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Master and Servant
"Master and Servant" is a song by the English electronic band Depeche Mode, released on 20 August 1984 as the second single from their fourth studio album, Some Great Reward (1984). Its sexual subject matter caused some controversy, leading some radio stations to refuse to play it. It was a Top 10 hit on the UK Singles Chart, and charted in the US on both the Hot Dance Club Songs chart and the Billboard Hot 100.
Like the other tracks on the album Some Great Reward on which it was included, "Master and Servant" was recorded mostly in West Berlin to Hansa Studios in early 1984. The band was working to deliberately shed the "teenybopper" image they'd acquired with the first album and early singles, and used the "big" sound produced at Hansa combined with their improved songwriting and evolved image to be taken more seriously as musicians.
"Master and Servant" continued with the socially- and politically-conscious themes of the songs they'd written over the past two years. According to songwriter Martin Gore, "it's a song about domination and exploitation and we use the sexual angle to get that song across."
Similar to their previous single, "People Are People", the band included sampled sounds on "Master and Servant", such as the whip effect, which is based on producer Daniel Miller standing in the studio hissing and spitting. According to the band, they tried to sample a real whip, but "it was hopeless". Other sampled sounds included band member Andrew Fletcher spanking Martin Gore. Final mixing of the track took one week.
"Master and Servant" was released as the second single from their forthcoming album on 20 August 1984, preceding the album's release by one month. The B-side to the single was another new original song, "Set Me Free (Remotivate Me)". In the UK, Mute Records released the single on 7", 12" and limited 12" vinyl, with catalogue numbers 7BONG6, 12BONG6 and L12BONG6, respectively. In Germany, Intercord Records released the single on colored vinyl, with catalogue numbers INT 111.821, INT 126.824 and INT 126.826 for the 3 vinyl formats as well.
The limited 12" single had remixes of both "Master and Servant" and "People Are People" by Adrian Sherwood, Sherwood's second time mixing a Depeche Mode track and also the second time that an artist outside the band was responsible for an official Depeche Mode single remix. Sherwood's remix of "People Are People", called "Are People People?", was called an "innovative", "disturbing" "complete deconstruction" of the song that, according to the Depeche Mode biography Monument by Burmeister and Lange, "fit perfectly into the band's industrial image."
In the US, Sire Records released 7", 12" and promotional 12" versions of the single, though they contained unique remixes not available on the European releases (catalogue numbers 7-28918, 0-20283, and PRO-A-2221). A promotional 7" vinyl was released by Sire Records in Canada (92 89187), and the limited 12" UK single was released promotionally by RCA Records in Spain.
The single reached number 9 on the UK Singles Chart, number 49 on the US Hot Dance Club Songs chart and number 87 on the US Billboard Hot 100.
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Master and Servant
"Master and Servant" is a song by the English electronic band Depeche Mode, released on 20 August 1984 as the second single from their fourth studio album, Some Great Reward (1984). Its sexual subject matter caused some controversy, leading some radio stations to refuse to play it. It was a Top 10 hit on the UK Singles Chart, and charted in the US on both the Hot Dance Club Songs chart and the Billboard Hot 100.
Like the other tracks on the album Some Great Reward on which it was included, "Master and Servant" was recorded mostly in West Berlin to Hansa Studios in early 1984. The band was working to deliberately shed the "teenybopper" image they'd acquired with the first album and early singles, and used the "big" sound produced at Hansa combined with their improved songwriting and evolved image to be taken more seriously as musicians.
"Master and Servant" continued with the socially- and politically-conscious themes of the songs they'd written over the past two years. According to songwriter Martin Gore, "it's a song about domination and exploitation and we use the sexual angle to get that song across."
Similar to their previous single, "People Are People", the band included sampled sounds on "Master and Servant", such as the whip effect, which is based on producer Daniel Miller standing in the studio hissing and spitting. According to the band, they tried to sample a real whip, but "it was hopeless". Other sampled sounds included band member Andrew Fletcher spanking Martin Gore. Final mixing of the track took one week.
"Master and Servant" was released as the second single from their forthcoming album on 20 August 1984, preceding the album's release by one month. The B-side to the single was another new original song, "Set Me Free (Remotivate Me)". In the UK, Mute Records released the single on 7", 12" and limited 12" vinyl, with catalogue numbers 7BONG6, 12BONG6 and L12BONG6, respectively. In Germany, Intercord Records released the single on colored vinyl, with catalogue numbers INT 111.821, INT 126.824 and INT 126.826 for the 3 vinyl formats as well.
The limited 12" single had remixes of both "Master and Servant" and "People Are People" by Adrian Sherwood, Sherwood's second time mixing a Depeche Mode track and also the second time that an artist outside the band was responsible for an official Depeche Mode single remix. Sherwood's remix of "People Are People", called "Are People People?", was called an "innovative", "disturbing" "complete deconstruction" of the song that, according to the Depeche Mode biography Monument by Burmeister and Lange, "fit perfectly into the band's industrial image."
In the US, Sire Records released 7", 12" and promotional 12" versions of the single, though they contained unique remixes not available on the European releases (catalogue numbers 7-28918, 0-20283, and PRO-A-2221). A promotional 7" vinyl was released by Sire Records in Canada (92 89187), and the limited 12" UK single was released promotionally by RCA Records in Spain.
The single reached number 9 on the UK Singles Chart, number 49 on the US Hot Dance Club Songs chart and number 87 on the US Billboard Hot 100.