| Dave Gahan |

|
| Background information |
| Born |
May 9, 1962 (1962-05-09) (age 45) |
| Origin |
Epping, Essex, England |
| Genre(s) |
New Wave, Synthpop, Rock |
| Years active |
1981–present |
| Label(s) |
Mute |
Associated
acts |
Depeche
Mode |
| Website |
www.davegahan.com |
David Gahan (born May 9, 1962 in Epping, Essex, England) is the baritone
lead-singer for English
synthpop
Band, Depeche Mode.
|
Contents
- 1 Life
Before Depeche Mode
- 2 Depeche
Mode
- 3 Solo
- 4 Personal
troubles
- 5 References
- 6 External
links
|
Life Before Depeche Mode
Born into a working class Christian, Salvation Army family to
Sylvia and Len, David was 6 months old when Len left the family. Sylvia
and Len divorced
2 years later and his mother moved the family -- David and sister Sue
(born 1960) -- to Basildon after Sylvia met and married her second
husband Jack. The Gahan family continued to grow with the birth of two
further brothers Peter (born 1966) and Phil (born 1968). David and Sue
were raised under the impression that their mother's second husband
(Jack Gahan; from whom Dave takes his second name, and after whom
Dave's own son Jack is named) was in fact his real father. Legally and
morally this was true, Jack had adopted both Sue and Dave and raised
them as his own children. Tragedy struck in 1972 when Jack, the elder
Gahan died when David was ten. Gahan recalls how he "came home one day
and found this bloke [his biological father] at home". Of the incident,
he has said: "I'll never forget that day. When I came home from school,
there was this stranger in my mum's house. My Mother introduced him to
me as my real dad. I remember I said, crying, that was impossible
because my father was dead. How was I supposed to know who that man
was? From that day on, Len often visited the house, until one year
later he disappeared again. Forever this time. Since then he had no
contact with us. By growing older, I thought about him more and more.
The only thing my mother would say, was that he moved out to Jersey to open a
hotel".[1].
"Mum had kept it back from me til there was a need to tell me about my
birth father, it's a different generation and you can understand I
guess she thought she was doing the right thing."
Gahan compensated for the loss of his father by becoming
something of a "real wide boy with a chip on my shoulder, a real yob". His crimes as a
youth included stealing cars,
vandalism,
and spray-painting graffiti on walls, and as a result he had
visited juvenile court three times before he
was 14.
Within six months of leaving Barstable School in July 1978,
Gahan found and lost something in the order of twenty jobs, from
selling soft drinks to working on a construction site. David also
applied for a job as an apprentice fitter with North Thames Gas. He was
told by his probation officer to be honest with the interviewer, and as
a result, he admitted his criminal record but claimed he was a
"reformed character". Of course, he did not get the job.
Eventually, he earned a place at Southend Art College, which
he enjoyed immensely. After three years, he gained the British Display
Society Award, which allowed him to get jobs doing displays in shop
windows and shopping centres.
Depeche Mode
Dave Gahan (far right) in 1981,
as part of Depeche Mode's original lineup.
Circa 1980,
Vince
Clarke was, at one point, a member of two bands; French
Look, with Robert Marlow, and Composition
Of Sound with future Depeche Mode member Andy Fletcher. Martin
Gore drifted between the two bands, until eventually both groups fell
out (and French Look fell apart; consequently
Martin later joined Composition Of Sound), as they
both wanted Gore to be part of their band and -- in
an attempt to please everyone -- he had been unwilling to choose one
over the other.
Later that same year, at a jam session for local talent, Vince
Clarke (Yazoo, Erasure)
was impressed with Gahan's vocal rendition of David
Bowie's "Heroes" and invited him to join his band, Composition
of Sound. Gahan agreed, and shortly thereafter the band was
renamed to Depeche Mode (a name suggested by Gahan
after he had come across a fashion magazine by the name of Dépêche-mode)
which has been translated to "Fast Fashion" many times. However, when
taking into account the actual meaning and not the literal one, it
translates to "Fashion Dispatch (news)". The group released their debut
record, Speak and Spell, in 1981 on Mute
Records.
Since then, the band has continued to explore new musical
directions, and their sound has evolved immensely since their
inception. They have released eleven studio albums, four greatest hits
compilations (The Singles 81>85,
The Singles 86>98,
Catching Up with
Depeche Mode The
Best Of, Volume 1), a remix album (Remixes
81 - 04) and are now considered elder statesmen
of their craft, who inspired an electronic movement.
