Depeche Mode are a band formed in 1980 in Basildon, Essex, England. The
group's original lineup consisted of David
Gahan (lead vocals), Martin Gore (keyboards, guitar, vocals,
chief songwriter after 1981), Andrew Fletcher
(keyboards) and Vince Clarke (keyboards,
chief songwriter 1980–81). Vince Clarke left the band after the release
of their 1981 debut album; soon replaced by Alan
Wilder (lead keyboards) who played with the band from 1982 to
1995. Following Wilder's departure, Gahan, Gore, and Fletcher have
continued to perform as a trio.
Depeche Mode are one of the longest-lived and most successful
bands to have emerged from the New Romantic and New
Wave era. As of 2006, it was estimated that Depeche Mode had sold over
91 million records (56 million albums / 35 million singles) worldwide
and have had forty-four songs in the UK
Singles Chart. They have had more top 40 hits in the UK without a #1
hit than any other artist.
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Contents
- 1 Current
line-up
- 2 Early
history
- 2.1 1977–1980:
Formation
- 2.2 1981–1983:
Early releases and first successes
- 2.3 1984–1988:
Growing international fame
- 3 Middle
history
- 3.1 1989–1994:
Two hit albums
- 3.2 1995–2000:
Continued success through turmoil
- 4 Depeche
Mode in the 2000s
- 4.1 2001–2004:
Exciter
- 4.2 2005–present:
Playing the Angel and current events
- 5 Live
supporting musicians
- 6 Discography
- 7 See
also
- 8 References
- 9 External
links
|
Current line-up
- David Gahan — Lead vocals.
- Martin Gore — Keyboards,
guitars
and vocals.
- Andrew Fletcher — Backing keyboards
Early history
1977–1980: Formation
Depeche Mode's origins can be traced back to 1977, when Vince
Clarke and Andrew Fletcher formed a band called "No Romance In China",
with Clarke on vocals/guitar and Fletcher on bass. In 1978, Clarke
played guitar in an "Ultravox rip-off band", The Plan, with
school friend Robert Marlow on vocals and
Vince on guitar/keyboards. In 1978–79, Gore played in an acoustic duo,
Norman and The Worms, with school friend Philip Burdett (who now sings on the
folk circuit) on vocals and Gore on guitar. In 1979, Marlow, Gore,
Clarke and friend Paul Redmond formed a band called "The French Look",
Marlow on vocals/keyboards, Gore on guitar, Clarke and Redmond on
keyboards. In March 1980, Clarke, Gore and Fletcher formed a band
called "Composition of Sound", with Clarke on vocals/guitar, Gore on
keyboards and Fletcher on bass. "The French Look" and "Composition of
Sound" once played live together in June 1980 at St. Nicholas School
Youth Club in Southend-on-Sea, Essex.
Soon after the formation of "Composition of Sound", Clarke and
Fletcher switched to synthesizers, working odd jobs to buy them, or
borrowing them from friends. Gahan joined the band in 1980 after Clarke
heard him perform at a local scout-hut jam session, crooning to a
rendition of David Bowie's 'Heroes', and
"Depeche Mode" were born. The new name was taken from a French fashion
magazine, "Dépêche mode", which translates to "Fashion Update" or
"Fashion News Dispatch" (dépêche = dispatch) though it has commonly
been mistranslated as "Fast Fashion", due to the confusion with the
French verb "se dépêcher" ("to hurry up"), this is further complicated
by the fact that the word mode means switching
between modes on cd players and other items hence, some peoples view
that depeche mode means fast mode or dispatch mode.
1981–1983: Early releases and
first successes
While playing a live gig at the Bridge House in Canning
Town,
the band was approached by Daniel Miller (an electronic
musician and founder of Mute Records), who was interested in
them recording a single for his burgeoning label.
The result of this verbal contract was "Dreaming
of Me b/w Ice Machine", which was released in February 1981, and
managed to reach #57 on the UK charts. Encouraged by this surprise
success, the band recorded its second single "New Life",
which significantly topped the previous one, climbing to #11. Three
months later, the band released "Just
Can't Get Enough" - their first single to enter the UK top ten, peaking
at #8. This record was in many ways a breakthrough for the band, and
its success paved the way for their debut album - Speak
& Spell, released in November 1981, and
eventually reaching #10 on the UK album charts. Critical reviews were
mixed - Melody
Maker described it as a "great album... one they had to make to conquer
fresh audiences and please the fans who just can’t get enough",
while Rolling
Stone was more critical, calling the album "PG-rated fluff".
