1993 Devotional leg The fractures between the band that had grown during the album's recording sessions continued during the tour; Gahan and Wilder took their own limos from hotels to the show, with Gore and Fletcher arriving in a third. Producer and label owner
Daniel Miller later said, "It was different limos, different hotel floors. I don't think anyone spoke to Dave [Gahan] the entire tour. They saw Dave on stage and then he went off into his dressing room and his candles and everything. Alan [Wilder] wasn't really talking to Martin [Gore] and [Fletcher]. Obviously it was very sad." The band attempted interventions with Gahan, as they had during recording the album, but their efforts went unheeded.
European leg The European leg started on 19 May 1993 in France and ran through 31 July, ending in London. The English band
Spiritualized were originally hired to be the tour's opening act, but audiences reacted so poorly to them at early dates that the band were replaced by
Miranda Sex Garden after about a month. Spiritualized were told on 28 May that they wouldn't be needed after the show on 29 May, leading Spiritualized the refuse to open for Depeche Mode for the 29 May show in Stockholm. To fill in at the last minute, the band had the band who were playing at their hotel to fill in. Miranda Sex Garden was able to take over the opening slot starting with the 31 May show in Hanover. Opening some nights on the Devotional leg of the tour was
The Sisters of Mercy. On 1 and 2 July 1993, after playing two nights in Paris, Wilder and Lyon went to Studio Guillaume Tell, where they had recorded some of the songs from
Music for the Masses years earlier, to remix their single "
Condemnation", giving the remix the name "Paris mix." Some songs from the show on 15 July 1993 in Madrid were recorded and later released as the
B-sides to the "Condemnation" single. By the time the tour reached Budapest in late July 1993, the press were noticing and reporting on Gahan's behavior, and the band's excesses, noting the presence of women lining up to get in to Depeche Mode's afterparty. Gahan and Gore were not the only members of the band to be seen enjoying excesses of alcohol and drugs; Wilder, too, was "knocking back double tequila shots" and had an unpleasant, drunken run-in with fans in Budapest. At the end of the European leg of the tour in
Crystal Palace, London on 31 July 1993, the press reported that the band's end-of-leg party featured a VIP room with free tequila, champagne, and live sex acts. The show was recorded and broadcast by
BBC2 in the
United Kingdom. During the break between the European and North American legs in August 1993, tracks recorded during the European leg for a live album were mixed by Wilder and Lyon, who went to
Dublin to mix the live album at
Windmill Lane Studios. The resulting live album,
Songs of Faith and Devotion Live, was released in December 1993. Internally, relationships between members of the band remained low; Wilder, Fletcher and Gore were referring to Gahan as "
The Cunt" due to his behaviour.
North American leg The North American leg started Quebec, Canada on 7 September 1993 and ran through 3 December, when it ended in Mexico City. After the first North American show in Quebec City, Canada, Gahan and tour co-manager
Daryl Bamonte were arrested after Gahan assaulted a member of the hotel staff where they were staying. Charges against both were later dropped. On 13 September 1993, Depeche Mode released their third single from the album, "
Condemantion" in the US and UK. On 8 October 1993, just before the encore of the show in
New Orleans, Gahan suffered a drug-induced heart attack on stage. Said Gahan, Doctors warned Gahan that he should consider taking the rest of the tour off, or at least perform "on a stool" to prevent further heart damage, but Gahan refused and instead only the next show of the tour was cancelled before the tour resumed as normal. The show on 24 October 1993 in
Cincinnati was cancelled after Gahan cut his hand as he tried to open a beer bottle after the show the night before in
Detroit. The leg was divided into four sub-legs; an African leg, starting in
Johannesburg, South Africa on 9 February 1994 and ending in Johannesburg on 26 February; an
Oceania leg starting on 3 March 1994 in
Singapore and ending on 26 March in Honolulu; a South and Central American leg starting in
São Paulo, Brazil on 4 April 1994 and ending on 16 April in
Monterrey, Mexico; and the US Summer Tour leg, starting on 12 May 1994 in
Sacramento, California and ending in
Indianapolis, Indiana on 8 July. On 10 January, while the tour was being retooled for the second leg, the band released "
In Your Room"" as the fourth and final single from the album in various territories. Most of the band took January 1994 off for a holiday, except Wilder, who worked out changes to the tour's setlist for the upcoming leg in Milan. Wilder also recorded an updated "
trip-hop" version of "I Want You Now" (from
Music for the Masses (1987)) for the second leg. Only Wilder, Lyon and Bamonte worked on the updated songs. Said Wilder, "The remaining members of the band didn't hear 'I Want You Now' or any of the other [additional] music until it was played on stage." The band also simplified the stage for the second leg, with Gore saying that for the first leg, "We had 11 or 14 screens on stage with visuals interacting between all the screens. I think we realised, maybe it was over the top. So we scaled it down for the second leg and I think that actually went over better with the audience, with just a couple of screens." The new set was less costly to maintain, construct and transport. As an opening act for this leg of the tour, the band convinced
