Unreleased recordings
This page details studio and concert recordings known to have been recorded and/or mixed in preparation for a potential release that have yet to be made available on an official basis. Please bear in mind that due to the limited publicity naturally given to unreleased material, this is not an exhaustive list. Click here to view a list of all songs known to have been recorded or performed by Depeche Mode that have yet to be officially released.
Unreleased recordings
Addiction
This song was performed during the 1980 Tour, and only one decent audience recording of this song exists from 1980-11-14 Technical College, Southend-On-Sea, Essex, England, UK. This date may have been the song's only live performance.
Sunday Morning
'Sunday Morning' is a early live-only track performed by Composition Of Sound prior to their final name change to Depeche Mode. It was performed only two or three times on early dates of the 1980 Tour and features a hymn-like vocal chant. It is mentioned in BONG magazine, issue 24 by Daryl Bamonte; see scan below. No live recording of this track is available.
Mirror Is Standing
'Mirror Is Standing' is an early live-only track, presumably performed on very early dates of the 1980 Tour. It is mentioned in BONG magazine, issue 24 by Bamonte. No live recording of this track is currently available.
Radio News
'Radio News' is an unreleased Vince Clarke-penned song by Depeche Mode that appears on the Summer 1980 Demo Tape. It was played at several early live concerts. Currently, 1980-09-20 Crocs, Rayleigh, Essex, England, UK is the only confirmed performance. The track was refutably described by Bamonte in BONG magazine, issue 24 as having never been recorded.
The entire song is available for streaming here. A lossless version is also available for download on the Summer 1980 Demo Tape page.
Reason Man
'Reason Man' is assumed to have been written by Vince Clarke. It is unknown why it does not appear on Speak & Spell as an album song or B-side. It was only performed during the 1980 Tour, and only one relatively poor audience recording of this song exists from 1980-10-30 Bridge House, London, England, UK (which happens to be the earliest circulating genuine recording of Depeche Mode).
A stream of the entire track, as well as lyrics transcribed to the best of our ability can be viewed here. 'Reason Man' is also mentioned by Bamonte in BONG magazine issue 24.
Secrets
'Secrets' is a early live-only track, presumably performed only on very early dates of the 1980 Tour. It is also mentioned in BONG magazine issue 24 by Bamonte. It is alleged by some that 'Secrets' was later reworked by Clarke into 'Unmarked', an album song on Yazoo's second and final studio album.
Tomorrow's Dance
'Tomorrow's Dance' is assumed to have been written by Vince Clarke. It is unknown why it does not appear on Speak & Spell or as a B-side. It was only performed during the 1980 Tour, and only one poor quality audience recording of this song exists from 1980-10-30 Bridge House, London, England, UK (which happens to be the earliest genuine Depeche Mode recording currently in circulation). The entire song as well as a transcription of its lyrics are available here. 'Tomorrow's Dance' is mentioned by Bamonte in BONG magazine issue 24 on page 18.
Summer 1981 Intro
The 'Summer 1981 Intro' is an instrumental concert intro confirmed to have been played at concerts between 1981-07-23 The Venue, London, England, UK and 1981-08-02 Jenkinsons, Brighton, England, UK. The instrumental resembles a slowed down version of 'Shout'. It is possible that this intro was also played at the following concert, 1981-08-05 Rafters, Manchester, England, UK, but the only available recording begins about thirty seconds into 'Television Set', so it cannot yet be determined whether it was played on this date.
Violence
'Violence' is the first of four songs featured on Alan Wilder's 1984 "Some Great Reward" Demo Tape. The track does not appear on any official release and has never been performed live. The song is available to stream here.
I Feel No Guilt
'I Feel No Guilt' is the third of four songs included on Alan Wilder's 1984 "Some Great Reward" Demo Tape. It does not appear on any official release and has never been performed live. The entire track is available for streaming here.
