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What Lies Beneath: The Police: “Synchronicity II”

The yell expelled by Sting at the top of The Police’s 1983 “Synchronicity II” evokes memories of early MTV. The band, along with a a core group of artists, were creating new material and offering it to the public in an innovative form—the music video.

The post-apocalyptic vision of “Synchronicity II” featured a windblown Sting with his spiky Dune-era hair and colorful shredded jacket, standing atop a mountain of wreckage. Loose sheets of paper and other debris blew around haphazardly, as he sang the opening lyric: “Another suburban family morning/Grandmother screaming at the wall.” Andy Summers’ distinctly mysterious guitar riffs and Stewart Copeland’s forceful drums and cymbals were ever present, as Sting shared the story of a family’s descent into madness. Even on Daddy’s way to work, destruction is evident in the environment: “Another industrial ugly morning/The factory belches filth into the sky.” And don’t think Daddy’s commute home is any better, as he deals with “Contestants in a suicidal race/Daddy grips the wheel/and stares alone into the distance/He knows that something somewhere has to break.”

But wait… “Many miles away/Something crawls from the slime/At the bottom of a dark/Scottish lake,” serving to foreshadow and solidify the end of peace and innocence, and an ominous transition toward something dark and mythical (the rising ness from the loch).