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Violator (Music)

 Violator (Music)
type
TVTItem
 Violator (Music)
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Violator (Music)
 Violator (Music)
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Violator
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Violator, released in 1990 through Mute Records in the UK and Sire Records & Reprise Records in the US, is the seventh studio album by English Alternative Dance group Depeche Mode. Co-produced by New Order and U2 engineer Mark "Flood" Ellis (who was producing Nine Inch Nails' 1989 debut album at around the same time, thanks to the overlap in recording sessions), the album continues the Darker and Edgier brand of Synth-Pop that had defined the band's sound since 1983's Construction Time Again while also orienting it in a somewhat new direction hinting at what their work would later become, reducing the industrial influences and concurrently ramping up the Alternative Rock elements. Compared to their previous album Music for the Masses, Violator offered a much more free-form composition and production style, with much more open-ended demo recordings and a general absence of pre-production, both of which enabled the musicians to attain a higher degree of creative freedom than on previous records.The resulting album was an unprecedented commercial success, serving as Depeche Mode's mainstream Breakthrough Hit and turning the band into international superstars. It spawned four singles: "Personal Jesus", "Enjoy the Silence", "Policy of Truth", and "World in My Eyes", with the first two each ranking among the band's unquestioned high-water-marks and defining moments.Lead single "Personal Jesus" marked Depeche Mode's sendoff to the 1980s in more ways than one, being their last material released during the decade (coming out on August 28, 1989) and being driven by an uncharacteristic twanging countryish guitar riff a world away from their earlier synthpop and industrial-influenced styles. It became the highest selling 12" single on a Warner Music Group associated labelnote (Sire Records, the band's distributors in the US and Canada) due to a combination of its release half a year before its parent album and the controversy surrounding its Blasphemous Boast-based ad campaign. The lush, propulsive second single "Enjoy the Silence" then became a Top 10 hit in both the US and the UK, while the album peaked at No. 2 on the UK Albums chart and No. 7 on the Billboard 200 — marking the band's first album to reach the top ten in the US — in addition to topping the charts in Belgium, France, Greece and Spain. As a sign of the band's newfound fame, a signing party in Los Angeles initially expected to bring in a few thousand people at most ended up drawing roughly 17,000.Violator went on to become the 17th best-selling album of 1990 in the US, the 39th best-selling album of the year in the UK, and the fifth best-selling album of the year in the entire European Union. It was later certified triple-platinum in the US, double-platinum in Canada, platinum in France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and Switzerland, and gold in the UK, Austria, and Sweden. It still continues to sell well to this day, having peaked at No. 22 on both the Polish Albums chart and the Billboard Top Dance/Electronic Albums chart in 2017.Tracklist: "World in My Eyes" (4:26) "Sweetest Perfection" (4:43) "Personal Jesus" (4:56) "Halo" (4:30) "Waiting for the Night" (6:07)note (According to a possibly apocryphal trivia note formerly on the band's website, the song was supposedly originally called "Waiting For The Night To Fall" but due to a 'printing error' all pressings of the album lose the last two words — a notion however Jossed by band member Alan Wilder) "Enjoy the Silence" (6:12)note (Contains the hidden track "Interlude #2 (Crucified)" at 4:21) "Policy of Truth" (4:55) "Blue Dress" (5:41)note (Contains the hidden track "Interlude #3" at 4:18) "Clean" (5:32)
 Violator (Music)
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2023-10-10T00:16:03Z
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2023-10-10T00:16:03Z
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Dropped link to Meddle: Not a Feature - ITEM
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Dropped link to PinkFloyd: Not a Feature - IGNORE
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Dropped link to SomeGreatReward: Not a Feature - ITEM
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Dropped link to TheDreaming: Not a Feature - ITEM
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Dropped link to Yeezus: Not a Feature - ITEM
 Violator (Music)
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DBTropes
 Violator (Music) / int_14beeefd
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Darker and Edgier
 Violator (Music) / int_14beeefd
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Darker and Edgier: Violator was another step forward in the band's growing cynicism and moodiness within their songs, setting the stage for what would be their bleakest album.
