"Enjoy the Silence" | ||||||||||||||||
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Single by Depeche Mode | ||||||||||||||||
from the album Violator | ||||||||||||||||
B-side |
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Released | 16 January 1990 | |||||||||||||||
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Recorded | 1989 at Puk Studios (Denmark) and Logic Studios (Milan, Italy) | |||||||||||||||
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Length | 4:16 | |||||||||||||||
Label | Mute | |||||||||||||||
Writer(s) | Martin Gore | |||||||||||||||
Producer(s) |
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Depeche Mode singles chronology | ||||||||||||||||
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"Enjoy the Silence" | ||||||||
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Single by Lacuna Coil | ||||||||
from the album Karmacode | ||||||||
B-side | "Virtual Environment" | |||||||
Released | June 2006 | |||||||
Format | CD, digital download, vinyl | |||||||
Recorded | 2005 | |||||||
Label | Century Media | |||||||
Writer(s) | Martin Gore | |||||||
Producer(s) | Waldemar Sorychta | |||||||
Lacuna Coil singles chronology | ||||||||
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"Enjoy the Silence" is a song by the English electronic band Depeche Mode, taken from their seventh studio album, Violator (1990). The song was recorded in 1989 and released on 16 January 1990 as the album's second single.
The single is Gold certificated in the US and Germany. The song won Best British Single at the 1991 BRIT Awards.
"Enjoy the Silence" was re-released as a single in 2004 for the Depeche Mode remix project Remixes 81–04, and was titled "Enjoy the Silence (Reinterpreted)" or, more simply, "Enjoy the Silence 04".
There are two instrumental B-sides to "Enjoy the Silence". "Sibeling" (the 12" B-side) is a soft piano-tune while "Memphisto" (the 7" B-side) is a darker, eerier track. The title of "Sibeling" refers to Finnish classical composer Jean Sibelius. According to Martin Gore, "Memphisto is the name of an imaginary film about Elvis as a Devil, that I created in my mind".
The Anton Corbijn-directed music video for "Enjoy the Silence" references the themes and storyline of the philosophical children's book The Little Prince. Footage of Gahan dressed as a stereotypical king wandering the hillsides of the Scottish Highlands, the coast of Algarve in Portugal and finally the Swiss Alps with a deck chair is intercut with black-and-white footage of the band posing. Brief flashes of a single rose (which is also on the album cover of Violator) appear throughout the scenes.