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{{Song | {{Prevnext| | ||
|title=Personal Jesus | prev=Sweetest Perfection| | ||
next=Halo| | |||
|screenshot=Single-PJ.jpg | colorscheme=Jesus}} | ||
|artist=[[Depeche Mode]] | |||
{{Song infobox | |||
|songwriter=[[Martin L. Gore]] | | title = Personal Jesus | ||
|producer=[[Depeche Mode]]<br>[[Flood]] | | screenshot = Single-PJ.jpg | ||
|studio= | | artist = [[Depeche Mode]] | ||
|tempo=129 | | songwriter = [[Martin L. Gore]] | ||
|timesignature=4 | | producer = [[Depeche Mode]]<br>[[Flood]] | ||
|key=F♯ Minor | | studio = Logic Studios, Milan | ||
| | | length = 4:56 <small>(album version)</small><br>3:44 <small>(single edit)</small> | ||
| tempo = 129 | |||
|engineeringassistance=[[Daryl Bamonte]]<br>Dick Meaney<br>David Browne<br>Mark Flannery | | timesignature = {{music|time|4|4}} | ||
| | | key = F♯ Minor | ||
| | | engineeredby = 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 | |||
|recordingdate=May 1989 | | mixingby = [[François Kevorkian]] | ||
|releasedate=August | | designby = [[Anton Corbijn]]<br>Area | ||
| recordingdate = May 1989 | |||
|colorscheme=Jesus | | releasedate = 29 August 1989 | ||
| colorscheme = Jesus | |||
}} | }} | ||
{{S|Personal Jesus}} is a song from the 1990 album ''[[Violator]]'' by [[Depeche Mode]]. It was released as a lead single on 29 August 1989. | |||
== Notes == | == Notes == | ||
Songwriter {{MLG}} described how the book ''{{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elvis_and_Me Elvis and Me}}'' by {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Priscilla_Presley Priscilla Presley}} inspired the song in an [https://books.google.com/books?id=fTAxVGMigAYC&pg=PA56 interview] for ''Spin'' magazine: | |||
<blockquote> | <blockquote>It's a song about being a {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesus Jesus}} for somebody else, someone to give you hope and care. It's about how {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elvis_Presley Elvis [Presley]}} was her man and her mentor and how often that happens in love relationships; how everybody's heart is like a god in some way. We play these god-like parts for people but no one is perfect, and that's not a very balanced view of someone is it? | ||
</blockquote> | |||
Dave Gahan told [http://web.archive.org/web/19990427033719/http://members.tripod.com/~i1u/dmarticlmain.htm Gear Magazine] in 1998: | |||
<blockquote>"Having somebody you can really trust and talk to and get the right answers from. It's a very optimistic song. What it's saying is that if you can grasp on to something that's much bigger than yourself and believe in it, then you have a faith and it's always there. Really, I think it's just about believing in yourself. The answers are inside, if you dig deep enough." | |||
</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||
Johnny Cash covered the song in 2002 | {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johnny_Cash Johnny Cash}} (who covered the song in 2002) offered his interpretation of the song in an {{EL|https://www.npr.org/news/specials/johnnycash/ interview}} for ''NPR'': | ||
<blockquote> | <blockquote> | ||
It's a very fine, fine evangelical song, probably the most evangelical gospel song I ever recorded, although I don't know if the writer meant it to be that, but that's what it is. It's where you find your comfort, your counsel, your shoulder to lean on, your hand to hold on to your Personal Jesus. | |||
</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||
[[Alan Wilder]] wrote in an {{EL|http://oldsite.recoil.co.uk/report/edit/dm8698/pj5.htm editorial}} on {{Shunt}}, the official [[Recoil]] website: | |||
<blockquote> | <blockquote> | ||
The track itself was a significant move forward for the group but still retained elements of [Depeche Mode's] former experimental self. For example, the main 'stomp' was a recording of 2 or 3 people jumping up and down on flight cases working alongside Martin's {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Lee_Hooker John Lee Hooker}} guitar riff and the {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kraftwerk Kraftwerk}}-style synth parts. | |||
</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||
Gore described initial doubts about the song's potential for commercial success prior to its record-breaking release in [[BONG 37]], 1998: | |||
<blockquote> | <blockquote> | ||
