 |

INTERVIEWS
/ NEIL / CHRIS
/ PSB /
Boston's
Weekly Dig
Pet
Shop Boys
Slim Shady, Here We Come
by Eric Solomon
I didn't
ask why / though he seemed like such a / regular guy / he said we
could be / secret lovers / just him and me / Then he joked / "Hey
man! / Your name isn't Stan, is it? / We should be together!"
/ And he was passionate / I guess I would rate / him a nine out
a ten / by then / I'd fallen in love - an Eminem-esque homosexual
experiment from "The Night I Fell in Love" off of Release.
Step
One
Being a pop-culture icon is tiresome work, and nobody knows this
better than Chris Lowe and Neil Tennant. As the incomparable Pet
Shop Boys, the jovial duo has exhausted the annals of cocktail party
stardom. They've have played a Saturday night in Vegas at $58 a
head; given advice to sexually frustrated housewives on MTV's Loveline;
interviewed Madonna over flutes of champagne; partied in the Hacienda's
heyday with New Order, the Happy Mondays, and the Stone Roses; been
poster boys (literally) for capturing homosexuality as an artistic
issue (along with Boy George, Erasure, and Bronski Beat); been stalked
in New York city, chased in Argentina, and proposed to by a band
of frothing man flesh in Barcelona. Whats more impressive,
they've remained culturally and musically relevant for over 15 years,
and with the unveiling of their eighth studio album - the much lauded
Release (Sanctuary) - Neil and Chris have more experiential knowledge
about the world of musical fame and fortune than most, if not all,
pop-duo exponents from the 1980s.
"I'm
not really all that surprised at how successful the album has been,"
says Chris Lowe of the Pet Shop Boys latest. "After all,
Release was made in nearly exactly the same fashion as our previous
seven albums, and," he laughs sharply, "those seem to
have done all right!" Sure enough, like their previous classics,
Release was recorded at the Pet Shop Boys' studio in Neil Tennant's
(he's the one who sings - Chris plays keyboards) house in the Northeast
of England. Despite being recorded in the same location as their
previous outings, it's no secret that Release is a fairly massive
departure from their more dance-based outings like "West End
Girls", "Suburbia", or "Go West".
"So,
maybe we could be accused of mellowing out a bit," muses Chris.
"But that's pretty narrow-minded, I think. Just because we're
sometimes played on..." He lowers his voice substantially,
"...Adult Contemporary stations these days; it doesn't mean
we've ditched our edge. At least, I'm pretty sure we haven't,"
he jokes. Well, I'm not sure that the Pet Shop Boys ever had an
"edge" per se, but if Chris is worried about Release sounding
less culturally honed than their previous work, he's unduly concerned.
Bottom line, this is still a Pet Shop Boys album, and their sound
signature is stamped across Release like white on rice. So, what's
different about it then? One word: Guitars.
"That's
absolutely right," Chris enthuses. "The sounds we've used
[on Release] aren't really dancey in the slightest. What we found
was that the songs we liked the most, which we wrote this time around,
weren't really electronically based, and having made the decision
not to program dance elements, it was very liberating in terms of
songwriting. It gave us a whole lot more freedom to experiment...and
consequently, the emphasis is more on guitar-based songs than strictly
on production." Of course, what Chris fails to mention in his
cursory analysis of Release's sound is that when guitars are concerned,
the Pet Shop Boys only have time for the best. "It's good to
have friends in high places," Chris reports light-heatedly
on Johnny Marr's (The Smiths, Electronic) widespread contributions
to the album. "At first, Neil just did all the guitar work,
and of course, it was pretty good, but he just wasn't completely
satisfied. So, I said, we do know Johnny Marr! He conceded, and
the rest is history, as they say..." Chris trails off in a
way that indicates that since the release of er, Release, he's done
little aside from talk about the ingredients that went into the
final product. It's all got to be a bit tiring, hasn't it?
And
to this observation, Chris perks right up. "It's not that I
don't like talking about our work," he divulges, "but
do you have any idea how many times I feel like I've said the exact
some words over and over again? It's like permanent déjà
vu, you know?" I do know. And so, obligingly, happily, gears
are switched.
Step
Two
As an Englishman, born and raised, Chris Lowe is well aware of the
effect British music has had on the American music industry. Nonetheless,
for the first time in nearly 30 years, there is currently no British
artist residing on the American Top 40.
"Here's
what I think," Chris answers a question he wasn't even asked.
"At the moment, English music is the most wretched, horrible
thing I ever could have imagined. It's nothing but manufactured
pop," he continues and simmers his voice to a whisper, "...if
I hear one more fucking Kylie Minogue sound-a-like!" Chris
erupts into a full-blown guffaw. "At this point, American music
doesn't need to be looking elsewhere for influences," he adds.
"Critics said time and time again that modern R&B is where
the action is at, and I couldn't agree more. So, that's what happening,
innit?" Chris looks for verbal approval. "Americans are
moving forward musically, while the English are waiting for the
second coming of Britpop to emerge." But what about dance music?
"Right, right!" he yips into the receiver. "That's
the only good British export these days, but Billboard Top 40 or
whatever doesn't seem to give a hoot or holler about that!"
But,
there's a certain irony in discussing these sorts of issues with
the Pet Shop Boys, who are certainly as popular in America as they
are in England. Chris has got an answer for that, too, though. "We're
pan-cultural," he jokes. "No, really, I simply cannot
account for our success with American audiences. Some of our wildest
reactions - outside of Latin America, but that's a whole story in
itself - have been stateside, and Neil and I have been nothing but
thankful for that."
So,
it's been over 15 years since Chris and Neil released their debut
album, Please, to a sea of pop-hungry audiences. Through dozens
of hit singles and a basketful of albums, the Pet Shop Boys have
accumulated more exposure to the world than most musicians can even
remotely fathom. What could possibly be next?
"Death,"
Chris deadpans. "I'll cling on until Eminem's lawyers take
us for everything we've got [see the lyrics above for some insight
into that one]! Really, though, I have trouble imagining life as
an ex-Pet Shop Boy. So, I won't." Fair enough. Given their
supernatural popularity, along with the imminent success of Release,
it surely seems that Neil and Chris will be a staple in the public's
musical diet for some time to come. "All I've ever wanted for
us," says Chris, "is to be quality performers, both within
and outside of the studio. And," he cracks an audible grin,
"hopefully to make a few hearts flutter along the way."
Release
is out now on Sanctuary Records. Catch the Pet Shop Boys at the
Orpheum this Sunday, May 19, 7:30pm/$46/$36/$28.50.
Boston's Weekly
Dig
|