Respect to the Originators by Rene Passet
About the interview
Accessed: since 18th March 1997.
DEPECHE MODE:
RESPECT TO THE ORIGINATORS
words: René Passet
It's been almost three years since their Songs About Faith And Devotion. Three years in which one of the bandmembers left and singer David Gahan balanced between live & death, between needle and fix.
Clean for nine months now, Gahan is eager to prove he has stepped out of the dark alleys, away from staring at The Barrel Of A Gun. Ultra, their new album proves just that. It's their best album since Black Celebration.
But no doubt you can read all about the new album and Dave's addiction in just about every popmagazine between here and Holland in the next few months. So I decided not to ask them the obvious questions, but instead focus on their influence on modern dancemusic, such as house, techno and trip hop. Important dancemusic-artists such as Derrick May, Carl Craig and Underworld all namedrop Depeche Mode as being highly influencial.
"I remember hearing Lie To Me for the first time. It completely blew my mind", remembers Detroit technopioneer Carl Craig, when asked about Depeche Mode. "Together with bands like Yazoo & Visage, Depeche Mode had a major impact on a lot of the technoguys here.".
What do Martin Gore and Andy Fletcher from Depeche Mode (with whom I get to speak in the famous Amstel Hotel in Amsterdam) think of the fact they played a role in the development of techno & house?
"I think it's a testament to the diversity in our music over the years, that we are cited by technopeople, by housepeople and by industrial people" replies Martin.
"We had a lot of different elements in our music. I think the most important thing for the techno- and housepeople was the way we made music. The fact we were an electronic band and one of the earlier Ones."
Andy continues: "The programming and the whole aspects of the way we work in a studio. Using anything, not being limited to standard rock limitations. No rules at all."
But despite their unorthodox approach of making music, Depeche Mode slowly but surely became rockstars', performing in big stadiums and touring the world for months and months. How different are things in the dancemusic-scene. There simply are no real dance-popstars, no fanclubs devoted to dance-artists. Instead, young bedlamproducers pop out records on independent recordlabels and remain relatively anonymous, despite having clubhits and big recordsales.
"The dancescene has always been like that, hasn't it? I think that's one of the main reasons recordcompanies find it very hard to market dancemusic, because it is very faceless."
Q: And it's mostly instrumental, trackbased music. While you write actual songs.
Martin: "Yeah. Some danceartists might have hit singles, but that doesn't translate very well into albumsales."
Q: There are a few exeptions nowadays, one of them being Underworld, who remixed your Barrel Of A Gun-single.
Andy: "There is music for dancefloors and music for at home. The art is to make music that appeals to both. Which you can play on the dancefloor and can, sort of, play at home as well. Some of the dancemusic doesn't sound as good on a home hi-fi, without the atmosphere (of a club)."
Q: You were one of the first popbands who released housemixes, back in 89. But you didn't really prolong that by asking famous remixers. Instead you often worked with the same remixers, like Francois Kevorkian.
Martin: "I think at the time we had a few houseremixes done, it was an interesting area in music. But for me house now is very old and stale. It hasn't moved on to much. We get a lot of pressure this time, to get a houseremix done for our next single."
Andy: "And for the last single. We also got a lot of pressure. We just got back the dj-reports from England and America. Of course they all loved the Underworld Hard mix. The most liberal dj's, that is. But the average Tracy and Sharon', who go to the local disco, dance to housemusic. They don't dance to our Plastikman-remix, or even the One Inch Punch-remix. It's just not housey enough for them. So we get a lot of pressure, especially from America, to ask Todd Terry or whoever (Martin gigles). Along those lines...U 2 has got Morales (David Morales, rp), haven't they? I'm not big on remixes. I like Todd Terry but David Morales for me is a total no-go."
Martin: "This is our liberal member of the band by the way. He'd have Todd Terry."
Andy: "He does good mixes. He's one of the best."
Martin: "But for me, I just think we should stay clear of house remixes. I'm not totally up on the scene, but for me it doesn't seem to have moved on at all. It really sounds dated."
Q: Do you think so?!
Martin: "Yes, to me it sounds dated. There are a lot more interesting things happening in the triphop-field and the technofield."
Q: Like Richie Hawtin?
Martin: "I think the Richie Hawtin-remix of Painkiller is really inovative. I even prefer it to our original version. Because the original idea for that song was for it to be quite soothing. That's why it was called Painkiller. But our version ended up being quite hard. It's a bit too bombastic. Richie Hawtin stripped it down and took it back to how it was intented, when it was a demo."
Q: Are you in control, if it comes to asking remixers?
Andy: "It's our choice. And the record company and various other people suggest names. The battle is obviously..., they want to cover as many dancefield as possible. That's really the reason you do it anyway. Our thing is to get music we like. Artists we like to remix. We've got dj Shadow to do a remix of Painkiller. But it came back and it was total samples galore. It's all over the place. It's unusable."
Martin: "He even used about half a verse from an old R&B song, hapening over the top of it."
Q: It's unusable because you have to clear all these samples?
Andy: "Yeah. We refused it first, but now Mute will try to clear all the samples. And if that succeeds, we might put it on a future mix. Perhaps."
Q: How is the remix?
Martin: "The mix is good."
Andy: "It's frustrating sometimes. When the Underworld-mix came back, it came in two mixes. Tim, who had allready listened to it, said the second one was brilliant. So we listened to the Soft Mix, which was the first mix. We thought: this is really great! The second one must be amazing!' But then it starts of, it lasts for about ten minutes and there is not one recognisable bit of the song in there. And no vocals."
Martin: "Originally it had no vocals, ha ha ha!"
Andy: "So I went to Tim and said: It is really good, but it has got noting of the song in it.' He replied: well, that's the way it is done nowadays'. But we didn't think it was right so we had a discussion. We sent the remix back and Underworld added some vocals, as a compromise. But it's very funny how it worked. I'm still not sure about it. But it's a good mix in the end. But I like the soft mix more (Martin nods)."
Martin: "The original version of Barrel Of A Gun was about 83 beats per minute. When we received the Hard Mix back from them, we were sitting there thinking: what relevance does this speed bare to ours. Is it double the speed?' And we timed it and it turned out to be about 148 bpm! When I rang them up and spoke to them, I asked: Is there any change you can fly some vocals in? Just so it has some relevance. Because there's not one sound of the original version on there'. And they said: well, were not quite sure how that works, because the speed is different and I think it's in a different key', ha ha ha ha! Different key, different speed, different song!"