Songs Of Praise And Emotion
[Blue Divide, Volume 2, Issue 1, 2000. Words: Uncredited. Picture: Anton Corbijn.]
Alan Wilder, best known for his involvement with electronic groundbreakers Depeche Mode, progresses through the genre further with Recoil, a project in which the last word will be his own.
No matter where he goes, who he meets and whatever he creates, Alan Wilder will never be able to escape the tremendous gravity that constantly attaches him to the 80’s and early 90’s success he shared with his synth-pop partners in Depeche Mode. But that’s not necessarily a bad thing (their haircuts and the outfits they wore might be a different story). Yet the musical potency of this quartet was for well over a decade enough to make the most tone-deaf get up and groove in the most awkward and hilarious way they were capable of. During promotional tours, overwhelming fan turnouts caused riots, and their following has spanned nearly two decades without ever fading. A feat which few other bands can stake claim to. But arduous touring and emotional strain soured the musical nectar of the band, and in 1995 Wilder decided he wanted out.
Various physical, mental and social problems within the group were attributed to Wilder’s departure through various media sources. Speaking to me via phone from his home in England Mr. Wilder was gracious enough to shed some light on this dim period and hopefully bury the rumours at sea.
“One aspect was that there WAS an uneven workload towards the end that I didn’t feel was particularly appreciated within the group. But I wouldn’t say that was the main reason I left. I would say REALLY it’s much more fundamental than that. I just got bored with the group mentality. The feeling of being in a gang when you’re middle-aged is not as exciting as when you’re young.”
Although it may seem like he’s somewhat downplaying the tumultuous period leading up to the break-up, Wilder sincerely feels it shouldn’t have to be explained any other way. “I didn’t want to be in a group anymore. I just wanted to do some different things. I felt we had achieved a lot and I had a lot of fun. I’ve done very well out of it, but it was just time to move.” Alan seems to have no regrets for abandoning his cushy position was well.
“I look back on it with a lot of fondness. I have good feelings about it, but I’m really glad I left as well.”
The subsequent break-up gave Alan the breathing room to work full-time on his other musical endeavour, Recoil. Wilder actually began the project during the late 80’s while still programming, producing and touring with Mode. So was he ever bored with the group mentality back then?
“I suppose it was a way to really alleviate any frustrations of always working within the same pop format. If Recoil was ever going to be anything, it had to be different than what I was already doing. So there was no point in making it based around forming a pop song. So I tried to do something that was as opposite to that as I could think of.” Although Mode wasn’t exactly conventional pop either, Wilder felt he needed to explore an even more experimental side. “I thought let’s have no rules and boundaries and let’s just see what comes out.” Alan’s experimental venture was given a nice boost with the advent of the almighty sampler. “To me, that was a fascinating tool, to take pieces of the performance that retain all that humanity (of the performance).”
Through various one-off releases including Hydrology 1+2, Wilder was able to dive headfirst into full-length album material by releasing his 1992 debut, Bloodline. It was a mix of dark and subtle, blues and trip-hop and completely interesting all the same. Tracks like “Electro Blues For Bukka [White]” could easily have influenced Moby to explore his blues-y side on Play. Definitely a change of pace from Depeche’s musical stylings, Bloodline laid the groundwork for what was to become the Mr. Hyde to Mode’s Dr. Jekyll. Alan once again became consumed with the Depeche Mode workload and Recoil was shoved into the backburner. After his exit from DM, the beast once again re-surfaced and Alan released the long overdue follow-up to Bloodline, the bizarre and intriguing Unsound Methods.
Armed with a crate of guest vocalists including spoken word artist Maggie Estep and ex-Nitzer Ebb vocalist Douglas McCarthy, Methods delivered a dub-inflected, eerie narrative of the dark alleyways in Wilder’s mind. The music is a far cry from Alan Wilder’s soft-spoken persona. Maybe that’s why he chooses to have other vocalists interpret his music from a lyrical standpoint. “I try to use people that I think will be sympathetic to the music. That means that I have to really create a framework for the music before I can really think about the vocalists. Once I DO get in touch and somebody shows interest and we decide to do something, I allow them very much to bring their character into the project and to write words without too much interference.”
Wilder’s ideology of having multiple vocalists lead his music around has been pushed even further on his follow-up to Unsound Methods, the recently released Liquid. An even more twisted look into the subterranean recesses of the human mind, body and spirit, Liquid utilizes the help of a new handful of vocalists, includng Diamanda Galas, Samantha Coerbell and the delighful Golden [Gate] Jubilee Quartet. As “Black Box Pt. 1”, a first person narrative of them moments before a plane crash with dramatic strings and thundering drums to boot, opens the record. The song is actually based on a real-life encounter Wilder had when a plane crashed in a field while he and his wife were driving along the countryside. Had it been a few hundred yards closer, I wouldn’t be talking to the man today. “It became kind of a pivotal track. I originally didn’t intend it to be. It just helped me make sense of all the other stories that were written subsequent to writing that track. Originally, it was just one long track. We ended up putting half of it in the beginning and half at the end, and then we tried to incorporate the idea of this man going down in a plane.”
[Blue Divide, Volume 2, Issue 1, 2000. Words: Uncredited. Picture: Anton Corbijn.]
