Synchro_System

<i>Synchro System</i>

Synchro System

1983 studio album by King Sunny Adé and his African Beats


Synchro System is a 1983 album by Nigerian jùjú band King Sunny Adé and His African Beats. It was the second of King Sunny Adé's three releases for Island Records, following on the heels of 1982's crossover success Juju Music.[1] The title track is a re-recording of Adé's 1974 Nigerian hit of the same name.[2]

Quick Facts Synchro System, Studio album by King Sunny Adé and his African Beats ...

The album peaked at #91 on Billboard's "Pop Albums" chart.[3] It garnered Adé a Grammy Award nomination, a first for a Nigerian artist.[4] It was re-released in 1990.

Recording

The album was Adé's first to be recorded in London.[5] It was produced by Martin Meissonnier, who worked to taper Adé's sound to Western listeners by clearly distinguishing each element in the mix, including guitar riffs, "simmering" percussion, and vocals, which were then "thickened" with keyboard additions.[5] The album features fewer steel guitar contributions from Ademola Adepoju than its predecessor,[6] but like Adé's other early 1980s recordings, it employs synthesizers and drum machines.[7] The album features more synthesizer lines and more distinctive "songs" with shorter track lengths than Juju Music (1982).[8]

Critical reception

More information Review scores, Source ...

Syncro System charted higher than the crossover success Juju Music.[12] Critic Robert Christgau credited Meissonnier with improving Adé's production for Western reception by “emphasizing discrete melodies and heating up the mix," calling the album "more conventionally unified" than its predecessor.[10] Jonathan Gregg of Rolling Stone opined that while this album held many of the same features as the former, it "does not quite match the excitement or subtlety" and did demonstrate limitations within the emerging genre.[13]

In their 1990 book African Rock, authors Chris Stapleton and Chris May call the album "the most satisfying of Ade's albums for Island, carefully balancing Western and Nigerian elements," and called it "the first juju album to generate easy dancing on British floors."[14] In 2007, The Mojo Collection refers to the album as "an abstract, a frozen picture of what the African Beats were like" which "still sounds intensely vivid."

The album was ranked at number 10 among the "Albums of the Year" for 1983 by NME.[15]

Track listing

All tracks composed by King Sunny Adé.

  1. "Synchro Feelings - Ilako" – 5:36
  2. "Mo Ti Mo" – 5:31
  3. "Penkele" – 4:00
  4. "Maajo" – 4:10
  5. "Synchro System" – 6:27
  6. "E Saiye Re" – 3:29
  7. "Tolongo" – 3:19
  8. "E Wele" – 5:03
  9. "Synchro (Reprise)" – 1:27

Personnel

Performance

Production


References

  1. Baird, Robert. (July 22, 1992) The Sunny King: this Nigerian superstar rules the realm of world music. The Phoenix New Times. Retrieved 2008-06-17.
  2. "Best of the Classic Years - King Sunny Ade | Songs, Reviews, Credits". AllMusic.
  3. "King Sunny Ade - first Nigerian Grammy Award nominee". Records Nigeria. Archived from the original on 17 January 2017. Retrieved 16 January 2017.
  4. The Mojo Collection. Canongate. 2007. p. 479.
  5. "Rhythm Music Magazine". Rhythm Music Magazine. 4. 1995.
  6. High Fidelity, vol. 33, 1983.
  7. Erlewine, Stephen Thomas; Bogdanov, Vladimir; Woodstra, Chris, eds. (2001). All Music Guide: The Definitive Guide to Popular Music. Backbeat / AllMusic. p. 882.
  8. Christgau, Robert (1990). "A". Christgau's Record Guide: The '80s. Pantheon Books. ISBN 0-679-73015-X. Retrieved August 16, 2020 via robertchristgau.com.
  9. The Rolling Stone Album Guide. Random House. 1992. p. 7.
  10. Watrous, Peter. (September 13, 1990) Into Juju's ecstatic heart The New York Times. Retrieved 29-01-08.
  11. Gregg, Jonathan. (September 1, 1983) Synchro System[dead link] Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2008-06-17.
  12. Stapleton, Chris; May, Chris (1990). African Rock: The Pop Music of a Continent. Belisk. p. 330.
  13. "Albums and Tracks of the Year". NME. 2016. Retrieved 13 March 2018.

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