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INTERVIEWS
/ NEIL / CHRIS
/ PSB /
Pet Sounds
Over the past
two decades, the Pet Shop Boys have kept their music and their agenda
fresh.
by Justin Hampton
Despite what
anyone might think of them, there’s no faulting the Pet Shop
Boys for taking too few risks in their careers. While others in
their early-80s synth-pop peer group have fallen by the wayside
or found themselves languishing away in the retro pigeonhole, the
Boys have always managed to throw their audience a few curveballs
to keep them guessing over the past twenty years. The latest one
comes in the form of their newest album, Release, which shows the
boys abandoning the forlorn gay dance sound of their early years
for a more organic if still wistful musical approach. "[Modern]
dance music is about what will work on the dance floor. And on this
album, we decided that what we do best is write great songs,"
says band Boy Chris Lowe. "So we’ve realized those songs
in the way that best suits them. It’s totally liberating to
get on with accessing emotions and telling stories and doing what
we do best, really."
Cooped up in
partner Neil Tennant’s home studio in Northeast England, Chris
also comments on the change of environment for the making of this
album’s songs. Outside of the largely instrumental "The
Samurai in Autumn," the songs of Release focus on guitar-driven
ballads, filled in largely by the duo’s old cohort Johnny
Marr (The Smiths). The lyrics themselves, in the meantime, also
quietly jar the listener, whether they’re posing Eminem as
an enthusiastic partner in a gay romance ("The Night I Fell
in Love") or drawing parallels between Jesus Christ and Matthew
Shepard ("Birthday Boy"). Lowe himself insists neither
he nor Tennant have any politics they hope to push on their listeners.
Rather, it’s about presenting something honest, real and different.
Relates Lowe, "In England, there’s so much manufactured
pop music now that it’s sort of unbearable now. The record
industry seems to be very conservative at the moment. It doesn’t
seem to be a very good time for pioneering musical styles. The latest
thing in dance music is ‘80s retro. Everyone seems to be looking
back rather than forward. I like the idea of the future more than
the past."
Ironically enough,
Lowe admits to enjoying the Felix da Housecat LP, mentioning that
it sounds a lot like the Pet Shop Boys’ initial demos, and
joking that they might re-release those tracks for DJs. Still, Tennant
and Lowe appear more concerned now with broadening the stereotype
of their music and of gay music in general. Lowe does hold out hope
for a renewed attempt at Wotapalava, the ill-fated gay/lesbian national
tour that folded last year when Sinéad O’Connor pulled
out of the bill at the last minute. Creatively, the tour’s
"anti-gay gay statement" still makes sense to Lowe, as
he explains. "[Gay music] is not just a load of clichés.
It’s not just a load of disco dollies who like Hi-NRG music,
you know what I mean? You’ve got Rufus Wainwright, Sinéad
- I just think everyone should be tolerant of everybody, regardless
of anything. It’s a funny issue, the whole thing. I don’t
approve of any type of ghetto. I just want one community - mankind
- where everyone is tolerant of everybody."
Yes, Lowe knows
he just let a cliché slip. But many a Pet Shop Boys fan worldwide
trusts they’ll continue to say it in many different and inventive
ways. That’s what allows them to keep doing it. "We’ve
written songs that mean a lot to people in their lives. They weren’t
just hits. And that allows us to carry on. And when you know that
you have that, you just feel like you’re wanted, and it’s
a good feeling to have." |