Pet
Shop Boys
The fantastic Pet Shop Boys, joined
TOTP for a Live Chat and answered your
questions about their music, their new
album and lots more ...
Question from Ian: Hi Neil and Chris.
Really enjoyed your performance tonight,
what's it like being back at Top of
the Pops?
Neil: The first time was in 1985, and
what's really nice is that they had
a thing in the 90s when they went to
Elstree. Now it's back at BBC TV Centre
in Shepherds Bush, which is more convenient,
and it's where TOTP originally came
from. The audience feedback was good.
We had some fans in there. My brother
and his wife were there. Friends and
family!
Question from Hans: Hello boys. You
released your album on April 1st. Did
you come up with the title Release because
that is the latin word for April?
Chris: Is it? Of course that's the
reason! You studied Latin didn't you,
Neil?
Neil: We were originally going to call
the album Home, but it was suggested
that we call it Release. It feels like
a release for me.
Question from Sarah Merrett: What do
you think about the state of the music
today? Do you think there are too many
"created" bands and not enough
originality about? I have always been
a fan since the early 80's and love
your music.
Chris: I love manufactured pop bands,
they're fantastic. S Club Juniors are
my favourite - I don't think those kids
are being exploited at all!
Neil: I do like Blue.
Question from Chris: Yeah, they're
good.
Neil: You can get good manufactured
bands. The Monkees were manufactured.
Chris: The Beatles!
Neil: No, not really ... You don't
have to buy it if you don't want to.
Question from Hilary Hadfield: Love
the new album. Have seen the gruelling
tour, how do you prepare physically
for it?
Chris: I'm down the gym every day!
I've just run the marathon! It's also
a mental thing as well, so I like to
do a lot of reading. I study Buddhism
and yoga.
Neil: No wonder you look so well Chris!
I actually do nothing to prepare for
the tour, but I occasionally do yoga
before the show. I think it's good to
be upside-down, get the blood to your
head. I like touring, but I don't like
flying all the time.
Question from David Elliott: Will the
Release world tour have a similar set
up to the recent university tour or
are you going to go for something a
bit more extravagant?
Neil: It's not extravagant. Doing this
in smaller venues - we designed it around
what we wanted to do musically, and
it's not a big production. It was designed
by Ian McNeil, a famous theatre designer,
so the aesthetic is 'rough'.
Chris: This tour is really about the
music, just us and the audience. We're
not detached from the audience this
time. We've reworked some of the old
songs too - not too radically.
Question from Vespawelle Java: Hello
boys, may I ask you for the story behind
the wonderful song Love is a Catastrophe?
Neil: This came out of a thing in my
personal life I was very unhappy about.
I told a friend that love is a catastrophe.
When love goes wrong, you get obsessional,
and that's what the song is about. It's
quite cathartic putting it down in words.
You make the record, listen back to
it, and you can leave it there. This
was written almost two years ago now.
When I sing it, I find I can still feel
the pain, if you like.
Question from David King: Will you
be releasing another remix album? How
about calling it "Excuse me PLEASE
it's DISCO ACTUALLY"!
Chris: Great title! I doubt it. We've
just repackaged all our previous stuff.
There's quite a lot of stuff lying around
but I don't think we will.
Neil: We wanted to re-release the old
material because the technology has
really improved, so we could make the
sound quality better. We also wanted
to put out the stuff - remixes for example
- that we made at the time, and have
them all in one place. It's a marketing
exercise as well, to get our stuff back
in the shops.
Chris: In the old days, the booklet
was the cover in the CD packaging. Our
stuff was originally poorly packaged,
but now they're gorgeous items in cardboard
sleeves, and you get two albums in one.
Question from Alex 4D: A few people
have covered your songs, Merril Bainbridge
covered Being Boring - which are your
favourites?
Neil: I like the version of Rent we
did with Liza Minelli, arranged by the
person who did the music for all the
David Lynch films. I felt that was a
really good arrangement. It's a very
coverable song because it's got a very
simple chord change.
