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nextlink=Waiting For The Night | | |||
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{{Song infobox | |||
|title=Halo | |||
|screen=hd | |||
|screenshot=Album-Violator.jpg | |||
|artist=[[Depeche Mode]] | |||
|album=[[Violator]] | |||
|songwriter=[[Martin L. Gore]] | |||
|producer=[[Depeche Mode]]<br>[[Flood]] | |||
|studio=Puk Studios, Denmark<br>Logic Studios, Milan | |||
|tempo=112 | |||
|timesignature={{music|time|4|4}} | |||
|key=E♭ Minor | |||
|mixingby=[[François Kevorkian]] | |||
|engineeringby=Pino Pischetola<br>Peter Iversen<br>[[Steve Lyon]]<br>Goh Hotoda<br>Alan Gregorie<br>Dennis Mitchell<br>Phil Legg | |||
|engineeringassistance=[[Daryl Bamonte]]<br>Dick Meaney<br>David Browne<br>Mark Flannery | |||
|sleevedesignby=[[Anton Corbijn]]<br>Area | |||
|label=[[Mute Records]] | |||
|length=4:30 | |||
|recordingdate=May 1989 – January 1990 | |||
|releasedate=19 March 1990 | |||
|timesplayed={{NumberOfLivePlays|Halo}} | |||
|colorscheme=Violator | |||
}} | |||
"[[Halo]]" is a song from the 1990 album ''[[Violator]]'' by [[Depeche Mode]]. | |||
== Notes == | == Notes == | ||
Line 79: | Line 111: | ||
|Martin L. Gore|©1990 Grabbing Hands Music Ltd/EMI Music Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved.}} | |Martin L. Gore|©1990 Grabbing Hands Music Ltd/EMI Music Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved.}} | ||
{{ | == Composition == | ||
=== Sample sources === | |||
{{#lst:List of Depeche Mode sample sources by album/Violator|DM-SS-Halo}} | |||
== Music video == | |||
{{#widget:YouTube| id=iEH4eqtK8SU}} | |||
== Live performances == | |||
{{Live section}} | |||
== Live versions == | |||
This section provides an example of a live version of [[Halo]] from each tour that it was played. | |||
* <sm2>https://media.dmlive.wiki/stream/dm1990-08-04.sbd.violatorlive.0.flac1644/03.m4a</sm2> 1990 World Violation Tour: [[1990-08-04 Dodgers Stadium, Los Angeles, CA, USA]] | |||
* <sm2>https://media.dmlive.wiki/stream/dm1993-07-31.FM.BBC2-gadget242-Stealth71.0.flac1648/04.m4a</sm2> 1993 Devotional Tour: [[1993-07-31 Crystal Palace Sports Ground, London, England, UK]] | |||
* <sm2>https://media.dmlive.wiki/stream/dm1994-05-14.sbd.ER.0.flac1648/02.m4a</sm2> 1994 Exotic Tour: [[1994-05-14 Shoreline Amphitheatre, Mountainview, San Francisco, CA, USA]] | |||
* <sm2>https://media.dmlive.wiki/stream/dm2001-10-11.sbd.mute.0.flac1644/05.m4a</sm2> 2001 Exciter Tour: [[2001-10-11 Festhalle, Frankfurt, Germany]] | |||
* <sm2>https://media.dmlive.wiki/stream/DeMaLive/24.m4a</sm2> 2013-2014 Delta Machine Tour: [[2013-07-11 BBK Festival, Bilbao, Spain]] | |||
== Trivia == | |||
*'Halo' has been sampled in the following songs and remixes: | |||
**'Prawdziwy Rapper Klamca (Propaganda Wersja)' - Peja and Slums Attack (2005) | |||
**'Precious (DJ Dan 4 A.M. Mix)' - Depeche Mode (2005) | |||
*'Halo' has been covered by '''Józsa Alex and Quick''' (2003), '''Dimitris Korgialas''' (2005), and '''Weak13''' (2017). | |||
== Notes == | |||
<references group="footnotes" /> | |||
== References == | |||
<references /> | |||
[[Category:Song]] | |||
[[Category:Depeche Mode songs]] | |||
[[Category:Violator songs]] | |||
[[Category:Songs in E♭ Minor]] | |||
[[Category:Songs between 110-114 BPM]] | |||
[[Category:Songs written by Martin L. Gore]] | |||
[[Category:Songs with official music videos]] | |||
<metadesc>"Halo" is a song from the 1990 album Violator by Depeche Mode.</metadesc><nowiki/> |
Latest revision as of 23:00, 17 March 2024
