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Exciter | 
enlarge | Artist: Depeche Mode Label: Wea/Warner Brothers Category: Music
List Price: $7.98 Buy New: $6.97 You Save: $1.01 (13%)
New (41) Used (93) Collectible (3) from $0.13
Rating: 384 reviews Sales Rank: 40077
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
MPN: 47960 UPC: 936247960220 EAN: 0093624796022 ASIN: B00005BL2A
Release Date: May 15, 2001 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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| Tracks:
| • | Dream On | | • | Shine | | • | The Sweetest Condition | | • | When The Body Speaks | | • | The Dead of Night | | • | Lovetheme | | • | Freelove | | • | Comatose | | • | I Feel Loved | | • | Breathe | | • | Easy Tiger | | • | I Am You | | • | Goodnight Lovers |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com essential recording One of Depeche Mode's greatest strengths is also their greatest weakness. The band comes up with some of pop music's most inventive lyrics, and at the same time, they always give the impression that they'll arbitrarily sing about anything, as long as it's depressing. But on Exciter there's an autobiography in the lyrics that, for the first time, strikes a chord with skeptics and believers alike. Singer David Gahan's battle with addiction and its horrendous pitfalls took its toll in DM's 1990s releases; Songs of Faith and Devotion failed to measure up to their groundbreaking albums of the '80s, and Ultra found songwriter Martin Gore less inspired, and a hoarse Gahan incapable of delivering his signature clear and booming vocals. Mercifully, the band has exorcised the demons and produced an album that places them squarely back on track. The opener, "Dream On," is a close cousin to "Personal Jesus," combining earthy guitar with electrified, pulsating synths. The track's physical and metaphorical imagery poignantly relays the karmic revolution of living the fast life. The brilliant, mesmerizing monster of a tune, "The Dead of Night," swaggers with a giant, crushing industrial beat like a Nine Inch Nails song dressed in glamorous drag, while the ballads "Shine" and "Freelove" are as beautiful as the classic "Somebody" (but entirely unburdened by saccharine sentimentality). Gore's keen ear for shimmering sonics and bellowing rhythm reinvigorates the Depeche Mode-branded synth-pop that's remained unique for the last 20 years. In all, Exciter is a stunning return to form, and a triumph by every definition. --Beth Massa
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| Customer Reviews: Read 379 more reviews...
Artistic Masterpiece November 26, 2008 Exciter seems to be the one album that too many DM fans have regarded as lesser than their previous work. If you are looking for quick catchy top ten hits, then yes you should pass this one up. But if you, like me, love it when artists express themselves however they feel regardless of what the public expects, then this is the album that gives us Depeche Mode, naked. The electronic music plays richly, beautifully, transporting the listener to another realm, a feat accomplished by very few artists. This is art. This is musical genius. Absolutely, Depeche Mode gets better each album.
I can't believe I once hated this album... June 3, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Maybe it was because I expected a more danceable, synthpoppy album. I said, what the hell is this and I didn't care to listen to it any more as I had also the CD singles of Dream On, I Feel Loved and the magnificent Freelove. It was not long ago that I took the time to listen again to this album and really have to say now that this is one of DM's best albums. I just can't stop hearing songs like Breathe or Goodnight Lovers. This is DM's at a very special phase that we may not hear again. Those two songs (Breathe or Goodnight Lovers) actually doesnt't sound very DM as one could say but has such emotion, such soul that now I feel like I have found a treasure and plan to enjoy it forever. Martin Gore is such a genius.
Worst Depeche Mode album ever January 26, 2008 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
I consider myself a huge Depeche Mode fan and this album is just terrible. There is not one redeeming song on it. I was severely disappointed. Buy Playing the Angel, Violator, A Broken Frame, Some Great Reward, anything other than this.
Exciter ? hmmm I don't think I've heard that one September 23, 2007 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Obviously if you are reading a review of this disc from DM in the year 2007 you have either just completed your ENTIRE collection or stumbled upon this GEM quite by accident as a later in life fan...either way Congratulations! EXCITER is something that pulls on your senses from the minute you put it on and before you know it your heart strings are involved. Gahan's vocals are such that people stop talking when his voice enters the room in "Dream On"...from there it is only a matter of time before this disc never quite leaves your disc player. It's something that you randomly find you're trying to work into conversation... It's a work of art in the truest sense... ( it will make you want to START a collection )Martin Gore Thank You
and... suddenly they fell from grace September 6, 2007 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
I'm a fan since 1987's Music for the Masses. I'm totally devoted to Depeche Mode, but it's 2007 and Exciter strikes as their worst CD ever. I'm not that fond of A Broken Frame, but there's an innocence to that album that enlightens and lets the listener aware that there's a bright future ahead for this band. Exciter is a complete joke. The songs are truly uninspired, the lyrics are lame -Gore seems to drift away from his very intimate topics from all past Depeche albums- and, worst of all, Mark Bell has nothing to do with the somber and poppy mixture of sound that became DM's trademark. Tim Simenon did a hell of a job in translating the band to the late 90's. But Bell choose to get Bjorkesque on them. The result is a total lack of emotion. For some reason I really like Sweetest Condition (bluesy and simple) and Freelove (seductive and quiet), but the rest of the album is so forgettable that nobody gave a damn when they failed to play any of its tracks on the Playing the Angel tour. Every band has to suffer through a phase like this, but DM seemed as they have gone way above that curse for so long and... suddenly they fell from grace.
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