DEPECHE MODE DISCOGRAPHY




Depeche Mode 'The Best Of Volume 1' 2006



Compilation:  

The Best Of Volume 1


Label:  

Depeche Mode  

MUTE


Catalog number:  

mutel15


Release date:  

CD, CD+DVD - 13 November 2006 / DIGITAL - iTunes: 8 November 2006 | 7digital: 14 November 2006 / 3LP - 12 February 2007


Compiled:  

Daniel Miller and Roland Brown


Re-mastered:  

Simon Heyworth at Super Audio Mastering, Devon.


Producer:  

Depeche Mode, David Bascombe, Mark Bell, Flood, Ben Hillier, Daniel Miller and Tim Simenon


Written:  

Martin L Gore | Vince Clarke | Gahan/Eigner/Phillpott


Visuals:  

art direction by Anton Corbijn


Formats edition:  

LP

CD

CD and DVD

DIGITAL


UK chart:  

18 position



DEPECHE MODE:


■  

Dave Gahan


■  

Martin Gore


■  

Andy Fletcher



BAND MEMBERS:


■  

Alan Wilder (October 1982 - 01 June 1995 | one-off show in 17 February 2010)


■  

Vince Clarke (1980 - 03 December 1981)



SONG LYRICS by TRACK




PRESS RELEASE


Depeche Mode


DEPECHE MODE


THE BEST OF VOLUME 1 (CD)


Released 13th November on MUTE (UK)


Released November 14th on Sire/Reprise (USA)



"One of the greatest British pop groups of all time" - Sunday Telegraph


"One of the coolest bands we've ever had" - The Sun


"The dark overlords of electro-pop" - NME


Hugely influential and hailed by Q magazine as "the most popular electronic band the world has ever known", Depeche Mode follow 25 incredibly successful years of sublime, superlative electronica with their first ever Best Of collection released on MUTE on November 13th.


Brimming with 17 hit singles that span their incredible and varied career, this eagerly anticipated album also contains the brand new track 'Martyr' which pulses with their relentlessly energetic sound and it sits immaculately amongst their luminous history. Martyr will be released as a single early November.


This inspired collection of classic Depeche songs features their most definitive work to date - including the hits 'Just Can't Get Enough', 'Everything Counts' 'Personal Jesus', 'Enjoy The Silence' and 'Precious'. All tracks are taken from 11 of the band's studio albums released between 1981 and 2006.


Formed in 1981, Depeche Mode - Dave Gahan, Andy 'Fletch' Fletcher and Martin Gore - have spent over 400 combined weeks on the UK charts and continue to win critical acclaim across the world. Their first thirteen albums (released between 1981 and 1998) all reached the UK Top Ten, as did 2005's 'Playing The Angel'.


One of the most influential groups over the last 25 years, Depeche Mode have inspired generations of new musicians while consolidating their considerable reputation. In the process they have sold over 72 million records and played to audiences in excess of 30 million throughout their remarkable 25-year career. They remain one of the most highly regarded and passionately supported groups in modern music.


International sales of their current acclaimed album 'Playing The Angel' are 3 million, and have seen them reach Number 1 in eighteen countries, plus Top Ten in Canada and the US. It has also been certified Gold in seven countries and platinum in three. In addition to this, Depeche Mode have played to 2.5 million people across 31 countries this year, on the 'Playing The Angel' world tour.



The complete tracklisting for the Best Of CD is as follows, with original album bracketed:



Personal Jesus ('Violator', 1990)


Just Can't Get Enough ('Speak And Spell', 1981)


Everything Counts ('Construction Time Again, 1983)


Enjoy The Silence ('Violator', 1990)


Shake The Disease ('The Singles 81-85', 1985)


See You ('A Broken Frame', 1982)


It's No Good ('Ultra', 1997)


Strangelove ('Music For The Masses', 1987)


Suffer Well ('Playing The Angel', 2005)


Dream On ('Exciter', 2001)


People Are People ('Some Great Reward', 1984)


Martyr (Best Of)


Walking In My Shoes ('Songs of Faith and Devotion', 1993)


I Feel You ('Songs Of Faith And Devotion', 1993)


Precious ('Playing The Angel', 2005)


Master And Servant ('Some Great Reward', 1984)


New Life ('Speak And Spell', 1981)


Never Let Me Down Again ('Music For The Masses', 1987)



DEPECHE MODE


THE BEST OF VOLUME 1 (CD + DVD) deluxe edition


Released 13th November on MUTE (UK)


Released November 14th on Sire/Reprise (USA)



"One of the greatest British pop groups of all time" - Sunday Telegraph


"One of the coolest bands we've ever had" - The Sun


"The dark overlords of electro-pop" - NME


On November 13th, Depeche Mode follow 25 incredibly successful years of sublime electronica with their first ever Best Of collection. A companion Best of DVD will also be released on the same day featuring videos for 23 classic tracks that span their acclaimed and varied career.


