz-infused tracks such as "Planet Home," "Soul Education," and "Where Do We Go From Here?" More introspective moments like the horn-driven "Black Capricorn Day" and the delicate "Falling" are lauded for providing emotional balance amid the high-energy funk, with the overall collection described as "really good music" that resonates beyond its era. The departure of bassist Stuart Zender during recording, alluded to in the pointed closer "King For A Day," is viewed as a significant turning point, with Nick Fyffe's seamless integration helping maintain the band's groove-heavy cohesion.[30][20] Commentators in the 2010s and 2020s have affirmed Synkronized's enduring replay value, particularly in tracks like "Canned Heat," which exemplify Jay Kay's hedonistic charisma and the band's cosmic funk ethos, contributing to Jamiroquai's legacy of commercial success—including three UK No. 1 albums and over 35 million records sold worldwide. While some note its shift toward slicker production as a departure from earlier organic sounds, the album is generally seen as a high point of consistency and groove, bridging the band's acid jazz roots with broader electronic pop accessibility.[30]Commercial performance
Chart performance
Synkronized debuted at number one on the UK Albums Chart, marking Jamiroquai's second album to top the chart there, and remained in the top 40 for several weeks.[7] In the United States, the album entered the Billboard 200 at number 28.[31] The album also achieved number-one positions in Australia on the ARIA Albums Chart and in Germany on the Offizielle Deutsche Charts.[32][33] Internationally, Synkronized performed strongly across Europe and Oceania, as shown in the following selected peak positions:| Country | Peak Position | Chart |
|---|---|---|
| United Kingdom | 1 | UK Albums Chart |
| United States | 28 | Billboard 200 |
| Australia | 1 | ARIA Albums Chart |
| Germany | 1 | Offizielle Deutsche Charts |
| New Zealand | 12 | Recorded Music NZ Albums Chart |
Sales and certifications
Synkronized achieved significant commercial success following its release, particularly across Europe and the United Kingdom. In the United Kingdom, the album was certified Platinum by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) for sales of 300,000 units.[7] The album has sold over 2 million copies worldwide.[8] The following table summarizes the key certifications for Synkronized:| Country/Territory | Certification | Units certified | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Australia (ARIA) | 2× Platinum | 140,000 | ARIA |
| Germany (BVMI) | Gold | 150,000 | BVMI |
| Switzerland (IFPI SWI) | Platinum | 50,000 | IFPI Switzerland |
| United Kingdom (BPI) | Platinum | 300,000 | Official Jamiroquai website |
Legacy and reissues
Cultural impact
Synkronized played a significant role in solidifying Jamiroquai's position within late 1990s popular culture, particularly through its lead single "Deeper Underground," which served as the main theme for the 1998 blockbuster film Godzilla. The track's inclusion on the film's soundtrack, produced by Epic Records, exposed Jamiroquai to a broader international audience, marking their only number-one single on the UK Singles Chart and contributing to the album's global reach. This association with a high-profile Hollywood production amplified the band's funky, electronic sound in cinematic contexts, helping to bridge acid jazz with mainstream media.[35] The album's second single, "Canned Heat," achieved lasting cultural prominence via its feature in the 2004 independent film Napoleon Dynamite. In the movie's climactic talent show scene, protagonist Napoleon Dynamite performs an improvised dance to the song, a moment that has been widely regarded as one of cinema's most iconic and parodied sequences. This placement propelled "Canned Heat" into pop culture lexicon, with the dance routine inspiring memes, covers, and references across media, and significantly boosting streams and sales of the track years after its initial release. The scene's awkward yet hypnotic energy, set against the song's upbeat disco-funk groove, encapsulated early 2000s indie film aesthetics and resonated with audiences seeking escapist humor.[36][37][38] Beyond specific media tie-ins, Synkronized embodied the optimistic spirit of pre-millennium Britain, serving as a sonic backdrop to a era of cultural affluence and national hope under Tony Blair's early leadership. Its blend of retro funk, acid jazz, and emerging electronic influences captured the eclectic music scene of the time, evoking nostalgia for a "gold-tinted moment" in British history that fans continue to cherish. The album's production, emphasizing live instrumentation alongside digital elements, reflected broader shifts toward genre fusion in popular music.[30] In terms of musical legacy, Synkronized contributed to Jamiroquai's enduring influence on contemporary artists, particularly in funk, soul, and electronic genres. Its innovative arrangements inspired figures like Pharrell Williams, who has cited the band as a key influence, and helped pave the way for modern acts blending vintage grooves with modern production techniques. The album's commercial success in the U.S., following its release on Sony's Work Group imprint, further expanded acid jazz's footprint in global pop, encouraging cross-genre experimentation among subsequent musicians.[39][40]Reissues and remasters
Synkronized was reissued on vinyl in 2016 by Music On Vinyl as a remastered edition pressed on 180-gram heavyweight vinyl, featuring a gatefold sleeve and inner sleeve with credits. This European release, dated October 24, 2016, aimed to provide enhanced audio quality for audiophiles while preserving the original artwork and tracklisting.[41] A subsequent vinyl reissue followed in 2018, distributed internationally including in the United States, maintaining the standard black vinyl format without additional remastering notes but continuing availability for collectors. This edition, released on March 2, 2018, by Sony Music, included a digital download code and was pressed to meet ongoing demand.[42] No deluxe or expanded CD remasters have been officially released, though various represses of the original 1999 compact disc edition remain in circulation.[1]Credits
Track listing
Synkronized features 11 tracks on its standard edition. The track listing, as presented on the album's vinyl and CD releases, is as follows:| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Canned Heat" | 5:32 |
| 2 | "Planet Home" | 4:44 |
| 3 | "Black Capricorn Day" | 5:41 |
| 4 | "Soul Education" | 4:15 |
| 5 | "Falling" | 3:45 |
| 6 | "Destitute Illusions" | 5:40 |
| 7 | "Supersonic" | 5:16 |
| 8 | "Butterfly" | 4:29 |
| 9 | "Where Do We Go from Here?" | 5:14 |
| 10 | "King for a Day" | 3:38 |
| 11 | "Deeper Underground" | 4:44 |
Core Band Members
- Jay Kay – lead vocals, arrangements, producer[1]
- Toby Smith – keyboards, keyboard programming, producer (select tracks)[1]
- Derrick McKenzie – drums[43]
- Nick Fyffe – bass guitar[43]
- Sola Akingbola – percussion[44]
- Wallis Buchanan – didgeridoo[43]
Additional Musicians
- Simon Katz – guitar[45]
- Irwin Keiles – guitar (track 1: "Canned Heat")[46]
- The Kick Horns – horns, horn arrangements[47]
- Simon Hale – string arrangements, keyboard arrangements[47]
- DJ D-Zire – turntables[48]
Production and Technical Personnel
- Al Stone – producer, recording engineer, mixing engineer[47]
- Rick Pope – producer (select tracks)[49]
- Paul Stoney – assistant engineer[45]
- Mike Marsh – mastering engineer[45]