Songs Of Faith And Devotion: Difference between revisions

From DM Live - the Depeche Mode live encyclopedia for the masses
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 18: Line 18:
}}
}}


<blockquote>"There's been a big change in each individual member of the group which I couldn't sum up in a few sentences but particularly over the last few years, I think. Since we've got to our thirties, certain aspects of our lives have become much more important to us. We had a significant break away from each other before we started making this record, and when we came back together you could really see the changes in us."<br>- [[Alan Wilder]], [[BONG 23|<i>BONG</i> 23]]<ref>Source: [[BONG 23|<i>BONG</i> magazine, issue 23, pg. 20]], 1995.</ref></blockquote>
<blockquote>"There's been a big change in each individual member of the group which I couldn't sum up in a few sentences but particularly over the last few years, I think. Since we've got to our thirties, certain aspects of our lives have become much more important to us. We had a significant break away from each other before we started making this record, and when we came back together you could really see the changes in us."<br>[[Alan Wilder]], [[BONG 23|<i>BONG</i> 23]]<ref>Source: [[BONG 23|<i>BONG</i> magazine, issue 23, pg. 20]], 1995.</ref></blockquote>


<i>[[Songs Of Faith And Devotion]]</i> is the eighth studio album by [[Depeche Mode]] and the final album produced with [[Alan Wilder]] as a member of Depeche Mode. The album was released in the United Kingdom on March 22, 1993 by [[Mute Records]]. It was supported by the [[:Category:1993 Devotional Tour|Devotional]] and [[:Category:1994 Exotic Tour|Exotic tour]].
<i>[[Songs Of Faith And Devotion]]</i> is the eighth studio album by [[Depeche Mode]] and the final album produced with [[Alan Wilder]] as a member of Depeche Mode. The album was released in the United Kingdom on March 22, 1993 by [[Mute Records]]. It was supported by the [[:Category:1993 Devotional Tour|Devotional]] and [[:Category:1994 Exotic Tour|Exotic tour]].

Revision as of 07:25, 2 November 2019

For information on this album's singles, see the Singles section.
Album-Violator.jpg #7: Violator
Albums
#9: Ultra Album-Ultra.jpg
This article is about the album. To view a list of its songs and B-sides, see Songs Of Faith And Devotion songs.
Songs Of Faith And Devotion
Album-SOFAD.jpg
Album
Artist
Depeche Mode
Catalogue no.
Stumm 106
Formats
LP, CD
Produced by
Release date
March 22, 1993
Recorded at
Madrid, Spain
Chateau du Pape (Hamburg, Germany)
Engineered by
Steve Lyon
Paul Kendall
Chris Dickie

"There's been a big change in each individual member of the group which I couldn't sum up in a few sentences but particularly over the last few years, I think. Since we've got to our thirties, certain aspects of our lives have become much more important to us. We had a significant break away from each other before we started making this record, and when we came back together you could really see the changes in us."
Alan Wilder, BONG 23[1]

Songs Of Faith And Devotion is the eighth studio album by Depeche Mode and the final album produced with Alan Wilder as a member of Depeche Mode. The album was released in the United Kingdom on March 22, 1993 by Mute Records. It was supported by the Devotional and Exotic tour.

Track list

  1. I Feel You
  2. Walking In My Shoes
  3. Condemnation
  4. Mercy In You
  5. Judas
  6. In Your Room
  7. Get Right With Me
  8. Rush
  9. One Caress
  10. Higher Love

For a full list of songs, singles, and B-sides produced for this album, see the list of Songs Of Faith And Devotion songs.

Singles

  1. I Feel You - February 15, 1993
  2. Walking In My Shoes - April 26, 1993
  3. Condemnation - September 13, 1993
  4. In Your Room - January 10, 1994

Notes

"I'd like to feel that this music will lift people and make them feel better in whatever they do. I'm just trying to push myself further."
- Dave Gahan, BONG 52[2]

Flood describes the comping process employed when structuring performative musical elements into the finished product for BONG magazine, issue 22:

"A lot of times we'd have a click track or some other rhythmic foundation on the computer (sequencer) and then perhaps I'd send Alan into the studio to do real drums. We'd run through the whole song trying out different drum ideas. Out of that, we might take eight bars from one spot and four bars from another, sample it all and loop it. So we might have a whole drum track made of loops. We did the same for bass and even some of the guitars, although other things are full performances all the way through."[3]

Songs by BPM

Album BPM range by song
122
93
58
96
126
98
128
109
100
99

Average:
102.9
  • BPM values are plotted from 1 to 184 BPM.
  • In cases where a song features a change in tempo, the tempo at which the majority of the song
    plays takes precedence.
  • Unless noted otherwise, BPMs are estimated values determined by Spotify's Audio Analysis
    algorithm and as such are not guaranteed to be 100% accurate.

References