Album Details
Title: The Singles 81>85 Artist: Depeche Mode Release Date: 1998 Re-Released On: 2/1/2002 Label: EMI Europe Generic, Sire Duration: 58:49 Album Type(s): Greatest Hits UPCs: 093624729822, 0724347387654, 093624729846, 5016025382200, 5016025982202, 5016025682201 Genre: Rock Styles: Synth Pop, Alternative Pop/Rock, New Wave, Contemporary Pop/Rock, Post-Punk, Club/Dance, Alternative Dance, Alternative/Indie Rock, Punk/New Wave Moods: Brooding, Detached, Dramatic, Austere, Cathartic, Intimate, Melancholy, Nocturnal, Ominous, Plaintive, Reflective, Somber, Sophisticated, Angst-Ridden, Bleak, Cold, Gloomy, Hypnotic, Insular, Literate, Provocative, Refined/Mannered, Stylish, Tense/Anxious, Wintry, Confrontational, Paranoid, Searching, Sensual, Sexy, Slick, Theatrical, Wistful, Yearning, Bittersweet, Cynical/Sarcastic, Sad, Sexual, Sparse, Bitter Total Copies: 2 Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1 |
Track Listings
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Dreaming of Me
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New Life
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Just Can't Get Enough
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See You
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The Meaning of Love
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Leave in Silence
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Get the Balance Right!
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Everything Counts
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Love in Itself
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People Are People
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Master and Servant
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Blasphemous Rumours
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Somebody
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Shake the Disease
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It's Called a Heart
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Photographic [Some Bizarre Version]
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Just Can't Get Enough [Schizo Mix]
Additional Releases
| Year | Type | Label | Catalog # | | 1999 | CD | Sire | 47298 | | 1985 | CD | EMI Europe Generic | 2568220 |
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Album Review
Replacing the original Catching Up with Depeche Mode compilation, Singles 81>85 subtracts two tracks -- the lightweight curiosity "Flexible" and "Fly on the Windscreen," which surfaced to better effect on Black Celebration -- and adds two, the full six-minute remix of "Just Can't Get Enough" and the original version of "Photographic," Depeche's recording debut on a 1980 compilation album. The overall collection remains the same, though, namely, a run through the peerless singles that kept the band on the charts in the U.K. and elsewhere, as well as building up their increasing cult following in America. It's an embarrassment of riches, from such bouncy early hits as "New Life," "Just Can't Get Enough," and "The Meaning of Love" to the increasingly heavier sound of "Everything Counts," "People Are People," and "Blasphemous Rumors." Nearly all the tracks appear in the original single mixes, some quite different from their album versions, others essentially the same (the one subtle difference in "Somebody" is an echoey percussion pattern buried in the mix, for instance). Two otherwise unavailable singles also appear here: "It's Called a Heart" is pleasant enough, but "Shake the Disease" is great, an obsessive love lyric matched to a wonderful, slow dance melody and an excellent pairing of David Gahan's more aggressive and Martin Gore's gentler vocals. As an introduction to Depeche's brilliant knack for catchy tunes evolving over time into a more challenging but no less popular collection of songs, at once defining and expanding the boundaries of synth pop, look no further. ~ Ned Raggett, All Music Guide
Credits
| Name | Credits | | Alan Wilder | ? | | Andrew Fletcher | ? | | Daniel Miller | Producer | | Dave Allen | Engineer | | David A. Jones | Photo Treatment, Design | | David Gahan | ? | | Depeche Mode | Producer | | Eric Radcliffe | Engineer | | Eric Watson | Photography | | Gareth Jones | Producer, Engineer | | John Fryer | Engineer | | Martin L. Gore | ? | | Martyn Atkins | Photo Treatment, ?, Design | | Mike Marsh | Remastering | | Rick Guest | Photography | | Roland Brown | Remastering | | Vince Clarke | ? |
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