MARTIN GORE
'Martin Gore' (born Martin Lee Gore, 23 July 1961, Basildon, Essex, England) is an English songwriter, lyricist, singer, guitarist and keyboardist. He is a founding member of Depeche Mode, a quintessential 1980s synthpop band. His work now spans three decades, but he is best known as the composer of hits such as "Personal Jesus" and "Everything Counts".
| Contents |
| Career |
| Personal life |
| Solo discography |
| Singles |
| Remixes |
| Depeche Mode songs with Gore on lead vocals |
| Duet |
| Live |
| Trivia |
Career
Gore left St. Nicholas's Comprehensive School in 1977 and took a job as a bank teller. During evenings, weekends and any other spare time, he was involved with the local band 'Norman and the Worms'.
In 1980, Gore met Andrew "Fletch" Fletcher at the Van Gogh club. Fletcher recruited Gore into his band with Vince Clarke, ''Composition of Sound''. Soon the band drafted David Gahan to be the lead singer after seeing him sing "Heroes" by David Bowie. Gahan is credited with the name "Depeche Mode" after seeing the phrase as a title of a French fashion magazine, which considered taking them to court, but thought it would be good publicity for the magazine to let the band have the name.
When Clarke departed the band in 1981 after their debut album Speak & Spell, Gore became the main songwriter of Depeche Mode.
Gore also sings lead vocals in several of the band's songs, mainly those that could be classified as Depeche's softer (love) ballads, his soft tenor voice providing a contrast to David Gahan's dramatic baritone.
Clarke wrote most of Depeche Mode's first album, ''Speak & Spell'', (1981). Gore contributed two tracks, "Tora! Tora! Tora!" and the instrumental "Big Muff". "Any Second Now (voices)" features Gore's first lead vocals for the band. When Clarke announced his departure from Depeche Mode in 1981, citing the pressures of fame and creative differences, Gore took over songwriting. Gore had been writing material since the age of twelve.
The songs Gore wrote for Depeche Mode's second album, ''A Broken Frame'' (1982) were different in sound and lyrical content from Clarke's offerings on ''Speak & Spell''. Gore's writing became gradually darker and more political on subsequent Depeche Mode albums.
Gore remains the primary songwriter for Depeche Mode.
Personal life
According to Jonathan Miller's book "Stripped: Depeche Mode" (Omnibus Press, 2003, 2004, ISBN 1.84449.415.2, pp.318-319), Gore's biological father was an African-American GI stationed in the UK. Gore was raised by his stepfather and biological mother. Miller quotes childhood friends and Gore himself. According to Miller's source, Gore is of mixed ethnicity, and, as an adult, met his father in the American South. Gore responds to the source's information and is quoted in Miller's book saying "It brings up family traumas" and "It's one of those things I'd rather not talk about."
On 27 August 1994, Gore married lingerie designer Suzanne Boisvert, and has two daughters and a son with her: Viva Lee Gore (born 6 June 1991) and Ava Lee Gore (born July 1995) and Calo Leon Gore (born 27 July 2002).
As of January 2006 Gore has divorced from Boisvert. The song "Precious" from 2005's ''Playing the Angel'' was a product of the divorce, written as a response to the trauma it caused his children. [1]
Solo discography
# ''Counterfeit e.p.'' (Mute STUMM 67, 1989)
# ''Counterfeit²'' (Mute STUMM 214, 2003)
In 2003 Mute released Gore's ''Counterfeit²'', a follow up solo cover album to the 1989 ''Counterfeit EP''. Both feature only versions of material by other songwriters. The first Counterfeit featured covers of bands such as The Durutti Column, Comsat Angels and Sparks. The second contains an eclectic barrage from David Essex to Lou Reed, John Lennon, David Bowie and even Nick Cave.
Gore played guitar on Gwen Stefani song "Wonderful Life" on her 2006 album ''The Sweet Escape.''