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Violator (Music) / int_14beeefd
 Violator (Music) / int_22093e9b
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New Sound Album
 Violator (Music) / int_22093e9b
comment
New Sound Album: Martin starts using guitars more often, the rest of the guys work in stronger dance beats, Mark "Flood" Ellis co-produces, and François Kervorkian engineers. Closer to the dance-rock style of Alternative Rock that groups like New Order and Big Audio Dynamite popularized.
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 Violator (Music) / int_26ac510e
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Mythology Gag
 Violator (Music) / int_26ac510e
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Mythology Gag: "Sweetest Perfection" reprises "To Have and to Hold".
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 Violator (Music) / int_2e22f7d4
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Minimalistic Cover Art
 Violator (Music) / int_2e22f7d4
comment
Minimalistic Cover Art: A high-contrast image of a red rose against a black background, with the band name and album title in tiny logotypes.
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 Violator (Music) / int_2f3cf3a2
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Stoic Spectacles
 Violator (Music) / int_2f3cf3a2
comment
Stoic Spectacles: Andrew Fletcher donned these around the time of the album's release.
 Violator (Music) / int_2f3cf3a2
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Violator (Music) / int_2f3cf3a2
 Violator (Music) / int_361d0d58
type
Concept Video
 Violator (Music) / int_361d0d58
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Concept Video: "Enjoy the Silence" stars Dave Gahan as a king without a kingdom, wandering around the countryside in search of a place to rest his lawn chair "throne."
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Violator (Music) / int_361d0d58
 Violator (Music) / int_51f90774
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Step Up to the Microphone
 Violator (Music) / int_51f90774
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Step Up to the Microphone: Martin sings lead on "Sweetest Perfection" and "Blue Dress".
 Violator (Music) / int_51f90774
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Violator (Music) / int_51f90774
 Violator (Music) / int_575fd5e2
type
Dark Is Not Evil
 Violator (Music) / int_575fd5e2
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Dark Is Not Evil: "Waiting for the Night":
 Violator (Music) / int_575fd5e2
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Violator (Music) / int_575fd5e2
 Violator (Music) / int_5e835a41
type
Gratuitous Panning
 Violator (Music) / int_5e835a41
comment
Gratuitous Panning: The synth blips that serve as the rhythm track for "Waiting for the Night" jump between the left and right audio channels with each successive beat. The percussion section in "Blue Dress" features staccato synthesized drums that pan between audio channels with each subsequent hit, and they constantly drum in sextuplets. Those sensitive to directional shifts in sound may feel a bit dizzy when listening with headphones. The synth blips in "Interlude #3" gradually pan back and forth across the two audio channels. Fittingly for a track inspired by a Pink Floyd song (see Shout-Out), "Clean" includes a bass that plays one rhythm from left-to-right almost throughout.
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Violator (Music) / int_5e835a41
 Violator (Music) / int_5fe1360d
type
Audience Participation Song
 Violator (Music) / int_5fe1360d
comment
Audience Participation Song: "Personal Jesus" and "Enjoy the Silence" in concert.
 Violator (Music) / int_5fe1360d
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Violator (Music) / int_5fe1360d
 Violator (Music) / int_6298c177
type
Sequel Song
 Violator (Music) / int_6298c177
comment
Sequel Song: "Blue Dress" appears to be one to "Something to Do" from Some Great Reward, featuring similar imagery of dresses; the line "put it on and don't say a word" that opens "Blue Dress" seems to further this by harking back to the line "I'd put your pretty dress on" that appears near the end of "Something to Do".