During the touring and promotion for "Speak & Spell",
Clarke began to privately voice his discomfort at the direction the
band was taking. He later expressed his agitation that "there was never
enough time to do anything".
In late 1981, Clarke publicly announced that he was leaving Depeche
Mode. Soon afterwards, he joined with blues singer Alison
Moyet to form Yazoo (Yaz in the US) and
later, the duo Erasure with Andy Bell,
in 1985. With their primary songwriter gone, Depeche Mode needed a new
direction. Martin Gore, who had written "Tora! Tora! Tora!" and "Big
Muff" for their debut album, took over as the band's new songwriter. In
January 1982, the band released "See You", their first single without Clarke,
which against all expectations, managed to beat all three Clarke-penned
singles in the UK charts, reaching #6. In the ensuing months of that
year, two more singles were released ("The
Meaning of Love", and "Leave in Silence"), and the band
embarked on their first world tour - known as the "See You" tour. Their
second album A Broken Frame
was eventually brought out in September. This album is generally viewed
as a transitional release, with Gore's songs split between poppy,
Clarke-influenced tunes ("The Meaning of Love", "A Photograph of You")
and considerably darker territory ("Leave in Silence", "Monument"),
hinting at the direction the band would take in following years. During
the early stages of recording for A Broken Frame,
the band recognised that it needed a fourth member for touring and
other commitments. In late 1981, they placed an ad in Melody Maker
stating "Keyboard player needed for established band - no timewasters."
Alan
Wilder, a 22-year old keyboardist from West London responded
- and after two auditions with Daniel Miller, he was accepted as the
fourth member of Depeche Mode.
Despite this, however, Daniel Miller informed Alan that he wasn't
needed for the actual recording of the album,
as the band wanted to prove that they could succeed without Vince
Clarke. Alan's first musical contribution to the band was in 1983, on
the non-album single "Get the Balance Right!".
For their third LP Construction Time Again,
Depeche Mode decided to work with producer Gareth Jones, at John
Foxx's Garden Studios.
The album saw a dramatic shift in the group's sound, due in part to the
introduction of the Synclavier and Emulator
samplers, in addition to their previously-used analogue synths.
By sampling the noises of everyday objects, the band created an
eclectic, industrial-influenced sound, with
similarities to groups such as the Art
of Noise and Einstürzende Neubauten.
Similarly, Gore's lyricism was rapidly evolving, focusing increasingly
on political and social issues. A good example of the new sound was on
the first single from the album "Everything
Counts", a commentary on the perceived greed of multinational
corporations,
which got to #6 in the UK, also reaching the Top 30 in South
Africa, Switzerland,
Sweden
and West
Germany. Alan Wilder also contributed two songs to the album ("The
Landscape is Changing", "Two Minute Warning").
1984–1988: Growing international
fame
In their early years, Depeche Mode had only really attained
success in the UK, Europe, and Australia - however, this changed in
March 1984, when they released the single "People
Are People". The song - a comment on racism, climbed to #13 on the US
charts, as well as reaching #4 on the UK and Swiss charts - and
gave them their first #1 (in Germany). To cash-in on
the surprise success of the single, Sire, the band's North-American record
label, released a compilation of the same name. A month
later, the band's proper follow-up album "Some
Great Reward" was released to generally positive reviews. Melody Maker
claimed that the album made one "sit up and take notice of what is
happening here, right under your nose."
"Some Great Reward" saw the band experimenting with even darker subject
matter, exploring sexual politics ("Master
and Servant"), adulterous relationships ("Lie to Me"), and arbitrary
divine justice ("Blasphemous Rumours"). Also
included was the first Martin Gore ballad ("Somebody") - a concept that
would become a staple on all following albums. The album was also their
first to enter the US album charts, and made the Top 10 in several
European countries. In 1985, Sire released a second North American
compilation "Catching Up with
Depeche Mode" (called The Singles 81>85 in
Europe with a different track listing, and released there by Mute
Records), designed as a companion to the aforementioned "People Are
People" compilation, and including the new hit singles : "Shake
the Disease" (#4 in Germany, #5 in Sweden, #6 in Switzerland, #13 in
France and #18 in the UK) and "It's
Called a Heart" (#7 in Sweden and Switzerland, #8 in Germany, #18 in
the UK and #29 in France).