Created by some of the most cutting-edge and superlative directors - including their longtime collaborator Anton Corbijn, who has been professionally associated with the band for two decades - this DVD Best Of also features work by Clive Richardson, Stephane Sednaoui, Peter Care, Brian Griffin, John Hillcoat and Uwe Flade.


Often eschewing traditional glamour with progressive treatments, each impressive video captures the dynamic vision and unrelenting energy of Depeche Mode.


The DVD compilation is sourced from 11 of the band's studio albums, released between 1981 and 2006, including 'Playing The Angel' and two of its recent hit singles - 'Precious' and 'Suffer Well'.



The DVD tracklisting is:



Just Can't Get Enough - (Directed by Clive Richardson)


Everything Counts - (Directed by Clive Richardson)


People Are People - (Directed by Clive Richardson)


Master & Servant - (Directed by Clive Richardson)


Shake The Disease - (Directed by Peter Care)


Stripped - (Directed by Peter Care)


A Question Of Time - (Directed by Anton Corbijn)


Strangelove [1987 Version] - (Directed by Anton Corbijn)


Never Let Me Down Again - (Directed by Anton Corbijn)


Behind The Wheel - (Directed by Anton Corbijn)


Personal Jesus - (Directed by Anton Corbijn)


Enjoy The Silence - (Directed by Anton Corbijn)


I Feel You - (Directed by Anton Corbijn)


Walking In My Shoes - (Directed by Anton Corbijn)


In Your Room - (Directed by Anton Corbijn)


Barrel Of A Gun - (Directed by Anton Corbijn)


It's No Good - (Directed by Anton Corbijn)


Only When I Lose Myself - (Directed by Brian Griffin)


Dream On - (Directed by Stephane Sednaoui)


I Feel Loved - (Directed by John Hillcoat)


Enjoy The Silence 04 - (Directed by Uwe Flade)


Precious - (Directed by Uwe Flade)


Suffer Well - Directed by Anton Corbijn)


Also on the DVD will be the "Electronic Press Kit" (E.P.K.) for "The Best Of" album.


Formed in 1981, Depeche Mode - Dave Gahan, Andy 'Fletch' Fletcher and Martin Gore - have spent over 400 combined weeks on the UK charts and continue to win critical acclaim across the world. Their first thirteen albums (released between 1981 and 1998) all reached the UK Top Ten, as did 'Playing The Angel'.



Depeche Mode


DEPECHE MODE


THE BEST OF VOLUME 1 (digital deluxe edition)


Released November 8th, 2006


buy: iTunes



Digital Deluxe Edition



The digital deluxe edition release of "The Best Of" contains the CD, as well as a selection of bonus remixes!



Personal Jesus


Just Can't Get Enough


Everything Counts


Enjoy The Silence


Shake The Disease


See You


It's No Good


Strangelove


Suffer Well


Dream On


People Are People


Martyr


Walking In My Shoes


I Feel You


Precious


Master And Servant


New Life


Never Let Me Down Again


Personal Jesus (Boyz Noise Rework)


Never Let Me Down Again (Digitalism Remix)


Everything Counts (Oliver Huntemann & Stephan Bodzin Dub)


People Are People (Underground Resistance Remix)


Personal Jesus (Heartthrob Rework 2)



DEPECHE MODE


THE BEST OF VOLUME 1 (special edition triple vinyl)


Released February 12th, 2007 on MUTE (UK)


buy: MUTEBank



The LP:



Personal Jesus


Just Can't Get Enough


Everything Counts


Enjoy The Silence


Shake The Disease


See You


It's No Good


Strangelove


Suffer Well


Dream On


People Are People


Martyr


Walking In My Shoes


I Feel You


Precious


Master And Servant


New Life


Never Let Me Down Again



©2006 Venusnote



depeche mode



And then there was Depeche Mode, pale faced pop smitten Basildon boys born in the 60s, bruised by the brazen Bowie, connected by dreams, lust and wires to Ultravox, Kraftwerk, Eno and Moroder, who formed perfectly, just in time, wet behind the ears with made up eyes and fashion in their hair, in 1980.



This was when 1980 seemed like the future, when guitars seemed like the past.