Question from Emma King: What has been
the best gig so far and why?
Neil: Ever? I always remember a gig
on the Performance tour in Brussels.
The show was like an opera - you had
to pretend the audience weren't there,
but they were behaving like a football
crowd. I really enjoyed that gig. I
remember Glastonbury two years ago.
We didn't know what it would be like
but it went down really well.
Chris: We did a concert in Rio once.
The audience was so mad - the reaction
was like just having scored the winning
goal at the World Cup.
Neil: The first time we did TOTP -
West End Girls - you do a rehearsal,
and when we did, the studio went really
quiet, and at the end, the studio clapped,
and it was a nice feeling.
Question from Steve Wilkinson: Hi Neil
and Chris - will you ever DJ on Radio
One again like you used to?
Chris: I'll DJ again if we're asked.
Whenever we've done it we've had total
control over what records we play, so
it was great - we could scout round
all the record shops. Doing the Simon
Bates show for a week was a real highlight.
There's a record I heard called Just
Put Your Hand in Mine by the Space Cowboys
which is really good.
Question from Josh Isaacs: Do you feel
you have developed as musicians during
your absence from the limelight?
Neil: I don't know about the absence
and the limelight bit but I think, over
the years we've developed as musicians.
I feel we have over the last few months,
doing the university tour, having to
play guitar. I've been playing guitar
since 12, but I was pushing myself on
the tour, doing something new. It's
a good feeling. Remembering all the
chords and the whole thing, I like that.
But I also feel, making songs technically,
we've improved over the years. I think
we still have the simple inspiration
that we had at the start, but greater
technical knowledge. When we started
we didn't always understand what was
going on in the studio, but now we do.
Question from Trudi Topham: Was it
jarring moving from more "conventional"
careers into the pop arena? What prompted
the decision to leave financial stability
and head into the fickle music world?
Neil: Chris didn't have a career! He's
never worked for a living ever!
Chris: I've had part-time jobs!
Neil: For me it was a funny decision.
I left Smash Hits at 30 which seemed
quite old. I felt it was worth a go.
We got an advance from EMI, which meant
I got the same annual salary as my pitiful
one at Smash Hits.
Chris: I had no idea how the music
would be received. When we came back
from New York with our demo, I didn't
play it to anyone - I was too embarrassed!
Question from Susan Cowan: Hello Neil
and Chris. I really enjoyed Closer to
Heaven, are there any plans for another
musical?
Chris: Oh yes, we're going to write
another one next year. We learnt a lot
from Closer to Heaven. It was a great
experience. It's not just me and Neil
- it's the whole theatrical team, the
actors as well. It's a great team effort,
and when you get it on stage, it's quite
an achievement. A long, hard process,
but well worth it. We want to do one
that's more accessible to more people
this time. Closer to Heaven was never
meant to be a big blockbuster like Les
Mis. It was very much an off-Broadway
production, which lasted for five months
- I was surprised it lasted more than
a week!
Neil: We're also talking about a north
American production too. I was talking
to someone who works in musicals, and
she said she couldn't imagine an entirely
new musical with a new score being successful,
because people like familiarity. As
ever in the Pet Shop Boys we're standing
outside what other people think. We
think it's possible, but we don't think
of it as being commercially viable for
ten years. We just think of it as doing
a new play.
Chris: The age group we were aiming
at would go to the cinema, but would
never go to the theatre. I think Closer
to Heaven would make a great film. I
can imagine a Hard Day's Night type
version of it.
Question from Julian Thomas: Any more
musical collaborations on the horizon?
Neil: No, not at the moment.
Chris: We're not really thinking about
it at the moment.
Question from Stephen1: What's your
favourite track on the latest album,
and are you worried about upsetting
Eminem?
Neil: We're not worried about upsetting
Eminem. He's upset a lot of people in
his career, so I suspect he won't mind,
but he probably won't hear it! My favourite
album is the last track, You Choose,
but I like every track on the album.
