So is Kölsch - one of my favourite acts at the moment.jamie1978 wrote:Neil has good taste, that Royksopp track is great, as is the whole album in factDrem wrote:New interview for Chilean press:
http://www.economiaynegocios.cl/noticia ... ?id=296371
Thanks to Google Translator, it says:
- yes, they're not using Twitter for communication with fans (as they've already stated on a many occasions before, yet some fans still don't believe);
- among Neil's current favourite tracks are "Cassiopeia" (Kölsch) and "Here she comes again" (Röyksopp);
- apparently, third b-sides compilation is coming sometime in the future (more likely amidst the next decade, should we be realistic?);
- Super tour will represent the songs from 12 of PSB albums (so I guess we won't hear any songs from "Behaviour");
- "Further Listening" reissues are officially postponed till the next year ("we hope to launch it next year").
PRESS Thread
Re: PRESS Thread
Just for the sake of it, make sure you're always frowning.
It shows the world that you've got substance and depth.
It shows the world that you've got substance and depth.
Re: PRESS Thread
Touring interviews began to appear. The one in Salt Lake City Weekly:
http://www.cityweekly.net/utah/talking- ... id=3499647
http://www.cityweekly.net/utah/talking- ... id=3499647
"I think it’s an amazingly good album, I’ve got to be honest with you. It’s one of the albums I feel most proud of. But for people who don’t really know us, and have a sort of an idea about us, ‘Electric’ is more what the Pet Shop Boys are meant to be."
(Neil Tennant, speaking about "Elysium" on the eve of "Electric" release.)
(Neil Tennant, speaking about "Elysium" on the eve of "Electric" release.)
Re: PRESS Thread
Small yet amusing interview with Chris in San Francisco Chronicle:
http://www.sfchronicle.com/music/popqui ... 992432.php
http://www.sfchronicle.com/music/popqui ... 992432.php
"I think it’s an amazingly good album, I’ve got to be honest with you. It’s one of the albums I feel most proud of. But for people who don’t really know us, and have a sort of an idea about us, ‘Electric’ is more what the Pet Shop Boys are meant to be."
(Neil Tennant, speaking about "Elysium" on the eve of "Electric" release.)
(Neil Tennant, speaking about "Elysium" on the eve of "Electric" release.)
Modern pop stars have to talk about their love lives - but we don’t
Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe talk about their 35-year careers and why only their songs reveal the secrets of their private lives
Deep inside a sweltering, warren-like rehearsal space somewhere in southeast London, Britain’s most successful pop duo (50 million records sold worldwide) are on mischievous form. Pet Shop Boys, aka Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe (they’re always listed in that order, like Ant and Dec, and Gilbert and George) are both shaven headed, clad all in black and melting in the heat. So how are they, apart from hot?
“Old,” says Lowe (he’s 57).
“You’re not old!” says Tennant.
“Neil said the other day he’s now a young old person.” (Tennant is 63).
“Yeah, I think I am,” says Tennant.
“Whereas I’m still an old young person,” says Lowe.
What’s the difference?
“I’m still like a child,” says Lowe. “A stroppy child.”
So Tennant can’t behave like that any more?
“He never did,” Lowe says. “Always the serious one.”
Serious? Not wholly, but Tennant, the singer, is certainly the more grown-up half of the partnership, marshalling a conversation that skips merrily from the delights of the Norwegian city of Bergen to the perils of playing the Vienna State Opera (“we had a major row about the lasers”), to Tennant editing the Dairy Book of Home Management in his pre-music days, to why West End Girls, their breakthrough single of 1984, sounded like hip-hop (“Grandmaster Flash with an English accent”).
The keyboardist Lowe, as promised, plays the role of miscreant younger brother, occasionally finishing Tennant’s sentences or digressing laconically about subjects such as his love for the trashy reality TV series, The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills. “It’s the same every episode,” he says with wonder. “They all get dressed up, go to a party, get drunk, have a row, and then have the debriefing on the way back in the limo.”