The glam, disco and punk of the heady corrupting 70s needed somewhere to go, and better and better machines for recording, simulating and manipulating sound were being invented, perfect for those listeners and addicts who thought of pop as something deliciously alien and unsettling that must always move forward and change its mind. These self-conscious starry eyed Basildon boys, who amongst themselves and with others had formed late 70s bands that were sort of post-punk, almost art-pop, more or less wonky stylish statements of intent, half Essex, half Martian, were all fired up ready to inherit, and pass on, invented notes, noise and beats that connected their dressed up deadpan androgynous heroes with many possible tomorrows. Their early bands had names like No Romance in China, The Plan, The French Look and Composition of Sound - names that hint at the fascination these chic-ish young town dwelling dreamers had with image, foreignness, systems, rhythm, desire, mystery, music, art and escape. Names that weren't quite right, not fully formed, not for those who, on the sly posing quiet, had ambition that the name of the group they were in would sound right next to Sparks, Roxy Music, Devo, Cabaret Voltaire and Joy Division.



By 1980, which wasn't yet as glossy, processed and speedy as the 80s would turn out, about the same time as The Face was formed and just before MTV came to life, the four local play boys who found themselves in the same club, the same rocket ship, the same illusion, the same magazine feature, named themselves Depeche Mode. Even if in 1980 you saw the four baby boys play small clubs or support Fad Gadget lined up behind their primitive machines playing cute clockwork technopop like a kindergarten Kraftwerk there was something about the name that made you think they were up to something, and it wasn't completely innocent. They bopped like a battery operated Monkees in a space age cartoon, but you sensed that in their record collection between Tangerine Dream and T. Rex there was Throbbing Gristle. Between fun and games, between girls and showing off, there was Faust.



Their name, apparently, was French, for something to do with speed, and fashion, or acceleration, and style, or image, and madness, or alienation, and code. It was a good name, and has never stopped being a good name, for a group who have never stopped being half pragmatic half enigmatic half commercial half inscrutable half in plain sight half hidden half abstract half lucid half simple half sophisticated half composed half off their rocker. Even when they positively glowed with brand new ambition and sweet driving youth there was an insidious otherness about them, somewhere between shifty and charming, that suggested there was something powerful about this pop group. They wanted to make the listener a believer - in the group, in what the group believed in - with a kind of dark force that could make a catchy throwaway pop song almost religious in intensity.



Nine years later, 1989, the group were a long way from home, from Southend on Sea, from jerky electropop perk, having taken their otherness with them through many changes of mind and appearance, having seen the world, and other worlds. Their 23rd UK single was a song more or less a religious plea about more or less Elvis that more or less sounded like the group that produced it were from the back of a mythical derelict American beyond rather than straightforward earthbound Basildon. Personal Jesus stamped, stung and lunged along a sinister gothic road inventing some genre or another you could call synth'n'blues, beatific pop or country and techno. It was a song pretty much about some kind of divine, damned Elvis, or the ghost of God, or the end of the line, or the love supreme, that you actually wanted Elvis to sing, to deliver. Johnny Cash was close enough, given the phenomonal circumstances. Maybe the song was about a dream William Burroughs had once had about drinking absinthe in the land of the dead with John the Baptist and Edgar Allen Poe. Dave Gahan, the tender teenage singer Depeche Mode had chosen because they heard him croon Bowie's Heroes in some local pub as if he knew what the song was all about, sang Jesus like he was lost in the desert of his own consciousness. His mouth was dry but his mind was on fire. He was beside himself with calm desperation. His time was up and he was just a singer, a kind of hard working hard living supervisor of emotion, but he was a lot tougher than he'd been at the beginning of the 80s. He was a lot more alive and a lot closer to death. What on earth was he on? He was on the kind of journey that can make pop stars seem like Jesus.



Martin Gore had written a penetrating, mind stretching Bob Dylan lyric in the flip, devil-may-care style of Marc Bolan, a hobo gospel song glazed with industrial heat, a musical dream about faith and forgiveness. Any group that can begin their best of collection with such a song, a song seething with musical, personal and mythical history, must be one of the great groups.



Can you tell listening to their 3rd single, 1981, Just Can't Get Enough, when they were bouncy electrobabes alongside Human League, OMD and Soft Cell that they would one day be responsible for a song that featured such a real guitar, even if it was a sneaky, shadowy reproduction of a real guitar, and which would eventually feature so beautifully in Johnny Cash's long brave walk towards death? A song that seemed made out of wood, terror and soul as much as metal, code and glam? Just Can't Get Enough bounced with horny hopeful boy band glee, it was a shiny, shapely love song, but there was something rattled and creepy in there, and eventually Depeche Mode revealed the hidden melancholy in deep dark dream full. Some people just can't get the thought of Just Can't Get Enough out of their heads when they consider Depeche's reputation, as if this is their key song, their moment, their only sound. In fact, it is the plugged in sound of their beginning, an early moment, an initial calculation, a boyish ejaculation, the beginning of an adventure in pleasure and pain, image and rhythm, and once they'd helped invent guitar rejecting future loving electropop, mixing strict disco pulse with hyperalert electric precision and tart gleaming wit, they just kept moving. They kept switching. They kept exploring. If they'd merely energetically repeated the idea, and beat, and subject of their third single, as infectious and appealing as it all was, they wouldn't now be one of the great groups of all time. They would be just a passing poppy phase, a tidy, throwaway example of a genre that by the mid 80s had burnt itself out. A cosy item of nostalgia. Temporarily topical. They were, though, a pop group that developed their ideas, their scope of their repertoire, like a serious rock group, like an experimental collective. They were a singles group that cared about the form and content, the ambition, of their albums, and that questing spirit passed into their singles.