This song was our first experiment we had working with [[Flood]] and [[François Kevorkian]], and we were really unsure about how that whole relationship would work. We were really happy with the song and we realised that it was a potential single, but we didn’t have any idea of the mass appeal that it would have. We thought that it was the sort of thing that we liked but the radio programmers would hate, and we’d be lucky if it reached no. 25 – it was one of those sort of feelings we had in the studio about this song. We were especially worried about America, because the moment you mention the word Jesus in the title, you’re asking for trouble, but the single eventually turned out to be {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warner_Music_Group Warner Bros.’}} biggest selling 12” of all time. | |||
</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||
[[Vince Clarke]] stated in a 2001 [[2001-05-07 BBC London, London, UK|interview]] for ''BBC'': | |||
<blockquote> | <blockquote> | ||
" | To me, "Personal Jesus" is like a rock sound, I suppose. It's not really like a typical American rock. I think it's far more clever and imaginative than that. If you told me that there would be a record like ''Violator'', that they might have written ''Violator'', 20 years ago, I would not have believed you. Going for that amount of time, then they're a band that have had a huge influence. | ||
</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||
Musician {{EL|https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charlie_(cantante_italiano) Charlie Marchino}}, who was at Logic Studios during the recording of "Personal Jesus", describes the experience in an {{EL|http://www.liberoquotidiano.it/blog/soggetti-smarriti/996543/ho-sputtanato-una-fortuna-ma-non-datemi-del-pirla.html interview}} for ''Libero Quotidiano'': | |||
<blockquote> | <blockquote> | ||
" | I was at Logic Studios where Depeche Mode was recording ''Violator'', and one day, I am playing ping pong with one of them. They play and challenge each other with ping pong every day. But then they are recording "Personal Jesus" and I am wondering how they make the drumming loop in a military marching style at the beginning of the song. I am wondering what instrumentation they are using, what technological effects. So I follow after them and my jaw drops. They are on the metallic stairwell, and using its [railing], they are beating their feet on the staircase, all together, tum, tum, tu tu tum. Record and mix. Unbelievable. | ||
</blockquote> | |||
== 2011-05-14 Mute Short Circuit analysis == | |||
As part of a programme of talks and films at the Mute Short Circuit event in May 2011, producer [[Flood]] gave a presentation in which he recalled the production of several [[Depeche Mode]] tracks through looping audio examples and commentary. Among the tracks included in his presentation was "Personal Jesus". An abridged transcript of his comments can be viewed below. | |||
<blockquote> | |||
We started off with this particular song, this was the first song that we recorded. The demo was pretty much a smaller version of what you know and love, but everything about it was all a bit of a test. | |||
So the first day in Milan with Depeche Mode, what are we going to do? We're going to record ourselves kicking a bit of metal in the booth, me and Fletch, while Dave Martin and Alan and the engineer, whom I'd never met, are all sitting and looking. So, that was the first I'd ever done. And that took a long time to do, which wasn't something I was expecting. A foot stomp? How hard could that be? Oh boy... | |||
Anyway, so we do this, and then it's on to the main riff of the song. Now, Martin, felt very, very strongly that it should be acoustic guitar. So, OK, you're the boss, I'm working my way in here, so let's do the acoustic guitar. | |||
So, well, he's written it. He's a pretty damn fine guitar player, which I didn't realize at the time. Depeche Mode, they don't do guitars, do they? So he spent a long time playing this, and playing it, and playing it, and then we all agreed it sounds pretty good. But personally, I felt it could go a bit further... but I had to wait. So we're going along, it sounds pretty good, it's basically the demo. So obviously Depeche are going 'Hmm, how much are you charging?' | |||
Anyways, so maybe we can make the footstomps a bit bigger. | |||
[plays room track of footstomp behind the sound of the main footstomp channel, producing a thicker sound] | |||
So, OK, they're going 'Right, big deal, you recorded a bit of room'. Sure, anyone can do that. | |||
So then another idea that was going along was to use acoustic-y type of instruments, so you'd have harmonica or... one idea for the bass was actually to use the Jew's harp. | |||
[plays Jew's harp track] | |||
So we're going 'OK, that sounds pretty good. Sounds a bit like a blues band. We're Depeche Mode... what's going on? Where are you leading us now?' | |||
So anyway, try and re-address the balance. We're going to introduce something a little more Depeche Mode-esque. | |||
