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The following is a list of notable artists that have recorded and officially released renderings of songs originally written by Depeche Mode. The list is organized alphabetically by song and then release year.
The Singles 81→85 is a greatest hits album by English electronic music band Depeche Mode, released on 14 October 1985 by Mute Records. [6] [7] The compilation was not originally released in North America, where it was replaced by its counterpart Catching Up with Depeche Mode.
The Singles 86>98 is a greatest hits album by English electronic music band Depeche Mode, released on 28 September 1998 by Mute Records.It serves as a follow-up to the band's previous compilation, The Singles 81→85, which was also reissued in the same year.
For example, the fifth Depeche Mode single to follow this pattern, "People Are People", is identified with the code "BONG5", printed on the single's cover, spine and on the record or CD itself. The "BONG" designation is preceded with numbers or letters that indicate the format of the release, such as "7" for a 7" single, "CD" for a CD-single ...
Vince Clarke wrote the song. [5] There were two versions of the song available. The 7″ version would later become the "album version", as it would eventually appear on the UK version of Speak & Spell, released in October 1981, and a 12″ "remix", which differs from the album version, in that it has a different intro, intensely percussive and harder, and an added synth part in the "solo ...
People Are People is a compilation album by English electronic music band Depeche Mode, released in North America by Sire Records on 2 July 1984. [1] [2] Sire sensed it needed a new approach in its release policy since the band's 1983 effort Construction Time Again had failed to chart in the US.
The first CD was remastered and was released on a CD/SACD hybrid except for in the US where the remastered first disc was pressed to standard CD. The bonus DVD includes a 5.1 surround mix of the original album, the B-Side "My Joy" and the Jazz Mix of "Death's Door" (basically an extended mix of the original version), as well as several other ...
The music video for "A Question of Time" is the first Depeche Mode video to be directed by Anton Corbijn, and was the start of a relationship with him and the band which still lasts to this day. It was included on the Strange video, The Videos 86>98 , the DVD of The Best of Depeche Mode Volume 1 and on Video Singles Collection .