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Black Celebration [LP]
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Black Celebration [LP]
Current price: $11.99
Barnes and Noble
Black Celebration [LP]
Current price: $11.99
Size: CD
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Whether the band felt it was simply the time to move on from its most explicit industrial-pop fusion days, or whether increased success and concurrently larger venues pushed the music into different avenues,
Depeche Mode
's fifth studio album,
Black Celebration
, saw the group embarking on a path that in many ways defined their sound to the present: emotionally extreme lyrics matched with amped-up tunes, as much anthemic rock as they are compelling dance, along with stark, low-key ballads. The slow, sneaky build of the opening title track, with a strange distorted vocal sample providing a curious opening hook, sets the tone as
David Gahan
sings of making it through "another black day" while powerful drums and echoing metallic pings carry the song.
is actually heavier on the ballads throughout, many sung by
Martin Gore
-- the most per album he has yet taken lead on -- with notable dramatic beauties including "Sometimes," with its surprise gospel choir start and rough piano sonics, and the hyper-nihilistic "World Full of Nothing." The various singles from the album remain definite highlights, such as "A Question of Time," a brawling, aggressive number with a solid
Gahan
vocal, and the romantic/physical politics of "Stripped," featuring particularly sharp arrangements from
Alan Wilder
. However, with such comparatively lesser-known but equally impressive numbers as the quietly intense romance of "Here Is the House" to boast,
is solid through and through. ~ Ned Raggett
Depeche Mode
's fifth studio album,
Black Celebration
, saw the group embarking on a path that in many ways defined their sound to the present: emotionally extreme lyrics matched with amped-up tunes, as much anthemic rock as they are compelling dance, along with stark, low-key ballads. The slow, sneaky build of the opening title track, with a strange distorted vocal sample providing a curious opening hook, sets the tone as
David Gahan
sings of making it through "another black day" while powerful drums and echoing metallic pings carry the song.
is actually heavier on the ballads throughout, many sung by
Martin Gore
-- the most per album he has yet taken lead on -- with notable dramatic beauties including "Sometimes," with its surprise gospel choir start and rough piano sonics, and the hyper-nihilistic "World Full of Nothing." The various singles from the album remain definite highlights, such as "A Question of Time," a brawling, aggressive number with a solid
Gahan
vocal, and the romantic/physical politics of "Stripped," featuring particularly sharp arrangements from
Alan Wilder
. However, with such comparatively lesser-known but equally impressive numbers as the quietly intense romance of "Here Is the House" to boast,
is solid through and through. ~ Ned Raggett