Pet Shop Boys
Neil Tennant, the assistant editor of UK pop magazine Smash
Hits met keyboard player Chris Lowe in a music shop in
London in 1981 and discussed forming a band called the Pet Shop
Boys (the name takes its inspiration from a couple of friends of
Tennant and Lowe who owned a pet shop in Ealing, West London).
After writing and recording demos, they came under the wing of
New York dance producer Bobby "O" Orlando. In the summer
of 1984, they issued the Orlando-produced West End Girls
which passed unnoticed.
Dropped from Epic Records, they were picked up by Parlophone
the following year.
A second single Opportunities (Let's Make Lots Of Money) also
failed but a re-recording of West End Girls began selling
in late 1985. In January 1986, this hypnotic single topped the
charts in the UK and repeated the feat later in the USA.
The duo's debut Please, Love Comes Quickly, a re-mixed
version of Opportunities (Let's Make Lots Of Money) and Suburbia
consolidated their position in the UK during 1986. The
following year, the duo returned to number one with It's A Sin.
By this time, they were critically fêted as one of the more
interesting bands of their time, with an engaging love of pop
irony, camp imagery, and arch wordplay. The quality of their
melodies was also evident in the successful collaboration with Dusty
Springfield, What Have I Done To Deserve This? which
reached number two in both the UK and the USA.
By the end of the year the duo were back at the top in their
home country with a cover version of the Elvis
Presley hit, Always On My Mind (also a US Top Five
single).
After releasing the well-received Actually, the duo
appeared in the documentary film, It Couldn't Happen Here,
which co-starred Carry On actress, Barbara
Windsor. The film was given the cold shoulder by reviewers and
was seen as a mild hiccup in the duo's fortunes.
A
fourth UK number one with Heart was followed by a
production and songwriting credit on Eighth
Wonder's hit single, I'm Not Scared. Introspective
spawned further UK Top 10 hits in Domino Dancing, Left
To My Own Devices, and It's Alright.
Having previously eschewed live tours (they had hitherto
performed one-off concerts only), the Pet Shop Boys made their
debut in Japan and the Far East, before finally reaching the UK.
In typical manner, the show's concept took them as far away from
the traditional pop concert as possible and incorporated the use
of actors, dancers and film.
A surprise collaboration in 1989 with Liza Minnelli gave her a
UK Top 10 hit with Losing My Mind. The duo's own
inventive wit was again in evidence on the UK Top Five hit So
Hard, the laconic Being Boring (a rare failure - it
only reached number 20), and an odd fusion of U2's
Where The Streets Have No Name and Frankie Valli's Can't
Take My Eyes Off You. Behaviour was a downbeat,
slightly disappointing album.
In 1991, the duo issued one of the best compilations of the
era, Discography. Despite Tennant's continued involvement
with Johnny Marr and Bernard Sumner in Electronic, the duo
insisted that the Pet Shop Boys were only taking a short
break.
The UK Top 10 hit Can You Forgive Her? was a fine
trailer to 1993's Very, a superb collection that tinkered
with the duo's sound to incorporate contemporary dance music
sounds. Later in the year, they enjoyed a UK number 2 hit with a
bold cover version of the Village
People's gay anthem, Go West.
Alternative was an excellent double CD of b-sides,
which fully demonstrated their pioneering sound in
"left-field dance pop". Bilingual experimented
with Latin rhythms, and featured two further UK Top 10 singles, Before
and Se A Vide E (That's The Way Life Is).
The duo's long-awaited new album, Nightlife, was
premiered by the single I Don't Know What You Want But I Can't
Give It Any More. Despite a rare lapse of taste on the camp New
York City Boy, the album highlighted their remarkable
creativity on tracks such as Happiness Is An Option and
the bittersweet single You Only Tell Me You Love Me When
You're Drunk, which put them back in the UK Top 10 in January
2000.
Tennant and Lowe subsequently collaborated with writer Jonathan
Harvey on the West End musical, Closer To Heaven, which
opened at the Arts Theatre in May 2001.
The show earned some particularly harsh reviews from theatre
critics, and despite attracting a cult audience closed after only
four months. The duo returned to the UK charts in 2002 with Release,
which featured a more guitar-orientated sound, notably on the
powerful I Get Along.
The third volume in the duo's ongoing remix project was
released the following year, with Tennant and Lowe reclaiming
territory that had been eroded by their own success and that of
other less talented acts. The Pet Shop Boys shine in the dance
arena, and Disco 3 was a blistering return. They remixed Yoko
Ono's Walking On Thin Ice which became a hit in June
2003.
|