[plays resonant synth bass track]. | |||
It's starting to sound halfway decent now. OK, so that's pretty good, that's not a bad start off. That's probably a couple of days worth of work. A lot of testing, a lot of 'Is this as good as it gets?' | |||
There are loads of other pieces in there that you just start to see -- essentially all I was doing was enhancing what they already had and trying to help them go to a new place, and it was very difficult. In the end, in order to get the life out of the guitar that I thought it needed, I finally persuaded Martin to actually put [in] an electric [guitar]. Maybe the acoustic had taken half a day to record, I remember he just did the electric guitar parts in one go. [He was] just like 'Ah, really, is that all I've gotta do? Alright. Uh, can I go now?' Small victories! | |||
If I had the slide guitar part here, I could show it, but I always heard that as screaming voices, and there was one evening when they're all looking at me going 'What are you talking about? It's a slide guitar.' And Dave going 'What, just screaming to something?" I go 'Yeah, just scream to anything!' He goes 'What, like this? Rahhh!' I went 'Great!' So they sampled it and put it with the guitar that slides up, and that's why it sounds — it sounds like a slide guitar, but it's not quite a slide guitar, and that's something that they'd obviously learned from Daniel, and I had learned from Daniel, this thing of meticulously crafting something and building it. | |||
So that's the way that that track was built up. Each part of that track is very, very crafted, and it was just trying to enhance effectively what was there ... It's a fantastic piece of music, but it was only a better version of the demo. That's the job of the producer, sometimes, to go, 'Look, it's great, I don't need to do anything,' which is a bit hard when the artist is looking at you going 'What exactly have you done in the last hour? How much are we paying you?' | |||
</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||
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|Martin L. Gore|©1989 Grabbing Hands Music Ltd/EMI Music Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved.}} | |Martin L. Gore|©1989 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-PJ}} | |||
== Music video == | |||
{{#widget:YouTube| id=u1xrNaTO1bI}} | |||
{{#widget:YouTube| id=8onMJT7Os6g}} | |||
== Live performances == | |||
{{Live section}} | |||
== Live versions == | |||
This section provides an example of a live version of [[Personal Jesus]] from each tour that it was played. | |||
* <sm2>https://media.dmlive.wiki/stream/dm1990-07-21.sbd.unknown.unknown.flac1644/16.m4a</sm2> 1990 World Violation Tour: [[1990-07-21 Shoreline Amphitheatre, Mountainview, San Francisco, CA, USA]] | |||
* <sm2>https://media.dmlive.wiki/stream/dm1993-07-31.FM.BBC2-gadget242-Stealth71.0.flac1648/12.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.flac1648/13.m4a</sm2> 1994 Exotic Tour: [[1994-05-14 Shoreline Amphitheatre, Mountainview, San Francisco, CA, USA]] | |||
* <sm2>https://media.dmlive.wiki/stream/dm1998-10-05.sbd.MTV.0.flac1644/07.m4a</sm2> 1998 The Singles Tour: [[1998-10-05 Cologne Arena, Cologne, Germany]] | |||
* <sm2>https://media.dmlive.wiki/stream/dm2001-10-11.sbd.mute.0.flac1644/17.m4a</sm2> 2001 Exciter Tour: [[2001-10-11 Festhalle, Frankfurt, Germany]] | |||
* <sm2>https://media.dmlive.wiki/stream/dg2003-06-12.fm.unknown.0.flac1648/09.m4a</sm2> 2003 Paper Monsters Tour: [[2003-06-12 Hultsfred Festival, Hultsfred, Sweden]] | |||
* <sm2>https://media.dmlive.wiki/stream/dm2006-06-04.sbd.unknown.unknown.mp2256/14.m4a</sm2> 2005-2006 Touring The Angel (Regular): [[2006-06-04 Rock Am Ring, Nurburgring, Germany]] | |||
* <sm2>https://media.dmlive.wiki/stream/dm2005-12-11.sbd-PreFM.0.flac1644/01.m4a</sm2> 2005-2006 Touring The Angel (Acoustic): [[2005-12-11 KROQ Almost Acoustic Christmas, Gibson Amphitheatre, Universal City, CA, USA]] | |||
* <sm2>https://media.dmlive.wiki/stream/dm2009-04-xx.Pre-FM.unknown.0.flac1644/04.m4a</sm2> 2009-2010 Tour Of The Universe: [[2009-04-xx Tour Of The Universe Tour Rehearsals, SIR Studios, New York, NY, USA]] | |||
* <sm2>https://media.dmlive.wiki/stream/dm2013-10-11.sbd.acl.webstream.aac256/11.m4a</sm2> 2013-2014 Delta Machine Tour: [[2013-10-11 Austin City Limits Festival, Austin, TX, USA]] | |||
* <sm2>https://media.dmlive.wiki/stream/dm2018-06-26.sbd.VoltFestival.0.m4a128/12.m4a</sm2> 2017-2018 Global Spirit Tour: [[2018-06-26 Volt Festival, Sopron, Hungary]] | |||
* <sm2>https://media.dmlive.wiki/stream/dgss2021-12-13.sbd.MagentaMusik360.aac128/15.m4a</sm2> 2021 Imposter Tour: [[2021-12-13 Admiralpalast, Berlin, Germany]] | |||
