Skip to navigation Skip to content

History

June 1997

On June 27 the Pet Shop Boys play their first ever festival show, headlining the Roskilde festival in Denmark. “We’re playing fifteen hit singles and one obscure song.” Neil tells the press beforehand. “We’re not taking any chances,” Chris explains. After a fairly triumphant reception, Chris says, “We didn’t look too keen, did we? It’s easy to get carried away at moments like that and do things you regret later.” Two days later they play at another festival in Turku, Finland. During “Go West” a preposterously large ship comes up the river, alongside the stage, as though choreographed.

July 1997

A new version of ‘Bilingual’ is released on July 7th titled ‘Bilingual Special Edition’. It features a bonus CD containing 7 remixed tracks, including the extended version of ‘Somewhere’ and a previously unavailable mix of ‘The boy who couldn’t keep his clothes on’.

1997 July

The Pet Shop Boys agree to headline Gay Pride, an all-day celebration on Clapham Common in London on July 5th. They perform ‘Somewhere’, ‘It’s a sin’, and ‘Go West’ to a sea of people, as far as you can see, their arms in the air.

August 1997

On August 16 the Pet Shop Boys headline the final night of the Stockholm Water Festival in Sweden. The stage is on a man-made island floating on water, which sways noticeable as they perform.

September 1997

On September 14 the Pet Shop Boys appear on the TV programme ‘An Audience With Elton John’ performing with Elton John an arrangement of theirs which melds together two of his songs, “Believe” and “Song For Guy”.

October 1997

On October 26 the Pet Shop Boys headline Stonewall’s Equality Show at London’s Royal Albert Hall, having agreed to do so at the last minute. Before finishing with a hastily arranged version of Tom Jones’ “It’s Not Unusual”, they played a medley which included “Sixteen Going On Seventeen” (from The Sound Of Music), “Being boring”, “Climb Every Mountain” (also from The Sound Of Music) and “Go West”, “It was our greatest moment,” Chris declares. “Our finest hour.”

November 1997

On November 24 a longform video, Somewhere: Pet Shop Boys in Concert, is released. Directed by Annie Griffin, it comprises of a half-hour documentary about the staging of the Somewhere show followed by a film of most of the show itself.

1997 November

December 1997

For their Fan Club, the Pet Shop Boys record a Christmas song, “It doesn’t often snow at Christmas” and send it in silver bubble-wrap casing as their Christmas card. “Originally I was trying to do this pretentious Christmas‑y music thing,” Neil says, “but then I said, ‘maybe we should do something really corny…” Though not released commercially it is played several times on Radio One before Christmas.

February 1998

On February 28 the Pet Shop Boys begin a short, four-concert Russian tour, visiting Moscow and St. Petersburg, inspired by their visit to St. Petersburg to see Brian Eno the previous summer. In Moscow they perform twice in one night, once in a large arena then later in the middle of an over-crowded nightclub. The local media ask them whether they speak Russian, “We’re very good at saying ‘nyet’,” they explain.

April 1998

On April 13, Twentieth Century Blues: The Songs of Noel Coward is released. It is an album of Noel Coward songs covered by contemporary musicians, co-compiled by Neil, who has been working on it for the past eighteen months. He has loved Noel Coward’s music since he first heard it in about 1970. “I think as a songwriter he’s slightly underrated,” Neil says, “simply because his plays are so famous, and people forget.” The Pet Shop Boys do a version of “Sail Away”, and amongst the other interpreters are Elton John, Paul McCartney, Suede, Robbie Williams and the Divine Comedy. “We tried to choose artists,” Neil explains, “who somehow seem to be in the Noel Coward tradition of wit, theatrically and style.” To promote the album, Neil appeared along on TFI Friday where he sang along with a busker playing Pet Shop Boys songs on an acoustic guitar.

On this day

1987

A major fire breaks out at King’s Cross underground station in London, killing 31 people. Years later, people listening to the Pet Shop Boys song ‘King’s Cross,’ with its reference to ‘dead and wounded,’ will wrongly assume that it was inspired by this fire. In reality, the song had debuted on the album Actually a little more than two months earlier, back in September 1987.

1999

The Boys are in the midst of a one-week break between the North American and European legs of their Nightlife Tour.

2006

Having completed their North American Fundamental Tour, Chris and Neil are enjoying some time off in Mexico. This evening they attend a Morrissey concert in Monterrey at the same venue where they themselves had performed two nights before.