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INTERVIEWS
/ NEIL / CHRIS
/ PSB
Postmodern
ironists cloaked behind a veil of buoyantly melodic and lushly romantic
synth-pop confections, the Pet Shop Boys' cheeky, smart and utterly
danceable music established them among the most commercially and
critically successful groups of their era. Always remaining one
step ahead of their contemporaries, the British duo navigated the
constantly shifting landscape of modern dance-pop with rare grace
and intelligence, moving easily from disco to house to techno with
their own distinctive image remaining completely intact; satiric
and irreverent yet somehow strangely affecting the
Pet Shop Boys transcended the seeming disposability of their craft,
offering wry and thoughtful cultural commentary communicated by
the Morse code of au courant synth washes and drum-machine rhythms.
Pet
Shop Boys formed in London in August, 1981 when vocalist Neil Tennant
(a former editor at Marvel Comics who later gained some notoriety
as a journalist for Smash Hits magazine) first met keyboardist Chris
Lowe (a onetime architecture student) at an electronics shop; discovering
a shared passion for dance music and synthesizers, they immediately
decided to start a band. Dubbing themselves the Pet Shop Boys in
honor of friends who worked in such an establishment while
also obliquely nodding to the sort of names prevalent among the
New York City hip-hop culture of the early 1980s the duo's
career first took flight in 1983, when Tennant met producer Bobby
"O" Orlando while on a writing assigment. Orlando produced
their first single, 1984's "West End Girls" which scored
a hit in the U.S.
Then,
in 1985, an evocative new Stephen Hague production of "West
End Girls" became an international chart-topper. Its massive
success propelled the Pet Shop Boys' 1986 debut LP Please into the
Top Ten, and when "Opportunities" was subsequently reissued,
it too became a hit. Disco, a collection of dance remixes, was quickly
rushed into stores, and in 1987 the duo resurfaced with the superb
Actually, which launched three more Top Ten smashes "It's
a Sin," a lovely cover of the perennial "Always on My
Mind," and "What Have I Done to Deserve This?, "a
duet between Tennant and the great Dusty Springfield. A documentary
film titled It Couldn't Happen Here was released the following year.
Also
in 1988, Pet Shop Boys issued their third studio LP, the eclectic
Introspective; the single "Domino Dancing" was their final
Top 40 hit in the U.S. The following year, the duo collaborated
with a variety of performers, most notably Liza Minnelli, for whom
they produced the 1989 LP Results; they also produced material for
Springfield, and Tennant joined New Order frontman Bernard Sumner
and ex-Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr in the group Electronic, scoring
a hit with the single "Getting Away With It." The Pet
Shop Boys reconvened in 1990 for the muted, downcast Behaviour,
produced by Harold Faltermeyer. 1991 saw the release of their hit
medley of U2's "Where the Streets Have No Name" and Frankie
Valli's "Can't Take My Eyes Off You," and was followed
in 1993 by Very, lauded among the duo's finest efforts to date.
After a three-year absence, the Pet Shop Boys resurfaced with Bilingual,
a fluid expansion into Latin rhythms. Nightlife followed in 1999
and sparked the dance club hit "New York City Boy." On
the success of that, they also toured the U.S. for the first time
in eight years.
While
on tour, Tennant and Lowe were also collaborating with playwright
Jonathan Harvey. Since 1997, the three had been crafting a musical
surrounding gay life and societal criticisms. Closer to Heaven made
its West End debut in 2001 and had a successful run for most of
the year. The Pet Shop Boys' score of the original cast recording,
Closer to Heaven, was also a hit in the UK. They still had time
to make a record for themselves, too. In April 2002, Tennant and
Lowe issued their follow-up to 1999's Nightlife, the vibrant album
entitled Release.
Jason Ankeny
All Music Guide
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