Question from Anders: How do you feel
when you find out that your songs are
on the internet one or two months before
the album is released?
Neil: It's a fact of modern life. I
find it kind of annoying that your album
is stolen and put on the internet. You
don't have the responsibility about
releasing things anymore, you don't
have the choice. If we wanted to do
that, we could do it on our own website.
There's a weird morality on the internet
- people think it's okay to steal things
because it doesn't feel like stealing.
Our album is something made and financed
by us. I think we should be able to
decide when we can release it. I think
people should get their heads around
the fact that it's stealing. But the
music business isn't really bothered.
People say, I downloaded your album,
I'm going to buy it. Okay, but it's
still stealing. We think music is precious,
and has a value. If you look at our
album cover, the work that's gone into
the presentation - when people download
it in MP3 format ...
Chris: People don't realise that MP3
isn't a very good format. There's this
whole myth that digital is really good
quality, but analogue is much better
quality.
Neil: The internet is a good resource,
but there are no libel laws on it -
people say things that aren't true,
as if they are fact. People are intellectually
lazy ...
Chris: And the grammar's appalling!
Question from Jeremy Kay: Have you
got massive record collections? I remember
Neil saying he bought all the Bobby
O records in the early days...
Neil: At some point in the early 90s,
or even earlier than that, I got rid
of a lot of vinyl albums, but I kept
my 12" singles. I've also got a
collection of 7" records from the
70s and early 80s. And I've got thousands
of CDs!
Question from Neilsblueeyes: Roughly
what percentage of your fan mail do
you read (truth please!) and do you
bin it immediately or keep any of it?
Neil: We have a system on the internet
where people can ask us questions, and
we answer some of them - we can't answer
them all! Fanmail requests for autographs
are passed to us, and we sign them,
but we can't respond to all our fanmail.
We get sent food and things - bottles
of wine, that goes down quite well!
Question from David Robinson: What
further ambitions do you have as a group
bearing in mind everything you've achieved
over the years? Is there anything you
still have a burning desire to do?
Neil: We have a lot of ambitions, in
terms of performances, records, doing
another musical.
Chris: I don't know really. I wish
I was more ambitious really. I'm lazy!
But it's the more ambitious people who
seem to get further, even if I'm not
as talented. I wish I had a bigger ego
because they seem to do better as well.
Question from Neilsblueeyes: Who is
the snootiest star you've met?
Chris: Apart from Neil?
Neil: How dare you say that! Moby!
No... Michael Stipe? Erm... People probably
expect showbizzy stars to be snooty,
but music people are a lot more snooty.
Steven Spielberg told me he loved my
music. But you might find someone who
won Big Brother is a lot more snooty
than Steven Spielberg.
Question from Mellissa Marshall: Did
you ever think, way back in the 80's
that your success would continue as
it has done ... your albums get better
and better!!
Neil: Thank you! We've never ever thought
that far ahead. It's great to still
be doing what we're doing. We have fantastically
interesting lives, have done for a long
time. What happens happens. It's great
really.
Chris: I didn't really think about
it. I never imagined success in the
first place. I've got no complaints.
Neil: I think to be able to have ideas,
write songs, have them released and
get things produced in the theatre -
it's a wonderful position to be in.
Chris: We've managed to do this without
using fame and celebrity. Sometimes
I think if we'd lived our lives in a
more public way, we'd have had more
success. But we've relied on our music,
rather than going to openings and living
our life as a soap opera.
Neil: We don't look back at our records
and think they're crap. We like them
all.
Chris: I think our greatest achievement
is writing songs that mean things to
ourselves and people.
TOTP Host: Here's the Boys with a final
word to everyone that's logged on today....
Neil: I'd like to thank all our fans
around the world for the support they
give us, because it is great. We have
a kind of weird Pet Shop Boys community.
It's amazing. It's all about love!
Chris: As long as it's unrequited!
The Pet Shop Boys are all about lost
love, or love that's never happened!
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