By the time of their 8th single, Everything Counts, in 1983, the four of them were slightly different from the four of them that started, because founder member Vince Clarke had moved away to the other side of town, and Alan Wilder had joined. They were still a classic four piece pop group, but whereas Vince was theatrically, traditionally pop, Martin, aided and abetted by Alan, was eccentrically, almost violently pop. Everything Counts was an ominous song about greed, war, rivalry, fear, there wasn't much romance in the air, and as much as Depeche Mode were already testing sonically how far you could push a pop song and still chart, they were also testing how far conceptually you go before you faded away into the shadows. How dark could you get? How original ? How twisted ? Being a Mute group - let's not forget that they were a pop group on a radical independent label that believed there was some definite social, artistic and political purpose to music - their attitude was to make entertainment that might mess with your mind and reach deep into your soul. They did this by placing words next to other words and sound within other sounds in a way no one else had thought of. They still charted.



By the time of their 24th single, 1990, Enjoy The Silence, which rumbled with a curious courtesy, Depeche Mode, had invented genres, influenced innovators, conquered America, slipped behind Anton Corbijn's screen of perverse, playful cool, and savagely, surgically remixed their music into all the great cities of the world. They were writing incredibly evocative songs that could communicate, electronically and naturally, complex feelings about life and loneliness with extraordinary grace and precision. No line is longer than four words long. Rhythm flows into melody flows into atmosphere flows into form flows into silence flows into rhythm. Violence flows into silence flows into violence. They made it seem so simple. Silence was the sixth track on their seventh album, Violator, which also included Personal Jesus and so is not surprisingly a leading candidate for the greatest Depeche Mode album. In the video directed by Anton Corbijn, Dave, remote, calm and knowing in robe and crown, as self-made king of all he surveyed, walked across the world, from one end of the 80s to the other, into the future, into the imagination, into the song itself and into the history of Depeche Mode, which was nowhere near over. By now, the task was to not sink into self-parody, to keep up the momentum, to resist the grand temptations that were actually Presley-sized even though they used to be little and live next to nowhere, to avoid being shoved into the past by new trends and new sounds, to resist sulking that they were so taken for granted.



By the time of their 13th single, 1985, Shake the Disease, an articulate song about inarticulacy, they were somewhere between being the bright electropop pioneers who relished making the rhythm of their music avant garde hard, and the group who were well on their way to establishing themselves as the missing link between the magnificently diseased unpop group Throbbing Gristle and (the pop singles of) the blatantly shaking Britney Spears. They were also, given that Martin Gore was at heart a thoughtful observant singer-songwriter, the missing link between the spiritual English blues of John Martyn and the distressed American hedonism of Nine Inch Nails. Their 13th single began with the narrator making it clear he was not going to get down on his knees. Knees, the getting or not getting down on, is an image Gore is very fond of, one Dave Gahan has always been very happy, in a noble, mournful way, to sing, to deliver. There was also in this song begging, torture, eternity and a sense, lingering from their adolescent days, set to linger into middle age, that the most important thing in life is to be understood, even if you're really a wilfully mysterious bastard. Depeche Mode music has always been the perfect soundtrack to the feeling that no-one understands you/me, and so by 1985, they were the leading band/brand pretty much in the world for confused, profoundly pensive young people who wanted from their music a helping hand to hold and, possibly, kiss.



By the time of their 4th single, See You, 1982, the first written by Martin Gore, their love songs were already about love as something that only leads to failure, to regret, to a kind of death, if not death itself, a sentiment Gahan was happy, in a solemn, contemplative way, to sing. By the time of their 32nd single, 1997, It's No Good, Depeche Mode were a group who had released 31 singles and were about to release their ninth album, this one without Alan Wilder, who had moved away to the other side of the valley, and for some to some extent it seemed all over for the group. No more inspiration. The early hope, as sensationally zipped open by their third single, had surely all dried up. Martin Gore, though, often at his Goriest when things seem hopeless and resignation seems the only way forward, was still looking to the stars and negotiating with the Gods and the occasional difficult human being. He was not tempting fate and his patience was infinite. Stunned by many different things he still somehow knew which way to turn. Dave had in many real ways nearly died, nearly died in the tattooed skin of an ancient zealous outsider, nearly become the baby pop star who blew himself up because getting older in the spotlight, or even just outside it, is packed with horror. He sang the song as if it was about being in a tunnel and at the end you can see a white light, as if the song is not about a girl that you have all the time in the world to make yours, but about life itself, which you have to believe in or it drops out from underneath you. He sang the song as if he could still hear the terrifying,smacking laughter of angels. It still charted. Andy Fletcher noted this in his book of notes about the progress of the group, which was now a kind of Bible.



