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INTERVIEWS
/ NEIL / CHRIS
/ PSB
Never
mind the bus, cocks
It
was, on the face of it, a simple assignment: seek out the Pet Shop
Boys, possibly Britains greatest, certainly Britains
perennially coolest pop band and, using the finest gadgets developed
by Q, discover the truth behind the band. No matter how sinister.
Flipside agent
003.5 (half the man of James Bond) is rattling the cage that guards
the entrance to the grand and over-intricate Victorian hulk of the
St. Pancras hotel, a building that has lain deserted for more than
fifteen years…
A guard opens
the gate in the wire mesh and gives 003.5 a sinister once-over.
The waiting room is huge, a long, curved space; holes all over the
once ornate plaster ceiling; convoluted, heavily coloured frescoes
peering through the bland coats of whitewash. Fifteen minutes later,
their minion, M, appears and bids 003.5 to follow him down a long,
echoing corridor to a sweeping Addams Family-friendly staircase
in the very bowels of the building. The pace quickens, the two pairs
of footsteps echoing around the empty rooms.
A word about
these Pet Shop Boys. Here are two guys who had their first No.1
with their debut single, ‘West End Girls’, fourteen
years ago, back in an age (80’s where a debut No.1was a really
big deal. It also hit the top spot in the States. Following their
initial success, they just kept putting out the hits. With an absolute
disregard for the rules of pop stardom, they carried on writing
and releasing more songs that would effortlessly sit in the upper
reaches of the charts while being more wittier, more eloquent and
more intelligent that The Late Show’s finest minds.
Flick through
the soon-to-be-released Now That’s What I Call Music! Sixteen
CD ‘Millennium’ pack and you’ll find a Pet Shop
Boys track on pretty much every disc – each song always sounding
completely different, each sounding precisely like a Pet Shop Boys
track and exactly like nothing else. “We try to make something
different,” Neil says later, “but then I sing on it,
and it turns into the Pet Shop Boys and that’s that. There’s
no getting away from it”.
They’re
still at it, of course, as their new single, a quietly anthemic
emotional storm by the lugubrious name of ‘I Don’t Know
What You Want But I Can’t Give It Any More’ more than
amply testifies.
They also have
a penchant for inappropriately grand sets and theatrics for their
gigs. Hiding a space station in a volcano is nothing for people
who have known to hire performance artists to kit out the bastion
of poshness, the Savoy Theatre when they played a two week stint
there. They have now hired a world renowned Iraqi architect (Zahia
Hadid) to design the staging for their forthcoming tour.
They revel in
wearing brightly coloured, often very silly uniforms. Pointy hats
and primary coloured suits have previously been all the rage in
PetShopland. Now, in their new video, Neil and Chris don a very
fetching Japanese-samurai-meets-Kajagoogoo in 1960’s Harvey
Nic’s look, all in all the sorts of things make The Village
People look the model of camouflaged sobriety. Worst of all, they
are both well spoken, one with a soft, authoritive, slightly posh
English accent, the other boasting a more rumbustious Northern accent
and a gleeful cackle. Sure signs, as any Hollywood producer will
tell you, of untold, heinos, world-threatening villainy.
At the top of
the stairs stands Denton, who has the sort of physique that would
have brick out-houses for the use of elephants at London Zoo running
in terror. Is he here to let me out or them in?
There’s
no time to let the enormity of Denton sink in. M ushers me through
a door concealed in a wall of deep burgundy and golden fleur-de-lis.
The other side is a corridor. Dogs bark from a room to the left,
apparently approaching quickly. It turns out only to be a tape recording.
M is already striding purposefully ahead, past the rows of bare,
dusty rooms, towards the video image that fills the end of the corridor.
Medical needles squirt bright green liquid, thick red liquid flows
through even thicker vessels: it could be Campari being poured over
ice, it could be blood rushing through the tubes of some trauma
equipment. Cruelly comedic eyebrows are being surgically implanted.
The rest has to wait: M is leading the way into the Boys’
inner sanctum.
The room is
white. In the middle of the floor is a raised dias, also white,
with a clear perspex top covering lots of bright lights. Neil ‘Blofeld’
Tennant and Chris ‘Dr-Evil’ Lowe, dressed in identical
grey plastic combats and ultra-designed, chocolate-coloured jackets
made out of similar, cheap-tent-groundsheet material, are sitting
on a pair of chrome and plastic office chairs. 003.5 climbs up onto
the platform, taking in the lime green, Barbarella-friendly reclining
seats closest to the Boys.
“Aha.
You sat in that chair,” Neil Tennant observes. His voice is
as smooth, precise and distinctive as it is on his records. “All
the others chose the other one.” He nods to the other chair.
“You’re
just part of an experiment,” smiles Chris Lowe.
On What?
“You.”