It was during this period that the band became associated with
the gothic subculture, which had begun
in Britain, and was slowly gaining popularity in the United States.
There, the band's music had first gained prominence on college radio
and modern
rock stations such as KROQ
in Los
Angeles, and WLIR
on Long Island, New York, and
hence, they appealed primarily to a decidedly cultish, alternative
audience who were disenfranchised with the predominance of "soft rock
and "disco hell""
on the radio. This view of the band was in sharp contrast to that in
Europe and the UK, despite the increasingly dark and serious tone in
their songs.
In Germany (and other European countries), Depeche Mode were considered
teen idols, and were regularly featured in euro teen magazines,
providing their detractors with more ammunition to use against them.
Depeche Mode's largest transformation came in 1986, with the release of
their fifteenth single "Stripped", and its accompanying
album Black Celebration.
Jettisoning much of the "industrial-pop" sound that had characterised
their previous two LPs (although they retained their often imaginative
sampling), the band introduced an ominous, highly atmospheric and
textured sound, accompanied by some of Gore's bleakest, most insightful
lyrics to date. Also included on the album was a revised version of the
song "Fly on the Windscreen", which had originally appeared as the
b-side to "It's Called a Heart". The band recognised the song's
promise, and decided to improve it and include it on the album, renamed
as "Fly on the Windscreen - Final".
The music video for "A Question of Time" was the first
to be directed by Anton Corbijn,
beginning a working relationship that continues to the present day.
Anton has directed 19 more of the band's videos (the latest being
2006's "Suffer
Well") and live performances, and has been responsible for some of the
band's albums and singles covers.
1987's Music for the Masses saw
further alterations in the band's sound and working methods. Dave
Bascombe (who had previously worked with Tears
for Fears) was brought in as a producer (although his role
ended up being more that of an engineer),and
the band (for the most part) abandoned sampling in favour of more
musical experimentation.
Although the chart performance of the singles ("Strangelove",
"Never Let Me Down Again" and
"Behind
the Wheel") was disappointing in Great Britain (whereas those singles
were big hits in countries such as West Germany, South
Africa, Sweden
or Switzerland,
reaching the Top 10 there), the album was almost universally praised by
the music press - far more so than any other album the band had
released. Record Mirror described it as "the
most accomplished and sexy Mode album to date".
and, more important than that for the band, it made an impressive
breakthrough in the American market, something which the band had
failed to achieve with their previous albums.
On the heels of Music for the Masses, the group played a
follow-up world tour in 1987–88. The tour culminated on 18 June in a
concert at the Pasadena Rose Bowl with a sell-out
attendance of 60,453 (the highest in eight years for the venue). The
tour was documented in 101 - a concert film by D.A.
Pennebaker, and its accompanying soundtrack album.
Middle history
1989–1994: Two hit albums
In mid-1989, the band began recording in Milan with record
producer Flood. The result of this session
was the single "Personal Jesus", which featured a
catchy, drum-based sound, radically different from anything the band
had released thus far. Prior to its release, advertisements were placed
in the personal columns of UK regional newspapers with the words "Your
own personal Jesus." Later, the ads included a phone number one could
dial to hear the song. The ensuing controversy helped propel the single
to number 13 on the UK charts, becoming one of their biggest sellers;
in the US, it was their first gold single and their first top 40 hit
since "People Are People", eventually becoming the biggest-selling
12-inch single in Warner Bros. Records' history.
The song has been covered by (amongst others) Johnny
Cash, Gravity
Kills, and Marilyn Manson, and was notably
sampled by Jamelia
in her song Beware of the Dog. In September
2006, it was voted by readers of music monthly Q
as one of the 100 greatest songs of all time. During this time, the
band were gaining additional prominence in the US, where their
influence on the techno and house
music scenes was becoming increasingly recognised. Techno pioneers Derrick May, Kevin
Saunderson and Juan Atkins regularly quoted Depeche
Mode as an influence in their development of proto-techno music during
the Detroit
Techno explosion in the late 1980s.