* <sm2>https://media.dmlive.wiki/stream/dm2023-03-30.matrix.ryanj-anonymous.0.flac1644/26.m4a</sm2> 2023-2024 Memento Mori Tour (Regular): [[2023-03-30 T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas, NV, USA]] | |||
* <sm2>https://media.dmlive.wiki/stream/dm2023-04-09.DPA4060.duranie.0.flac1644/24.m4a</sm2> 2023-2024 Memento Mori Tour (With preacher samples): [[2023-04-09 Videotron Center, Quebec City, QC, Canada]] | |||
== In the media == | |||
"Personal Jesus" is featured in the acclaimed 2004 video game ''{{EL|https://www.grandtheftwiki.com/Grand_Theft_Auto:_San_Andreas Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas}}'' on the fictional alternative rock in-game radio station ''{{EL|https://www.grandtheftwiki.com/Radio_X Radio X}}''. Non re-encoded audio extracted from the game featuring fictional radio host {{EL|https://www.grandtheftwiki.com/Sage Sage}} (voiced by {{EL|https://www.grandtheftwiki.com/Jodie_Shawback Jodie Shawback}}) can be heard below: | |||
<blockquote> | |||
'''Sage''': "The Mode are up next. 'Personal Jesus'. Incredible. I've found one – and I think it's me." | |||
<html5media>https://media.dmlive.wiki/stream/gtasa-radiox/intro.ogg</html5media> | |||
'''Sage''': "You just can't argue with Depeche Mode, you can't. I've tried, I've spent nights, hours and hours. You can't do it. I want David Gahan to move into my house – he said 'No.'" | |||
<html5media>https://media.dmlive.wiki/stream/gtasa-radiox/outro.ogg</html5media> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
{{ | == Trivia == | ||
*'Personal Jesus' has been covered by {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johnny_Cash Johnny Cash}}, {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Def_Leppard Def Leppard}}, {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sammy_Hagar Sammy Hagar}} feat. {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Anthony_(musician) Michael Anthony}}, {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neal_Schon Neal Schon}} and {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chad_Smith Chad Smith}}, {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marilyn_Manson Marilyn Manson}}, {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El%C3%A4kel%C3%A4iset Eläkeläiset}}, {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lollipop_Lust_Kill Lollipop Lust Kill}}, {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravity_Kills Gravity Kills}}, {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitamin_String_Quartet Vitamin String Quartet}}, Hooligans, Challenger in Pieces, {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No_One_Is_Innocent No One Is Innocent}}, {{EL|https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anaklein Anaklein}}, 3 Minute Solution, {{EL|https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Lord_Fonda John Lord Fonda}}, Jazzystics feat. {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karen_Souza Karen Souza}}, {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Cheese Richard Cheese}}, The Gospel, Berk & the Virtual Band, G&G, Radio Star, {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tamtrum Tamtrum}}, {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Di_Leva Di Leva}}, {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nina_Hagen Nina Hagen}}, Bebo Best, Evelins and Mr. Lova, Niji, Shaka Ponk, HausHetaere, {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rockabye_Baby! Rockabye Baby!}}, Renzo Baltuzzi, Apathy, The Molly Ringwalds, Music Box Mania, Leo, Acousticman Chillout, Mindless Self Indulgence, Tim Barton, Chateau Pop, and Ko Ko Mo. | |||
*"Personal Jesus" has been sampled in "House 'N Roll" by The Sacados, "Perdiendo El Tiempo" by Fangoria, "Was It Worth It? (Dub)" by {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pet_Shop_Boys Pet Shop Boys}}, "Personal Jesus" by Apathy, "Beware of the Dog" by Jamelia, "{{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reach_Out_(Hilary_Duff_song) Reach Out}}" by {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hilary_Duff Hilary Duff}} feat. {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._Prophet The Prophet}}, "Personal Jesus/Just Can't Get Enough" by The Molly Ringwalds, and "False Idols" by LSDXOXO. | |||