As entertaining as free associating with the Pet Shop Boys is, we are here, as they playfully remind me, to talk about Catalogue, their project to reissue all their albums, which is kicking off with Nightlife (1999), Release (2002) and Fundamental (2006).
“I’m always surprised how good they are,” Tennant says, his vowels as decadently elongated as ever. “Because when you make an album you get kind of sick of it by the time you’ve finished it. There are so many versions of the Pet Shop Boys and then we edit them together for each album.”
Fundamental is often described as their most overtly political album, “a picture of Britain and the world in the War of Terror”, as Tennant puts it. He corrects himself: “War on Terror. It was Borat that said War of Terror, wasn’t it? ‘We admire your War of Terror.’ "
One reviewer said that Integral, a song on Fundamental about ID cards (how quaint) was the first time he had heard Tennant sounding angry. “Yeah, well I was probably angry about quite a lot of things,” he says. Another song on that album, I’m With Stupid, was about Tony Blair’s closeness to George W Bush, while the album was dedicated to two gay teenagers who were hanged in Iran in 2005.
How about now — has the age of Donald Trump and Brexit inspired them to write anything? Tennant said recently that I’m With Stupid could easily be reworked to refer to Theresa May and the US president, but he’s unsure about tackling current events: “It’s almost too serious, too alarming,” he says. “It sort of bypasses your creative process.”
The pair have expressed their contempt for nostalgia, but their records are like shiny time capsules, both thematically and musically. “Sometimes we just copy the style of contemporary pop records to see how they work,” Tennant says; over the years they have upholstered their electronic sound with hip-hop, disco, house and even indie guitars. Surely there must be an element of nostalgia with these reissues. Which of their albums are their favourites?
Lowe smirks. “I think my three favourite Pet Shop Boys albums are the three that are being rereleased.’’
Tennant giggles. “I remember talking to Liza Minnelli about promotion and she said that she could turn any question into an answer about her new album. ‘It must have been very tough growing up with your mother . . . ’ — ‘Oh I think mum would have loved this new album. She loved to dance!’ ” More laughter. Told you they were on mischievous form.
They’re bullish, too, undeterred by a few iffy reviews for their forays into high culture (“Heaven save us from pop stars with pretensions,” said The Times of their Alan Turing-themed Prom in 2014). “We would probably quite like to do another ballet,” Tennant says. “I think we’d quite like to do another piece of musical theatre. We’re not just like doing one of each. It’s not box-ticking.”
Not that they would ever forsake their first love: pop. Why would they, when it’s bigger than ever? Gone are the days when it fought to be taken seriously against rock, with Tennant, as assistant editor of Smash Hits, firmly on the side of pop. That battle has been won, he thinks: “Pop’s dominant.” He cites the example of Coldplay. “When they came in they were the new Travis, then they were the new U2 and then suddenly they’re making pop records.”
The duo are rehearsing for a summer of festival dates, including Brighton Pride and Bestival. The latter, a famous haven for fancy dress, will be a rare occasion when Tennant and Lowe, who have previously donned pointy cone hats, glitter-balls and cardinal robes on stage, won’t be the most bizarrely dressed people in attendance. The last time they played Bestival, in 2006, they flew afterwards to Finland to play another festival, where the headliner was David Bowie, whose Hallo Spaceboy they had recently remixed.
“We were on before him, and there were people swimming in the nude while we were playing,” Tennant says. “When we did Go West, a massive ship went past and tooted its horn. It was really amazing. Then we went and watched a bit of Bowie’s set, and he said, ‘I’d like to dedicate the next song to Neil Tennant from the Pet Shop Boys. It’s called Queen Bitch!’ ”
When the laughter has died away, they try shamelessly to turn the conversation back to the reissues.
“You should see the work Neil’s done on these booklets,” Lowe says, referring to the liner notes that accompany the albums, which Tennant oversaw.
“It was like doing the Dairy Book of Home Management,” Tennant says.