By the time of their 18th single, Strangelove, 1987, Depeche Mode had discovered how to write a voluptuous song about pain that was dedicated to pleasure. Dave has always been happy, in a pummelled, torn way, to deliver Martin's messages about being punished, by life, himself and others. Gore prefers pain and trouble to indifference. Dave's just happy, in a trashed, vibrant way, to be still singing. By the time of their 43rd single, Suffer Well, 2006, the first to be written by Dave Gahan, Depeche Mode were somewhere between being the undoubting beat up Rolling Stones of their generation, legends in their own commercial world, and immortal futurist entertainers who'd never compromised their pure devotion to singing chastened introspective pop built to slam into your psyche.



By the time of their 36th single, Dream On, 2001, Gore had written yet another great resounding pop song about the nightmare of sensation as rendered by a cold, unforgiving universe whose middle name was pain. Or maybe Martin was passing on some kind of request to Dave, or himself, to be careful with the self-medication, the late nights, the long exhausting journey into self-loathing. The steady flag carrying Andy was as always close by, watching and listening, always ready to help, to mop up the blood, if required. By the time of their 10th single, People are People, 1984, Depeche Mode were automatically filed under synthpop, like that meant something, like they were made out of plastic or something, but were writing songs bursting with static panache angrily questioning the hatred people feel for each other. By the time of their 45th single, Martyr, 2006, Depeche Mode had kept up their end of the bargain so consistently for so long that a track they had written after over a quarter of a century being, and battling, together was good enough to feature on their Best of collection.



By the time of their 28th single, Walking in My Shoes, 1993, you could rely on a restless, striving Depeche Mode to write a shrewd, worldly song about weariness that would become the number one American rock song. By the time of their 27th single, I Feel You, 1993, Martin was in love. Dave sang the words like he was also in love, or at least had once heard amazing rumours about the condition. The song faithfully remembered a great sensual Summer and pumped irony just in case anyone had forgotten Depeche Mode's role over the years in setting and resetting trends.



By the time of their 41st single, Precious, 2005, Martin was confessing something specific and private about falling out of love, and although sometimes it's never quite clear who his words are meant for - for Dave to sing, for Andy to check, for himself to work himself out, for an audience, for strangers, for someone close, for God, for no-one in particular - this song was for his children. By now, for the three who had survived the twenty five years they had been together as fashion, life, music, technology and time boiled all around them, Depeche Mode wasn't just something they did in their life. The group was their life. It was where they lived. It was the city they took with them wherever they want.



By the time of their 11th single, the gripping, groping Master and Servant, 1984, Depeche Mode were announcing that most of their songs - even the ones about displacement, feelings of dread, endless corridors, swimming through air, hostility, hysterical love, terrible rejection, looking in the mirror, forbidden fruit, diabolical vanity, ghostly flowers, the fiery beauty of the world, fitful comprehension, information processing, victimisation, eternal vigilance, guilt, sin and envy, the world crashing around your ears - were really about sex, and sexual initiation. By the time of their 2nd single, New Life, Depeche Mode believed in the future, and their future, and the strange magical way a pop song could help you, as performer or listener, transcend shyness, attack boredom and find the future, if only for a moment.



By time of their 19th single, Never Let Me Down Again, 1987, Depeche Mode were reporting from inside the thrilling fantasy of being a successful pop group. They had written the track that twenty years later would be the final track on their Best of collection, an album that demonstrated that they'd been places, and seen things, and found the future. There will still places to go and things to see. There was always the future. It was time for a little hope, a little optimism, an oblique suggestion of loyalty. The four friends were explaining, as best as they could, with only a hint of sorry doubt and suspicion, how great it was where they were, out of their minds, lost in music, inside this story that only they were having, that was dawning on them all the time, that led time and time again to chaos and glory. They were in this together in their own special time and space.



Dave, meanwhile, on royal, metaphysical behalf of the group, who were keeping themselves busy and invisible as Anton trained his astonishing eye on things, kept walking. He walked across mountains, avoiding lost cities, across fields of time, walking to a rhythm that carried him to the sea. How deserted the beach was. He waded into the sea, and kept walking.



