Pet
Shop Boys find their release
By Joanna Wilson
BBC News Online
From West End Girls and It's A Sin
to Go West and recent hit Home and Dry,
the Pet Shop Boys' unique brand of pop
has spanned almost 20 years.
Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe's latest
album, Release, finds them in classic
Pet Shop Boys mode, if a little less
epic than previous efforts.
Do you still get excited about
releasing your records?
Neil: We get very
excited about it. I always go into my
local record shop and see if it's displayed.
It's very exciting when you suddenly
hear it on the radio. I don't think
you ever get blasé about that.
How is this album different from
the others?
Neil: I think the
sound is different. It's not as epic
as previous Pet Shop Boys material,
but then we have always done a wide
range of music. I think it's the most
melodic album we've made.
Which songs on it do you like best?
Neil: The second half
actually is the half I like best now,
but I think that's often the case.
Chris: We've done the
album like an old vinyl LP, so it's
very much two halves.
Which song is your favourite?
Chris: Love Is A Catastrophe.
Neil: Maybe Love Is
A Catastrophe as well, or the last track,
You Choose - it's so philosophical and
interesting and very beautiful.
Was making this album quite an
easy process?
Neil: This was more of an organic album.
We did it over the period of about a
year, on and off. We were writing songs
for our musical Closer To Heaven when
we were working on this.
What can we expect in your tour?
Neil: This time we'll
be playing big theatres. We're playing
in Grimsby!
Chris: It's great because
we get to go to all these exciting places
instead of just Birmingham, Glasgow
and London.
What is it like having a new generation
of fans?
Neil: It's good. Our
audience is always shifting anyway.
Looking at websites and things I'm always
surprised how young a lot of our audience
is.
How is the music scene different
now to when you first had a hit in the
mid 80s?
Neil: In the 80s when
you put a record out it would chart,
then it would go up the next week, and
up again the next, etc. Nowadays everything
is arranged so that really when your
record charts it is the beginning of
the end. It used to be more exciting
climbing (the charts) and seeing TV
appearances make a difference.
In the 80s it was creatively competitive.
And I don't think it seems like that
now, although there are maybe some people
like that, but it doesn't really seem
that way.
Chris: Pop music was
completely different then - people actually
wanted to do something different, dress
themselves up and do fresh types of
music, and write good songs, whereas
now it's just a group wannabes really.
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