In February 1990,
"Enjoy the Silence", became one of
Depeche Mode's most successful singles to date, reached #6 in the UK; a
few months later in the US, it became Depeche Mode's first (and to
date, only) Top 10 pop hit, reaching #8, and earning the band a second
gold single. It won 'Best Single' at the 1991 Brit Awards. To promote
their new album Violator,
they held an in-store autograph signing at the Wherehouse Records music
store in Los Angeles, which attracted approximately 17,000 fans and
caused a near-riot.
Violator went on to reach top 10 in the UK and the Billboard 200 in the
US. It has also been certified triple platinum in America,
selling there over 3.5 million units. The subsequent World Violation
Tour was another notable success, with 40,000 tickets sold within eight
hours for the New York Giants Stadium (in East Rutherford, New
Jersey) show, and 48,000 tickets for the Los Angeles Dodger
Stadium show sold within an hour of going on sale. Two more singles
from the album, "Policy of Truth" and "World
in My Eyes" were moderate UK hits.
In 1991 Depeche Mode made a one-off contribution to the Wim
Wenders film, Until the End of the World,
entitled "Death's Door" and a third solo album was released by Alan
Wilder under the Recoil moniker bridged the gap between
albums. Depeche Mode significantly changed pace in 1993 with Songs of Faith and
Devotion. Another substantial departure for the
band - "SOFAD" saw them experimenting with more organic arrangements,
based as much on heavily distorted electric guitars and live drums
(played by Alan Wilder, whose debut as a studio drummer was the track
"Clean" on Violator)
as on synthesizers.
Live strings, uillean pipes and female gospel vocals
were other new additions to the band's sound.
The album debuted at #1 in both the UK and the US, on the
heels of the bluesy, grunge-influenced single "I Feel
You". Depeche Mode were the first UK-Alternative band which had a
number 1 hit album in the billboard 200 album charts. The 14-month
"Devotional" world tour followed. It was documented by a concert
video of the same name, and a second live album, Songs of Faith and
Devotion Live. The live album was essentially a
track-by-track reproduction of the eponymous album, designed to help
boost sales figures of the studio album, and it proved to be a critical
and commercial failure. By 1994 Depeche Mode were amongst the world's
elite stadium bands, alongside U2, R.E.M., INXS, and The Rolling Stones.
Strains, however, were beginning to emerge. Dave Gahan's heroin
addiction was starting to affect his behaviour, causing him to become
more erratic and introverted. Martin Gore experienced a series of
seizures, and Andy Fletcher declined to participate in the second
"exotic" leg of the tour, due to "mental instability". During that
period, he was replaced on-stage by Daryl
Bamonte, who had worked with the band as a personal assistant for many
years.
1995–2000: Continued success
through turmoil
In June 1995, Alan Wilder announced that he was leaving
Depeche Mode, citing his "increasing dissatisfaction with the internal
relations and working practices of the group".
He continued to work on his personal project Recoil, releasing a fourth
album (Unsound Methods) in 1997. Wilder
claimed that he had contributed the lion's share of work on past
albums, and that "this level of input never received the respect and
acknowledgement" it deserved.
Following Wilder's departure, many were skeptical of whether Depeche
Mode would ever record again. Gahan's mental state and drug habit
became a major source of concern, with an alleged suicide attempt
(which Gahan has consistently denied), and a near-fatal overdose at his
home in Los Angeles.
Despite Gahan's increasingly severe personal issues, Gore
tried repeatedly during 1995-1996 to get the band recording again.
However, Dave would rarely turn up to scheduled sessions, and when he
did, it would take weeks to get any vocals recorded. Gore was forced to
contemplate breaking the band up, and releasing the songs he had
written as a solo album.
In the end, Gore's worries were unfounded, in mid-1996, Gahan finally
entered a drug rehabilitation program to
battle his heroin addiction.