“Probably worse than that, actually.”
“No, there could never be anything in my life worse than the Dairy Book of Home Management,” Tennant says with a shudder. “It was a home encyclopaedia; the whole thing had to be done in ten weeks. I knew nothing about cooking or . . . ”
“Wiring a plug,” says Lowe.
“We got the diagram wrong in the book,” says Tennant with another shudder. “I think we got live and neutral mixed up.”
“Can you imagine the deaths!” says Lowe.
A few years after that, in 1981, Tennant met Lowe in an electronics shop on the Kings Road in southwest London. They bonded over dance music and “being two northerners in London”, Tennant says. He is from Newcastle, Lowe is from Blackpool. Both retain their accents; Tennant has a house in Durham and Lowe still spends lots of time in Blackpool.
They talk mistily about the early days of the band, where money from the label was plentiful, even for an unknown duo without a hit.
“The first track we ever did on Parlophone was Opportunities (Let’s Make Lots of Money) in 1985 and we worked in, I think, four studios,” Tennant says.
“And it was a flop!” says Lowe.
“I probably imagined I’d be back at Smash Hits within nine months,” says Tennant.
He was wrong — later that year West End Girls went to No 1 on both sides of the Atlantic and suddenly they were pop stars; Tennant was in Smash Hits rather than writing it. And here they are, 22 Top 10 singles, three Brits and eight Grammy nominations later. They’ve been together for 36 years, but there have been no hiatuses, or even whispers of disharmony. “We don’t fall out,” Tennant says. “We sort of bicker a bit. Well, it’s more likely that we’re both annoyed about the same thing that’s happening around us. I think we’re both a bit autistic.”
Lowe nods. “If you’re told one thing, and you’re told the reason for that thing, and then something else happens, you can’t follow why it’s happened that way, and it starts to drive you mad.”
Tennant came out as gay in 1994 and Lowe is widely assumed to be gay too, but neither will talk about their love lives. “Some people like to do that,” Tennant says. “The modern pop star has to do that.” As far as he is concerned, though, “the private life is in the songs. Once you’ve done that, you don’t then need to explain it. And it’s more interesting. We don’t know much about Bob Dylan’s private life — makes him more interesting. It’s probably boring. Otherwise, it all becomes this song and the life and the perfume and the clothes range and the reality TV appearances.”
Pressed, Tennant will talk about his formative years at a strict Catholic boys’ school, which fed into several of the band’s songs, most notably It’s A Sin. “I’ve probably worked through it,” he says. “When we wrote It’s A Sin in 1983, it was only 11 years after I’d left school, whereas I don’t really think about it now. People took It’s A Sin seriously, but I thought of it as being light-hearted. It was written very, very quickly. When we do it live it’s a sort of a big highlight. It didn’t feel like that when we wrote it.”
Lowe’s childhood could hardly be more different. “Blackpool’s an unusual place to grow up,” he says. “Amusement arcades, nightclubs, holidaymakers, the Pleasure Beach — that’s your normal.” Showbiz runs in the family: his mother was a dancer and his grandfather, Syd Flood, was in the Nitwits, the music-comedy act that had a residency in Las Vegas in the Sixties.
It turns out that this might hold the key to Lowe’s stage persona, which famously involves him looking grumpy behind his keyboards. Tennant talks about watching an online clip of the Nitwits: “We realised, it’s the family act, because his grandfather sits there and looks grumpy! It’s the same act!”
An act it certainly is in Lowe’s case; he is clearly having a hoot most of the time, as is his musical partner of almost four decades. Tennant remembers talking to Lowe’s grandparents about working in showbiz. “Your grandmother said to me, ‘Oh, it’s a marvellous life, isn’t it?’ ”
He stops and smiles: “I said, ‘Yeah, it is, actually.’ ”
by Ed Potton
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/time ... -wd8tg7pqq
Deep inside a sweltering, warren-like rehearsal space somewhere in southeast London, Britain’s most successful pop duo (50 million records sold worldwide) are on mischievous form. Pet Shop Boys, aka Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe (they’re always listed in that order, like Ant and Dec, and Gilbert and George) are both shaven headed, clad all in black and melting in the heat. So how are they, apart from hot?