A very thorough all-rounder in which Alan discusses his Recoil project, especially the making of Liquid. This article is a goldmine of information on how Alan works and what makes him tick, and the author has been very fair in his coverage of Alan's time in Depeche Mode. A Recoil gem.
" I always tried to drag the music into a more thoughtful place, which meant possibly giving it more depth. I felt the songs deserved it. "
Alan Wilder, best known for his involvement with electronic groundbreakers Depeche Mode, progresses through the genre further with Recoil, a project in which the last word will be his own.
No matter where he goes, who he meets and whatever he creates, Alan Wilder will never be able to escape the tremendous gravity that constantly attaches him to the 80’s and early 90’s success he shared with his synth-pop partners in Depeche Mode. But that’s not necessarily a bad thing (their haircuts and the outfits they wore might be a different story). Yet the musical potency of this quartet was for well over a decade enough to make the most tone-deaf get up and groove in the most awkward and hilarious way they were capable of. During promotional tours, overwhelming fan turnouts caused riots, and their following has spanned nearly two decades without ever fading. A feat which few other bands can stake claim to. But arduous touring and emotional strain soured the musical nectar of the band, and in 1995 Wilder decided he wanted out.
Various physical, mental and social problems within the group were attributed to Wilder’s departure through various media sources. Speaking to me via phone from his home in England Mr. Wilder was gracious enough to shed some light on this dim period and hopefully bury the rumours at sea.
“One aspect was that there WAS an uneven workload towards the end that I didn’t feel was particularly appreciated within the group. But I wouldn’t say that was the main reason I left. I would say REALLY it’s much more fundamental than that. I just got bored with the group mentality. The feeling of being in a gang when you’re middle-aged is not as exciting as when you’re young.”
Although it may seem like he’s somewhat downplaying the tumultuous period leading up to the break-up, Wilder sincerely feels it shouldn’t have to be explained any other way. “I didn’t want to be in a group anymore. I just wanted to do some different things. I felt we had achieved a lot and I had a lot of fun. I’ve done very well out of it, but it was just time to move.” Alan seems to have no regrets for abandoning his cushy position was well.
“I look back on it with a lot of fondness. I have good feelings about it, but I’m really glad I left as well.”
The subsequent break-up gave Alan the breathing room to work full-time on his other musical endeavour, Recoil. Wilder actually began the project during the late 80’s while still programming, producing and touring with Mode. So was he ever bored with the group mentality back then?
“I suppose it was a way to really alleviate any frustrations of always working within the same pop format. If Recoil was ever going to be anything, it had to be different than what I was already doing. So there was no point in making it based around forming a pop song. So I tried to do something that was as opposite to that as I could think of.” Although Mode wasn’t exactly conventional pop either, Wilder felt he needed to explore an even more experimental side. “I thought let’s have no rules and boundaries and let’s just see what comes out.” Alan’s experimental venture was given a nice boost with the advent of the almighty sampler. “To me, that was a fascinating tool, to take pieces of the performance that retain all that humanity (of the performance).”
Through various one-off releases including Hydrology 1+2, Wilder was able to dive headfirst into full-length album material by releasing his 1992 debut, Bloodline. It was a mix of dark and subtle, blues and trip-hop and completely interesting all the same. Tracks like “Electro Blues For Bukka [White]” could easily have influenced Moby to explore his blues-y side on Play. Definitely a change of pace from Depeche’s musical stylings, Bloodline laid the groundwork for what was to become the Mr. Hyde to Mode’s Dr. Jekyll. Alan once again became consumed with the Depeche Mode workload and Recoil was shoved into the backburner. After his exit from DM, the beast once again re-surfaced and Alan released the long overdue follow-up to Bloodline, the bizarre and intriguing Unsound Methods.
Armed with a crate of guest vocalists including spoken word artist Maggie Estep and ex-Nitzer Ebb vocalist Douglas McCarthy, Methods delivered a dub-inflected, eerie narrative of the dark alleyways in Wilder’s mind. The music is a far cry from Alan Wilder’s soft-spoken persona. Maybe that’s why he chooses to have other vocalists interpret his music from a lyrical standpoint. “I try to use people that I think will be sympathetic to the music. That means that I have to really create a framework for the music before I can really think about the vocalists. Once I DO get in touch and somebody shows interest and we decide to do something, I allow them very much to bring their character into the project and to write words without too much interference.”
Wilder’s ideology of having multiple vocalists lead his music around has been pushed even further on his follow-up to Unsound Methods, the recently released Liquid. An even more twisted look into the subterranean recesses of the human mind, body and spirit, Liquid utilizes the help of a new handful of vocalists, includng Diamanda Galas, Samantha Coerbell and the delighful Golden [Gate] Jubilee Quartet. As “Black Box Pt. 1”, a first person narrative of them moments before a plane crash with dramatic strings and thundering drums to boot, opens the record. The song is actually based on a real-life encounter Wilder had when a plane crashed in a field while he and his wife were driving along the countryside. Had it been a few hundred yards closer, I wouldn’t be talking to the man today. “It became kind of a pivotal track. I originally didn’t intend it to be. It just helped me make sense of all the other stories that were written subsequent to writing that track. Originally, it was just one long track. We ended up putting half of it in the beginning and half at the end, and then we tried to incorporate the idea of this man going down in a plane.”