Singles
| 'Year' | 'Title' | 'Chart positions' | 'Album' | |||
| US Hot 100 | US Modern Rock | US Mainstream Rock | UK | |||
| 1989 | "Compulsion" | — | #18 | — | — | ''Counterfeit'' |
| 2003 | "Stardust" | — | — | — | #44 | ''Counterfeit²'' |
| 2003 | "Loverman EP²" | — | — | — | — | ''Counterfeit²'' |
Remixes
★ 1994 Spirit Feel - "Rejoice" (Mystic Span Mix)
★ 1995 Garbage - "Queer" (The Most Beautiful Woman in Town Mix)
★ 1999 ON - "Soluble Words" (Sublingual Remix)
★ 2003 Señor Coconut And His Orchestra - "Smooth Operator" (In-Disguise Remix)
Depeche Mode songs with Gore on lead vocals
Depeche Mode's lead vocals are generally handled by David Gahan, but on occasion Gore will sing lead vocals. These are all the songs he sings in chronological order.
★ ''Speak and Spell''
★
★ "Any Second Now (voices)"
★ ''Construction Time Again''
★
★ "Pipeline"
★
★ "Everything Counts (Reprise)"
★ ''Some Great Reward''
★
★ "It Doesn't Matter"
★
★ "Somebody"
★ ''Black Celebration''
★
★ "A Question of Lust"
★
★ "Sometimes"
★
★ "It Doesn't Matter Two"
★
★ "World Full of Nothing"
★
★ "Black Day" ["Stripped" single]
★ ''Music for the Masses''
★
★ "The Things You Said"
★
★ "I Want You Now"
★
★ "Route 66" (cover of a song by Bobby Troup [B-Side of "Behind the Wheel"]
★ ''Violator''
★
★ "Enjoy the Silence" (''Harmonium'' version only) ["Enjoy the Silence" single]
★
★ "Sweetest Perfection"
★
★ "Blue Dress"
★ ''Songs of Faith and Devotion''
★
★ "Death's Door" [''Until the End of the World'' soundtrack]
★
★ "Judas"
★
★ "One Caress"
★ ''Ultra''
★
★ "Home"
★
★ "The Bottom Line"
★ ''Exciter''
★
★ "Comatose"
★
★ "Breathe"
★ ''Playing the Angel''
★
★ "Macro"
★
★ "Damaged People"
Duet
These are songs where Gahan and Gore have around equal singing time, in chronological order. In some instances, both sing at the same time (ex: "Behind the Wheel"), and in others, Gahan sings the verses while Gore sings the chorus (ex: "Everything Counts").
''Note that the songs listed here are based on judgement of the Wikipedia users editing this site, and may not officially be called "duets" by the band or some other Wikipedia users.''
★ Everything Counts [''Construction Time Again'']
★ Something to Do [''Some Great Reward''] (the 2004 Black Strobe remix completely loses Gahan's voice)
★ People Are People [''Some Great Reward'']
★ Shake the Disease [''Catching Up with Depeche Mode'']
★ Here is the House [''Black Celebration'']
★ Behind the Wheel [''Music for the Masses'']
★ Pleasure, Little Treasure [''Music for the Masses'']
★ Waiting for the Night [''Violator'']
★ Insight [''Ultra'']
★ Surrender [B-side to "Only When I Lose Myself"], albeit only towards the end of the track
★ The Sinner In Me [''Playing the Angel'']
★ Nothing's Impossible [''Playing the Angel'']
★ Newborn [B-side to "A Pain That I'm Used To"]
Live
These are songs that Gore has sung lead live, although the studio versions are sung by Gahan, in chronological order of the song's first live performance by Gore. Includes his solo concerts in 2003. To date, the only Gore-lead song that was sung by Gahan live was "Route 66" which was the closer during the World Violation Tour.
★ Little 15 (World Violation Tour)
★ Here is the House (World Violation Tour)
★ Condemnation (Exotic Tour, Exciter Tour, Solo)
★ Waiting for the Night (Exotic Tour)
★ Sister of Night (KROQ Acoustic Christmas '98, Exciter Tour)
★ Dressed in Black (Exciter Tour)
★ Surrender (Exciter Tour, Solo)
★ Only When I Lose Myself (Solo only)
★ In Your Room (Solo only)
★ Walking in My Shoes (Solo only)
★ The Love Thieves (Solo only)
★ Enjoy the Silence (Solo only)
★ Shake the Disease (Solo, Touring the Angel)
★ Leave in Silence (Touring The Angel)
Trivia
★ A curiously endearing parody of Depeche Mode's "Somebody", entitled "Some Valium for Fletch" was released on the Internet, and features a fictional Gore singing an anxiety-ridden Andrew Fletcher to sleep after the final Touring the Angel concert.
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