Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Interpretations of the lyrics vary widely. [8] [9] Writing in Entertainment Weekly about a 1996 Sting tour, Chris Willman said: "The late-inning number that really gets [the crowd] galvanized is the edgy old Police staple that has the most old-fashioned unresolved rock tension in it, 'Synchronicity II'—which, after all, is a song about a domestic crisis so anxiety-producing that it wakes up ...
In the most common version Sting is reading a copy of Carl Jung's Synchronicity (1960) on the front cover along with a superimposed negative image of the actual text of the synchronicity hypothesis. A photo on the back cover also shows a close-up, but mirrored and upside-down, image of Jung's book.
"King of Pain" is a song by British rock band the Police, released as the second single from their fifth and final studio album Synchronicity (1983). Written by the band's lead singer and bassist Sting as a post-separation song from his wife, "King of Pain" conjures up symbols of pain and relates them to a man's soul.
After the Synchronicity tour wrapped in March 1984, the Police went on what seemed like just a temporary hiatus at the time, with Sting recording his 1985 full-length solo debut, The Dream of the ...
"Wrapped Around Your Finger" was released as the follow-up to the worldwide hit "Every Breath You Take." In Britain, it reached No. 7 on the UK Singles Chart in August 1983, [5] and in the US, it was instead released as the fourth single from Synchronicity (after "Every Breath You Take," "King of Pain," and "Synchronicity II").
"Synchronicity I", as well as its more famous counterpart "Synchronicity II", features lyrics that are inspired by Carl Jung's theory of synchronicity.Also included in the lyrics is a term from "The Second Coming," "Spiritus Mundi" (translating to "spirit of the world"), which William Butler Yeats used to refer to the collective unconscious, another of Jung's theories.
[2] "Miss Gradenko" Stewart Copeland Synchronicity: 1983 [8] "Mother" Andy Summers Synchronicity: 1983 [8] "Murder by Numbers" † Sting Andy Summers Non-album single B-side of "Every Breath You Take" 1983 [14] "Next to You" Sting Outlandos d'Amour: 1978 [1] "No Time This Time" Sting Reggatta de Blanc: 1979 [2] "Nothing Achieving" † Stewart ...
The box set states that it 'contains every single song the Police ever released' but it excludes ten officially released tracks from before its release in 1993: "De Do Do Do, De Da Da Da" (Spanish Version) (4:00) and "De Do Do Do, De Da Da Da" (Japanese Version) (4:00) were released in the US in 1981 as a double A-side 7", with Sting singing the song in both Spanish and Japanese (AM-25000).