The Police

Synchronicity (Remastered)

  • MOG Editorial Review

    Editors_picks_badge
    In a lot of ways, Synchronicity is rightfully remembered as the Police's commercial breakthrough, but there's far more to love on the band's final album than just "Every Breath You Take." In fact, despite the track being a quintessential adult contemporary jam, most of the album finds Sting and company getting back to their rock roots after years of genre experiments. The title track makes this apparent from the start, feeling like an adrenaline rush as much from the instruments as the tempo itself. That same energy wears off by the second half of the album, but there's enough of straightforward fun here to make you wish the trio could have kept it together for at least one more ride.
  • AMG Review of Synchronicity

    Amg
    Stephen Thomas Erlewine
    All Music Guide

    Simultaneously more pop-oriented and experimental than either Ghost in the Machine or Zenyatta Mondatta, Synchronicity made the Police superstars, generating no less than five hit singles. With the exception of "Synchronicity II," which sounds disarmingly like a crappy Billy Idol song, every one of those singles is a classic. "Every Breath You Take" has a seductive, rolling beat masking its maliciousness, "King of Pain" and "Wrapped Around Your Finger" are devilishly infectious new wave singles, and "Tea in the Sahara" is hypnotic in its measured, melancholy choruses. But, like so many other Police albums, these songs are surrounded by utterly inconsequential filler. This time, the group relies heavily on jazzy textures for Sting's songs, which only works on the jumping, marimba-driven "Synchronicity I." Then, as if to prove that the Police were still a band, there's one song apiece from Stewart Copeland and Andy Summers, both of which are awful, as if they're trying to sabotage the album. Since they arrive on the first side, which is devoid of singles, they do, making the album sound like two EPs: one filled with first-rate pop, and one an exercise in self-indulgence. While the hits are among Sting's best, they also illustrate that he was ready to leave the Police behind for a solo career, which is exactly what he did.

First Kill
about 5 years ago
A Police Reunion?
over 5 years ago
Police Reunion Ticket Prices (Via Billboard.com)
over 5 years ago
Another Week Another Vinyl: The Police: Synchronicity
about 3 years ago
Re-united and it feels so good....
over 5 years ago
you're a terrible person, but I love your music
about 5 years ago
Lazy, lazy, lazy.
over 3 years ago
OMG, Part 1 - The Police in Vancouver
over 5 years ago
clothing,shoes,jeans,t-shrits,handbags,sunglasses,belts,bikinis in
10 months ago

Listen free to millions of songs

Connect using Facebook

© 2006-2012 Mog Inc. All Rights Reserved