Solo
Dave's first solo album 'Paper Monsters'
In 2003
he released his first solo album, Paper
Monsters (which he co-wrote with guitarist and
friend Knox Chandler), followed by
a world tour (including a performance at 2003's Glastonbury
Festival), singing both his new solo tracks and Depeche Mode fan
favourites. His touring band included Knox
Chandler on guitar, Martyn LeNoble (Porno
for Pyros, Jane's Addiction, The
Cult) on bass, Vincent Jones (Sarah McLachlan) on
keyboards, and Victor Indrizzo (Beck, Macy Gray)
on drums.
The album was a moderate success. The first single "Dirty
Sticky Floors" became a Top 20 hit on the World Singles chart selling
over 200,000 copies, as well as hitting the Top 20 in the UK. The album
itself became a Top 10 hit on the European album chart and a Top 40 hit
in the UK. This success was backed by a world tour and a live DVD
titled Live Monsters which was released in
2004. A year later, he also appeared as model and spokesperson of the
European mid-range fashion retailer J Lindeberg and its S/S 2006 menswear
line. The ads featured both him and seemingly random quotes like "What
would happen if we all told the truth", "You can tell he's lying
because his lips are moving", etc. These ads appeared prominently in
international fashion press.
In the press Dave expressed bitterness about never writing
songs for Depeche Mode, sometimes personally attacking Martin or Andrew
in interviews.
In 2004, he
said that if he did not get to write half of the songs on the new
Depeche Mode album, there would not be one.
Eventually there was a compromise, and Dave wrote three songs on 2005's Playing
the Angel. The three songs, "Suffer
Well" (nominated for a US Grammy award announced on Dec 7, 2006), "I
Want It All" and "Nothing's Impossible" (the first later becoming a
single), have had mixed opinions from fans. Others point that Depeche
Mode songs usually don't have outside input in songwriting, but that
the music on the three songs are collaboratively by Andrew Philpott
and drummer Christian Eigner. The exact
contribution of each writer (Gahan/Eigner/Philpott) is not known, but
according to Dave in 2003, during the making of Paper Monsters, he
worked on lyrics and basic melodies for some songs, with help from Knox
Chandler to flesh them out. You can see a video of this at Dave's solo
website, under the in-studio videos. It is viable to think he did this
type of collaboration for Playing the Angel as well. It is agreed by
all in the band, including Dave, that "Dave's songs" were thrown in the
Depeche Mode blender during the making of Playing the Angel, and were
no longer just Dave songs, but they became true Depeche Mode songs.
Going from strength to strength' Depeche Mode have won the "Best Dance
Artist Group" award at the 22nd Annual IDMA Awards in March 2007,
sponsored by the Winter Music Conference.
In 2007, Dave Gahan announced he was working on a new album
via a video greeting for Depeche Mode's official website recorded at
the 2007 MusiCares Charity event on May 11th. The album, titled Hourglass,
will be accompanied working by Andrew Philpott and Christian Eigner and
according to Dave, they will be producing it together.
The material was recorded at Gahan's 11th Floor Studios in New York
City, Gahan's hometown for 10 years now. The material will be mixed in
July by Tony Hoffer, best known for his work with Beck, The Kooks and
Air. According to Gahan, "Hourglass" will be more electronic-sounding
than "Paper Monsters".
In July 2007, Side-Line Magazine revealed that Gahan has
been working with a new project called MIRROR, which is produced by
Vincent Jones. Along with Jones, who played with Gahan's touring band
and mixed the live DVD "Live Monsters", MIRROR features another Gahan
collaborator, Knox Chandler (Siouxsie And The Banshees, Pyschedelic
Furs), as well as piano by Bowie favorite Mike Garson, and a monologue
by Warhol superstar Joe Dallesandro. Gahan sings vocals on the track
"Nostalgia".
The first single to be pulled from Dave Gahan's forthcoming
solo record "Hourglass" will be "Kingdom". According to Side-Line
Magazine
this single will be a download only, though as usual a 7" collector's
vinyl release might be considered as well.