*Marilyn Manson's cover of "Personal Jesus" was featured in the soundtrack to 2013 horror film ''{{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horns_(film) Horns}}'' starring {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Radcliffe Daniel Radcliffe}} of ''{{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harry_Potter_(film_series) Harry Potter}}'' fame. Notably, the film's soundtrack also includes {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Bowie David Bowie's}} "{{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%22Heroes%22_(David_Bowie_album) Heroes}}" (a performance of which by [[Dave Gahan]] was overheard by [[Vince Clarke]], who subsequently invited Gahan to join [[Depeche Mode]] in early to mid-1980. Depeche Mode would later [[Heroes|cover]] this song in tribute to the late Bowie following his {{EL|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_David_Bowie passing}} in 2016). | |||
<references group="footnotes" /> | |||
== References == | |||
<references /> | |||
{{Singles}} | |||
[[Category:Singles]] | |||
[[Category:Depeche Mode songs]] | |||
[[Category:Depeche Mode singles]] | |||
[[Category:Violator songs]] | [[Category:Violator songs]] | ||
[[Category:Violator singles]] | [[Category:Violator singles]] | ||
[[Category:Songs in F♯ Minor]] | [[Category:Songs in F♯ Minor]] | ||
[[Category:Songs between 190-194 BPM]] | |||
[[Category:Songs written by Martin L. Gore]] | |||
[[Category:Depeche Mode lead singles]] | |||
[[Category:Lead singles]] | |||
[[Category:Songs with official music videos]] | |||
<metadesc>"Personal Jesus" is a song from the 1990 album Violator by Depeche Mode. It was released as a single on 29 August 1989.</metadesc><nowiki/> |
Latest revision as of 01:22, 11 July 2024
|
3. Personal Jesus List of Violator songs |
|
Personal Jesus
| |
Song | Personal Jesus |
---|---|
By | Depeche Mode |
Songwriter | Martin L. Gore |
Produced by | Depeche Mode Flood |
Recorded at | Logic Studios, Milan |
Length (mm:ss) | 4:56 (album version) 3:44 (single edit) |
Tempo | 129 BPM |
Time signature | 4 4 |
Key | F♯ Minor |
Engineered by | Pino Pischetola Peter Iversen Steve Lyon Goh Hotoda Alan Gregorie Dennis Mitchell Phil Legg |
Engineering assistance | Daryl Bamonte Dick Meaney David Browne Mark Flannery |
Mixed by | François Kevorkian |
Design | Anton Corbijn Area |
Recorded | May 1989 |
Originally released | 29 August 1989 |
Live performances as Depeche Mode | 991 times * |
Total live performances | 1067 times * |
"Personal Jesus" is a song from the 1990 album Violator by Depeche Mode. It was released as a lead single on 29 August 1989.
Notes
Songwriter Martin Gore described how the book Elvis and Me by Priscilla Presley inspired the song in an interview for Spin magazine:
It's a song about being a Jesus for somebody else, someone to give you hope and care. It's about how Elvis [Presley] was her man and her mentor and how often that happens in love relationships; how everybody's heart is like a god in some way. We play these god-like parts for people but no one is perfect, and that's not a very balanced view of someone is it?
Dave Gahan told Gear Magazine in 1998:
"Having somebody you can really trust and talk to and get the right answers from. It's a very optimistic song. What it's saying is that if you can grasp on to something that's much bigger than yourself and believe in it, then you have a faith and it's always there. Really, I think it's just about believing in yourself. The answers are inside, if you dig deep enough."
Johnny Cash (who covered the song in 2002) offered his interpretation of the song in an interview for NPR:
It's a very fine, fine evangelical song, probably the most evangelical gospel song I ever recorded, although I don't know if the writer meant it to be that, but that's what it is. It's where you find your comfort, your counsel, your shoulder to lean on, your hand to hold on to your Personal Jesus.
Alan Wilder wrote in an editorial on Shunt, the official Recoil website:
The track itself was a significant move forward for the group but still retained elements of [Depeche Mode's] former experimental self. For example, the main 'stomp' was a recording of 2 or 3 people jumping up and down on flight cases working alongside Martin's John Lee Hooker guitar riff and the Kraftwerk-style synth parts.
Gore described initial doubts about the song's potential for commercial success prior to its record-breaking release in BONG 37, 1998:
This song was our first experiment we had working with Flood and François Kevorkian, and we were really unsure about how that whole relationship would work. We were really happy with the song and we realised that it was a potential single, but we didn’t have any idea of the mass appeal that it would have. We thought that it was the sort of thing that we liked but the radio programmers would hate, and we’d be lucky if it reached no. 25 – it was one of those sort of feelings we had in the studio about this song. We were especially worried about America, because the moment you mention the word Jesus in the title, you’re asking for trouble, but the single eventually turned out to be Warner Bros.’ biggest selling 12” of all time.
