Depeche Mode fans call for hometown recognition

Depeche Mode's Martin Gore, wearing a grey and black jumper, and Dave Gahan, wearing sunglasses, a black T-shirt and gold necklace, stand again a backdrop of keyboards and speakers. To the left a logo says BBC Radio 2 and to the right  it says Piano Room.
Image caption,

Depeche Mode's Martin Gore and Dave Gahan, who both now live in the US, were photographed for BBC Radio 2's Piano Room at Maida Vale Studios in 2023

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Fans of one of the world's biggest-selling bands have called for them to be officially recognised in their home town.

Depeche Mode started out as a four-piece in Basildon, Essex, in 1980 before achieving global fame with their trademark electronic sound and brooding lyrics.

Barclay Quarton, lead singer with tribute band The Devout, said: "In Basildon, there should be some sort of mural or something that draws in tourism from around the globe to say magic was created here."

Basildon Council has not responded to a request for comment.

Andy Fletcher stands with his hands on his hips and smiling at the camera, next to Martin Gore, who is wearing all black and has curly blonde hair and Dave Gahan, who is wearing a shirt and jeans and looking at the other two and smiling at them. They are standing in front of a public building, made of steel, glass and stone concrete panels.Image source, Getty Images
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Andy Fletcher, who died in 2022, is pictured with bandmates Martin Gore and Dave Gahan in Basildon in 1980

Quarton said: "Magic started here in this little town in Essex and it means a lot to millions and millions of people."

Calls for official recognition come as a BBC Radio 4 documentary Depeche Mode: Reach Out and Touch Faith speaks to commentators and guests about the group's working class roots and remarkable journey as musicians.

The band and crew are in various positions on stage in a tent during preparations for a gig.Image source, Deb Danahay
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Depeche Mode during a soundcheck in the Netherlands at their first overseas gig, supporting Tuxedo Moon on 25 July 1981

The band, originally called Composition of Sound, was formed by friends Andy Fletcher, Vince Clarke and Martin Gore before Dave Gahan was recruited later.

They performed for the first time as a four-piece at Nicholas School, now James Hornsby School in Laindon, Basildon, which Gore and the late Fletcher attended, with Clarke a former pupil at Laindon High Road School.

The band playing on a TV set, with black and white graphic prints and stripes. Yellow lights illuminate the smoke around the bottom of the set.
Image caption,

The band played children's TV show Saturday Superstore in 1983

The band, however, mostly live in the United States now and have been critical of their hometown in interviews.

Gore was quoted as saying: "I really hated Basildon. I wanted to get out as quickly as I could... I hear it's a pretty horrible place these days," while Gahan was quoted as saying: "All I remember about Basildon was that it was awful."

A close-up of Ms Danahay with her hands either side of her face. She has dark slicked back hair and is wearing black rimmed glasses. She is sitting in a restaurant.Image source, Deb Danahay family
Image caption,

Deb Danahay said she bonded with frontman Gahan over music and fashion while they were pupils at Barstable School in Basildon

Deb Danahay first became friends with Gahan at Barstable School, with Depeche Mode playing one of their first gigs at a party she co-hosted at Paddocks Community Hall, Laindon.

She used to help run the Depeche Mode Information Service in the band's early days and was in a relationship for four years with Clarke, who left to launch Yazoo with fellow Basildon musician Alison Moyet and later Erasure with Andy Bell.

Six men, wearing Depeche Mode T-shirts, sit on a sofa in front of pixelated portraits of Gore, Gahan and Fletcher.Image source, Deb Danahay
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A group of Depeche Mode fans travelled from Argentina to visit the band's birthplace, and took in the Towngate Theatre to see the portraits there

Ms Danahay now takes dedicated Depeche Mode fans - known as Devotees - on tours of Basildon, built to ease post-war overcrowding in London.

The majority of visitors were from Europe, particularly Germany, and South America, she said.

"Most of them think they're going to come to the town centre and there's going to be statues of the band - they're really shocked [that there isn't]," she said.

A black shiny plaque says: Martin Gore and Andrew Fletcher former students of this school - together with Vince Clarke and Dave Gahan - played their first concert here in 1980 as Depeche Mode.Image source, Deb Danahay
Image caption,

A plaque at the old Nicholas School is one of the few reminders that the band formed in the "new" town of Basildon

Ms Danahay, who lives in Canvey Island, said that while there was a plaque in James Hornsby School's sports hall to commemorate Depeche Mode's first gig, there was little else in the way of official recognition.

A photo of the infographic board featuring photos and circles of short information about James Hornsby School's famous alumni. The school, with flat roofs, is built in blocks and sprawls over a significantly-sized site.Image source, Deb Danahay
Image caption,

Martin Gore, Andy Fletcher; Perry Bamonte, of The Cure; Alison Moyet; and Bob the Builder creator Keith Chapman all attended the former Nicholas School, with Vince Clarke a pupil at Laindon High Road, which it later merged with

On tours, she is limited to taking fans to a board outside featuring photographs of Gore, Fletcher and Clarke along with former pupils Alison Moyet, The Cure's Perry Bamonte, and Bob the Builder and Paw Patrol creator Keith Chapman.

Fans appreciated giant portraits of the band members in the Towngate Theatre too, she said.

Dave Gahan is wearing an orange billowy shirt and leather like trousers, while holding a microphone and looking into the audience.  Vince Clarke is playing a keyboard and singing and has blonde hair, and is wearing a leather jacket and orange and black camoflage T-shirt. Andy Fletcher is standing, obscured behind Dave Gahan. Martin Gore is to the right of the image, wearing a black mesh top, leather straps, a studden black belt and leather trousers.
Image caption,

The original Depeche Mode line-up on Top of the Pops in 1981

As pioneers of the electronic sound inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2020, Depeche Mode and their peers were shaped by growing up in a new town surrounded by young people, Ms Danahay said.

"My parents... came from Dagenham and lots of Dagenham and East End people moved there," she said.

"They got a brand new house and the town centre wasn't even built then - and it's an analogy that I've heard, that it was because there were no old people... there wasn't people saying you shouldn't be doing this or that.

"We had so much freedom and didn't appreciate it because we thought this was how everyone's town was: the schools were brand new, everything was completely brand new.

"It was just brilliant."

Black and white photo of Dave Gahan, Andy Fletcher, Martin Gore and Vince Clarke leaning on one another and looking directly at the camera. They have their hands on a metal counter and are standing in front of tiled walls.
Image caption,

Depeche Mode photographed backstage at Top of the Pops in the early days of their pop career and before Vince Clarke (far right) was replaced by Alan Wilder at the end of 1981

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