Pet Shop Boys share lost Bananarama demo

From Ian Youngs at the BBC

The Pet Shop Boys are a band of two halves – Neil and Chris; serious suits and silly headgear; a glorious ’80s pop past and a constantly reimagined electronic future.

As singer Neil Tennant talks about a new series of reissued albums and an unheard track, those contrasts – which have always kept the band interesting – are as apparent as ever.

He looks back at how they have always looked forward. He has a lingering affection for old-fashioned physical music while admitting to succumbing to Spotify.

He doesn’t like Ed Sheeran but says the singer should be allowed to dominate the charts. He wants you to buy one set of reissues but says not to bother with another.

Media captionListen to the Pet Shop Boys’ demo version of One Way Street

The ones he’s on the phone to talk about are 1999’s Nightlife, 2002’s Release and 2006’s Fundamental, which are being remastered and reissued this month with copious bonus tracks.

One of those is One Way Street, a previously unreleased demo from the Fundamental sessions, which Tennant says he offered to Bananarama at the time – but has now decided he rather likes.

Their first six albums, which were re-released with similar bonus discs in 2001, are also getting another reissue. But if you already own the first remastered versions, you can save your money, the singer suggests.

Does going through the vaults bring back memories?

It brings back a lot of good memories. It was a lot of fun and people often ask Chris [Lowe] and I how the whole thing has lasted so long. We always have the same answer, because it’s true: We actually really enjoy going to the studio and writing songs together.

It is work but it’s also play, and I think when you listen to the newly reissued stuff you can see that we write in different styles and we experiment and we always write more stuff than we need for an album.

Do these albums strike you as being better or worse than you’d remembered them?

Happily, they seem to me to be better than I remember. When you work on an album and do promotion for it, you can get fed up with the whole thing after a while. And then you don’t really listen to it again very much because you’ve spent so long making it and then talking about it.

Listening back to Fundamental, I felt really pleased because it’s quite an epic album and it’s the only time we ever made an album which has got a strong concept.

We wanted to make an album that reflected what the world was like in the wake of 9/11, the Iraq war and the increasing surveillance techniques used by governments on their own people. It was a paranoid period and actually I think it expresses it quite well.

Pet Shop Boys
Image captionThe duo’s UK number ones include West End Girls, It’s A Sin and Always On My Mind

Tell me about the unreleased song, One Way Street.

In our studio we have a bookcase and One Way Street is the title of a book by the famous philosopher Walter Benjamin which, I hasten to add, I’d never actually read.

Chris was playing something on the keyboards and I saw this book and thought, “that’s a good title”. Actually it’s got a catchy chorus. We offered it to Bananarama, who were making a new album. We gave it to them and they rejected it!

The reason we didn’t put it out was because I thought the metaphor of a one way street – that something was predestined – was maybe a bit contrived. But listening to it all these years later it’s very catchy.

Your first six albums are also being remastered again – how much difference will there be?

Well, it’s a controversial thing in some ways because I think records should just get louder. If you bought the collection in 2001, I would suggest you don’t buy them again because I think it’s a bit ridiculous really. It’s exactly the same tracks and the same packaging and the same booklet, it’s just that they’ve been mastered again.

I asked our mastering engineer, ‘Do you think you can make them sound better than they did in 2001?’ And he said, “Yes we can, definitely.” And part of me is even slightly sceptical about that. You’re not getting any extra tracks or anything. Stick to your old ones, that’s my advice.

Read the full article here at the BBC

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