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Music Storytellers - VOL 72 - DEPECHE MODE
Music Storytellers - VOL 72 - DEPECHE MODE Photo

DEPECHE MODE -  Originally a product of Britain's new romantic movement, Depeche Mode went on to become the quintessential electro-pop band of the 1980s. One of the first acts to establish a musical identity based completely around the use of synthesizers, they began their existence as a bouncy dance-pop outfit but gradually developed a darker, more dramatic sound that ultimately positioned them as one of the most successful alternative bands of their era.

The roots of Depeche Mode date to 1976, when Basildon, England-based keyboardists Vince Clarke and Andrew Fletcher first teamed to form the group No Romance in China. The band proved short-lived, and by 1979 Clarke had formed French Look, another duo featuring guitarist/keyboardist Martin Gore; Fletcher soon signed on, and the group rechristened itself Composition of Sound. Initially, Clarke handled vocal chores, but in 1980 singer David Gahan was brought in to complete the lineup. After one final name change to Depeche Mode, the quartet members jettisoned all instruments excluding their synthesizers, honing a slick, techno-based sound to showcase Clarke's catchy melodies.

After building a following on the London club scene, Depeche Mode debuted in 1980 with "Photographic," a track included on the Some Bizzare Album label compilation. After signing to Mute Records, they issued "Dreaming of Me" in early 1981; while neither the single nor its follow-up, "New Life," caused much of a stir, their third effort, "Just Can't Get Enough," became a Top Ten U.K. hit, and their 1981 debut LP, Speak and Spell, was also a success. Just as Depeche Mode appeared poised for a major commercial breakthrough, however, principal songwriter Clarke abruptly exited to form Yazoo with singer Alison Moyet, leaving the group's future in grave doubt.

As Gore grabbed the band's songwriting reins, the remaining trio recruited keyboardist Alan Wilder to fill the technological void created by Clarke's departure. While 1982's A Broken Frame deviated only slightly from Depeche Mode's earlier work, Gore's ominous songs grew more assured and sophisticated by the time of 1983's Construction Time Again. Some Great Reward, issued the following year, was their artistic and commercial breakthrough, as Gore's dark, kinky preoccupations with spiritual doubt ("Blasphemous Rumours") and psychosexual manipulation ("Master and Servant") came to the fore; the egalitarian single "People Are People" was a major hit on both sides of the Atlantic and typified the music's turn toward more industrial textures.

Released in 1986, the atmospheric Black Celebration continued the trend toward grim melancholy and further established the group as a major commercial force. After the superb single "Strangelove," Depeche Mode issued 1987's Music for the Masses; a subsequent sold-out tour yielded the 1989 double live set 101 as well as a concert film directed by the legendary D.A. Pennebaker. Still, despite an enormous fan base, the group was considered very much an underground cult phenomenon prior to the release of 1990's Violator, a Top Ten smash that spawned the hits "Enjoy the Silence," "Policy of Truth," and "Personal Jesus."

With the alternative music boom of the early '90s, Depeche Mode emerged as one of the world's most successful acts, and their 1993 LP Songs of Faith and Devotion entered the charts in the number one slot. However, at the peak of its success, the group began to unravel; first Wilder exited in 1995, and then Gahan was the subject of a failed suicide attempt. (He later entered a drug rehabilitation clinic to battle an addiction to heroin.) After a four-year layoff, Depeche Mode continued onward as a trio and released 1997's Ultra, which featured the hits "Barrel of a Gun" and "It's No Good." A year later, the band embarked on a tour in support of its newly released hits album, The Singles 86>98. Depeche Mode played 64 shows in 18 countries for over one million fans. Each member took some considerable time off after the tour's completion, and Depeche Mode would not regroup for another three years. 