Vince Clarke stated in a 2001 interview for BBC:
To me, "Personal Jesus" is like a rock sound, I suppose. It's not really like a typical American rock. I think it's far more clever and imaginative than that. If you told me that there would be a record like Violator, that they might have written Violator, 20 years ago, I would not have believed you. Going for that amount of time, then they're a band that have had a huge influence.
Musician Charlie Marchino, who was at Logic Studios during the recording of "Personal Jesus", describes the experience in an interview for Libero Quotidiano:
I was at Logic Studios where Depeche Mode was recording Violator, and one day, I am playing ping pong with one of them. They play and challenge each other with ping pong every day. But then they are recording "Personal Jesus" and I am wondering how they make the drumming loop in a military marching style at the beginning of the song. I am wondering what instrumentation they are using, what technological effects. So I follow after them and my jaw drops. They are on the metallic stairwell, and using its [railing], they are beating their feet on the staircase, all together, tum, tum, tu tu tum. Record and mix. Unbelievable.
2011-05-14 Mute Short Circuit analysis
As part of a programme of talks and films at the Mute Short Circuit event in May 2011, producer Flood gave a presentation in which he recalled the production of several Depeche Mode tracks through looping audio examples and commentary. Among the tracks included in his presentation was "Personal Jesus". An abridged transcript of his comments can be viewed below.
We started off with this particular song, this was the first song that we recorded. The demo was pretty much a smaller version of what you know and love, but everything about it was all a bit of a test.
So the first day in Milan with Depeche Mode, what are we going to do? We're going to record ourselves kicking a bit of metal in the booth, me and Fletch, while Dave Martin and Alan and the engineer, whom I'd never met, are all sitting and looking. So, that was the first I'd ever done. And that took a long time to do, which wasn't something I was expecting. A foot stomp? How hard could that be? Oh boy...
Anyway, so we do this, and then it's on to the main riff of the song. Now, Martin, felt very, very strongly that it should be acoustic guitar. So, OK, you're the boss, I'm working my way in here, so let's do the acoustic guitar.
So, well, he's written it. He's a pretty damn fine guitar player, which I didn't realize at the time. Depeche Mode, they don't do guitars, do they? So he spent a long time playing this, and playing it, and playing it, and then we all agreed it sounds pretty good. But personally, I felt it could go a bit further... but I had to wait. So we're going along, it sounds pretty good, it's basically the demo. So obviously Depeche are going 'Hmm, how much are you charging?'
Anyways, so maybe we can make the footstomps a bit bigger.
[plays room track of footstomp behind the sound of the main footstomp channel, producing a thicker sound]
So, OK, they're going 'Right, big deal, you recorded a bit of room'. Sure, anyone can do that.
So then another idea that was going along was to use acoustic-y type of instruments, so you'd have harmonica or... one idea for the bass was actually to use the Jew's harp.
[plays Jew's harp track]
So we're going 'OK, that sounds pretty good. Sounds a bit like a blues band. We're Depeche Mode... what's going on? Where are you leading us now?'
So anyway, try and re-address the balance. We're going to introduce something a little more Depeche Mode-esque.
[plays resonant synth bass track].
It's starting to sound halfway decent now. OK, so that's pretty good, that's not a bad start off. That's probably a couple of days worth of work. A lot of testing, a lot of 'Is this as good as it gets?'
There are loads of other pieces in there that you just start to see -- essentially all I was doing was enhancing what they already had and trying to help them go to a new place, and it was very difficult. In the end, in order to get the life out of the guitar that I thought it needed, I finally persuaded Martin to actually put [in] an electric [guitar]. Maybe the acoustic had taken half a day to record, I remember he just did the electric guitar parts in one go. [He was] just like 'Ah, really, is that all I've gotta do? Alright. Uh, can I go now?' Small victories!
If I had the slide guitar part here, I could show it, but I always heard that as screaming voices, and there was one evening when they're all looking at me going 'What are you talking about? It's a slide guitar.' And Dave going 'What, just screaming to something?" I go 'Yeah, just scream to anything!' He goes 'What, like this? Rahhh!' I went 'Great!' So they sampled it and put it with the guitar that slides up, and that's why it sounds — it sounds like a slide guitar, but it's not quite a slide guitar, and that's something that they'd obviously learned from Daniel, and I had learned from Daniel, this thing of meticulously crafting something and building it.
