Sylvain Chauveau & Ensemble Nocturne – Down To The Bone – An Acoustic Tribute To Depeche Mode

Release year: 2005
Release version: Physical release
Label: Les Disques Du Soleil Et De L'Acier
Type: One band tribute

A tribute (almost) completely made with acoustic instruments like clarinets, guitar, piano, cello, viola and contrabass. An additional track called “(Enjoy) The Silence” is in fact just 46 seconds of – more or less – silence. Comes in digipack sleeve.

Tracks of “Sylvain Chauveau & Ensemble Nocturne – Down To The Bone – An Acoustic Tribute To Depeche Mode”

  1. Stripped (5:03)
  2. The Things You Said (3:59)
  3. Home (4:57)
  4. Policy Of Truth (3:36)
  5. Death’s Door (3:18)
  6. (Enjoy) The Silence (0:45)
  7. In Your Room (5:07)
  8. Blasphemous Rumours (4:12)
  9. Freelove (3:10)
  10. Never Let Me Down Again (5:41)
  11. Enjoy The Silence (4:27)

Listen to "Sylvain Chauveau & Ensemble Nocturne – Down To The Bone – An Acoustic Tribute To Depeche Mode" on Spotify

Picture of Michael M. Müller

Michael M. Müller

Although I already owned all regular releases, I started "seriously" collecting Depeche Mode's releases from all over the world in the late 80s. But when the internet and espacially eBay came up, I wanted to specialise my collection, because with eBay it was not a question of "how to find a rarity?" anymore, but just a question of "who pays the most?". That was the start of my collection of Depeche Mode cover versions.

I really like it when artists create a completely new mood in a cover version. For me, the best covers are very often just unknown tracks on an artist's album, while many tribute compilations are just "sound-a-likes" without own creativity.
Picture of Michael M. Müller

Michael M. Müller

Although I already owned all regular releases, I started "seriously" collecting Depeche Mode's releases from all over the world in the late 80s. But when the internet and espacially eBay came up, I wanted to specialise my collection, because with eBay it was not a question of "how to find a rarity?" anymore, but just a question of "who pays the most?". That was the start of my collection of Depeche Mode cover versions.

I really like it when artists create a completely new mood in a cover version. For me, the best covers are very often just unknown tracks on an artist's album, while many tribute compilations are just "sound-a-likes" without own creativity.