Depeche Mode - 1981-06-02 London | dmremix.pro

Depeche Mode 1981-06-02 London

demoderus

Well-known member
Administrator
Depeche Mode (as well as an unknown band named 'Siam') were the support act for The Psychedelic Furs. They supported The Psychedelic Furs again in 1983-03-26).
Here is BBC Radio 6 Music's host T om Robinson's memory of this night :
Back then I used to read the NME religiously from cover to cover , and early in 1981 their single of the week was an indie release by a new young all-synth band called Depeche Mode. The gig guide showed they were opening for The Psychedelic Furs at Hammersmith Palais that week and I bought myself a ticket. The Furs were a big noise back then, with a debut album on CBS Records, posters everywhere and gigging on a grand scale thanks to lavish tour support from their label.
The Palais was rammed with their fans, and the support band had been crammed into a small apron of stage, hemmed in my giant amplifiers, guitar stands, P A stacks, monitors, keyboards, drum risers and - at the back of the stage - a SuperT rooper followspot mounted on a stand like a machinegun.
Depeche Mode turned out to be four small shy skinny youths with three cheap bottom-of-the-range synths on makeshift stands and no backline at all. There was no sign of Vince's drum machine - instead at the front of the stage Dave Gahan had a radio cassette recorder that was wired into the P A system. As he announced each song, he would pull a cassette out of his shirt pocket, put it in the machine and out would come a plinky DR-55 drum pattern at exactly the right speed. A foolproof lo-tech solution to the tempo problem.
Their sound was young, fresh, sexy and quite unlike anything I'd seen or heard before. The Furs were as heavy dull and predictable as a Sherman tank and after two numbers I slipped away . As to what happened next... New Life went to number 1 1 that month on the unknown indie label Mute - while later in the year , for all the Furs' touring and promotional push, Pretty in Pink failed to even dent the UK T op 40.
 
Top