|
4. Halo List of Violator songs |
|
Halo
| |
Song | Halo |
---|---|
By | Depeche Mode |
Songwriter | Martin L. Gore |
Produced by | Depeche Mode Flood |
Recorded at | Puk Studios, Denmark Logic Studios, Milan |
Length (mm:ss) | 4:30 |
Tempo | 112 BPM |
Time signature | 4 4 |
Key | E♭ Minor |
Engineering assistance | Daryl Bamonte Dick Meaney David Browne Mark Flannery |
Mixed by | François Kevorkian |
Recorded | May 1989 – January 1990 |
Originally released | 19 March 1990 |
Live performances as Depeche Mode | 431 times * |
Total live performances | 431 times * |
"Halo" is a song from the 1990 album Violator by Depeche Mode.
Notes
Martin Gore says in the 1990-02-17 issue of NME:
"I suppose my songs do seem to advocate immorality but if you listen there's always a sense of guilt. On 'Halo' from the new album, you're right that I'm saying 'Let's give in to this' but there’s also a real feeling of wrongfulness."
Alan Wilder told Electricity Club in 2011:
Q: If there’s a favourite all time Depeche Mode track here at The Electricity Club, it’s 'Halo'. Could you tell us how you and co-producer Flood put together the palette of sounds that comprised the final arrangement?
A: "From memory, the drums were sampled from Led Zeppelin's 'When the Levee Breaks' (but secondhand from a rap record). It is one of the most commonly used drum samples – for obvious reasons as it has that very special Bonham sound. The same snare drum sound appears on DM’s 'Get Right With Me'. I've also heard that snare on a Massive Attack record and many others. [...] Other sounds on 'Halo', I'm more vague about, but we certainly would have used Flood's ARP 2600 in conjunction with other modular synths to create the bass parts and other sequencer parts. For the end choruses, there are some string samples which I think were derived from Elgar. One of my techniques is to find sections of classical strings and transpose / stretch these, then add my own samples, in order to formulate new and unusual arrangements. This was a case in point. The DM track 'Clean' utilised classical strings in a similar way."
Q&A on Alan Wilder's Shunt:
Kev & Schtace: Specifically, what are the elements of the song 'Halo' that you like. This is one of my favourite DM songs. The mood/atmosphere is powerful with an excellent build-up - it reminds me of the feeling I get when I listen to the LP version of 'In Your Room'.
A: "I like the string arrangement and the fact that we used drum loops on it - something we had hardly done before that time. It's not a bad song either."
Alan Wilder in his editorial on Violator:
"As for singles, 'Halo' was on a short-list but was never really a major contender. We ended up using it in a roundabout way by making a video (as well as one for 'Clean') to fill out the 'Strange Too' compilation."
Lyrics
Halo
You wear guilt
Like shackles on your feet
Like a halo in reverse
I can feel
The discomfort in your seat
And in your head it's worse
There's a pain
A famine in your heart
An aching to be free
Can't you see
All love's luxuries
Are here for you and me
And when our worlds
They fall apart
When the walls come tumbling in
Though we may deserve it
It will be worth it
Bring your chains
Your lips of tragedy
And fall into my arms
And when our worlds
They fall apart
When the walls come tumbling in
Though we may deserve it
It will be worth it
Songwriter: Martin L. Gore
Publishing Information: ©1990 Grabbing Hands Music Ltd/EMI Music Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved.