Chris emits the first burst of his devious, persistent cackle.
What happens
afterwards?
“You don’t
want to know that.”
Neil interrupts:
“No one leaves this building alive. We should tell you: the
drains are blocked.”
Gulp.
Meet the Pet
Shop Boys. Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe.
Neil:
The first time my mother heard Its A Sin,
she burst into tears. Apparently, she took it all seriously
that I apparently had this incredible burden of Catholic guilt since
school and all the rest of it. I had to assure her that Id
written the song in ten minutes flat and that it was actually meant
to be sort of funny, really.
Were
it not for his pop star attire, Neil Tennant could, in a certain
light, almost be your Dad: advancing middle age has softened and
rounded but not disguised his once stark face, while
his hair has now finished greying and has busily started thinning.
Ultimately, though, just like his voice, hes too distinctive
to escape the fame game. No such problems for Chris. Here is a man
whose photograph has appeared on numerous top-selling records and
yet, despite his spiky hair and cheekbone-to-cheekbone grin, could
easily walk down the busiest in London wearing a T-shirt marked
I Am A Pop Star and no one would bat an eyelid. Hed
certainly enjoy the irony of the situation.
Today, the pair are especially beneficent, having just completed
a week of Japanese interviews.
Chris: They all ask quite lengthy questions
Neil:
and theyre being translated.
Chris: Theyre all about meaning. Its like exam
questions at university.
Neil And theyre all obsessed by The Chemical Brothers,
Underworld and Fatboy Slim. A mildly dismissive tone has crept
into Neils voice. Just like the rest of the world.
The Pet Shop Boys are promoting their new single, I Dont
Know What You Want But I Cant Give It Any More. It is
yet another classic Pet Shop Boys moment sweet, gleaming
synth chords that instantly mark out a Pet Shop Boys track from
anything else, lap around Neils vocals, as they have done
on all their other singles, the beautiful melancholic melody, chronically
understated, weevling its way into the memory centre of the brain
in about ten seconds flat.
Its about the end of a relationship, where two people
are no longer communicating, Neil explains. Its
all over
but it hasnt happened yet. The title is almost
paradoxical, dont you think? It certainly is
but this is the Pet Shop Boys: such paradoxes are exactly the sort
of thing upon which they thrive. Even Radio Ones Chris Moyles
has noted that it doesnt seem to make sense.
Hes a smartass though, isnt he? counters
Chris, before admitting, Actually, I dont think Ive
ever listened to him. What times he on? Ah. Im
normally having an afternoon kip at that time, preparing myself
for the evening.
Neil returns to the original question in hand. Well I thinks
its quite clear what it means. I dont know what you
want but I cant give it any more. In other words, no matter
what you want from me, our relationship is in such a state that
Im not prepared to give it to you.
As pop song concepts go, its certainly no Vengaboys
and far more complex that the run-of-the-mill chartbound love song.
In fact I Dont Know
is one of those increasingly
rare things a pop song that deals with the messy, confusing strife
and torture of real relationships, a love song that is honest about
the tricky realities of love, a song thats actually about
something significant.
Its partly from a personal experience and partly because
I liked the phrase, admits Neil. The phrase did occur
to me one day I mean, I just thought it. It was probably on the
train to Charing Cross from Ashford. I used to have a house in East
Sussex. I dont drive so Id get the train. Actually,
I quite often write lyrics on trains. Theres something about
the rhythms of the train on the track.
Chris is looking at Neil with a look of mild amusement.
Its definitely nothing to do with Ashford, though. Theres
always a cloud over Ashford. Neil pauses for a moments
reflection. I wrote Can You Forgive Her? on that
train as well.
Unfortunately for Neil, this is a source of inspiration that has
already run dry.
Now Ive bought a house in the North East of England,
I get the Great North Eastern Railway Intercity 125,
as people used to say. I dont like those because theyre
quieter. Its something about noisy trains
Back to the song.
I have this little Psion organiser
Chris butts in with a mischievous chuckle: Hes got this
little songwriting program.
Neil likes the idea. If only I did. That would be great. I
would be like David Bowie! He has that cut-up program which comes
up with lyrics
Hes lost in a moments reverie before getting back to
the matter in hand.
The main thing about writing lyrics is to know what you are
writing about. Sometimes when you write a song, a phrase comes into
your head with a melody, and then youve got to make sense
of it. Thats quite difficult. Youve got to work out
what the song is about. It can take ages before you know that.
The song is inspired by my own experiences, my own relationships.
Its not an exact description of one. The last album [1996s
Bilingual] was quite personal for me, but this new one is less so.
You can write songs from imagination, or from things youve
read or from other peoples experiences. Its not all
non-fiction, thats what Im saying, whereas Bilingual
was.
