Future Music

VINCE CLARKE

Vince Clarke is almost unique in the synth-pop world for attaining significant success with a multitude of electronic bands throughout the ’80s and beyond. Having studied violin and piano at school, the South Woodford, Londonborn songwriter teamed up with schoolmate Andy Fletcher prior to the formation of Depeche Mode, then promptly left the band after their debut album Speak & Spell (1981) hit the top 10.

Shortly after, the introverted electro-pop mastermind met Alison Moyet to have huge but brief success with Yazoo before scoring even greater chart triumphs as one half of the interminable dance-pop duo Erasure, with vocalist Andy Bell. The restless Clarke has also collaborated with Martin Gore for the 2011 album VCMG and other electronic luminaries such as Heaven 17’s Martyn Ware, Jean-Michel Jarre and Orbital’s Paul Hartnoll, amongst others.

Indeed, it was during Clarke’s collaboration with Gore that he was introduced to the world of Eurorack. After building a system and spending a few years simply admiring it, he began to dig a lot deeper during the pandemic,surfacing a few years later with a series of tracks simply titled Drone. Persuaded by Mute Records boss Daniel Miller to elongate those recordings, Clarke finally releases his first solo album Songs of Silence – a dark, minimalist ode to sci-fi film soundtracks.

“THE OB-8 I CAN UNDERSTAND [THROWING AWAY] BECAUSE IT’S DREADFUL, BUT THE ROLANDS… THAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN A BAD DECISION”.

Was your early fascination with electronic sounds led by the music that was around in the ’70s and early ’80s or the technology itself?

“It was the new records that I started hearing in the early ’80s. When bands like The Human League, Soft Cell and OMD started releasing records, it became kind of a scene in my home town for myself and likeminded fans. We were interested in this stuff whenever it was played in the front rooms at various friends’ parties, but it wasn’t a genre back then – it was a whole new sound.”

When you started making electronic music, what access did you have to gear, which was presumably quite expensive at the time?

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Future Music

Future Music4 min read
Pharrell Williams
Very few musicians have commanded the same level of influence as Pharrell Williams. Flourishing both behind the boards and in front of the mic, Pharrell has made a name for himself as both a worlddominating artist and a hitmaking producer, earning le
Future Music4 min read
Releases
Kranky Adam Wiltzie is best known for his work with Star of the Lid, the influential drone outfit he founded alongside Brian McBride, who sadly passed away last year. Eleven Fugues for Sodium Pentothal is Wiltzie’s first true solo album, released un
Future Music3 min read
Gear Guide
Review: FM397 | Push finally lives up to Ableton’s vision of controller-as-instrument, and standalone mode is a great new way to use Live. Review: FM402 A fabulous evolution of the classic APC form, and the standalone functions will bring it into all

Related Books & Audiobooks