Composition
Sample sources
"Halo" - Depeche Mode 1990 |
Sample overview | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Click to display/hide audio | |||||
Self-made samples | |||||
Sample | Notes | Audio | |||
Synthesizer elements | The origin of the bass is a combination of likely two or more unique synthesized parts, including a 'dark' velocity-sensitive synth bass layered with an additional bass part. According to Wilder, these bass parts are likely to have originated from the Minimoog and producer Flood's ARP 2600.[1] | ||||
Vocal elements | The choir stabs heard during the first chorus are comprised of a series of solo vocal "ahh" samples.[footnotes 1] |
| |||
Sample sources | |||||
Sample | Source | Status | Notes | Audio | |
Melodic elements | Sound Ideas - Series 1000 General Effects Library - CD #1018 Naval Boats, Ships, Motorcycles - Track #35 "SHIP, HORN" (filename "ShipHorn 1018_35") - 1983 (originally available on reel-to-reel tape, 1979) |
|
The lead riff heard throughout "Halo" employs a truncated sample of a naval ship horn derived from Sound Ideas's 1983 sound effects library Series 1000 General Effects Library CD #1018 Naval Boats, Ships, Motorcycles. The library is notable for debuting as the first commercially available sound effects library of its kind on compact disc. | Click to display/hide audio example | |
Orchestral elements | Barry Adamson - Moss Side Story - "The Swinging Detective" - 6 March 1989 |
|
An orchestral string element derived from Barry Adamson's 1989 instrumental "The Swinging Detective" is utilised throughout "Halo".[footnotes 2] | Click to display/hide audio example | |
Orchestral elements | Gustav Mahler, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Zubin Mehta - Symphony No.5 in C sharp minor - IV Adagietto: Sehr Langsam. V. Rondo - Finale: Allegro - 1977 |
|
A manipulated section of audio featuring orchestral strings derived from a 1977 performance of the fourth movement of Gustav Mahler's Symphony No. 5 by the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra with Zubin Mehta is utilised throughout "Halo". | ||
Orchestral elements | Gustav Mahler, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Georg Solti - Symphony No.5 in C sharp minor - 4. Adagietto (Sehr langsam) - March 1970 |
|
A series of manipulated sections of audio featuring orchestral strings derived from a March 1970 performance of the fourth movement of Gustav Mahler's Symphony No. 5 by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra with Georg Solti are utilised throughout "Halo". | Click to display/hide audio example | |
Drum elements | Tone Lōc - Lōc-ed After Dark - "Don't Get Close" - 1989 |
|
A manipulated, re-sequenced section of audio featuring drum elements audible throughout "Halo" is derived from the intro drum solo of "Don't Get Close" by American rapper Tone Lōc from his 1989 debut album Lōc-ed After Dark. The audio featured on "Don't Get Close" is itself a sample originally derived from the intro drum solo of "Rock Candy" by Montrose for their 1973 debut album of the same name.