With Gahan out of rehab in 1996, Depeche Mode held recording sessions
with producer Tim Simenon; the next year,
the album Ultra and its
two preceding singles, "Barrel of a Gun" and "It's
No Good", were released. The album again debuted at #1 in the UK. Due
to the stress of the previous world tour, the band decided to forego
touring altogether for Ultra. Furthermore, the album received a
lacklustre reception from the press and fans alike. The band have also
recognised Ultra's poor reception; live dates following the Singles
Tour after the release of Ultra have seen only one Ultra song being
played, or on many tour dates, none whatsoever.
A second singles compilation The
Singles 86-98 was released in 1998, preceded by
the new single "Only When I Lose Myself",
which had been recorded during the "Ultra" sessions. The band set off
on a 4 month tour that cemented their place as a quasi-permanent
attraction, with a large touring attendance regardless of album sales.
(U2, R.E.M., and the Rolling Stones are some others in this category).
The same year, a tribute album For
the Masses was released, featuring Depeche Mode
covers by bands such as The Smashing Pumpkins, The
Cure and The Deftones.
Depeche Mode in the 2000s
2001–2004: Exciter
In 2001, Depeche Mode released Exciter,
which was produced by Mark Bell (formerly of the
pioneering techno
group LFO).
Bell introduced a minimalist, digital sound to much of the album,
influenced by IDM and glitch.
The album failed to achieve the same levels of sales as the band's
previous three releases, with many fans and critics feeling that the
album was lacking depth, uninspired and underproduced. It was the first
studio album by Depeche Mode to chart higher in the US than the UK. The
critical response to the album was mostly apathetic. Whilst it received
reasonably positive reviews from some magazines (NME and US magazines Rolling
Stone and L.A.
Weekly), most others (including Q Magazine, PopMatters,
and Pitchfork Media) derided it as
sounding underproduced, dull and lacklustre..
As with Ultra, the band have recognised Exciter's poor reception; live
dates following the Exciter tour have seen only one Exciter song being
played, or on many tour dates, none whatsoever.
2003 saw the release of Gahan's solo album, Paper
Monsters, followed by a worldwide tour and an
accompanying DVD,
titled Live Monsters; Martin Gore continued his
solo career with the release of Counterfeit²
(a follow-up to his 1989 release Counterfeit); and
Fletcher launched his own label, Toast Hawaii,
which has no bands signed to it (the only outcome so far was the
synth-pop group, Client, who have now left
the label).
In August that year, Mute released the DVD version of Devotional,
filmed during their 1993 world tour, as well as a new remix compilation
album Remixes 81 - 04
that compiled new and unreleased promo mixes of the band's singles from
1981 to 2004, including a reinterpreted version of "Enjoy the Silence"
by Mike
Shinoda entitled "Enjoy the Silence 04", which
was released as a single, and reached #7 on the UK charts.
2005–present: Playing
the Angel and current events
On October
17, 2005,
the band released their 11th studio album Playing
the Angel and received very good reviews. Many
fans considered this album as a true return to form. Produced by Ben
Hillier, this Top 10 hit (peaking at #1 in 17 countries) featured the
hit single "Precious", peaking at
#4 in the UK charts. The album was backed by the band's first in-store
signing since 1990, on the day of release in New
York City. This is the first Depeche Mode album to feature lyrics
written by Gahan and, consequently, the first album since 1984's Some
Great Reward featuring songs not written by Gore.
With a prototypical version having been leaked onto the
Internet some months earlier,
the official video for "Precious" was released on September
12 on the Depeche Mode website, www.depechemode.com. The second single
from the album, "A Pain That I'm Used To,"
was released on December 12, and the third single from
the album was "Suffer Well," the first ever post-Clarke
Depeche Mode single not to be written by Gore (lyrics by Gahan, music
by Philpott/Eigner).
Moreover the appreciation of Depeche Mode by the world of
today s Electronic music is shown by the numerous DM remixes by
contemporary djs such as Ricardo Villalobos' remix of "The sinner in
me" or Kruder & Dorfmeister's remix of "Useless".
Also on March
2, 2006,
they released a video version of single "Suffer Well" sung in Simlish as it is
featured on The Sims 2: Open for
Business PC game soundtrack along with accompanying video (the group
featured as Sims). They join 1980s pop bands, Kajagoogoo
and Howard Jones in
the PC game as musical contributors with their performances in Simlish.
