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Sounds of the Universe est le douzième album studio du groupe britannique Depeche Mode, sorti à l'échelle mondiale le 20 avril 2009 (entre une sortie anticipée le 17 en Allemagne, en Suisse et Australie et une sortie américaine le 21).
Pour la seconde fois, Depeche Mode a fait appel au producteur Ben Hillier.
Si l'album contient treize titres, une édition "Deluxe" comporte, outre cinq chansons supplémentaires (Light, The Sun and the Moon and the Stars, Ghost, Esque et Oh Well) suivies de remixs sur un second CD, des démos d'anciennes chansons sur un troisième CD, un DVD, et plusieurs objets (deux livres, deux badges, un poster, etc.).
Le premier single tiré de cet album est Wrong, diffusé à partir du mois de février 2009 (présenté aux Echo Awards, en Allemagne, le 21 février) et mis en vente le 6 avril. La vidéo du single a été réalisée par le réalisateur Patrick Daughters, célèbre pour sa vidéo de la chanson 1234 de Leslie Feist.
Le deuxième single est la septième plage de l'album : Peace il sort le 15 juin 2009. Le clip a été réalisé par le duo Jonas & Francois (ayant déjà travaillé avec Justice, Kanye West, Madonna) et raconte la triste histoire d'une jeune femme, jouée par l'actrice roumaine Maria Dinulescu.
User Album Review
As if to underline the artlessness of 90 percent of 'modern' pop acts who currently trade in 80s recreations, acts like U2 and the Pet Shop Boys are currently back to doing what they used to do so well. It's as if they're saying: ''hold on, we're not dead yet. stop dancing on graves that haven't even been dug.'' And now, joining 2009's roster of middle aged marvels, here come Depeche Mode. Sounds Of The Universe, the band's first album for four years reveals, here a trio who still sound just as committed and creative as they did 20 years ago. Maybe more so.
The album packs a raft of analogue synths and crunchy new wave guitar riffs. While advance notice of the album warned of the use of old school gear to evoke the cosmic, the band needed no ironic excuse to get out the Korgs and Moogs. They were doing this well before today's striplings were even a glint in the milkman's eye, so surely they have the right to wield such retro gear. And they wield it very well indeed. Like a barely reformed bad boy Dave Gahan intones, ''I could corrupt you, it would be ugly''. But despite the posturing this is a strangely warming soupcon of Eastern European cold war menace with a dash of turbo-charged Saturn Five thrown in on tracks like Come Back.
While single Wrong rides on a massed chorus and litany of ill-fortune, tracks like Perfect or Peace brim with poise and beautifully placed electronics that bring the best of Kraftwerk's very human tinkering to mind. Many of the songs remind us that self redemption is something they're justly proud of. ''I'm leaving bitterness behind this time. I'm cleaning out my mind'' sings Gahan. And while many may have scoffed at the teens from Basildon's transformation to smack addled leather and rubber goths, Martin Gore's way with a tune is fairly undeniable.
As if to highlight the intervening years that have seen Gahan branch into solo territory, there are three songs that bear his name as a co-writer; easily the equal of Gore's efforts. In return Martin gets to sing his own Jezebel which overcomes a rather risible opening couplet (''They call you Jezebel, whenever we walk in. You're going straight to hell, for wanton acts of sin'') by dint of a performance that's akin to a lounge singer on tranquilizers.
It would be nice to think that this will finally make modern bands give up on recreating the past and give us something new but it's probably a vain hope. No matter, Sounds Of The Universe easily rises above the pretenders.
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