Of course, putting any amount of biographical information into a
song could lead to potentially embarrassing situations, something
Neil is only too aware of. When its too obvious, you
can hurt people and I dont want to do that. There have
been a few people whove complained. Actually, and I was very
surprised by this, the first time my mother heard Its
A Sin. She burst into tears.
Chris bursts into laughter.
Neil continues undeterred. Apparently, she took it all seriously
that I apparently had this incredible burden of Catholic
guilt since school and all the rest of it. I had to assure her that
Id written the song in ten minutes flat and that it was actually
meant to be funny, really.
Chris has almost regained his composure. Were you there?
Neil replies. No I didnt go, Mum heres the
next single.
Chris mirth gets the better of him again.
Neil continues, ignoring him. But you do have to think about
things like that. I think its weird when you write something
about somebody, about relationships, and then they hear it on the
radio. The must be so strange. Its like do you know
Bob Dylans Positively Fourth Street? It starts
up with the line, You should stand in my shoes, and
finishes with, And then youd see what a drag it is to
be you. He wrote that about a girl he was going out with.
I always thought, you know, Fucking hell shes
stuck with this. Shell be in her mid-fifties and the
radio will play Bob Dylans Positively Fourth Street,
ending with that. That will have dominated her entire life. She
will be the person Positively Fourth Street was written
about. When she dies, some paper write that she was the person Bob
Dylan wrote those lines about.
Chris is back: She really must have upset him.
I Dont Know What You Want
was produced by
Chris and Neil with David Morales, the muscle-clad garage DJ don
of Needin U (last years monsteroonie, pianos-in-the-air
Ibiza anthem) fame, in New York. Weve actually worked
with three people on the album: David Morales, Rollo [Faithless
backroom controller] and Craig Armstrong [orchestrator to Massive
Attack, Madonna and the stars]. We wanted Craig because we wanted
to have an orchestra on a lot of tracks, but we didnt want
to use it in the big, bombastic way that seems to be common nowadays.
Rollo, weve worked with him before, hes done a couple
of remixes for us and hes made a lot of records we like
And David Morales simply makes great records.
Chris:
It was a whole experience, working with David Morales. I was
like
I didnt want to do anything in case he thought
it was crap but he had this idea to do a disco anthem like
The Village People, so we just listened to a load of Village People
records again, just to get the vibe!
It
was a whole experience, working with him. Chris is reminiscing.
Its not just in the studio its like hanging
out with him in New York, walking down the street, with this macho
Puerto Rican man, always on his mobile, walking very slowly, taking
you under his wing. You become part of his family. You meet in the
street, go for a bite to eat, and then you go to the candle shop.
He loves candles, buys half a dozen imported candles from France,
gives you one, which is nice, and lights them. Its not how
we work at all. Everything was very slow, lots of phone calls, moody
lighting, everyone a bit unsure of where they fit in. I was like
I didnt want to do anything in case he thought it was crap
but he had this idea to do a disco anthem like The Village
People, so we just listened to a load of Village People records
again, just to get the vibe!
Thats probably going to be the next single. With [I
Dont Know What You Want
], he added this Giorgio
Moroder quality, that Trans Europe Express, Orient Express kind
of dark glamour, slightly sinister quality to it, like Kraftwerk
had.
003.5 coolly raises an inquisitive eyebrow.
I think its quite a sinster track. Theres a lot
of cruelty in this song. The words, theyre phrased as a kind
of crime. Was it cracking the code, or just filling in time? Was
that all? So then, why do you go back to the scene of the crime?
Did he call? I mean, its like being under surveillance. Thats
what was intended. Theres lots of surveillance in our society,
which is something that fascinates and horrifies me.
I want to go round and paint over all of them. Chris
previously hidden anarchist streak suddenly comes to the fore.
Neil continues to crack up the paranoia. Your journey here,
for instance, will have been recorded by three, four, five even
more video cameras. When Jill Dando died, there she was in her supermarket.
They just brought that in, proving it was of no help to anyone.
Its an infringement of our civil liberties and its even
very helpful. And dont you think its weird to be put
on a video which may be kept, possibly forever?
Luckily, Neil and Chris have got plenty of other grand schemes to
distract them from such dark worries, namely a headlining slot at
Augusts massive Creamfields festival. They asked us
and it sounded like a good event. Our roots are in dance music and
its on the August Bank Holiday. It wont be the
Boys first festival experience. Two years ago, to pay for
Somewhere, their previously mentioned arty residency at Londons
Savoy Theatre, Neil and Chris agreed to do the European festival
circuit. I think its great, declares Neil. The
first time you go to a festival and its Roskilde, the biggest
in Europe and youre headlining. It was pouring down
with rain. We came on at about quarter past one in the morning and
there was this big cheer
mainly because the rain had just
stopped.