To promote the Playing the Angel, the band
launched the worldwide Touring the Angel in November
2005, taking them to fans in North America and Europe. The tour
continued through the spring and summer of 2006. Depeche Mode also
headlined both the 2006 Coachella
Valley Music and Arts Festival, in California, and the O2 Wireless
Festival, which took place on the last weekend of June 2006 in London's
Hyde Park. Some of the gigs were their first ever shows in certain
countries like Romania and Bulgaria. In March 2006, the website
announced two dates in Mexico (a country they had not visited for
twelve years). More than 55,000 tickets for a stadium in Mexico
City were sold immediately, causing the band to schedule another date
for the same venue and demonstrating that their popularity in Mexico is
as significant as in many countries in Europe, where their audiences
are frequently of 40,000 people. (To see information on "Touring the
Angel" and other Depeche Mode tours, view Depeche
Mode Tours)
Recordings of 50 shows were officially released on CDs. These
limited edition Depeche Mode live albums published under the scheme
title Recording the Angel
were much sought after by collectors.
On April
3, 2006, remastered
editions of Speak
& Spell, Music
for the Masses, and Violator
were released, featuring remastered audio in two-channel stereo and 5.1
multichannel on Super Audio CD and DVD, extra tracks and
B-sides. In addition, each album comes with its own documentary
charting the history of the band and the production of each album. The
second installment of remastered albums were A
Broken Frame, Some
Great Reward and Songs of Faith and
Devotion, all of which were released on October 2, 2006. Construction Time Again and Black
Celebration were released on March 26, 2007. Both Ultra and Exciter
were scheduled to be re-released in May 21, 2007, but has been delayed until October 1, 2007. As they were
recorded within the last 10 years with then-state-of-the art
techniques) the remastering will not significantly improve the already
existing sonic clarity.
. For the US release of the remastered editions the Hybrid Multichannel
SACDs were replaced with regular CDs.
On September 25, 2006 Depeche Mode
released their live DVD-CD set Touring The Angel: Live In
Milan, directed by Blue Leach and recorded at Milan's Fila
Forum on February
18, and February
19, 2006.
The DVD has a full concert on disc 1, bonus live songs "A
Question of Lust" and "Damaged People" along with a 20-minute
documentary featuring Anton Corbijn, official tour announcement from
Germany in the summer of 2005, and the Playing the Angel electronic
press kit on disc 2, and disc 3 is a CD with live versions of tracks
from Playing the Angel. In addition, a "best-of" compilation was
released in November of 2006, entitled The
Best Of, Volume 1 featuring a new single "Martyr",
an outtake from the Playing the Angel sessions.
On 2
November, Depeche Mode received the MTV Europe Music Award
in the Best Group category. During that same period Fletcher confirmed
that the band was on a long break after the massive "Touring
the Angel" tour and that they soon would decide whether to go on hiatus
or if they should start to write a new album. However, one Depeche Mode
site states that they will "start recording sooner than expected, with
a new album possibly out as soon as late next year." Which means that
Dave Gahan might not tour for his "Hourglass" project and it is already
confirmed that Martin has written bunch of songs.
In December of 2006, Depeche Mode was nominated for a Grammy
award, for Best Dance
Recording, for "Suffer Well." This is their third Grammy award
nomination. The first being a Best
Long Form Music Video award in 1995 for Devotional
and the second being for Best Dance Recording for I Feel
Loved.
In mid-December, 2006, iTunes released The Complete Depeche
Mode as its fourth ever digital box-set (following The Complete U2 in
2004, The Complete Stevie Wonder in 2005, and Bob Dylan: The Collection
earlier in 2006).
In a Simpsons comic released in 2006, Lisa Simpson says seeing
a chor that she feels influences by Count Basie, Monk and Depeche Mode.
As of May 2007 Depeche Mode sold over 12 million records in
the USA alone.