So that's the way that that track was built up. Each part of that track is very, very crafted, and it was just trying to enhance effectively what was there ... It's a fantastic piece of music, but it was only a better version of the demo. That's the job of the producer, sometimes, to go, 'Look, it's great, I don't need to do anything,' which is a bit hard when the artist is looking at you going 'What exactly have you done in the last hour? How much are we paying you?'
Lyrics
Personal Jesus
Reach out and touch faith
Your own personal Jesus
Someone to hear your prayers
Someone who cares
Your own personal Jesus
Someone to hear your prayers
Someone who's there
Feeling unknown
And you're all alone
Flesh and bone
By the telephone
Lift up the receiver
I'll make you a believer
Take second best
Put me to the test
Things on your chest
You need to confess
I will deliver
You know I'm a forgiver
Reach out and touch faith
Reach out and touch faith
Your own personal Jesus
Someone to hear your prayers
Someone who cares
Your own personal Jesus
Someone to hear your prayers
Someone who's there
Feeling unknown
And you're all alone
Flesh and bone
By the telephone
Lift up the receiver
I'll make you a believer
I will deliver
You know I'm a forgiver
Reach out and touch faith
Your own personal Jesus
Reach out and touch faith
Songwriter: Martin L. Gore
Publishing Information: ©1989 Grabbing Hands Music Ltd/EMI Music Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved.
Composition
Sample sources
"Personal Jesus" Depeche Mode 1989 |
Self-made samples | ||||
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Sample | Notes | Audio | |||
Drum elements | Wilder recalls in separate Q&A and Editorial features on Shunt, the official Recoil project site: "The main stomps... [were] a recording of 2 or 3 people jumping up and down on flight cases."[1][2] | ||||
Guitar, vocal elements | Album producer Flood recalled the unique slide guitar sound recorded on the second day of production on "Personal Jesus" in his 2011 Mute Short Circuit presentation:
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Vocal elements | Album producer Flood describes the origin of the "Personal Jesus" breathing rhythm recorded on the third day of the song's production in his 2011 Mute Short Circuit presentation:
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Drum elements, tom drum | An ambient drum sample originally recorded for use with 1983's "Pipeline" is utilised in combination with a tom drum sound originally recorded for use with 1987's "I Want You Now" to form a series of two unique drum fills preceding each verse section. |
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Sample sources | |||||
Sample | Source | Status | Notes | Audio | |
Drum elements, snare drum | Fad Gadget - Fireside Favourites - "Newsreel" - 7 November 1980 |
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A manipulated snare sound derived from the opening moments of "Newsreel" from the 1980 Fad Gadget album Fireside Favourites is utilised throughout the outro of the album version of "Personal Jesus". Notably, this sample would also see use throughout "World In My Eyes". Former Depeche Mode member Alan Wilder recalled the snare drum sound of "World In My Eyes" in an undated Q&A on Shunt, the official Recoil project site: "[...] I think we made it from scratch or it could be a combination of analogue and a sample."[1] | ||
Orchestral elements | Barry Adamson - Moss Side Story - "The Swinging Detective" - 6 March 1989 |
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A manipulated, processed section of audio derived from Barry Adamson's 1989 instrumental "The Swinging Detective" is utilised sporadically throughout "Personal Jesus". | ||
Drum elements | E-mu Systems - Emulator II factory library disk #71: DAS Synth |
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A lo-fi synthesizer sample derived from Emulator II factory library disk #71 "DAS Synth" is played several keys above its root key to produce a metallic ticking sound that is used in place of a hi-hat starting from the second chorus section of "Personal Jesus". | Click to display/hide audio example | |
Drum elements | Optical Media International (OMI) - Emulator III Universe of Sounds Master Studio Collection Volume 2 - Tough Tones - "NOISE BURST" |
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A treated copy of a clap-like percussive sound derived from the "Tough Tones" voice of Universe of Sounds Master Studio Collection Volume 2 by Optical Media International is utilised throughout "Personal Jesus" starting from the second chorus section. | Click to display/hide audio example | |
Bass guitar elements | Optical Media International (OMI) - Emulator III Universe of Sounds Master Studio Collection Volume 1 - Machine Set - "Stein Bass A1", "Stein Bass D2" |
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A series of bass guitar samples derived from the "Machine Set" voice of Universe of Sounds Master Studio Collection Volume 1 by Optical Media International are utilised throughout "Personal Jesus". | Click to display/hide audio example | |
Drum elements, snare drum | Akai - S1000 MIDI Stereo Digital Sampler - SL601 SAMBA SET - SN-HI3 and S1000 - SL602 AMBIENCE SET - SN HIGATE - June 1988 |
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A manipulated, processed composite snare drum sound comprised of samples derived from the Akai S1000 diskettes SL601 "Samba Set" and SL602 "Ambience Set" is utilised throughout "Personal Jesus". Notably, this composite snare sound would also see use sporadically throughout "Sweetest Perfection" and "Policy Of Truth". |
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Music video
Live performances
- Main article: Available recordings of "Personal Jesus"
- Main article: List of dates where "Personal Jesus" was played
Live versions
This section provides an example of a live version of Personal Jesus from each tour that it was played.