Paul Morley, Home, 120806




SINGLE


Depeche Mode

Martyr

Depeche Mode

Remixes




VINYL RELEASE


3 x 12" (mutel15) EU




LP 1




SIDE A



A 01.   "Personal Jesus" 03:47


A 02.   "Just Can't Get Enough" 03:43


A 03.   "Everything Counts" 04:01



SIDE B



B 01.   "Enjoy The Silence" 04:18


B 02.   "Shake The Disease" 04:51


B 03.   "See You" 04:01




LP 2




SIDE C



C 01.   "It's No Good" 05:58


C 02.   "Strangelove" 03:46


C 03.   "Suffer Well" 03:52



SIDE D



D 01.   "Dream On" 03:51


D 02.   "People Are People" 03:37


D 03.   "Martyr" 03:25




LP 3




SIDE E



E 01.   "Walking In My Shoes" 05:00


E 02.   "I Feel You" 04:35


E 03.   "Precious" 04:09



SIDE F



F 01.   "Master And Servant" 03:59


F 02.   "New Life" 03:46


F 03.   "Never Let Me Down Again" 04:20





● MATRIX: RUNOUT / BARCODE



Label Code:   lc05834


Barcode:   0 094637 507414 >


Runout A:   12 muTE L 15 A₁ 65654 1A 3750741


Barcode:   0094638719311


Runout B:   12 muTE L 15 B₁ 65654 1B 3750741


Barcode:   0094638719311


Runout C:   12 muTE L 15 C₁ 65654 1C 3750741


Barcode:   0094638719410


Runout D:   12 muTE L 15 D₁ 65654 1D 3750741


Barcode:   0094638719410


Runout E:   12 muTE L 15 E₁ 65654 1E 3750741


Barcode:   0094638719519


Runout F:   12 muTE L 15 F₁ 65654 1F 3750741


Barcode:   0094638719519


Other, Labels all LP:   printed in the eu


Vinyl record format:   33rpm





White sticker:


Limited Edition

Deluxe

Triple Vinyl


0094637507414"



NOTE: Cover: printed in the eu. Includes a 8-page 12" booklet. Matte cover. Printed inner sleeves. Durations do not appear on the release.



Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode


Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode


Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode


Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode


Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode


Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode


Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode


Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode


Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode




CD RELEASE


CD (cdmutel15) EU





1   "Personal Jesus" 03:47


2   "Just Can't Get Enough" 03:43


3   "Everything Counts" 04:01


4   "Enjoy The Silence" 04:18


5   "Shake The Disease" 04:51


6   "See You" 04:01


7   "It's No Good" 05:58


8   "Strangelove" 03:46


9   "Suffer Well" 03:52


10   "Dream On" 03:51


11   "People Are People" 03:37


12   "Martyr" 03:25


13   "Walking In My Shoes" 05:00


14   "I Feel You" 04:35


15   "Precious" 04:09


16   "Master And Servant" 03:59


17   "New Life" 03:46


18   "Never Let Me Down Again" 04:20





● MATRIX: RUNOUT / BARCODE



Label Code:   LC5834


Rights Society:   bel BIEM


Barcode:   0 094637 507322 >


Runout:   [MediaMotion logo] WWW.MEDIAMOTION.COM 3782052 @ 3


Runout, mould code area (white):   030215


Mould SID Code:   IFPI AAHY7


Mastering SID Code:   IFPI LW04


Barcode CD:   094637507322


Other CD:   made in the eu





White sticker on front states:


"18 CLASSIC HITS

including

Just Can't Get Enough

Personal Jesus

Enjoy the Silence

and the new single

Martyr


0094637507322"



NOTE: Cover: printed in the eu. Album title is spelled "the best of depeche mode VOLUME 1" on the disc, the back and the spine. Issued in a clear tray standard jewel case with 16-page booklet including liner notes, photos and credits. Durations do not appear on the release.



Depeche Mode are Andy Fletcher, Dave Gahan, Martin Gore.


Alan Wilder was a member of Depeche Mode from 1982 to 1995 and appears on all tracks except.


Vince Clarke was a member of Depeche Mode from 1980 to 1981 and appears on tracks 2 and 17.


All songs written by Martin L. Gore. Except 13 & 14 written by Martin L. Gore. 2 & 17 written by V.Clarke. 9 written by Gahan/Eigner/Phillpott.


Compiled by Daniel Miller & Roland Brown.


Re-mastered by Simon Heyworth at Super Audio Mastering, Devon.



Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode


Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode


Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode


Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode


Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode


Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode


Depeche Mode




CD and DVD RELEASE


Limited CD + DVD (lcdmutel15) EU



CD



1   "Personal Jesus" 03:47


2   "Just Can't Get Enough" 03:43


3   "Everything Counts" 04:01


4   "Enjoy The Silence" 04:18


5   "Shake The Disease" 04:51


6   "See You" 04:01


7   "It's No Good" 05:58


8   "Strangelove" 03:46


9   "Suffer Well" 03:52


10   "Dream On" 03:51


11   "People Are People" 03:37


12   "Martyr" 03:25


13   "Walking In My Shoes" 05:00


14   "I Feel You" 04:35


15   "Precious" 04:09


16   "Master And Servant" 03:59


17   "New Life" 03:46


18   "Never Let Me Down Again" 04:20



DVD VIDEO



1   "Just Can't Get Enough" 03:41


2   "Everything Counts" 03:59


3   "People Are People" 03:40


4   "Master And Servant" 03:50


5   "Shake The Disease" 04:46


6   "Stripped" 03:45


7   "A Question Of Time" 04:05


8   "Strangelove" 03:49


9   "Never Let Me Down Again" 04:25


10.   "Behind The Wheel" 04:13


11   "Personal Jesus" 03:46


12   "Enjoy The Silence" 04:36


13   "I Feel You" 04:35


14   "Walking In My Shoes" 05:03


15   "In Your Room" 04:50


16   "Barrel Of A Gun" 05:28


17   "It's No Good" 04:18


18   "Only When I Lose Myself" 04:14


19   "Dream On" 03:41


20   "I Feel Loved" 03:37


21   "Enjoy The Silence 04" 03:28


22   "Precious" 04:11


23   "Suffer Well" 03:51


PLUS


the best of depeche mode a short film 30:14





● MATRIX: RUNOUT / BARCODE



Label Code:   lc5835


Barcode:   0 094637 507421 >


Runout CD Outer Ring:   [MediaMotion logo] WWW.MEDIAMOTION.COM 3782052 @ 3


Mastering SID Code CD Outer:   IFPI LW04


Runout CD, mould code area (white):   030201


Mould SID Code CD:   IFPI AAHY7


Barcode CD:   0094637507322


Other CD:   printed in the eu


Runout DVD Outer:   [MediaMotion logo] WWW.MEDIAMOTION.COM 3750762-0 PAL @ 1


Runout DVD Inner:   [MediaMotion logo] WWW.MEDIAMOTION.COM 3750762-1 PAL @ 2


Runout DVD, mirrored, mould code area (amber):   010107


Runout DVD, mould code area (white):   020203


Mastering SID Code DVD:   IFPI LW04


Mould SID Code DVD:   IFPI AAHM3


Barcode DVD:   0094637507629





Sticker on front states:


"18 CLASSIC HITS

including

Just Can't Get Enough

Personal Jesus

Enjoy the Silence

and the new single Martyr

23 HIT VIDEOS

plus

exclusive new short film


0094637507421"



NOTE: Cover: printed in the eu. Album title is spelled "the best of depeche mode VOLUME 1" on the discs, the back and the spine. DVD features 23 promo videos and a short film about the band's career; total running time 126 minutes. Subtitles: English, German, French, Spanish, Italian. This is the original release. Durations do not appear on the release.


Disc Type: DVD9. Volume - 7593 Mb. Zone: 0 (All regions). Video standard: PAL. Image format on clips: 1,33:1; 1,66:1; 1,85:1 ( letterbox). The format of the image on the documentary and the menu: 1.85:1 (anamorph). Audio track on the documentary: PCM Stereo. Audio track on the clips: PCM Stereo


Depeche Mode are Andy Fletcher, Dave Gahan, Martin Gore.


Alan Wilder was a member of Depeche Mode from 1982 to 1995 and appears on all tracks except.


Vince Clarke was a member of Depeche Mode from 1980 to 1981 and appears on tracks Just Can't Get Enough and New Life.


All songs written by Martin L. Gore. Except Walking In My Shoes, I Feel You, In Your Room & Only When I Lose Myself written by Martin L. Gore. Just Can't Get Enough & New Life written by V.Clarke. Suffer Well written by Gahan/Eigner/Phillpott.


CD Compiled by Daniel Miller & Roland Brown.


Re-mastered by Simon Heyworth at Super Audio Mastering, Devon.


DVD Compiled by Roland Brown.


Encoded and authored at Technicolor.



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DIGITAL RELEASE


Digital Deluxe Download (iTunes - 8 November 2006 / 7digital - 14 November 2006) US



1   "Personal Jesus" 03:47


2   "Just Can't Get Enough" 03:43


3   "Everything Counts" 04:01


4   "Enjoy The Silence" 04:18


5   "Shake The Disease" 04:51


6   "See You" 04:01


7   "It's No Good" 05:58


8   "Strangelove" 03:46


9   "Suffer Well" 03:52


10   "Dream On" 03:51


11   "People Are People" 03:37


12   "Martyr" 03:25


13   "Walking In My Shoes" 05:00


14   "I Feel You" 04:35


15   "Precious" 04:09


16   "Master And Servant" 03:59


17   "New Life" 03:46


18   "Never Let Me Down Again" 04:20


19   "Personal Jesus" (Boys Noise Rework) 06:55


20   "Never Let Me Down Again" (Digitalism Remix) 04:40


21   "Everything Counts" (Oliver Huntemann & Stephan Bodzin Dub) 06:55


22   "People Are People" (Underground Resistance Remix) 07:24


23   "Personal Jesus" (Heartthrob Rework 2) 05:15





NOTE: Release via digital outlets like iTunes and 7digital



Depeche Mode




DEPECHE MODE COMMERCIAL TV









AUDIO | RELEASES


PRODUCTION DETAILS COMPILATION



"Personal Jesus" 03:46  •  Produced by Depeche Mode and Flood. Mixed by François Kevorkian.