“Old,” says Lowe (he’s 57).
“You’re not old!” says Tennant.
“Neil said the other day he’s now a young old person.” (Tennant is 63).
“Yeah, I think I am,” says Tennant.
“Whereas I’m still an old young person,” says Lowe.
What’s the difference?
“I’m still like a child,” says Lowe. “A stroppy child.”
So Tennant can’t behave like that any more?
“He never did,” Lowe says. “Always the serious one.”
Serious? Not wholly, but Tennant, the singer, is certainly the more grown-up half of the partnership, marshalling a conversation that skips merrily from the delights of the Norwegian city of Bergen to the perils of playing the Vienna State Opera (“we had a major row about the lasers”), to Tennant editing the Dairy Book of Home Management in his pre-music days, to why West End Girls, their breakthrough single of 1984, sounded like hip-hop (“Grandmaster Flash with an English accent”).
The keyboardist Lowe, as promised, plays the role of miscreant younger brother, occasionally finishing Tennant’s sentences or digressing laconically about subjects such as his love for the trashy reality TV series, The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills. “It’s the same every episode,” he says with wonder. “They all get dressed up, go to a party, get drunk, have a row, and then have the debriefing on the way back in the limo.”
As entertaining as free associating with the Pet Shop Boys is, we are here, as they playfully remind me, to talk about Catalogue, their project to reissue all their albums, which is kicking off with Nightlife (1999), Release (2002) and Fundamental (2006).
“I’m always surprised how good they are,” Tennant says, his vowels as decadently elongated as ever. “Because when you make an album you get kind of sick of it by the time you’ve finished it. There are so many versions of the Pet Shop Boys and then we edit them together for each album.”
Fundamental is often described as their most overtly political album, “a picture of Britain and the world in the War of Terror”, as Tennant puts it. He corrects himself: “War on Terror. It was Borat that said War of Terror, wasn’t it? ‘We admire your War of Terror.’ "
One reviewer said that Integral, a song on Fundamental about ID cards (how quaint) was the first time he had heard Tennant sounding angry. “Yeah, well I was probably angry about quite a lot of things,” he says. Another song on that album, I’m With Stupid, was about Tony Blair’s closeness to George W Bush, while the album was dedicated to two gay teenagers who were hanged in Iran in 2005.
How about now — has the age of Donald Trump and Brexit inspired them to write anything? Tennant said recently that I’m With Stupid could easily be reworked to refer to Theresa May and the US president, but he’s unsure about tackling current events: “It’s almost too serious, too alarming,” he says. “It sort of bypasses your creative process.”
The pair have expressed their contempt for nostalgia, but their records are like shiny time capsules, both thematically and musically. “Sometimes we just copy the style of contemporary pop records to see how they work,” Tennant says; over the years they have upholstered their electronic sound with hip-hop, disco, house and even indie guitars. Surely there must be an element of nostalgia with these reissues. Which of their albums are their favourites?
Lowe smirks. “I think my three favourite Pet Shop Boys albums are the three that are being rereleased.’’
Tennant giggles. “I remember talking to Liza Minnelli about promotion and she said that she could turn any question into an answer about her new album. ‘It must have been very tough growing up with your mother . . . ’ — ‘Oh I think mum would have loved this new album. She loved to dance!’ ” More laughter. Told you they were on mischievous form.
They’re bullish, too, undeterred by a few iffy reviews for their forays into high culture (“Heaven save us from pop stars with pretensions,” said The Times of their Alan Turing-themed Prom in 2014). “We would probably quite like to do another ballet,” Tennant says. “I think we’d quite like to do another piece of musical theatre. We’re not just like doing one of each. It’s not box-ticking.”