Until You've Sown The Seed
'Until You've Sown The Seed' is the final of four songs included on Alan Wilder's 1984 "Some Great Reward" Demo Tape. The song is unique as it lacks an official title and as a result is known by several fan-given titles. It is occasionally listed as 'Cliché' due to the song's tongue-in-cheek lyrics, and is also commonly mislabeled as 'Until You Saw The Sea' on some bootleg releases. This title does not make sense when considering the context of the lyrics, and is presumably the result of a misheard lyric which translated to a mislabeled song title on bootleg releases. This scenario is likely, as the song was only available as a poor quality recording prior for some time. 'Until You've Sown The Seed' does not appear on any official release and has never been performed live.
Love And Trust
Dave Gahan told Rolling Stone France magazine about the first song that he wrote at the end at of the 1980s: "My first song, I wrote it a long time ago with a guy named Daryl [Bamonte]. It was called Love And Trust. Frankly, it was not due to the group's lack of interest [that it was not released], I simply did not insist."[1] No recording of this song currently circulates.
Down In The Boondocks
Martin Gore covered this song for his first Counterfeit e.p. but it did not make the album. As co-producer Rico Conning recalls on his blog:[2]
Martin’s nifty guitar playing was a major revelation. He’d often turn away from the cranky computer, pick up his acoustic and launch into an Everly Brothers song, or even John Denver, and I’d happily join in on harmony. I managed to record one of these jams (without my harmonies), the old Billy Joe Royal classic Down In The Boondocks (written by Joe South). We thought this was great until Fletch came down for a visit and opined “sounds like bleedin’ Dave Edmunds”, so that killed that one. Somehow though it has found its way onto YouTube.
Michael Lyons, Andrew Fletcher's brother-in-law, stated on the Home forum[3]:
"This track was fully completed as part of the project but Martin was unable to obtain the relevant permission for releasing it as part of counterfeit." "[This track was] originally recorded and included on the very early Mute studio tapes."
A second generation copy of 'Down In The Boondocks' is available for streaming here.
Mother Me
The demo for 'Mother Me' appears on the "Perversion" demo tape and features Martin Gore performing lead vocal duties. The demo does not currently circulate and its lyrics are not known.
Schism
'Schism' is an instrumental which was created and demoed for Delta Machine. Further information on the Delta Machine demos can be found here.
Toast Hawaii
Toast Hawaii is an unreleased solo album recorded by Andrew Fletcher singing cover versions of his favorite songs, accompanied by either Alan Wilder and/or Martin Gore on piano.
- See more Andrew Fletcher | Toast Hawaii
Unreleased live recordings
1982-03-30 Rainbow Club, Oberkorn, Luxembourg
This concert was professionally filmed by RTL Luxembourg. On December 6, 2020, RTL Today published an article about this concert along with 2 minutes and 14 seconds of concert footage; the footage is of Just Can't Get Enough, New Life, and See You, in that order.
On May 28, 2022, in memoriam of Andrew Fletcher who had passed away two days prior on May 26, 2022, RTL Luxembourg published pro-shot videos of three songs in full: See You, New Life, and Just Can't Get Enough, in that order. The video footage can be watched on RTL's website, and is available for download here.
It is currently unknown whether more video footage or audio from this concert exists and is still viable for preservation.
1984-12-09 Alsterdorf Sporthalle, Hamburg, Germany
This concert was filmed for the video release The World We Live In and Live In Hamburg.
- See more: The World We Live In and Live In Hamburg
11 songs from this concert were also prepared for radio broadcast. Notably, Ice Machine, which does not appear on any official video release, was prepared for broadcast. Puppets from this concert has no recording circulating to date, including audience recordings.
1986-04-10 N.E.C., Birmingham, England, UK
Black Celebration, Something To Do, Stripped, A Question Of Time and More Than A Party from this concert were officially released on various editions of the A Question Of Time single release, the "X2" box set, the Black Celebration (album) reissue, and as part of the iTunes "The Complete Depeche Mode" compilation.
