Vince Clarke
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Vince Clarke (born Vincent John Martin, South Woodford, Essex, England, July 3, 1960) is an English pop musician and songwriter, who has been involved with a number of successful pop groups, including Depeche Mode, Yazoo, The Assembly and Erasure.
Raised in Basildon, Clarke initially studied the violin and then the piano.
In the late 1970s Clarke and schoolmate Andrew Fletcher formed the short-lived band "No Romance in China". In 1979 he teamed up with Fletcher to form "French Look", an early incarnation of Depeche Mode which was later re-named "Composition of Sound", following the addition of Martin Gore. Vince Clarke initially handled vocals.
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[edit] Depeche Mode
In 1980 singer David Gahan was drafted in to complete the line up and the band was re-named Depeche Mode. The band initially adopted a slick synthesised electropop sound, which produced the album Speak and Spell and the Clarke-penned singles "Dreaming of Me", "New Life" and "Just Can't Get Enough" in 1981. Clarke left Depeche Mode shortly thereafter. There were many rumored reasons pertaining to his departure, but the one that is most commonly said and that he's admitted to was because he did not enjoy the direction that the band was going. In addition, in later interviews (including the documentary on a remastered release of A Broken Frame), it was stated that he didn't enjoy the public aspects of success, such as touring and interviews, and found himself frequently at odds with his bandmates, particularly on the tour bus. When asked about his departure from Depeche Mode in the VH1 Behind the Music television series he said, “I think everybody in the band, especially myself, imagined that the reason we were doing so well was because of themselves… We were pretty young and very lucky, and things had happened very quickly for us and I don’t think we were really mature to handle the situation”. Depeche Mode went on to achieve international stardom.
Clarke has commented on Depeche Mode's post-Speak and Spell material as being a little dark for his taste, but good nonetheless. When asked about it, he said, "Martin was a strong writer. He always had been. And I think when I left, it gave him chance just to sort of emerge as the songwriter. I mean, he could always write songs. It's not like he just started because I left".
[edit] Yazoo
Clarke then teamed up with singer Alison Moyet (at the time known by the nickname of 'Alf') to form the synthpop band Yazoo (known as Yaz in the U.S.), which produced two albums and a string of hits including "Don't Go", "Situation" and "Only You".
Yazoo split in 1983, and Moyet went on to have a solo career.
[edit] The Assembly
In the following few years Clarke teamed up with Eric Radcliffe and their idea was to collaborate as one-off associations with different artists on each new single, thus the name The Assembly, notably with Feargal Sharkey the hit "Never Never". Two years later, another colaboration took place with Paul Quinn of Bourgie Bourgie, the result was the single "One Day" by Vince Clarke & Paul Quinn. However, the project never took off, and Clarke moved on to other projects.
[edit] Erasure
In early-1985 Clarke put an ad in Melody Maker for a singer, and the forty-first applicant was Andy Bell, who was a fan of his earlier projects. He teamed with Bell to form the group Erasure, and the duo became one of the biggest selling acts in British pop music history[citation needed] with international hits like "Oh L'amour", "Sometimes", "Chains of Love" and "A Little Respect".
The band has released fifteen albums to date and have enjoyed a long string of hit singles spanning their twenty-one years together, most recently topped off by the 2005 top five hit "Breathe" taken from their Nightbird album. In 2006 Erasure produced a country-western style acoustic album consisting of mostly non-single cuts from their previous albums. This album, Union Street was preceded by the single "Boy" originally included on their 1997 Cowboy album.
On January 26, 2007, in a video message on the offical Erasure website [1] the band announced the release of their sixteenth (thirteenth studio) album, entitled "Light at the End of the World". Scheduled to be released in the U.K. on May 21, 2007, with a U.S. release the following day, it is to be preceded by a brand new single; "I Could Fall in Love with You", to be released on April 2, 2007.
The album was produced by Gareth Jones and is expected to be a more 'dance oriented' effort than some of their more recent work with Clarke making reference to the new material sounding potentially a bit more like Andy Bell's 2005 solo effort Electric Blue.
[edit] Additional work
Clarke teamed with synthpop producer Martyn Ware (of Heaven 17) in 1999 as "The Clarke & Ware Experiment" and released the album Pretentious. The duo collaborated again in 2001 for the album Spectrum Pursuit Vehicle, which was created with "3D music technology" specifically designed for listening in headphones. 2001 also saw the release of the Clarke-produced album Erasure's Vince Clarke which featured The Peter Pan Effect, an album that he and Eric Radcliffe produced for his long time friend, Robert Marlow. Clarke wrote "Let's Get Together" for the pop girl group Girl Authority for their sophomore album, Road Trip. The song was meant to be for Depeche Mode, but was canceled out.
Clarke currently lives in Maine with his wife Tracy, whom he married in May 2004. They have one child, a son named Oscar, born on September 8, 2005.
[edit] External links
- Erasureinfo.com - The Official Erasure website.
- .:Polish Erasure Forum:. .:Polskie Forum Erasure - Erasure Garden:.
Teamed with Blancmage to form West India Company