Primal Scream to join the tour. Gahan was the one who argued for the choice, wanting a band that shared his drug habit. Although Gore would later say that stories of the band's excesses were exaggerated, Primal Scream was so put off by the level of drugs used by Depeche Mode on the leg, that they subsequently swore off drugs themselves. Media reported that the band continued to select a dozen or two of the most beautiful women to come backstage after shows for parties. A reporter for
Select magazine showed up to interview Gahan, and found him "sitting in the middle of the room in an armchair, apparently shoveling cocaine up his nose at a frightening rate. Suddenly he seemed to realise that I was a journalist, and he pointed at me and one of his big flunkeys came and got me. ... He started burbling on about how people didn't understand him, but then his mood changed suddenly and he said, 'I'm gonna curse you!' and the next thing I know he's bitten me on the neck!" Gahan later said that he remembered meeting the journalist but doesn't remember biting him, although he did later admit he had "some fascination at the time with vampires." In early February, when the tour was in South Africa, Wilder had some of his luggage stolen, despite being locked in secure storage that was patrolled by guards. Said Wilder, "We concluded that it must have been an inside job. ... I lost about £10,000 worth of clothing, some very personal bits and pieces and, of course, most of my stage outfits, which had to be remade." The 22 February 1994 show in
Durban had to be cancelled after Wilder was hospitalized on 21 February with
kidney stones. Once the tour resumed, Fletcher's depression started to drive a wedge further between him and Gahan and Wilder, who were both enjoying the hard-partying atmosphere of the tour. Said Gore, "It was very difficult. [Fletcher] has been my closest friend since we were 12. But for the other two, he'd become unbearable." As a result of Fletcher's depression and anxiety, and the dysfunction within the band, Fletcher made the decision to pull out of the tour after the shows in Honolulu on 25 and 26 March 1994. He later said, "I had had a nervous breakdown when we were recording the album. And then I went straight on tour, and it was a very long tour, a very stressful tour. And it just went on and on and on, and then they decided to do another American [leg], and I just didn't agree with doing it and thought it was a mistake, bad for our careers. I just needed a rest, so decided not to do it." As he left, Fletcher reportedly told Miller that he would not tour again so long as Wilder remained in the band. Later, Fletcher would say that "I just lost it. It was a breakdown." During the week break after the shows in Hawaii, the band enlisted Bamonte to take Fletcher's place on stage. While Gahan and Gore partied on the beaches, Wilder spent a week with Bamonte teaching him how to play the parts for the tour. Wilder later said that Bamonte "subsequently played it perfectly for the rest of the tour – pretty good, considering he'd hardly ever played a keyboard before in his life." Bamonte's first show was in
São Paulo, Brazil on 4 April 1994. In early April 1994,
Kurt Cobain committed suicide, and news of his death reached the band on 10 April, while they were in Chile preparing for their show. Years later, Gahan said that "My first reaction was that I was angry. I was pissed off. I felt like he had stolen my idea; he'd beaten me to it. That's how fucked-up I was. I really was that gone."
1994 US Summer leg To promote the US leg of the tour,
Sire Records issued a promotional "Summer Tour '94 CD Sampler" (catalogue number PRO-CD-6950), which contained seven of the band's songs and had the US concert dates printed on the label. The final show of the tour, played on 8 July 1994 in Indiana, saw a drunk Gahan stage dive during the show, landing on some seats and the concrete floor, and he had to be taken to the hospital with two cracked ribs. Gahan later said "My body was going on nothing. I cracked two ribs but it took me 24 hours to feel anything because I was so drunk." By the end of both legs of the tour, the band had visited twenty-seven countries and played to over two million people and 156 shows. With the end of the tour, Gahan retreated to a cabin with his wife Conroy for a few weeks to convalesce after his stage dive, saying "I really enjoyed the Faith and Devotion tour; I enjoyed that whole two year experience. I was right in it: 'I'm going to fucking do it, goddam it! And no one's going to stop me!' It took me a few years to come down from it." Gore later said of the tour, "It was endless parties. Out of control," adding "I don't think anyone was really the same after that tour." Gahan echoed that sentiment, saying that the tour "nearly killed us all, physically." Wilder would later say that his memories of the album and tour were "very dark", adding "I think something broke in me, during the making of that. ... It's perverse, because the music moves me more than anything else we've ever done." Fletcher later admitted that "we made mistakes with our [Devotional] tour. We planned too much and it was too long." ==Subsequent events==