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Just Can't Get Enough (Depeche Mode song)

"Just Can't Get Enough"
DepecheModeJustCantGetEnough.jpg
Single by Depeche Mode
from the album Speak & Spell
B-side "Any Second Now"
Released 7 September 1981
Format 7" single, 12" single, CD single
Recorded July 1981 Blackwing Studios, London
Genre Synthpop,new wave
Length 3:41
Label Mute
Writer(s) Vince Clarke
Producer(s) Depeche Mode, Daniel Miller
Depeche Mode singles chronology
"New Life"
(1981)
"Just Can't Get Enough"
(1981)
"See You"
(1982)
"Just Can't Get Enough"
Saturdaysjustcantsleeve-1-.jpg
Single by The Saturdays
from the album Chasing Lights re-issue
B-side "Golden Rules"
Released 1 March 2009
Format CD single, digital download
Recorded 2009
Genre Dance-pop, electropop
Length 3:08 (radio mix)
Label Polydor
Writer(s) Vince Clarke
Producer(s) David Eriksen,Max Herman
The Saturdays singles chronology
"Issues"
(2009)
"Just Can't Get Enough"
(2009)
"Work"
(2009)
Music video
"Just Can't Get Enough" on YouTube

"Just Can't Get Enough" is a song by the English electronic music band Depeche Mode. It was released in September 1981 as the second single from their debut album, Speak and Spell (1981). It was recorded during the summer of that year at Blackwing Studios, and was the band's first single to be released in the United States, on 18 February 1982. A riff-driven synthpop song, "Just Can't Get Enough" was the final single to be written by founding member Vince Clarke, who left the band in November 1981.

The single version of "Just Can't Get Enough" is the same version that appears on the UK version of Speak and Spell. The 12" single featured a "Schizo Mix", which is an extended version with additional synth parts adding a sinister feel to the track. This version appears on the US version of Speak and Spell, the UK re-release of Speak and Spell, the re-release of The Singles 81→85 and Remixes 81–04.

In addition, the single's B-side, "Any Second Now", was the first commercially available Depeche Mode instrumental. It shows up on the UK rerelease of Speak and Spell. A version including vocals (the first Depeche Mode vocals to be handled by Martin Gore) appeared on the album as "Any Second Now (Voices)". There is also an extended version, the "Altered" Mix. In the United States, the B-side is "Tora! Tora! Tora!". On the album, the song is crossfaded with the previous track, "Photographic", but on the single, the introduction is clean.

The single reached number 8 on the UK Singles Chart and number 26 on the US Hot Dance Club Play chart, making it their highest-charting single at the time on both counts. It also became the band's first (and biggest) hit in Australia, reaching number 4.

Due to Vince Clarke's songwriting, the song has a bubbly, upbeat feel that stands in contrast to the darker, brooding feel of most later Depeche Mode songs.


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