Demos & Studio Outtakes/Fake tracks: Difference between revisions
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Most hardcore Mode fans may have been exposed to this track via a lousy recording of what sounds like an American radio DJ poking fun at "Disco Hell". It sounds like he played the vinyl at the wrong speed. The same exact segment played on this radio spot is what I decided to supply above as an excerpt from the original-pressing vinyl. You can listen to the best quality copy of that radio spot below: | Most hardcore Mode fans may have been exposed to this track via a lousy recording of what sounds like an American radio DJ poking fun at "Disco Hell" some time in 1985. It sounds like he played the vinyl at the wrong speed. The same exact segment played on this radio spot is what I decided to supply above as an excerpt from the original-pressing vinyl. You can listen to the best quality copy of that radio spot below: | ||
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Revision as of 00:11, 31 January 2023
This section contains demos which are commonly attributed to Depeche Mode or one of their solo members, but are really other artists' demos or tracks. This is not necessarily an exhaustive list of fake demos and tracks, but it tries to be.
There are also noteworthy fake reel tapes purporting to contain an early live recording and demos; see more: Robin Neale's early tapes
Disco Hell
- This track is by Dafne and the Tenderspots[1], a band that Alan Wilder was a part of in 1979. He is co-credited along with the rest of that band for writing this track as well as the B-side, "I'm A Natural". This track isn't really "fake", just often not correctly credited to Dafne and the Tenderspots. For example, a couple bootlegs, it's claimed as one of Alan's demos from 1981 (along with some other tracks below), in much worse quality also. The excerpt below is from a rip of an original pressing vinyl done by DM Live Wiki. A 45 second excerpt is provided below for your listening pleasure. You can hear the entire B-side, "I'm A Natural", on YouTube in good quality.
Most hardcore Mode fans may have been exposed to this track via a lousy recording of what sounds like an American radio DJ poking fun at "Disco Hell" some time in 1985. It sounds like he played the vinyl at the wrong speed. The same exact segment played on this radio spot is what I decided to supply above as an excerpt from the original-pressing vinyl. You can listen to the best quality copy of that radio spot below:
Will The New Baby Grow
- This track is attributed to French Look (a band Martin was part of during 1980), but the actual song is Will The New Baby by Gammer & His Familiars. Appears on the "Rarities Of Mode" CD bootleg[2] in dreadful quality. DM Live somehow ended up with this song on a cassette tape entitled "DM Strange Cuts", which ironically has no Depeche Mode on it at all!
Nodisco (Instrumental)
- A very good instrumental claimed to be a demo is actually a cover done by the Italian duo Atrium [3], released as a b-side of another cover in 1985 on vinyl [4]. A vocal version also exists and it was released along with this version.
Another instrumental cover of the track superbly and very faithfully done by Stripped Productions using recreated samples is available to listen to on YouTube.
Return To Oberkorn (Instrumental)
- An instrumental bearing some musical resemblance to Oberkorn (It's A Small Town), but it's not Depeche Mode. Appears on the "Rarities Of Mode" CD bootleg.[2] The actual performer is unknown.
The Sun & The Rainfall (Instrumental)
- An instrumental cover made by the "Satellite" Fan Club in Milan, Italy[5] and released exclusively as a promo vinyl for said fan club in 1987 appears on the "Depeche Mode 79-82" CD bootleg[6] in dreadful quality:
An incomplete version (missing the beginning) though much better sounding copy of the song also appears on the cassette tape compilation bootleg entitled "Black Tulips", and is available to listen to here:
If somebody has a higher quality complete version, please contact us.
Transcanadian Track (Instrumental)
- Another instrumental attributed to Depeche Mode. Appears on the "Rarities Of Mode" CD bootleg.[2] The actual performer is unknown.
Get The Balance Right (Instrumental)
- This is a fan-made instrumental cover version, not a real demo. There are many instrumental cover / "demo" versions, but this one was occasionally thought as genuine given its closeness in melody and overall sound to the real track. The actual performer is unknown.
Treadmill Of Time
- This track is claimed to be Alan Wilder's circa 1981. It's sometimes titled "Treadmill Of Fire", which doesn't make any sense, but that title is included here for anybody doing some Googling with that title. The actual performer is unknown. If somebody has more info, a higher quality version, or even a tape with this song on it, please contact us.
Here To Have Fun
- This track is claimed to be Alan Wilder's circa 1981. The actual performer is unknown. If somebody has more info, a higher quality version, or even a tape with this song on it, please contact us.
Chart Rundown
- This track is claimed to be Alan Wilder's circa 1981. The actual performer is unknown. If somebody has more info, a higher quality version, or even a tape with this song on it, please contact us.
