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History

March 2004

On March 6, the Pet Shop Boys perform a one-off concert at Barfly, the tiny Camden venue in an upstairs room of a pub, as part of a series of concerts to raise money for Warchild, performing live in front of an audience as a duo for the first time in twenty years. The set begins with three songs they have never played before in concert: “Try it (I’m in love with a married man)”, “Tonight is forever” and “We’re the Pet Shop Boys”. (Also making their first appearances are “In private” and “Nervously”.)

May 2004

A character in Alan Bennett’s latest play, The History Boys, set in a school in the 1980s, which opens in London to widespread acclaim, quotes, with the Pet Shop Boys’ permission, from “It’s a sin”. They were flattered. “Thoroughly good play,” says Chris. “Highly recommended.”

On May 31 the Pet Shop Boys occasional Olde English label releases Pete Burns’ single, “Jack and Jill party”, written and produced by the Pet Shop Boys with additional lyrics by Dead Or Alive’s Pete Burns. The song had originally been written before PopArt’s release, using for its title a term Neil saw in a book of gay slang he’d been given: “a party attended by gays and lesbians”. When Neil bumped into Pete Burns at the club night Nag Nag Nag, he mentioned they had a song that might be suitable for him. Even though it was only available through the Pet Shop Bys’ website, it reached No 75 in the chart.

June 2004

The Pet Shop Boys 2004 summer tour of festivals begins at the Storsjoyran festival in Ostersund, Sweden, in a new production designed by Ian McNeil and accompanied onstage by guitarists Mark Refoy and Bic Hayes, and percussionist Dawne Adams. The last of ten dates was at the TIM Festival in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on November 7.

July 2004

On July 10 Neil celebrates his fiftieth birthday with a Warholian party billed as “A happening at the ‘Factory’.”

On July 26 the Rammstein single, “Mein Teil”, about the German cannibal who shared a meal of the sautéed penis of his willing victim before killing him, is released. It includes two mixes by the Pet Shop Boys.

September 2004

On the evening of September 12th the Pet Shop Boys’ new score to Eisenstein’s classic 1925 Russian silent film Battleship Potemkin is premiered in light drizzle at London’s Trafalgar Square in front of an estimated audience of 20,000. (They had been approached with this idea in April 2003 by Philip Dodd, the director of the ICA.) The Pet Shop Boys perform behind gauze with the Dresdner Sinfoniker, conducted by Jonathan Stockhammer, playing orchestrations by Torsten Rasch who first came to their attention with his orchestral album of works by Rammstein, Mein Herz Brennt; above the performers the movie is projected on a giant screen. The performance is preceded by a provocative spectacle masterminded by, and rant from, Simon McBurney. They encore with one of the score’s vocal songs, “No time for tears”

On September 27 the Pet Shop Boys film of their 1991 tour Performance is released on DVD, including an audio commentary from Neil, Chris and Chris Heath and, for the first time, the full version of “Where the streets have no name (I can’t take my eyes off you)”.

February 2003

On February 3 the Pet Shop Boys release the latest in their intermittent series of dance albums, Disco 3. It combines some more rhythmic mixes of songs on Release with a number of the more dance-oriented songs they have recorded but not yet released over the same period, and new versions of two of songs they recently recorded for their John Peel session which seemed in keeping: their 1983 song “If looks could kill” and their cover of “Try it (I’m in love with a married man)”. Its sleeve, a view of London and the Thames at night, was shot by Wolfgang Tillmans. 

2003 February

On February 22 the Pet Shop Boys DJ in London at Arthur Baker’s Return To New York, at an event billed as a soundclash between them and New Order (represented by Bernard Sumner and Peter Hook). To New Order’s amusement, Neil and Chris don’t physically play the records themselves — they choose and sequence them, and their programmer Pete Gleadall operates the decks — but they feel fully validated in this approach when Arthur Baker tells them that this was exactly how Afrika Bambaataa used to do it. 

On this day

1986

‘Suburbia’ is released as a single.

1988

The Pet Shop Boys perform ‘Domino Dancing’ on Top of the Pops.

2008

Neil, who had never learned to drive and until now never had a driver’s license, passes the test for his license on his first attempt. He celebrates by going out for an afternoon drive all by himself.

2009

The Boys perform the first of two consecutive nights’ shows at San Francisco’s Warfield Theater.

2011

They make a surprise appearance as after-dinner entertainers at an exclusive white-tie gala at The Stud House, Hampton Court, London—a fundraiser for the Raisa Gorbachev Foundation, a charity devoted to the battle against childhood cancer. Neil and Chris perform ‘Go West’ and ‘West End Girls.’

2013

The Electric Tour comes to Philadelphia.

2015

It’s the last full day of summer in the Northern Hemisphere. Chris and Neil are spending it in the midst of a Southern California heat wave; they’re in Los Angeles recording tracks for their next album with producer Stuart Price.