In August 2007, in the midst of promotion for Dave Gahan's
second solo album, Hourglass,
it was announced that Depeche Mode will be headed back in studio in
early 2008 to work on their upcoming twelfth studio album.[2]
Live supporting musicians
- Peter Gordeno
– keyboards, occasional electric bass and electric guitar (1998—Present)
- Christian Eigner – occasional
songwriting, drums (1997—Present)
- Jordan Bailey – backing vocals
(1998–2001)
- Hildia Campbell – backing vocals
(1993–1994)
- Samantha Smith – backing
vocals (1993–1994)
- Daryl Bamonte – keyboards (1994)
- Dave Clayton – keyboards (1997)
- Janet Ramus – backing
vocals (1998)
- Georgia Lewis – backing vocals (2001)
Between 1998 and 2006, both Gordeno and Eigner were present on
three consecutive tours; with Eigner on drums (and contributing to some
of the songwriting on Playing the Angel with Gahan and Andrew Philpott)
and Gordeno on keyboards.
Discography
-
Main article: Depeche Mode discography
See also
- Depeche Mode tours
- Depeche Mode songs with Martin Gore on
lead vocals
- Depeche Mode instrumentals
- Best selling music
artists - world's top selling music artists chart
- List
of number-one dance hits (United States)
- List
of artists who reached number one on the U.S. Dance chart
References
Print references
- Corbijn, Anton, Depeche Mode: Strangers,
1990, Prentice Hall, ISBN
0-7119-2493-7
- Malins, Steve, Depeche Mode : A Biography,
2001, Cooper Square Press, ISBN
0-8154-1142-1
- Miller, Jonathan, Stripped: The True Story of
Depeche Mode, 2004, Omnibus Press, ISBN
1-84449-415-2
- Thompson, Dave, Depeche Mode : Some
Great Reward, 1995, Pan Macmillan, ISBN
0-283-06243-6
- Zill, Didi, Depeche Mode. Photographs 1982-87,
2004, Schwarzkopf & Schwarzkopf, ISBN
3-89602-491-4
Footnotes
-
Tickell, P., "The Life of Depeche Mode", The Face,
January 1982
-
Page, B., "This Year's Mode(L), Sounds Magazine, 31
January 1981
-
Colbert, P., "Talking Hook Lines", Melody Maker, 31
October 1981
-
Fricke, D., "Speak & Spell", Rolling
Stone, May 1982 - Retrieved 6 February 2007
-
Ellen, M., "A Clean Break", Smash Hits, February
1982
-
"Alan Wilder's history", Shunt
- Retrieved on 6 Februaru 2007
-
"Speak & Spell/A Broken Frame",
Shunt - Retrieved on 6 February 2007
-
"The Singles 81-85", Shunt
- Retrieved on 6 February 2007
-
ibid.
-
Moore, X., "Red Rockers Over the Emerald Isle", NME,
17 September 1983
-
McIlheney, B., "Greatness and Perfection", Melody Maker,
29 September 1984
-
loc. cit., Alan Wilder's history
-
Adinolfi, F., "Dep Jam", Record Mirror, 22 August
1987
-
loc. cit., "The Singles 81-85"
-
"The Singles 86-98", Shunt
- Retrieved 7 February 2007
-
op. cit., "The Singles 86-98"
-
ibid.
-
Levy, E., "Music for the Masses", Record Mirror, 3
October 1987
-
Personal Jesus (#3), All
Music Guide
-
McCready, J., "Modus operandum", The Face, February
1989
-
Sanner, S., "Depeche has faith in new 'Songs'",
Variety, 22 March 1993
-
op. cit., "The Singles 86-98
-
op. cit., "The Singles 86-98"
-
Alan's Leaving, Jaakko's
Depeche Mode page - Retrieved 10 February 2007
-
ibid.
-
Martin L. Gore interview, Pavement,
16 April 1997
-
Cameron, K., "Dead Man Talking", NME, 18 January
1997
-
"Depeche Mode: Exciter (2001): Reviews",
Metacritic - Retrieved on 10 February 2007
-
Depeche Mode single leaked online
-
[1]More info on upcoming Depeche
Mode Ultra and Exciter remasters]
External links
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presents Depeche Mode
Singles: "Dreaming
of Me" | "New
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| "In
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| Videography |
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The World
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| Related
articles |
| Synthpop
| Depeche Mode Tours | Mute
Records | Paper Monsters
| Counterfeit e.p.
| Counterfeit² | Toast Hawaii | Recoil
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