Depeche Mode: Black Celebration at 40
According to his family, Martin Gore was a shy, introverted child. But that was then. By his mid-twenties, he had taken to wearing rubber fetish gear and singing ‘A Question Of Lust’ (containing the couplet “My weaknesses / You know each and every one”) to hundreds of thousands of people with his band Depeche Mode. It’s always the quiet ones… Artistically, Gore had come a long way by 1986. Black Celebration is a fine and kinky record that signaled a transition in Depeche Mode’s career; they became darker, sonically more adventurous and sweetly subversive. “If you call yourself a pop band,” remarked Gore at the time, “you can get away with a lot more.” It was the record on which Gore’s burgeoning writing skills thrust him deeper into the epicentre of an already successful group. He provided lead vocals on (an unprecedented) four tracks, including the angst-infected ‘World Full Of Nothing’ and the fabulous dirge of ‘A Question Of Lust’. But more than that, Black C...