Exciter, the band's follow-up to Ultra, was released in 2001, with the singles "Dream On" and "I Feel Loved" finding moderate success on international radio outlets. Two years later, Gahan issued his debut solo album, the dark and sultry Paper Monsters. Gore also followed suit by issuing the all-covers Counterfeit², a full-length sequel to his similarly themed 1989 EP. Each member supported his work with respective tours of the U.S. and Europe; however, the bandmembers soon resumed working together, and Playing the Angel, their 11th studio album, became a Top Ten hit upon its release in October 2005. Produced by Ben Hillier (Doves, Blur, U2, Elbow) and studded with singles like "Precious" and "John (The Revelator)," it topped the album charts in 18 countries and went multi-platinum and/or gold in 20 countries. Depeche Mode went on to play for more than two and a half million fans worldwide, and the DVD release Touring the Angel: Live in Milan (2006) captured one of the band's greatest shows. Sounds of the Universe, also made with the assistance of Hillier, arrived in early 2009.

http://www.billboard.com/artist/depeche-mode/bio/4446#/artist/depeche-mode/bio/4446
| Closed on 07/15/12 at 05:00PM
FanIQ Pts? No | Locker Room, Music | Numeric Input Opinion Poll
6 Fans
Question
971. Music Storytellers - VOL 72 - DEPECHE MODE

 &nbp;
TOP COMMENT * * * * * * * * * * * *
#6 | 341 days ago

I've always kinda liked these guys.

(You should put a ranking system in the answer choices...maybe like 0-5 or something so we can put them on a "like" scale!)
3  
  
13 Comments | Sorted by Most Recent First | Red = You Disagreed
Vote for your favorite comments. Fans decide the Top Comment (3+ votes) and also hide poor quality comments (4+ votes).
#1 | 341 days ago

These guys were popular in the U.S while I was in HS and I couldn't stand them or this kind of alternative music!  Back then, I was listening to Rock or Heavy Metal.

But, the older I became, the more I appreciated their music!

I wouldn't say I'm a fan on theirs, but, I do like some of their songs; "People are People", "Personal Jesus", "Master and Servant", "Precious", "Policy of Truth", "Enjoy the Silence", "John the Revelator"
44  
#2 | 341 days ago

The name makes me think of a funkadeliocious group of the nineties that were a one hitter....i can't think of the name, but the video, was hipplicious......
367  
#3 | 341 days ago

JenX63 wrote:
The name makes me think of a funkadeliocious group of the nineties that were a one hitter....i can't think of the name, but the video, was hipplicious......
Dee-lite (Groove is in the heart)?

Daft Punk 

Moby?

(headscratch)
44  
#4 | 341 days ago

I always liked "Never Let me Down Again" 

That is all.
#5 | 341 days ago

JenX63 wrote:
The name makes me think of a funkadeliocious group of the nineties that were a one hitter....i can't think of the name, but the video, was hipplicious......
Del the Funky Homsapien?
#6 | 341 days ago

I've always kinda liked these guys.

(You should put a ranking system in the answer choices...maybe like 0-5 or something so we can put them on a "like" scale!)
3  
#7 | 341 days ago

Nick__ wrote:
Dee-lite (Groove is in the heart)?

Daft Punk 

Moby?

(headscratch)
Yep Dee Lite. Haven't a clue why one group makes me think of the other since the music is worlds apart.
367  
#8 | 341 days ago

Lobotomy Jones wrote:
Del the Funky Homsapien?
Thanks for the heads up, I didnt know this guy.
367  
#9 | 341 days ago

I had the honor of growing up listening to these guys b/c my older sister loved them.  Behind the Wheel is one of my absolute favorite songs ever.
#10 | 341 days ago

Jess wrote:
I've always kinda liked these guys.

(You should put a ranking system in the answer choices...maybe like 0-5 or something so we can put them on a "like" scale!)
I like that idea!  yes
44  
#11 | 338 days ago

Even when I am a metal fan. I enjoy some other bands and this is one of those. Dave Gahan is such a front man, and their music is awesome. Period. smiley
#12 | 338 days ago

Nick__ wrote:
I like that idea!  yes
now go back and edit all 72 previous polls with this, lol cheeky
#13 | 338 days ago

I have their greatest hits disc, lots of good stuff, they were ground breaking for the electronica genre that still exists today

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