![]() Added on top is a separate floppy-based stacked strings sound.Īs the Emulator is pretty hard to come by these days, you can use UVI’s Emulation II soft synth instead, which William also employs to demonstrate the "bell pad" sound. The choir sound Depeche Mode used on "Enjoy the Silence" is straight from a floppy disk. (You can enter your own by signing up for the Synth Sounds Moog Model D Giveaway.) A software emulation like the Arturia Mini V3 will also get you there.Īfter showing off a stack of floppy disks, William turns his attention to " the keyboard of the song," the E-MU Systems Emulator II, an early sampler that takes audio files saved on floppy disks and allows you to play them across a keyboard. William uses the Arturia ARP 2600 V to emulate the "tacky, punchy, gritty sound" of the original unit, while playing the Moog bassline on a hardware Model D. In this second episode of our brand-new season of The Synth Sounds Of… William Kurk dissects the tech behind the groove-that is, the Moog Minimoog Model D and ARP 2600 that created the synth bassline, as well as the early sampler used for much of the song's iconic sounds. ![]() (You can listen to his original demo here.) Wilder heard a dance beat and worked with the rest of the band to turn it into a strange, melancholic pop hit. The song, with its now well-known chorus-"All I ever wanted, all I ever needed is here in my arms"-was intended by songwriter Martin Gore to be a plaintive ballad. ![]() Depeche Mode’s Alan Wilder, the band’s keyboardist who created many of their arrangements, had a real Guy Patterson moment upon hearing "Enjoy the Silence."
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