Postulate (Recoil)
- A track claimed to be "Postulate" by Recoil is actually Clock Bird by Minimal Compact. Appears on the "Rarities Of Mode" CD bootleg[2] in dreadful quality.
Shake The Disease (Martin's Demo Version Instrumental)
- This is a very well made instrumental cover of Martin's original demo. It appears on the CD-R bootleg Shake The Disease (20 Years Edition).[7] The remixer "Beyond" created this version back in 2005, and the streamable audio below is encoded from a lossless source.
- DX5 on YouTube also created a very good instrumental cover version: DX5 playing "Shake the Disease" (Martin Gore demo)
Black Celebration (Khoa Ho Version)
- This is Khoa Ho's piano cover of Black Celebration, appearing on "MODEified 1 - The Strangest Devotion". This is claimed to be Alan Wilder's demo on at least one bootleg, obviously false given that it doesn't sound like him and also for the fact that Martin was the one who wrote the song, so why would have Alan created a demo of it?
World Full Of Nothing
- This is a cover created by an unknown fan.
Mother Me / Monghi
- This song circulates as an instrumental track misattributed to Depeche Mode; it is truly Monghi by Vienna. Appears on the "Rarities Of Mode" CD bootleg[2] in dreadful quality. The real "Mother Me" demo has Martin's vocals and the demo exists on the "Perversion" demo tape, but it does not circulate and its lyrics are not known. Alan reveals a bit of info on Shunt Q&A about this track:[8]
- From: Eddie
- E-mail: [email protected]
The song you mentioned for 'Violator' called 'Mother Me', will you please give a description of what it sounded like, any possible lyrics, whether this song was ever actually recorded and who sang it, Dave or Martin?
It sort of got started with some drums, bass + a couple of other parts but was shelved quite quickly. It was medium tempo and if I remember correctly it slipped into 7/8 time signature for the chorus - oops. I think Dave would have sung it.
Alan also says in his editorial on Violator: "There was a song called 'Mother Me' which we also recorded during this period but never finished." Based on that quote, it can be inferred that a "work-in-progress" version of "Mother Me" exists in the vaults.
Furthermore, Daryl Bamonte said regarding this track: "I remember a track called 'Mother Me, Smother Me' that I believe was recorded for Violator, but didn't make the final cut for some reason. It was a really good song, but I don't think it was even used for a b-side."[9]
Dirty Alright Now
- A song claimed to be a Dave Gahan demo circa 1992. Appears on the "Rarities Of Mode" CD bootleg in poor quality.[2] celestinocamcia positively identified this track in June 2020 as "Journey On The Nile" by Tunnelvision.
Take A Look At Me Now
- Another song erroneously claimed to be a Dave Gahan demo circa 1992. Appears on the "Rarities Of Mode" CD bootleg in poor quality.[2] celestinocamcia positively identified this track in June 2020 as "I'm Gonna Cry" by Tunnelvision.
For Joanne
- A track claimed to be one of Dave's demos from 1992 is actually Joanne by Wall Of Voodoo. Appears on the "Rarities Of Mode" CD bootleg[2] in dreadful quality.
Personal Jesus (Studio Rough)
From Svenner's demo page.[10] This snippet just doesn't agree with the process of recording Personal Jesus as described by Flood in this video, and so is likely a falsification.
Sister Of Night (Demo)
- Martin singing over an acoustic guitar. This is a falsification that uses the isolated vocal track from the "One Night In Paris" DVD's center channel overlaid over someone playing guitar. Furthermore, DM Live is told by a reputable source that this is not what appears on the "Ultra" demo tape. Only this short 30-second snippet is available as an MP3; the track was speed-corrected and normalized, then encoded as WAV to prevent further quality loss.
References
- ↑ Discogs page for Dafne and the Tenderspots.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 Discogs info page for the CD bootleg "Rarities Of Mode".
- ↑ Discogs info page for Atrium.
- ↑ Discogs info page for the vinyl release.
- ↑ Auction for the vinyl in Popsike.
- ↑ DMremix page for the CD bootleg "Depeche Mode 79-82".
- ↑ Discogs page for Shake The Disease (20 Years Edition).
- ↑ Source: Shunt Q&A: Violator, toward the bottom of the page
- ↑ Source: Depeche-mode.com - "INSIGHT: Daryl Bamonte ... part 1", 2006.
- ↑ Svenner's demo page, now defunct, contained further information about demos as well as some info about unreleased mixes, fake demos claimed to be Depeche Mode's, some backing track samples, etc. The site is still accessible on archive.org, but some audio files are not available.