Get the Balance Right! explained

Get the Balance Right!
Cover:DepecheModeGetTheBalanceRight.jpg
Border:yes
Type:single
Artist:Depeche Mode
B-Side:The Great Outdoors!
Released:[1]
Recorded:December 1982
Studio:Blackwing (London)
Genre:
Length:
  • 3:12 (7″/single version)
  • 7:56 (12″ version)
Label:Mute
Producer:
Prev Title:Leave in Silence
Prev Year:1982
Next Title:Everything Counts
Next Year:1983

"Get the Balance Right!" is the seventh single by English electronic music band Depeche Mode, released on 31 January 1983.[2] Recorded at Blackwing Studios in December 1982, it is the first Depeche Mode single with Alan Wilder as an official band member; Wilder also co-wrote the B-side track "The Great Outdoors!" with Martin Gore. It is also one of the first Depeche Mode songs to feature guitar; according to Andy Fletcher, the guitar was processed through a synth and phased out of time to make it sound more interesting.[3]

"Get the Balance Right!" was not included on the following album Construction Time Again (although it appears on the deluxe edition of the album), but does appear on the American compilation People Are People and the compilation The Singles 81→85.

B-sides

The B-side is "The Great Outdoors!", an instrumental written by Gore and Wilder. It was featured on the Broken Frame Tour as the introduction theme for selected shows, after an incident with their Revox machine that destroyed almost all their previous intro, "Oberkorn (It's a Small Town)".

Included on the 12″ releases is "Tora! Tora! Tora!" (live), the first live recording released on a Depeche Mode single. A limited edition 12″ of the single was released, which features more live tracks: "My Secret Garden", "See You", and "Satellite". It was the first Depeche Mode single to have a limited edition.

Music video

In the music video, Wilder lip-syncs the first lines of the song, even though Dave Gahan is the lead singer. The director Kevin Hewitt made the assumption that Wilder was the singer and the band was too embarrassed to point out his mistake.[4]

Track listings

All songs written by Martin L. Gore, except "The Great Outdoors!" which was written by Gore and Alan Wilder.

7″ vinyl single

UK: Mute / 7Bong2

12″ vinyl single

UK: Mute / 12Bong2

UK: Mute / L12Bong2 (Limited edition)

US: Sire / 0-29704
Released 7 September 1983. The first two tracks on side two are listed as one track on the sleeve, when they are actually two separate tracks.[1]

CD single

UK: Mute / CDBong2
Released 25 November 1991, from the Singles Box Set #2.[1]
US: Sire/Reprise 40295-2
Released 26 November 1991, from the Singles Box Set #2.[1]
US: Reprise CD BONG 2 (R2 78890A)
Released 30 March 2004, from the Singles Box Set #1 reissue.[1]

Charts

Chart (1983)! scope="col"
Peak
position
UK Indie (OCC)[5] 1

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Official Depeche Mode web site single information . 4 July 2009 . 6 June 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170606170223/http://www.depechemode.com/discography/singles/07_getthebalanceright.html . dead .
  2. Book: Christopher . Michael . Depeche Mode FAQ: All That's Left to Know About the World's Finest Synth-Pop Band . 2020-12-28 . . 978-1-4930-5400-8 . 94 . 29 May 2021 . en.
  3. Book: Miller, Jonathan . Stripped: The True Story of Depeche Mode . . 2004 . 1-84449-415-2 . 245.
  4. Book: Miller, Jonathan . Stripped: Depeche Mode . Omnibus Press . 2008 . 978-1-84772-444-1 . London . 151.
  5. Book: Lazell, Barry . Depeche Mode . http://www.cherryred.co.uk/books/indiehits/d.htm . Indie Hits 1980–1989: The Complete U.K. Independent Charts (Singles & Albums) . . 1997 . 0-95172-069-4 . 4 May 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110605132747/http://www.cherryred.co.uk/books/indiehits/d.htm . 5 June 2011.