Blasphemous Rumours" / "Somebody | |
Cover: | DepecheModeBlasphemousRumours.jpg |
Type: | single |
Artist: | Depeche Mode |
Album: | Some Great Reward |
Released: | 29 October 1984 |
Recorded: | June 1984 |
Studio: |
|
Genre: | New wave[1] |
Length: |
|
Label: | Mute |
Producer: |
|
Prev Title: | Master and Servant |
Prev Year: | 1984 |
Blasphemous Rumours | |
Title2: | Somebody |
Next Title: | Shake the Disease |
Next Year: | 1985 |
"Blasphemous Rumours" / "Somebody" is a single by English electronic band Depeche Mode. It was released on 29 October 1984, as their twelfth UK single and first double A-side single.[2] [3] Both A-side songs are from the album Some Great Reward.
The verses to "Blasphemous Rumours" describe a 16-year-old girl who attempts suicide but fails. She experiences a religious revival but is then "Hit by a car / Ended up / On a life support machine" (from the lyrics). The chorus uses these incidents to conclude, "I don't want to start any blasphemous rumours / But I think that God's got a sick sense of humour / And when I die, I expect to find him laughing." Like other songs on Some Great Reward, the song uses a dense sound with extensive sampled percussion. The song stems from the times that Martin Gore would go with bandmate Andy Fletcher and former bandmate Vince Clarke to the church.[4] When Gore initially showed Fletcher the song, he found it quite offensive and said, "It certainly verges on the offensive." Gore describes the song's meaning: Dave Gahan said,
When Depeche Mode announced that they were planning to release "Blasphemous Rumours" as a single, pushback from the religious community[5] resulted, and consequently, the band decided as a compromise to release the single as a double-A side with "Somebody".
"Somebody", which was sung by Gore in the studio in the nude,[6] includes one of Gore's "little twists", where the song builds as if it is a song about finding your perfect love, only to have him reveal at the end "though things like this make me sick / in a case like this I'll get away with it." Gore added this because "I simply can't write your conventional pop fare. A pleasant song to me is unfinished, it isn't telling the full story. Which is why I introduced the twist at the end of 'Somebody' because the song was just too nice. You say I'm cynical about love in my songs and perhaps I am but I think that's an interesting angle. Otherwise you just become mundane like most chart music. Relationships do have their darker side and I like to write about it."[7]
In a significant moment in the Tour of the Universe at the Royal Albert Hall, Alan Wilder made a surprise appearance accompanying by playing the piano while Gore sang "Somebody".[8]
All tracks written by Martin L. Gore, except "Ice Machine", written by Vince Clarke, and "Two Minute Warning", written by Alan Wilder
All live tracks recorded at the Empire Theatre in Liverpool, England on 29 September 1984