It is Depeche Mode Live Wiki's opinion that Alan Wilder mistakenly misattributed the origin of this sample to a secondhand sample of Led Zeppelin's 1971 cover of "When The Levee Breaks" in a July 2011 interview for electricityclub.co.uk: "From memory, the drums [for "Halo"] were sampled from Led Zeppelin's 'When the Levee Breaks' (but secondhand from a rap record).[2] |
Click to display/hide audio example | |
Drum elements, snare drum | Fine Young Cannibals - The Raw & the Cooked - "She Drives Me Crazy" - 26 December 1988 |
|
A manipulated snare drum audible during the chorus sections of "Halo" is derived from the opening moments of the Fine Young Cannibals 1988 single "She Drives Me Crazy".[footnotes 3][3] Notably, this sound is also used throughout Wilder's 1989 "Eurotech Version" remix of Toni Halliday's "Time Turns Around", as well as the 2012 Recoil cover of Talk Talk's "Inheritance". | Click to display/hide audio example | |
Orchestral elements | Edward Elgar - Unidentified composition |
|
Wilder confirmed in a July 2011 interview for electricityclub.co.uk that "Halo" employs orchestral string elements sampled from an as yet unidentified piece of music composed by celebrated English composer Edward Elgar:
The source of the sampled orchestral phrase would have been commercially available by September 1989 at the latest. |
||
Vocal elements | Unidentified pornographic film |
|
The rhythmic vocal rhythm audible in the opening moments of "Halo" is confirmed by Violator engineer Roberto Baldi as having been sampled from a pornographic film. The film is likely to have released on VHS or Betamax cassette and would have been in circulation by May 1989. |
|
Music video
Live performances
- Main article: Available recordings of "Halo"
- Main article: List of dates where "Halo" was played
Live versions
This section provides an example of a live version of Halo from each tour that it was played.
- Play 1990 World Violation Tour: 1990-08-04 Dodgers Stadium, Los Angeles, CA, USA
- Play 1993 Devotional Tour: 1993-07-31 Crystal Palace Sports Ground, London, England, UK
- Play 1994 Exotic Tour: 1994-05-14 Shoreline Amphitheatre, Mountainview, San Francisco, CA, USA
- Play 2001 Exciter Tour: 2001-10-11 Festhalle, Frankfurt, Germany
- Play 2013-2014 Delta Machine Tour: 2013-07-11 BBK Festival, Bilbao, Spain
Trivia
- 'Halo' has been sampled in the following songs and remixes:
- 'Prawdziwy Rapper Klamca (Propaganda Wersja)' - Peja and Slums Attack (2005)
- 'Precious (DJ Dan 4 A.M. Mix)' - Depeche Mode (2005)
- 'Halo' has been covered by Józsa Alex and Quick (2003), Dimitris Korgialas (2005), and Weak13 (2017).
Notes
- ↑ Other songs to feature these vocal elements include "Enjoy The Silence","World In My Eyes", "Policy Of Truth" (as a layer mixed in with the lead melody), "Memphisto", and the sustained choir chords heard during the second verse of "In Your Room" as it was performed on the Devotional, Exotic, and Global Spirit tours.
- ↑ Notably, Depeche Mode and frequent Recoil collaborator Paul Kendall performed mixing, engineering, and general production assistance for Adamson's 1989 debut concept album Moss Side Story. A sample from another song featured on the same album, "The Man with the Golden Arm", would be utilised on the 1991 Nitzer Ebb album Ebbhead as produced by Alan Wilder.
- ↑ Prior to any editing applied post-sampling, the original snare's characteristic "pop" effect was achieved by recording the snare separately, then placing a speaker on top of the snare drum and a microphone below it, with the original recording played through the speaker and re-recorded.
References
- ↑ Wilder, Alan. "Shunt Q&A: ARCHIVES : DEPECHE MODE : VIOLATOR". recoil.co.uk. https://web.archive.org/web/20181128152225/http://oldsite.recoil.co.uk/forum/qa/dmviol.htm. Archived 28 November 2018, p. 1.
- ↑ "ALAN WILDER Interview" https://www.electricityclub.co.uk/, 27 July 2011. https://www.electricityclub.co.uk/the-alan-wilder-interview/
- ↑ Daley, Dan. "Classic Tracks: Fine Young Cannibals' 'She Drives Me Crazy'." Mix Online, 1 March 2001. https://www.mixonline.com/recording/classic-tracks-fine-young-cannibals-she-drives-me-crazy-375247.
- ↑ Gray, Steve and Chi Ming Lai. "ALAN WILDER Interview." electricityclub.co.uk. 27 July 2011. http://www.electricityclub.co.uk/the-alan-wilder-interview/