Martin Lee Gore (born 23 July 1961)[1] is an English musician and songwriter. He is one of the founding members of the electronic music band Depeche Mode and is the band's main songwriter.[2] He is the band's guitarist and keyboardist, and occasionally provides lead vocals.[3] Gore possesses a tenor singing voice which contrasts with lead vocalist Dave Gahan's dramatic baritone. He is also known for his flamboyant and (sometimes) androgynousstage persona. Gore has also released several solo albums and collaborated with former Depeche Mode member Vince Clarke as part of VCMG.[4]
Gore's songs include themes such as sex, religion and politics.[5] He has said he feels lyrical themes that tackle issues related to solitude and loneliness are a better representation of reality, whereas he finds "happy songs" fake and unrealistic.[6] At the same time, he asserts that the band's music contains "an element of hope".[7]
Martin Lee Gore was born in London, England. His biological father was an African-AmericanG.I. stationed in Britain.[9] Gore was raised by his stepfather David Gore and biological mother Pamela, who both worked at the Ford of Britain motor plant in Dagenham.[10] He believed his stepfather was his biological father until the age of 30, when he learned of his biological father.[11] Gore later met his biological father in the American South.[9] Gore has described his upbringing as "normal" and "stable" and has said that he was an introvert who preferred to spend time reading alone rather than with school peers. However, he also stated that he enjoyed his time at school and took part in foreign exchange trips.[10] His family briefly lived in Hornchurch during his upbringing before moving to Basildon, where he attended the Nicholas Comprehensive School. During school he was the guitarist in a local band called Norman and the Worms.[9][10]
Gore taught himself to play keyboard from the 1970s, never receiving formal training. He learned to perform chart hits, figuring out their structures via the magazine Disco 45.[12] He shared a class with Andy "Fletch" Fletcher, Alison Moyet and Perry Bamonte.[13] Gore left Nicholas Comprehensive after completing his A-levels in 1979 and took a job as a bank cashier. During evenings, weekends and any other spare time, he remained involved with Norman and the Worms.[14][15] He became interested in electronic music upon hearing acts such as Kraftwerk, the Human League and Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark (OMD).[12] He borrowed a Korg 700S from a friend, before purchasing a Yamaha CS5, his first synthesizer.[12]
Gore has two younger half-sisters, Karen, born in 1967, and Jacqueline, born in 1968.[10]
Left: Gore (centre-right) in 1984; Right: Gore in 1986
In 1980, Gore reunited with classmate Andy Fletcher at the Van Gogh club. Fletcher recruited him into his band Composition of Sound, along with Vince Clarke. Soon the band drafted Dave Gahan to be the band's lead singer after hearing him sing "Heroes" by David Bowie.[16] Gore is the band's keyboardist, contributes backing vocals,[3] and occasionally provides lead vocals.[17][18]
When explaining the band's choice for their name, 'Depeche Mode' (which was taken from French fashion magazineDépêche Mode),[19] Gore said, "It means 'hurried fashion' or 'fashion dispatch'. I like the sound of that."[20] However, the magazine's name (and hence the band's) correctly translates to something like "Fashion News" or "Fashion Update".[21]
Gore wrote two tracks on Depeche Mode's debut album, Speak & Spell: "Tora! Tora! Tora!" and the instrumental "Big Muff".[22] "Any Second Now (Voices)" features Gore's first lead vocals for the band.[16] When Clarke announced his departure from Depeche Mode in 1981, Gore became the principal songwriter for the band.[2] Songs Gore wrote for Depeche Mode's second album, A Broken Frame (1982), differed musically and lyrically from Clarke's. Gore's writing became gradually darker and more political on subsequent Depeche Mode albums.[16] He sings lead vocals on several of the band's songs, notably ballads – his tenor voice provides a contrast to Gahan's dramatic baritone.[23][24][25]
Former Depeche Mode colleague Vince Clarke collaborated with Gore for the first time since 1981 as techno duo VCMG on an instrumental minimalist electronic dance album called Ssss, released on 12 March 2012. The first single, Spock, was originally released worldwide exclusively on Beatport on 30 November 2011.[33][34] The second, Single Blip, was also released exclusively on Beatport on 20 February 2012, and the third one, Aftermaths, was released on 20 August 2012.[35]
MG
In late February 2015, several teaser images were displayed on Gore's official Facebook page,[36] citing a hashtag "MGxMG", which was later revealed to be a promotional tool for his new solo studio album, titled MG (named similarly to his previous collaborative album, VCMG, with Vince Clarke from 2012). In a news post on his official website and various social media on 2 March, this confirmation of his new studio album announced its release would be on 27 or 28 April and previewed a track, Europa Hymn, from the new album.[37][38]
In 2019, Gore received the Moog Innovation Award "for his many contributions to the exploration of sound in popular music".[44]
Musical pioneer Martin Gore's masterful electronic meditations on the human condition have illuminated the connection between transformative sound and pure emotion for decades. A founding member of the band Depeche Mode, Gore's sensual electronic compositions and introspective lyrics have resonated with faithful audiences around the world and impacted the direction of countless visionary artists from Trent Reznor to Johnny Cash. Gore's enduring ability to connect the rawest aspects of the human experience to the dance floor defined an era and perpetually reminds us what it means to be human through the emotional power of electronic sound.
Gore lives in Santa Barbara, California.[45] He started dating lingerie designer and model Suzanne Boisvert after meeting in Paris in 1989. They married in August 1994, had three children and divorced in 2006.[46][47][48][16] In June 2014, he married Kerrilee Kaski, with whom he has two daughters.[49][46][50]
He had stress-induced seizures during the band's 1993 Devotional Tour[53] and publicly acknowledged his past alcoholism.[54] During a break on the Devotional Tour in Denver, Colorado, he was arrested by local police and fined $50 for holding a loud party in his hotel room.[55]
Recorded with English female duo Client. Gore sings backing vocals on this track.
"Cloud Nine"
Item (EP)
Recorded with duo Onetwo (Claudia Brücken und Paul Humphreys). Gore co-wrote the song with Brücken, and he also plays guitar on this track. Also appears on the Onetwo album Instead (2007), and Brücken's compilation Combined (2011).
Recorded with Nitzer Ebb. Gore sings backing vocals on this track.
"The Unstoppable Collision"
2011
Nameless
Recorded with the band Compact Space (Daryl Bamonte, Florian Kraemmer, and Depeche Mode session drummer Christian Eigner). Gore plays guitar on this track.
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