"Just Can't Get Enough" 03:43  •  Produced by Depeche Mode and Daniel Miller. Engineered by Eric Radcliffe and John Fryer.


"Everything Counts" 03:58  •  Produced by Daniel Miller and Depeche Mode. Tonmeister by Gareth Jones.


"Enjoy The Silence" 04:16  •  Produced by Depeche Mode and Flood. Mixed by Daniel Miller and Flood. Engineered by Pino Pischetola, Peter Iversen, Steve Lyon, Goh Hotoda, Alan Gregorie, Dennis Mitchell and Phil Legg. Assisted by Daryl Bamonte, Dick Meany, David Browne, Mark Flannery and Ricky.


"Shake The Disease" 04:47  •  Produced by Daniel Miller, Depeche Mode and Gareth Jones at Handsa Mischraum, Berlin.


"See You" 03:52  • 

Produced by Daniel Miller and Depeche Mode. Engineered by John Fryer and Eric Radcliffe.


"It's No Good" 05:59  •  Produced by Tim Simenon. Mixed by Tim Simenon and Q. Engineered by Q. Programming by Kerry Hopwood. Keyboards and Keyboard programming by Dave Clayton. Assisted by Paul Hicks, Guy Massey, Lee Fitzgerald, Tom Rixton, Gary Forde, Lee Phillips, Jamie Campbell, Jim, Greg, Audie Chamberlain and Robbie Kazandijan. Mastered by Mike Marsh at The Exchange. Percussion by Victor Indrizzo.


"Strangelove" 03:47 06:46  •  Produced by Depeche Mode and Dave Bascombe at Studio Guillaume Tell, Paris. Engineered by Dave Bascombe.


"Suffer Well" 03:52  •  Produced by Ben Hillier for 140dB. Mixed by Steve Fitzmaurice and Ben Hillier. Programming by Dave McCracken and Richard Morris. Original Programming by Christian Eigner and Andrew Phillpott. Engineered by Ben Hillier and Richard Morris.


"Dream On" 03:51  •  Produced by Mark Bell. Engineered by Gareth Jones. Pre-production and additional production by Gareth Jones and Paul Freegard. Mixed by Steve Fitzmaurice. Mastered at The Exchange by Mike Marsh.


"People Are People" 03:43  •  Produced by Daniel Miller, Depeche Mode and Gareth Jones. Assistant Engineers by Ben Ward, Stefi Marcus, Colie McMahon.


"Martyr" 03:25  •  Produced by Ben Hillier for 140db. Mixed by Jeremy Wheatley for 365 Artists at Twenty-One Studios. Assisted by Richard Edgeier. Programming by Dave McCracken, additional programming by Richard Morris. Engineered by Ben Hillier and Richard Morris.


"Walking In My Shoes" 05:02  •  Produced by Depeche Mode and Flood. Mixed by Mark Stent. Engineered by Steve Lyon, Chris Dickie and Paul Kendall. Assisted by Jeremy Wheatley, Mark Einstmann, Shaun de Feo and Volke Schneider. Mastered by Kevin Metcalfe.


"I Feel You" 04:35  •  Produced by Depeche Mode and Flood. Mixed by Mark Stent. Engineered by Steve Lyon, Chris Dickie and Paul Kendall. Assisted by Jeremy Wheatley, Mark Einstmann, Shaun de Feo and Volke Schneider. Mastered by Kevin Metcalfe.


"Precious" 04:09  •  Produced by Ben Hillier for 140dB. Mixed by Ben Hillier and Steve Fitzmaurice. Programming by Dave McCracken and Richard Morris. Engineered by Ben Hillier and Richard Morris.


"Master And Servant" 03:45  •  Produced by Daniel Miller, Depeche Mode and Gareth Jones. Assistant Engineers by Ben Ward, Stefi Marcus, Colie McMahon.


"New Life" 03:43  •  Produced by Depeche Mode and Daniel Miller. Engineered by Eric Radcliffe and John Fryer.


"Never Let Me Down Again" 04:22  •  Produced by Depeche Mode and David Bascombe. Additional production and help from Daniel Miller. Engineered by David Bascombe.





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