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Violator (Music) / int_6298c177
 Violator (Music) / int_67784113
type
Non-Appearing Title
 Violator (Music) / int_67784113
comment
Non-Appearing Title: "Blue Dress", which holds the distinction of being the only straightforward example of this trope in a Martin Gore-penned song that isn't an instrumental. 'Straightforward' in that this is however played with on "Enjoy the Silence": the title doesn't appear in the main song, but rather opens the hidden "Interlude #2 (Crucified)" that immediately follows it. It also appears at the end of the video version of the song, without the following interlude. The interlude is absent on the song's single release, playing this trope straight there.
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 Violator (Music) / int_72b0dfd2
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Being Good Sucks
 Violator (Music) / int_72b0dfd2
comment
Being Good Sucks: "Policy of Truth":
 Violator (Music) / int_72b0dfd2
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Violator (Music) / int_72b0dfd2
 Violator (Music) / int_74149c93
type
Epic Rocking
 Violator (Music) / int_74149c93
comment
Epic Rocking: The 6:07 "Waiting for the Night", although "rocking" would be a very strong word for what is a quiet, gentle, atmospheric mood-piece. "Enjoy the Silence" also qualifies if one includes the hidden interlude.
 Violator (Music) / int_74149c93
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Violator (Music) / int_74149c93
 Violator (Music) / int_74b7629c
type
Instrumentals
 Violator (Music) / int_74b7629c
comment
"Blue Dress", which holds the distinction of being the only straightforward example of this trope in a Martin Gore-penned song that isn't an instrumental.
 Violator (Music) / int_74b7629c
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Violator (Music) / int_74b7629c
 Violator (Music) / int_870bbf64
type
Show, Don't Tell
 Violator (Music) / int_870bbf64
comment
Show, Don't Tell: The message behind "Enjoy the Silence", which can pretty much be summed up as "actions speak louder than words".
 Violator (Music) / int_870bbf64
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Violator (Music) / int_870bbf64
 Violator (Music) / int_8741b74
type
Playing with a Trope
 Violator (Music) / int_8741b74
comment
'Straightforward' in that this is however played with on "Enjoy the Silence": the title doesn't appear in the main song, but rather opens the hidden "Interlude #2 (Crucified)" that immediately follows it. It also appears at the end of the video version of the song, without the following interlude. The interlude is absent on the song's single release, playing this trope straight there.
 Violator (Music) / int_8741b74
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Violator (Music) / int_8741b74
 Violator (Music) / int_c75df49a
type
Shout-Out
 Violator (Music) / int_c75df49a
comment
Shout-Out: The rhythmic breathing and parts of the drum part in "Personal Jesus" are sampled from "The Dreaming" by Kate Bush. Both tracks also reference religious imagery in their titles, with "Personal Jesus" referencing, well, Jesus (albeit metaphorically), and "The Dreaming" referencing a key concept in Aboriginal mythology. "Clean" quotes the opening bassline of "One of These Days" by Pink Floyd. In an inverse example, "Black Skinhead" by Kanye West features a percussion section audibly inspired by that of "Personal Jesus", particularly the latter's interlude of thumping cases and heavy breathing; a mashup of the two songs was featured in a trailer for Atomic Blonde to highlight the reference.
 Violator (Music) / int_c75df49a
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Violator (Music) / int_c75df49a
 Violator (Music) / int_cc4b45f6
type
Word of God
 Violator (Music) / int_cc4b45f6
comment
The opening track "World in My Eyes" is also much lighter in its subject matter than previous Martin Gore-penned Depeche Mode songs; Word of God describes it as "saying that love and sex and pleasure are positive things."
 Violator (Music) / int_cc4b45f6
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Violator (Music) / int_cc4b45f6
 Violator (Music) / int_ce6555f0
type
Lighter and Softer
 Violator (Music) / int_ce6555f0
comment
Lighter and Softer: While the lyrics continue the dark, melodramatic, and sexually-driven tone established in 1984's Some Great Reward, the instrumentation on most songs is noticeably softer and rock-oriented compared to the industrial-influenced style of the band's albums from Construction Time Again to Music for the Masses. The opening track "World in My Eyes" is also much lighter in its subject matter than previous Martin Gore-penned Depeche Mode songs; Word of God describes it as "saying that love and sex and pleasure are positive things."
