Violator is a well-produced album. Depeche Mode, along with co-producer Flood (Mark Ellis), build songs upon thick layers of sound. Thus, the songs crafted here gain depth from always being sonically engaging and lyrically thought provoking. Being musically daring creates an atmosphere of danger where the production polish never detracts from the dark ambience.
"World In My Eyes", (86/100), begins the album with an ominous sense of foreboding, effected in part by a sinister synth line, doctored and distorted at times, a breathy, infectious beat and the trademark glum delivery of Dave Gahan. The menacing mood of the song would lend itself quite well to some noir spy film, establishing an atmosphere of intrigue curious listeners can't help but succumb to.
Songwriter Martin Gore takes the vocals on "Sweetest Perfection", (88), without disturbing the mood at all. If anything, the haunted string section and discordant tones here only take it up a notch. More and more sounds are added to the mix, each melting and rotting before your ears, as the song's intensification seems to bring it to the very brink of abandon. "Sweetest" compounds itself, a clever analogy of the decay that addiction multiplies, until it ends the only way it really can, abruptly.
Is there light at the end of this dark tunnel? "Personal Jesus", (92), is, of course, one of Depeche Mode's best known songs, covered by a long list that includes Swedish rock n' roller Jerry Williams and American Man In Black, Johnny Cash. Propelling along lines of faith and forgiveness, the real illumination of this song is in truly being there for someone when they need it. How much more tolerable a place the world would be if the proverbs, platitudes and principles so easily dropped from our mouths were actually acted upon.
"Halo", (88), shines a light of another sort. Exposing those who use guilt to manipulate others, this song affirms the beneficial beauty of forgiveness. Likening guilt to "chains" and "shackles," the inherent need to both wilfully allocate and humbly accept grace becomes evident. The strange chords and especially the harmonies of the chorus are remarkable, while a gust of strings takes the song through its fade out.
Next, "Waiting For The Night", (87), is a soft ode to the protective powers of twilight. If you can't hurt what you can't see, this song finds relief in a tranquil, escapist shell, shielded by a shroud of darkness granting a manner of self-assured invincibility through invisibility. "Waiting" seeks asylum by squinting its eyes and covering its ears, which subtly speaks to the kinds of horrors in a world that could drive someone to this.
The yearning for placid stillness continues in "Enjoy The Silence," (100), a song anyone with a penchant for words should heed. Gore's lyrics remind us that "words are trivial ... forgettable ... unnecessary." Politicians, speakers, writers, really anyone who is tempted to open their mouth at some point in time, would do well to consider that the action of the tongue, even well-intentioned, is too often destructive. What we believe will be naturally, and thus more authentically, borne out by actions. Of course, people in need, which is everyone in one way or another, are more likely to be helped by doing something, as opposed to running ragged tongues at them. There's probably more to say about all this, but I fear I've already drooled too many words here. The song with its iconic video can be viewed at: (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dp2mH9nrz60).
For those of the opinion there is no such thing as too much of a good thing, a fifteen-minute "Quad: Final Mix" is available on the Enjoy The Silence CD-single, along with no less than five other remixes. This song was also remixed in 2004 by Mike Shinoda as "Enjoy The Silence (Reinterpreted)" on Remixes 81-04, and released as a single with a Goldfrapp remix of "Halo" as the b-side.
On Violator, "Enjoy The Silence" is followed by the hidden interlude, "Crucified", a short instrumental, except for one unsettling machine-mangled cry of the title. Then, "Policy Of Truth", (90), examines the cost of honesty in a world of lies. Again, this song seems to prefer to stay in the dark, as it were, away from where truth hurts and no good deed goes unpunished. Even the hypocrisy of expecting honesty when we ourselves are seemingly incapable of giving it is cynically questioned. In a world where every word we hear is tainted with distrust from its very inception, greater significance is placed once again on the things we actually do.
It reminds me of the bridge of the song "Strange Days", from the Swirling Eddies' Outdoor Elvis, (1989), penned by Terry Scott Taylor alter ego, Camarillo Eddy: "And when we took the torch into the night/ We vowed to search the highways for an honest man/ But when we looked into each other's eyes/ We knew it would be best to make some other plan." Also coming to mind is Austrian philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein's seventh proposition: "What we cannot speak of, we must pass over in silence," (Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, 1921).
Whether one agrees or not with the song's conclusions, or even if its dire verdict is presented literally or ironically, is almost irrelevant. "Policy Of Truth" affords one the opportunity to contemplate their own values, if there is expediency in lying, if bliss can be truly found in ignorance, or if the ideal of truth is worth keeping completely uncompromised. Conversely, if one does not want to indulge this reflective flavour, "Policy" can be danced to just as well. Musically energetic, a cool recurring guitar twang and beefy brass section help carry these heavy ideas.
Gore grabs the mic for a second turn at vocal duty with "Blue Dress", (83). This song comes out of the shadows long enough to appreciate the kind of authentic happiness which springs from the seemingly smallest of things. Sounds reverberate frequently until the echoey bloops morph into another brilliantly bizarre hidden interlude, titled "Interlude No. 3".
This leads into Violator's final track, "Clean", (93), (http://www.mediafire.com/?gj5ya24fb036t7q). Perhaps as hopeful as Depeche Mode gets, the song leaves its dirty past behind for a better, brighter future. Even so, each change is acknowleged realistically with a chilling, robotic "Sometimes" tempering any unbound optimism. The candid attitude is refreshing, recognizing the future is not easily understood or predicted and that no breakthrough is itself unbreakable. Less sunny than sensible, "Clean" understands its slate is only that for one moment at a time and concludes an excellent album excellently.
The 2006 reissue includes the b-sides from Violator's various singles as bonus tracks. From Personal Jesus comes the catchy, masochistic "Dangerous", followed by the instrumentals "Memphisto" and "Sibeling" from Enjoy The Silence. Both conceive an austere vibe suitable for the closing credits of a sad film, with the former favoured for its intensity. Perhaps the best of all the b-sides, though, is "Kaleid" from Policy Of Truth. Also instrumental, there is a charged guitar base evocative of the Smiths' "How Soon Is Now?" supplying the exhilarating energy of this tune. Finally, the sadistic "Happiest Girl (Jack Mix)" and the impetuous "Sea Of Sin (Tonal Mix)" from the World In My Eyes single revisit some of the album proper's major themes.
What it does not include is the myriad of remixes also available on each respective single and elsewhere. A-sides, b-sides and Violator album cuts have all been reimagined time and again over the years, no doubt sending completists into fits.
Examples of highlights would include the "Personal Jesus (Kazan Cathedral Mix)" from the Sire Records sampler Just Say Da: Volume IV Of Just Say Yes, and the stripped down "bare" versions of "Waiting For The Night" and "Clean" from special releases of DM's 2005 album, Playing The Angel. ("Waiting" comes from iTunes preorders, while "Clean" from the album's limited DVD edition).
Examples of highlights would include the "Personal Jesus (Kazan Cathedral Mix)" from the Sire Records sampler Just Say Da: Volume IV Of Just Say Yes, and the stripped down "bare" versions of "Waiting For The Night" and "Clean" from special releases of DM's 2005 album, Playing The Angel. ("Waiting" comes from iTunes preorders, while "Clean" from the album's limited DVD edition).
Be it even treading the dancefloor, one may come away from this album with a sense that action is truth. I believe my next actions will be to give Violator another listen before retiring to a time of silence, both of which will be enjoyed ...
Violator (album): 89/100.