- Play 1990 World Violation Tour: 1990-07-21 Shoreline Amphitheatre, Mountainview, San Francisco, 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 1998 The Singles Tour: 1998-10-05 Cologne Arena, Cologne, Germany
- Play 2001 Exciter Tour: 2001-10-11 Festhalle, Frankfurt, Germany
- Play 2003 Paper Monsters Tour: 2003-06-12 Hultsfred Festival, Hultsfred, Sweden
- Play 2005-2006 Touring The Angel (Regular): 2006-06-04 Rock Am Ring, Nurburgring, Germany
- Play 2005-2006 Touring The Angel (Acoustic): 2005-12-11 KROQ Almost Acoustic Christmas, Gibson Amphitheatre, Universal City, CA, USA
- Play 2009-2010 Tour Of The Universe: 2009-04-xx Tour Of The Universe Tour Rehearsals, SIR Studios, New York, NY, USA
- Play 2013-2014 Delta Machine Tour: 2013-10-11 Austin City Limits Festival, Austin, TX, USA
- Play 2017-2018 Global Spirit Tour: 2018-06-26 Volt Festival, Sopron, Hungary
- Play 2021 Imposter Tour: 2021-12-13 Admiralpalast, Berlin, Germany
- Play 2023-2024 Memento Mori Tour (Regular): 2023-03-30 T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas, NV, USA
- Play 2023-2024 Memento Mori Tour (With preacher samples): 2023-04-09 Videotron Center, Quebec City, QC, Canada
In the media
"Personal Jesus" is featured in the acclaimed 2004 video game Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas on the fictional alternative rock in-game radio station Radio X. Non re-encoded audio extracted from the game featuring fictional radio host Sage (voiced by Jodie Shawback) can be heard below:
Sage: "The Mode are up next. 'Personal Jesus'. Incredible. I've found one – and I think it's me."
Sage: "You just can't argue with Depeche Mode, you can't. I've tried, I've spent nights, hours and hours. You can't do it. I want David Gahan to move into my house – he said 'No.'"
Trivia
- 'Personal Jesus' has been covered by Johnny Cash, Def Leppard, Sammy Hagar feat. Michael Anthony, Neal Schon and Chad Smith, Marilyn Manson, Eläkeläiset, Lollipop Lust Kill, Gravity Kills, Vitamin String Quartet, Hooligans, Challenger in Pieces, No One Is Innocent, Anaklein, 3 Minute Solution, John Lord Fonda, Jazzystics feat. Karen Souza, Richard Cheese, The Gospel, Berk & the Virtual Band, G&G, Radio Star, Tamtrum, Di Leva, Nina Hagen, Bebo Best, Evelins and Mr. Lova, Niji, Shaka Ponk, HausHetaere, Rockabye Baby!, Renzo Baltuzzi, Apathy, The Molly Ringwalds, Music Box Mania, Leo, Acousticman Chillout, Mindless Self Indulgence, Tim Barton, Chateau Pop, and Ko Ko Mo.
- "Personal Jesus" has been sampled in "House 'N Roll" by The Sacados, "Perdiendo El Tiempo" by Fangoria, "Was It Worth It? (Dub)" by Pet Shop Boys, "Personal Jesus" by Apathy, "Beware of the Dog" by Jamelia, "Reach Out" by Hilary Duff feat. The Prophet, "Personal Jesus/Just Can't Get Enough" by The Molly Ringwalds, and "False Idols" by LSDXOXO.
- Marilyn Manson's cover of "Personal Jesus" was featured in the soundtrack to 2013 horror film Horns starring Daniel Radcliffe of Harry Potter fame. Notably, the film's soundtrack also includes David Bowie's "Heroes" (a performance of which by Dave Gahan was overheard by Vince Clarke, who subsequently invited Gahan to join Depeche Mode in early to mid-1980. Depeche Mode would later cover this song in tribute to the late Bowie following his passing in 2016).
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 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.
- ↑ Source: SHUNT : ARCHIVES : REPORT : EDITORIAL : VIOLATOR