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An interview with the Pet Shop Boys
Interviewer: Jack Carrington
From: Varsity.co.uk / 10.11.2011
Views: 1829
The Pet Shop Boys to talk to Jack Carrington
about ballet, the biggest tour ever
and an exclusive announcement
It has been thirty years since Pet Shop Boys Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe met as students in an electronics shop in Chelsea. Since then they have gone on to become one of the worldâs most successful bands, selling over 100 million records and cultivating a unique catalogue of songs which straddles the fine line between pop and art. In the past year the pair have been hectically busy as usual. In March they launched their hit ballet âThe Most Incredible Thingâ at Sadlers Wells, before taking to the road to support Take That on the biggest tour in the history of the UK. Somehow they also found time to write 16 new songs for their next album which they are due to start recording this month.
As I arrive at the Pet Shop Boysâ airy Kensington offices, Neil - whose lyrics range from sincere romanticism to sardonic humour - makes a point of injecting a sense of Oxbridge rivalry into the proceedings. Without prompting, he begins to recall the time he spoke at the Oxford Union. âApparently it was the largest audience theyâd had since Ronald Reagan. It was a fascinating experience.â
A few minutes later Chris arrives looking slightly agitated and muttering about the terrible journey across London. Fortunately, he spots the box of patisseries in my hand; his face immediately lights up. âOh, youâve brought cake! Well, that changes everything of course,â he enthuses, âIâll even have a cup of tea nowâ.
As we sit down with tea and cake, I begin by asking them about their ballet - why did they decide to write it?
âAs far as some of the critics are concerned thereâs always the slight whiff of a vanity project with these things.â sighs Neil.
âWe did it because we were asked to!â Chris interjects, âWe didnât just go to Sadlerâs Wells and say âHey, can we write a ballet?ââ
âWe were asked to write a piece of music by our friend Ivan Putrov, whoâs a principal dancer at the Royal Ballet,â explains Neil, âAnd we wanted to do something like this after Closer to Heaven (The Pet Shop Boysâ 2001 musical). In a way itâs like writing the score to a silent film, which of course we did for Battleship Potemkin.â
I ask whether writing a ballet will change their approach to pop.
âItâs quite different to writing a pop song - the structure is far less rigid,â answers Chris.
âYou write a ballet to according to a set of themes, with longer melodic sequences. And best of all, I donât have to write any lyricsâ, Neil adds with a laugh.
The conversation turns to Take Thatâs Progress tour, for which the Pet Shop Boys provided a support set which one journalist compared to âgetting Michelangelo in to paint the kitchen ceilingâ. So, how did it feel to be part of the biggest tour in UK music history?
âWell one of the reasons we did it was that they were performing eight nights at Wembley Stadium - phenomenal,â says Chris between mouthfuls of cake, âI think only Steps are going to surpass that. Of course weâll be supporting them as well. Weâre the band you come to for supporting multiple stadium nightsâ, he adds with a distinctly mischievous glint in his eye.
Neil looks slightly exasperated. âDonât be ridiculous, Steps arenât doing stadiumsâ.
âNot yet, theyâre not - this is only their first comeback!â replies Chris with mock sincerity, âTake That started out with arenas, now theyâve set the template.â
I ask Neil and Chris about the recent Time Magazine feature which names their 1991 single âBeing Boringâ as one of the best 100 songs released since the magazine began in 1923. Unwittingly, I seem to have stumbled upon what appears to be an exclusive announcement. âI was listening to some of our old songs recently, because weâre putting out another B-sides album in February, like an âAlternativeâ part two. But weâre calling it Format,â says Neil, referring to their classic B-sides collection from 1995.
Chris sounds a little concerned, âWeâre not announcing that yet, are we?â
âWell why not - these things are usually leaked through some Japanese website anyway. Iâd rather it came out here,â insists Neil. âItâs all our B-sides from 1996 to 2009, starting with The Truck Driver and His Mateâ.
âOh I like that song,â Chris pipes up, âItâs just our little tribute to Oasis. In fact Jon Savage pointed out that itâs the chord change from Some Might Say. Though heâd better not put that in the sleeve notes when he writes them.â
âActually I think some of our best songs are B-sides,â declares Neil, âBecause on a B-side you can do what you likeâ.
As elder statesmen of pop, the pair seem somewhat disillusioned with the current scene. âAt the moment, thereâs no movement Iâm enthralled by,â says Chris, âI mean when I hear dubstep now I think âare we really still doing this?â Although Chase and Status are good live. And they have this fantastic idea where they split up and perform separately.â
âWe should do thatâ enthuses Neil, âJust âPet Shop Boyâ - we could cover the same number of venues in half the time, doing a DJ setâ, he giggles, âOf course, weâll just play our own records off vinylâ.
With the new album set to be released next Autumn, as well as the release of a B-sides collection and the return of their ballet to Sadlerâs Wells, they may well need to employ such time-saving techniques. 2012 looks to be yet another busy year for the Pet Shop Boys.
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