Recorded in England, Denmark and Italy between May and September 1989, Depeche Modes seventh studio album Violator was a landmark record beloved by fans and universally regarded as the bands creative highpoint. Eventually selling 7.5 million copies following its release in March 1990, Violator gave the cult British band Dave Gahan, Martin Gore, Andy Fletch Fletcher and Alan Wilder the critical acclaim they finally deserved. The adventurous, highly experimental approach that the band took for Violator recording sessions also yielded two of the bands most recognisable and successful singles in Personal Jesus and Enjoy The Silence. Produced by the band with the influential studio guru Flood and mixed by the legendary François Kevorkian, Violator is viewed as a hugely groundbreaking body of work by countless musicians and DJs, such was its progressive synthesis of electronic, rock, dance and pop music. The album revealed a new maturity and sensitivity to Martin Gores songwriting and allowed the bands inquisitive Alan Wilder to come to the fore as a principal architect of the bands approach to studio production. This period in the bands history also found them forging a deeply trusted and influential partnership with photographer and designer Anton Corbijn, often viewed as the fifth member of Depeche Mode at this time. Corbijns work with the Area creative agency for the Violator project delivered iconic, integrated artwork, photography, videos and short films across the album, its singles, and tour design. Written by uber-fans Kevin May and David McElroy, with Halo we find ourselves shadowing the band in the studio, on an intense, pivotal worldwide tour and on the sets of arty Super 8 vignettes. We watch as samples and sounds are painstakingly wrought into rhythms, as flights are missed to secure additional seconds of mix time, as label executives in boardrooms deliberate over the order of the albums singles. We find ourselves in downtown LA at the scene of an apocryphal riot as fans clamour to get their copies of the album signed. We observe the often misunderstood but hugely important role that the late Andy Fletcher played in the band and witness the tumultuous emotional pressures on the bands frontman, Dave Gahan. During an intense and pivotal two-and-a-half years in the life of the group, we follow Depeche Mode as they complete their metamorphosis into one of the most significant bands of a generation, and place the success and innovations of Violator at the dead centre of the rapidly-changing late-80s, early-90s musical zeitgeist. More than an album biography, Halo goes deep behind the scenes of the bands Violator period. The book takes the form of a detailed oral history from those who were there in the studio with the band, working behind the cameras, designing sleeves and appearing in the videos; support acts, tour managers, publicists and fans. The book features detailed interviews with central figures involved with the band as they transitioned their sound and image to a stadium-friendly aesthetic, as well as those whose trusted contributions were essential for the creation of Violator. With Halo, authors Kevin May and David McElroy have produced an essential guide for Depeche Mode fans and anyone inquisitive about the making of a classic, genre-defining album.
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