Not that they would ever forsake their first love: pop. Why would they, when it’s bigger than ever? Gone are the days when it fought to be taken seriously against rock, with Tennant, as assistant editor of Smash Hits, firmly on the side of pop. That battle has been won, he thinks: “Pop’s dominant.” He cites the example of Coldplay. “When they came in they were the new Travis, then they were the new U2 and then suddenly they’re making pop records.”
The duo are rehearsing for a summer of festival dates, including Brighton Pride and Bestival. The latter, a famous haven for fancy dress, will be a rare occasion when Tennant and Lowe, who have previously donned pointy cone hats, glitter-balls and cardinal robes on stage, won’t be the most bizarrely dressed people in attendance. The last time they played Bestival, in 2006, they flew afterwards to Finland to play another festival, where the headliner was David Bowie, whose Hallo Spaceboy they had recently remixed.
“We were on before him, and there were people swimming in the nude while we were playing,” Tennant says. “When we did Go West, a massive ship went past and tooted its horn. It was really amazing. Then we went and watched a bit of Bowie’s set, and he said, ‘I’d like to dedicate the next song to Neil Tennant from the Pet Shop Boys. It’s called Queen Bitch!’ ”
When the laughter has died away, they try shamelessly to turn the conversation back to the reissues.
“You should see the work Neil’s done on these booklets,” Lowe says, referring to the liner notes that accompany the albums, which Tennant oversaw.
“It was like doing the Dairy Book of Home Management,” Tennant says.
“Probably worse than that, actually.”
“No, there could never be anything in my life worse than the Dairy Book of Home Management,” Tennant says with a shudder. “It was a home encyclopaedia; the whole thing had to be done in ten weeks. I knew nothing about cooking or . . . ”
“Wiring a plug,” says Lowe.
“We got the diagram wrong in the book,” says Tennant with another shudder. “I think we got live and neutral mixed up.”
“Can you imagine the deaths!” says Lowe.
A few years after that, in 1981, Tennant met Lowe in an electronics shop on the Kings Road in southwest London. They bonded over dance music and “being two northerners in London”, Tennant says. He is from Newcastle, Lowe is from Blackpool. Both retain their accents; Tennant has a house in Durham and Lowe still spends lots of time in Blackpool.
They talk mistily about the early days of the band, where money from the label was plentiful, even for an unknown duo without a hit.
“The first track we ever did on Parlophone was Opportunities (Let’s Make Lots of Money) in 1985 and we worked in, I think, four studios,” Tennant says.
“And it was a flop!” says Lowe.
“I probably imagined I’d be back at Smash Hits within nine months,” says Tennant.
He was wrong — later that year West End Girls went to No 1 on both sides of the Atlantic and suddenly they were pop stars; Tennant was in Smash Hits rather than writing it. And here they are, 22 Top 10 singles, three Brits and eight Grammy nominations later. They’ve been together for 36 years, but there have been no hiatuses, or even whispers of disharmony. “We don’t fall out,” Tennant says. “We sort of bicker a bit. Well, it’s more likely that we’re both annoyed about the same thing that’s happening around us. I think we’re both a bit autistic.”
Lowe nods. “If you’re told one thing, and you’re told the reason for that thing, and then something else happens, you can’t follow why it’s happened that way, and it starts to drive you mad.”
Tennant came out as gay in 1994 and Lowe is widely assumed to be gay too, but neither will talk about their love lives. “Some people like to do that,” Tennant says. “The modern pop star has to do that.” As far as he is concerned, though, “the private life is in the songs. Once you’ve done that, you don’t then need to explain it. And it’s more interesting. We don’t know much about Bob Dylan’s private life — makes him more interesting. It’s probably boring. Otherwise, it all becomes this song and the life and the perfume and the clothes range and the reality TV appearances.”