A Japanese FM radio broadcast, containing 12 tracks, is available for download here.
July 14th, July 15th 1986, Irvine Meadows, Irvine, CA, USA
The two-night stint at Irvine Meadows was recorded for a planned live album release, according to an interview with the band on NRJ Radio in France, October 1986. Alan Wilder said "the time wasn't right and [we] wanted to get back into the studio to record a new album".
1988-01-11 Wembley Arena, London, England, UK
1988-01-11 Wembley Arena, London, England, UK was recorded with intent to broadcast on Capital Radio FM. With the upcoming release of the "101" film, the idea was shelved. The recording now lives in The British Library's archives.
1988-06-18 Rose Bowl, Pasadena, CA, USA
Depeche Mode's famous 101st and final concert of the 1987-1988 Music For The Masses Tour at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena. A documentary and double live album, 101, was released of the concert.
Unfortunately, the "101" documentary does not include the complete footage of the concert. However, you can watch 90-second video snippets of the performance on Vimeo.
Additionally, for more information about this gig, you can watch a brilliant special feature on the official site's archives titled "Archives Special: A Concert For The Masses, June 18, 1988".
1990-08-04 Dodgers Stadium, Los Angeles, CA, USA
You can enjoy 90-second clips of every song from the concert on depechemode.com. Additionally, for this particular night, there is very good soundboard audio sourced from the NTSC VHS tape recorded by the Dodgers Stadium crew, which is available here.
October 21st, October 22nd, October 23rd 1990 - Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy
The three-night stint in Paris 1990 was reportedly recorded for a live album release. Several fans reported seeing mobile recording units outside the venue. All three nights have good to very good sounding audience recordings available.
1998-12-12 KROQ Almost Acoustic Christmas, Shrine Auditorium, Los Angeles, CA, USA
Pro-shot video excerpts from this concert can be viewed on Vimeo here. A very good soundboard recording sourced from a silver CD bootleg is available here
2003-05-07 Mayan Theatre, Los Angeles, CA, USA
The final concert of Martin Gore's brief 2003 "A Night With Martin L. Gore" tour has a professionally mixed soundboard recording. It is unknown whether a release was ever planned. A snippet of Sweetest Perfection from this soundboard recording is available for streaming.
2005-12-09 Patriot Centre, Washington, DC, USA
This concert was filmed by video director Blue Leach, and the three singles were released for promotional use to EMI affiliates around the world. These pro-shot video clips are particularly notable as they bear visual similarities to the official Live In Milan DVD minus the video effects added in post-production. Precious and Suffer Well are available at the concert’s page in high quality and A Pain That I'm Used To is available in low quality, but the remainder of the concert video is not available.
2006-05-10 Starlight Amphitheater, Kansas City, MO, USA
After Martin Gore sang his two songs in the middle of the set, Dave Gahan didn't return to the stage. The band started playing 'In Your Room', but stopped it after a few seconds. Gore went on to play several more songs solo. This concert was recorded by Live Here Now but is unreleased to date. An anonymous poster on the Home forum informed Depeche Mode Live Wiki (edited for clarity):
I know LHN recorded this, because I went up to the mixing desk and [personally asked an audio engineer] if the [recording] would be released, [to] which he [replied] "I hope so."
2009-05-06 Rockhal, Esch-sur-Alzette, Luxembourg
This show (and the rehearsal the day before) were recorded by Live Here Now, but never released.
References
- ↑ Source: 2005-10-xx - Rolling Stone Magazine n°33 (France) - "Ménage à Froid" (translated from French)
- ↑ Source: Martin Gore "Counterfeit e.p." 1988 - Rico's Reel
- ↑ Source: Home: excitermode: "Re: Are These Demos Genuine?" (registration required to view)
Note: Some background information on this page was compiled from the "Home" forum post "It's a Question of World Violation Footage" (registration required to view).