English singer-songwriter and synth-pop musician Vincent John Martin, popularly known as Vince Clarke, was born on July 3, 1960, in South Woodford, Essex. Vince grew up in Basildon, Essex, and was drawn to music from a young age, first playing the violin and then the piano. His music career began in earnest in the late 1970s. He formed a band called No Romance in China with schoolmate Andy Fletcher. By 1979, he was playing guitar in the Plan, an Ultravox-influenced band. His next big step was in 1980 when he and Fletcher started Composition of Sound, later joined by Martin Gore. When Dave Gahan joined, they renamed the band Depeche Mode. Vince Clarke, as he was then known, helped create hits like "Dreaming of Me" and "Just Can't Get Enough" with Depeche Mode before leaving the band. After Depeche Mode, Vince Clarke formed Yazoo with Alison Moyet, producing hits like "Only You" and "Don't Go." Yazoo split in 1983, and Clarke then worked with Eric Radcliffe as the Assembly and produced the hit "Never Never" with Feargal Sharkey. The major turning point in Vince Clarke's career was in 1985 when he formed Erasure with Andy Bell. Erasure became a significant act in British music, known for hits like "Oh L'amour" and "Always." They have released 19 studio albums and enjoyed success over four decades. In 2009, he received the Outstanding Song Collection prize during the Ivor Novello Awards in recognition of his trajectory in the music industry. Over the following years, he released the electronic dance music album Ssss (2012) with his former Depeche Mode colleague Martin Gore as VCMG, and collaborated with the likes of Jean-Michel Jarre (2015's "Automatic") and Paul Hartnoll (2016's 2 Square). Entirely recorded during the COVID-19 pandemic, his instrumental solo album Songs of Silence came out in 2023, garnering critical acclaim and reaching number 6 on the UK Independent Albums chart.
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