Pressed, Tennant will talk about his formative years at a strict Catholic boys’ school, which fed into several of the band’s songs, most notably It’s A Sin. “I’ve probably worked through it,” he says. “When we wrote It’s A Sin in 1983, it was only 11 years after I’d left school, whereas I don’t really think about it now. People took It’s A Sin seriously, but I thought of it as being light-hearted. It was written very, very quickly. When we do it live it’s a sort of a big highlight. It didn’t feel like that when we wrote it.”
Lowe’s childhood could hardly be more different. “Blackpool’s an unusual place to grow up,” he says. “Amusement arcades, nightclubs, holidaymakers, the Pleasure Beach — that’s your normal.” Showbiz runs in the family: his mother was a dancer and his grandfather, Syd Flood, was in the Nitwits, the music-comedy act that had a residency in Las Vegas in the Sixties.
It turns out that this might hold the key to Lowe’s stage persona, which famously involves him looking grumpy behind his keyboards. Tennant talks about watching an online clip of the Nitwits: “We realised, it’s the family act, because his grandfather sits there and looks grumpy! It’s the same act!”
An act it certainly is in Lowe’s case; he is clearly having a hoot most of the time, as is his musical partner of almost four decades. Tennant remembers talking to Lowe’s grandparents about working in showbiz. “Your grandmother said to me, ‘Oh, it’s a marvellous life, isn’t it?’ ”
He stops and smiles: “I said, ‘Yeah, it is, actually.’ ”
by Ed Potton
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/time ... -wd8tg7pqq
"I think it’s an amazingly good album, I’ve got to be honest with you. It’s one of the albums I feel most proud of. But for people who don’t really know us, and have a sort of an idea about us, ‘Electric’ is more what the Pet Shop Boys are meant to be."
(Neil Tennant, speaking about "Elysium" on the eve of "Electric" release.)
(Neil Tennant, speaking about "Elysium" on the eve of "Electric" release.)
- Marie loves PSB
- Posts: 1755
- Joined: Sun 27 May 2007, 10:56 am
- Contact:
-
- Posts: 4709
- Joined: Tue 28 Oct 2003, 3:42 pm
- Contact:
Re: PRESS Thread
And there it is....
A few years after that, in 1981, Tennant met Lowe in an electronics shop on the Kings Road in southwest London.
Every article!!
A few years after that, in 1981, Tennant met Lowe in an electronics shop on the Kings Road in southwest London.
Every article!!
Last edited by One of the crowd on Wed 26 Jul 2017, 3:21 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Did Zoe Ball let something slip today? (31:01:24)
- lucienchardon
- Posts: 1104
- Joined: Thu 08 Jan 2004, 8:22 am
- Contact:
Re: PRESS Thread
Thanks for posting the article. Great stuff. Can't wait to get the booklets in the new reissues.
- madsnielsen
- Posts: 144
- Joined: Tue 28 Oct 2003, 2:35 pm
- Contact:
Re: PRESS Thread
Hilarious.“You should see the work Neil’s done on these booklets,” Lowe says, referring to the liner notes that accompany the albums, which Tennant oversaw.
“It was like doing the Dairy Book of Home Management,” Tennant says.
“Probably worse than that, actually.”
“No, there could never be anything in my life worse than the Dairy Book of Home Management,” Tennant says with a shudder. “It was a home encyclopaedia; the whole thing had to be done in ten weeks. I knew nothing about cooking or . . . ”
“Wiring a plug,” says Lowe.
“We got the diagram wrong in the book,” says Tennant with another shudder. “I think we got live and neutral mixed up.”
“Can you imagine the deaths!” says Lowe.
I had to look it up in my copy but I am no expert in wiring a plug either so can anyone explain what they got wrong in the book?.
Mads Nielsen
If people say I'm crazy, I tell 'em that it's true
If people say I'm crazy, I tell 'em that it's true
Re: PRESS Thread
I can't see any obvious mistakes in that, looks correct (could it be it was wrong in a different edition or something?)
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: Bing [Bot], Semrush [Bot] and 17 guests