Chris is somewhat more enthusiastic. I went to V98 and the
Hare Krishna tent was fantastic. It was so good. Me and me mates
were in there for hours. It was the only thing I did. That and a
bit of Robbie Williams.
Ah, yes, the infamous Mr. Williams.
I worked with him for that track on that Nöel Coward
album I put together, and then he asked me to sing on that song
of his, No Regrets. He just phoned me up and said he
thought it sounded like the Pet Shop Boys, so would I come and sing
on it? I have to admire that approach: it sounds like them
so why not get them to sing on it?
Chris decides its time to fill in some background gossip.
Weve known Robbie quite a bit since he was in
Take That. We knew them when they were just starting, when they
used to play all these little clubs all over the place. We had an
act, Cicero [or their now dormant/defunct Spaghetti label], who
was on the same circuit, so wed all be hanging out backstage.
Except they never knew who I was until later.
Neil drags up some more Robbie-related memories. I remember
seeing them in Cambridge. They were all really nervous but they
were great. I really enjoyed the show. Then it was just a case of
bumping into them, occasionally seeing Robbie in The [notorious
Soho media hangout] Groucho Club in the slippery slope years. Yeah,
hes really nice.
So has he been leading the Boys astray in the field of festivals?
Neil looks shocked. Oh no. It wouldnt be him leading
us astray
And so it goes. The Pet Shop Boys plans for global pop subversion
continue apace. This is, after all, the British band credited with
the first rap No.1 in America (West End Girls),
who are now toying with the idea of repeating the Sound Of Music
medley they played a recent gig for the gay charity Stonewall at
Creamfields. I really enjoyed doing that, Chris sighs.
Its the best film ever made.
Meanwhile, Neil, the ghosts of his heroes, Nöel Coward and
Oscar Wilde, looming ever closer behind his shoulders, is busy writing
a musical of his very own with playwright Jonathon Harvey. Hopefully
it will be finished next year; but it is a slow process and we want
to get it right. Maybe, though, it will never happen; well
just work at it for years and it will become the great lost musical
wed always promised ourselves.
The whimsy is clashed as Chris suddenly has a hip hop thought: Actually,
when we were working with David Morales in New York, we were at
the recording studios where Tupac got his ball shot off.
Did he actually get his ball shot off? Neil immediately
hones on salacious detail.
Erm, theres a book about it which I havent actually
read
Neil interrupts Chris truth-dodging get-out-clause with another
newly remembered, dubious titbit: Its will this thing
I saw these pictures of famous dead people: Tupac, John F Kennedy
a magazine article about some Internet site. It was horrible. Called
something like Celebrity Morgue.
Chris is hooked. Im going to be looking forward to that
all day, he laughs, irony, as per usual, in overdrive.
This is the band, the sinister, grandiose, pompous and all-too-human
duo who might yet save pop music. Theres no pop music
being made with any integrity any more, laments Neil, the
former Smash Hits writer in him coming to the fore. Maybe
its a generational thing, but as far as Im concerned,
its just not happening. Are the Sterophonics pop music? Catatonia?
I mean, when The Human League were making records, it was a great
time because they were changing the sound of pop music but
they were still interested in being popular. Today, Smash
Hits pop music has probably never been less interesting.
Chris gets in a well-placed sneer: They all went to stage
school!
Neils diagnosis continues. Its like it was before
The Beatles. Its just showbusiness. There always been and
element of showbusiness in pop music but now its just people
doing cheesy cover versions in the same styles as the originals,
which I think is really weird. I mean, we do cover versions but
they always turn into Pet Shop Boys songs
M reappears.
003.5s time has run out. Theres just enough minutes
left for one final question from the files: these days, pop stars
cant get enough of films, and films, especially American films,
cant get enough of English pop stars to play evil villains.
So which baddies do the Pet Shop Boys most identify with?
Chris is first to hit the metaphorical buzzer. The guy from
The Spy Who Shagged Me, Dr. Evil. No Mini-Me, actually!
Neil, meanwhile, looks perplexed. Luckily, Chris has an answer.
Oh. Ill tell you who youd be good at Dr.
Blofeld in Diamonds Are Forever, played by Charles Gray. Hes
posh.
Neil is intrigued, flattered even, but not convinced.
No
Now what would I play? Inspiration hits. I
know. You know Sister Act? I could be the Abbess, as played by Maggie
Smith. I could do that!
And with that, the criminally excellent pop duo of Chris Mini-Me
Lowe and, ahem, Abbess Tennant leave the room, free to wreak yet
another decade of wry, intelligent, perfect pop subversion on the
world: mission, once again, accomplished.
PET
SHOP BOYS were interviewed by Robert Heller
©
Flipside Magazine 1999
Full Transcript by David Elliott
Please note that "Denton" should be Dainton (PSB assistant)
but it was spelt Denton in the magazine!
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