Personal troubles
On August 17, 1995,
Gahan allegedly "attempted suicide" with a razor blade -- he later
stated that this was more of a "cry for help", rather than a suicide
attempt [2] . At one point during this
episode Gahan was known to spend 12 hours a day inside his wardrobe,
watching The Weather
Channel and talking to 'The Tin Man', a doll he was convinced could
talk (later on and after recovery, he would refer to these
"conversations" in his solo single Dirty
Sticky Floors).
He was then admitted to Cedars-Sinai Medical
Center, Beverly Hills, California
and released shortly after. On May 28, 1996, Gahan overdosed on a heroin and cocaine 'speedball'
in a Los Angeles hotel room. On
the way to the hospital, he was pronounced clinically
dead for two minutes, but was revived by paramedics, then again taken
to Cedars-Sinai Medical
Center. He was arrested upon his release two days later, and ordered by
the court to complete a 9 month rehabilitation.
The drug charges against Gahan were eventually dropped in September 1996, and Gahan has
now been clean for 10 years. Amanda De Cadenet is one of the
people he credits with helping him make that climactic step towards
sobriety, after his wife Jennifer, and Baron Jonathan Kessler.
Gahan currently lives in New York City, with his third wife
Jennifer, their daughter Stella Rose (b. July 29, 1999), and Jennifer's
son Jimmy. He also has a son, Jack (b. October 14, 1987), from his
first marriage.
References
External links
| v • d • e Dave Gahan |
| Knox Chandler | Victor
Indrizzo | Vincent Jones | Martyn
LeNoble | Christian Eigner |
| Discography |
|
Studio albums: Paper
Monsters | Hourglass
Singles: Dirty
Sticky Floors | I Need You | Bottle Living / Hold On | A
Little Piece
Video: Live
Monsters
|
| Related
articles |
| Synthpop
| Mute
Records | Depeche Mode | Erasure
| Recoil |
|
| v • d • e Depeche Mode |
David
Gahan | Martin
Gore | Andrew Fletcher
Vince Clarke | Alan
Wilder |
| Discography |
|
Studio albums: Speak
& Spell | A
Broken Frame | Construction Time Again
| Some Great Reward
| Black Celebration
| Music for the Masses
| Violator | Songs of Faith and
Devotion | Ultra
| Exciter | Playing
the Angel
Compilations: People Are People
| The Singles 81>85
| Catching Up with
Depeche Mode | The
Singles 86>98 | Remixes
81 - 04 | The
Best Of, Volume 1 | The Complete Depeche Mode
Live albums: 101
| Songs of Faith and
Devotion Live | Recording
the Angel
Tribute albums: For
the Masses | A Techno Tribute to
Depeche Mode | Color Theory
presents Depeche Mode
Singles: "Dreaming
of Me" | "New
Life" | "Just Can't Get Enough" | "See You" | "The
Meaning of Love" | "Leave in Silence" | "Get
the Balance Right" | "Everything Counts" | "Love,
in Itself" | "People Are People" | "Master
and Servant" | "Blasphemous Rumours"
/ "Somebody" | "Shake
the Disease" | "It's Called a Heart" | "Stripped"
/ "But Not Tonight" | "A Question of Lust" | "A
Question of Time" | "Strangelove" | "Never Let Me Down Again" | "Behind
the Wheel" | "Little
15" | "Everything Counts (Live)"
| "Personal
Jesus" | "Enjoy the Silence" | "Policy
of Truth" | "World in My Eyes" | "I Feel
You" | "Walking in My Shoes" | "Condemnation"
| "In
Your Room" | "Barrel
of a Gun" | "It's No Good" | "Home" | "Useless"
| "Only When I Lose Myself" | "Dream On" | "I Feel
Loved" | "Freelove"
| "Goodnight Lovers" | "Enjoy
the Silence 04" | "Precious" | "A Pain That I'm Used To" | "Suffer
Well" | "John the Revelator" / "Lilian" | "Martyr"
|
| Videography |
|
The World
We Live In and Live in Hamburg | Some
Great Videos | Strange
| 101 | Strange
Too | Devotional
| The Videos 86>98
| One Night in Paris
| Touring the Angel:
Live in Milan
|
| Related
articles |
| Synthpop
| Depeche Mode Tours | Mute
Records | Paper Monsters
| Counterfeit e.p.
| Counterfeit² | Toast Hawaii | Recoil
| Mute Records discography |