 Violator (Music) / int_ce6555f0
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Violator (Music) / int_ce6555f0
 Violator (Music) / int_d33d9ca1
type
Despair Gambit
 Violator (Music) / int_d33d9ca1
comment
Despair Gambit: The ambitious, short chorus of "World In My Eyes" features something similar to this, by convincing the one listening to the narrator that the situation is ending:
 Violator (Music) / int_d33d9ca1
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Violator (Music) / int_d33d9ca1
 Violator (Music) / int_d3f33049
type
Blasphemous Boast
 Violator (Music) / int_d3f33049
comment
Blasphemous Boast: "Personal Jesus" is built around this trope, right down to the title.
 Violator (Music) / int_d3f33049
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Violator (Music) / int_d3f33049
 Violator (Music) / int_e0d20ea6
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Intentionally Awkward Title
 Violator (Music) / int_e0d20ea6
comment
Intentionally Awkward Title: You don't call an album Violator and expect people to read it innocuously...
 Violator (Music) / int_e0d20ea6
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Violator (Music) / int_e0d20ea6
 Violator (Music) / int_e144beb6
type
Everything Is an Instrument
 Violator (Music) / int_e144beb6
comment
Everything Is an Instrument: The percussion track to "Personal Jesus" was created by recording the band members jumping on their instrument cases.
 Violator (Music) / int_e144beb6
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Violator (Music) / int_e144beb6
 Violator (Music) / int_e21e21be
type
Red and Black and Evil All Over
 Violator (Music) / int_e21e21be
comment
Red and Black and Evil All Over: Red and black and edgy, actually. The cover for the album is a red posterized rose flower on top of a plain black background, and fittingly, the songs included on the album are very dark.
 Violator (Music) / int_e21e21be
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Violator (Music) / int_e21e21be
 Violator (Music) / int_e26cfcc4
type
Ironic Episode Title
 Violator (Music) / int_e26cfcc4
comment
Ironic Episode Title: ...although, like Music for the Masses before it, the title for Violator was chosen specifically to invoke this trope. As explained by Martin Gore in a 1990 interview:
 Violator (Music) / int_e26cfcc4
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 Violator (Music) / int_e303d198
type
Whole-Plot Reference
 Violator (Music) / int_e303d198
comment
Whole-Plot Reference: According to Martin Gore, "Personal Jesus" was based on Elvis and Me, Priscilla Presley's 1985 book chronicling her dysfunctional relationship with her late husband, Elvis Presley.
 Violator (Music) / int_e303d198
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Violator (Music) / int_e303d198
 Violator (Music) / int_f1dcdabc
type
Hidden Track
 Violator (Music) / int_f1dcdabc
comment
Hidden Track: "Enjoy the Silence" and "Blue Dress" continue Depeche Mode's habit of including these, featuring follow-ups to the unlisted "Interlude #1" from Music for the Masses; like previously, the two "interludes" on Violator are sequenced as being part of the same track as the songs that directly precede them.
 Violator (Music) / int_f1dcdabc
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Violator (Music) / int_f1dcdabc
 Violator (Music) / int_fa77309d
type
Alternate Album Cover
 Violator (Music) / int_fa77309d
comment
Alternate Album Cover: While both CD and LP copies feature an image of a red rose, the CD release's cover◊ zooms in on the upper half; LP copies and CD longboxes feature the rose in full, as pictured above.
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Violator (Music)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Violator (Music)
hasFeature
Better Export for You / int_5a8146a1
 Violator (Music)
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British Music / int_5a8146a1
 Violator (Music)
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Dark Wave / int_5a8146a1
 Violator (Music)
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Everything Is an Instrument / int_5a8146a1
 Violator (Music)
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Hidden Track / int_5a8146a1