Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Martin Lee Gore (born 23 July 1961) [1] is an English musician and songwriter. He is one of the founding members of the electronic music band Depeche Mode and is the band's main songwriter. [ 2 ] He is the band's guitarist and keyboardist, and occasionally provides lead vocals. [ 3 ]
Municipal services are provided by Santa Barbara County; [27] as with the county's other unincorporated areas, Montecito's law enforcement agency is the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Office. [28] Montecito is part of the Santa Barbara County Supervisor District 1, [10] which elects one supervisor to the five-member Board of Supervisors. [27]
While Dave Gahan was still busy with his solo album Hourglass (2007), Martin Gore was in his home studio in Santa Barbara, California, working on new songs.In May 2008, the band went to the studio to record their twelfth studio album.
The Third Chimpanzee is the fourth solo recording by Martin Gore, the primary songwriter for the band Depeche Mode. [11] [12] The tracks were recorded in Santa Barbara in Gore's home studio and released 29 January 2021 by Mute. It was his first solo release in six years.
Hope Ranch is an unincorporated coastal suburb of Santa Barbara, California, located in Santa Barbara County. It is bounded on the east by Santa Barbara, on the north and west by the unincorporated area of the eastern Goleta Valley, and on the south by the Pacific Ocean. As of the 2000 census, the area had an approximate population of 2,200.
Santa Barbara (Spanish: Santa Bárbara, meaning ' Saint Barbara ') is a coastal city in Santa Barbara County, California, of which it is also the county seat.Situated on a south-facing section of coastline, the longest such section on the West Coast of the United States excepting Alaska, the city lies between the steeply rising Santa Ynez Mountains and the Pacific Ocean.
However, Martin and his wife of 15 years, Anne Stringfield, and their daughter, Mary (the comedian’s only child, born in December 2012), spend their summers in Santa Barbara.
After the 1925 Santa Barbara earthquake the main house was demolished. After Stanley McCormick's death in 1947, Katharine sold the estate in 1949 to one real estate developer, who sold it to another developer in 1950. The second one subdivided the estate into 34 smaller parcels and put them up for sale. [4]