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25/05
Electric Factory, Philadelphia
Pet
Shop Boys warm things up
By A.D. Amorosi
FOR THE INQUIRER
With
their tongue-in-cheek wit and sleek Bacharach-Morricone musical
house blend, the Pet Shop Boys are Britain's most elegant post-modernist
songwriters.
The
grandeur of programmer Chris Lowe's synthetic dance-pop and the
seedy satire of singer Neil Tennant's lyrics are legendary. And
the outspoken duo's personal politics have made them among the gay
community's highest-profile artists.
Yet
despite Pet Shop Boys' acclaim, and a string of platinum albums
and acerbic '80s hits that include "West End Girls," "What
Have I Done to Deserve This?" and "Always on My Mind,"
audiences persist in thinking of the 21-year collaborators as distant.
"It's
my voice," said Tennant, who with Lowe will make the Pet Shop
Boys' first-ever Philadelphia appearance on Saturday at the Electric
Factory. "It's been called chilly in its time."
PSB's
edgy new CD Release seeks to warm up the ironic sophistication that
is their trademark - emotionally, with depictions of ardor rather
than the duo's usual idealized, detached romanticism; musically,
with a soft parade of rock-ish guitars (provided by Tennant and
former Smiths member Johnny Marr); and topically, with a treatise
on violence against gays.
Tennant
is well aware of how songs such as "Birthday Boy" - an
allegory related to the murder of gay Wyoming college student Matthew
Shepard - reinforce the tidy biography the mainstream press has
constructed for PSB. Sometimes, he said, he would like to forget
the whole "gay thing."
"Gay
people never talk about 'gay icons,' " said the singer, 47.
Lowe is 42. "When Dusty Springfield died, the press wanted
to know from me why Dusty was a gay icon. She wasn't. She was a
bloody brilliant singer."
Image
problems
The
culture marginalizes non-heterosexuals by reducing them to cliches,
he said. "I resent that gay people are only safe within the
media when they're cuddly, muscley, tragic or" - especially
in mass entertainments such as TV and film - "don't do anything
with their penises for fear of tastelessness."
Tennant
places himself in the Rufus Wainwright camp, where individuality
takes precedence over slab-of-beef sexuality, and life and art have
more value than purchasing power and a steroid-stoked body.
"Maybe
the problem is I'm too feminine, or that I sing about death when
being gay is all about avoiding it," Wainwright - whose lush
CD Poses was one of the events of 2001 - told the New York Times
last summer. The son of singer-songwriters Loudon Wainwright 3d
and Kate McGarrigle loathes Madonna and loves torch songs - and
it has been suggested that his iconoclastic views have produced
some queasiness among gay men uncomfortable with an artist who compares
himself to Cole Porter and Verdi. But Tennant couldn't agree more
with the young Canadian.
"Everyone
assumes being gay means being part of a community, that it's always
a political response as well as a fashion or shopping response.
If there's one generalization, it's that gay people don't want to
be generalized."
Stereotypes'
effects
Whether
the stereotypes come from inside or outside the gay populace is
inconsequential: They're made to divide and conquer, he said. As
for the muscle-bound image prevalent in gay media, "some people
like to live in a ghetto," Tennant nearly spit.
It
was willful individuality last spring that brought Tennant and Lowe
to organize the first gay-centric touring festival, Wotapalava.
The road show was to feature PSB and Wainwright with Soft Cell,
Magnetic Fields and Sinead O'Connor - acts sharing only the commonality
of being gay or appealing strongly to that audience.
Said
Tennant: "People assume if you're gay you like disco and show
tunes" - comic pause - "which, by the way I do like. We
just wanted to prove there is no one gay music." Ticket sales
were said to be slow and the "gay Lollapalooza" disintegrated
before it began when O'Connor pulled out. ("Guess she wasn't
lesbian anymore," said Tennant, dryly - which is precisely
what the gay-again, off-again O'Connor has maintained for years.)
Tennant still hopes Wotapalava can be resuscitated.
In
the meantime, Pet Shop Boys are busy not "being bored,"
as one of their signature tunes intones, by making quiet changes.
Like their sexy musical Closer to Heaven, which closed its run on
London's West End in October, Release is a hotbed of flesh and filibuster,
torment and topicality.
Of
the CD, with its dearth of samples and producer du jour beats, Tennant
said: "We've desired, not so much to be timeless, but to not
worry about being hip." For PSB to make a record anchored by
brisk guitars and devoid of irony and epic dimension may be odd
to PSB fans. Not to Tennant.
No
more or less programmed or satirical than the duo's earlier CDs,
Release distills big themes into story forms that offer emotion,
redress and foreshadowing. "I Get Along," a tale of broken
romance, was inspired by the forced resignation of a Northern Ireland
politician. The disco-flavored "The Samurai in Autumn"
considers "committed, flippant" renegades - a PSB self-reference
to their place in the mass market. The stark "Birthday Boy"
draws parallels between the birth and crucifixion of Jesus and the
Shepard death. Even faux-homophobe Eminem makes his way onto Release:
"The Night I Fell in Love" offers a twist on the rapper's
hit "Stan" by imagining a tryst between Em and his number-one
teenage fan.
"I
buy [Eminem's] rationale that he's vocalizing the blindness of America,
that he's playing Jerry Springer-type characters," said Tennant,
who has no beef with the Grammy-winning artist, whose scenarios
can be construed on the literal level as being antigay.
"I
believe most people who are homophobic are afraid of sex, period
- afraid to talk about it, afraid to let their kids near it. People
fear homosexuality because they think it's only about sex. What
they don't know is that" - he pauses, holding back the very
last laugh - "well, the fact is, they're right."
Philadelphia Inquirer
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