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History

November 1993

‘I wouldn’t normally do this kind of thing’ is released as a single on November 15th. The single version, remixed by the Beatmasters, is radically different to the album version: longer, more epic and more upbeat. In the accompanying videos they wear new costumes (pink and white for Chris, pink and black for Neil) and sixties wigs, and they do things they wouldn’t normally do. “The song itself”, says Neil, “is about a reserved Englishman falling in love and going bonkers. He decides he couldn’t care less anymore, and throws caution to the wind. It’s a funny song, but it’s sincere. I’m so bored with people seeing us as ironic that I’m quite keen on being sincere at the moment”.

1993 November

October 1993

On October 24th the Pet Shop Boys appear at the London Palladium as part of The Equality Show, a benefit as part of Stonewall’s campaign to equalize the age of consent for gay and heterosexual people in Britain. They are introduced on stage by Boy George and Janet Street-Porter, and perform four songs: ‘Can you forgive her?’, ‘To speak is a sin’, ‘One in a million’ (incorporating Culture Beat’s ‘Mr. Vain’) and ‘Go West’. For the final song they are joined by the London Gay Men’s Choir.

September 1993

A new Pet Shop Boys album, ‘Very’, is released on September 27th. It is produced by the Pet Shop Boys, with additional production by Stephen Hague, and is mixed by Stephen Hague and Mike ‘Spike’ Drake. “It is called Very”, says Neil, “because it is Very Pet Shop Boys: It’s very up, it’s very hi-energy, it’s very romantic, it’s very sad, it’s very pop, it’s very danceable, and some of it is very funny…”. At the same time as they recorded ‘Very’, the Pet Shop Boys also recorded six further songs which they describe as “non structured” and which appear as a limited edition accompanying ‘Very’. This second album is titled ‘Relentless’, “because”, Neil explains, “it is”.

1993 September

‘Go West’ is released as a single on September 6th. It is the song they originally chose to cover at their Hacienda concert the previous year. “I was at home in my flat”, recalls Chris, “playing, as I often do, The Village People’s Greatest Hits album and I though ‘Go West’ would be a good song to play at a Derek Jarman event, a song about an idealistic, gay utopia. And I knew that the way Neil would sing it would make it sound hopeless; you’ve got these inspiring lyrics but it sounds like it’s never going to be achieved”. The video, which combines footage filmed in Moscow’s Red Square with an oblique tribute to A Matter of Life And Death, finds them in a new set of costumes: Neil in blue, Chris in yellow, and both of them wearing blue-and-yellow domes on their heads.

1993 September

July 1993

The Pet Shop Boys travel to Moscow for the opening of MTV Russia, “We had to cut a log in half”, explains Neil, “live on Russian television to officially open it”.

June 1993

A single, ‘Can you forgive her?’, is released on June 1st. The song, which takes its title from a novel by Anthony Trollope, “is a sort of a short story. It starts with a man being awake in the night, and he can’t get to sleep because he’s been made a fool of by his girlfriend, who thinks he’s not masculine enough. In the first verse he’s embarrassed and annoyed at his girlfriend. In the second one he reveals that the girlfriend thinks he’s a complete wimp, even in bed. Then in the third verse he goes back in time to his first sexual experience at school, and you realize that he’s gay but can’t face up to the fact”. For the accompanying photographs and video, the Pet Shop Boys appear in orange body suits and dunces caps designed by David Fielding, who designed the 1991 Performance Tour. “We wanted to do something that is the opposite of what everyone else is doing”, Neil explains, “Everyone else is being real, so we’re being artificial”.

1993 June

October 1992

On October 26th, the soundtrack to the Neil Jordan film ‘The Crying Game’ is released on Spaghetti Records. Earlier in 1992 the Pet Shop Boys had been asked whether they would be interested in helping with songs for the film, at that time titled ‘The Soldier’s Wife’. After seeing, and loving, a rough edit, they agreed to release the soundtrack on their Spaghetti label, and to contribute songs produced by them and performed by Cicero and Carroll Thompson. At the last moment, it was suggested that they also produce a new version of Dave Berry’s 1964 single, ‘The Crying Game’, with Boy George singing. They had lunch with him, and a week later it was recorded. ‘The Crying Game’ subsequently became the film’s theme tune. It is a British hit single in September 1992 and then, in the Spring of 1993, it became an American hit in the wake of the film’s immense American success. “I’m as happy as a sandboy”, Boy George will comment, and plans will be hatched for he and the Pet Shop Boys to work together again on his next LP.

September 1992

Eric Watson’s film of the 1991 Performance tour — also titled ‘Performance’ — is released on video on September 28th. It has been delayed after a copyright wrangle with one of the owners of ‘I Can’t Take My Eyes Off You’, and all traces of that song have been ruthlessly excised.

June 1992

Neil co-writes and sings on a new Electronic single ‘Disappointed’. The title came to him when Johnny Marr and Bernard Sumner’s backing track reminded him of ‘Disenchantee’, a song liked by French singer Mylene Farmer. “ ‘Disappointed’ is”, he says, “sort of a love song, about not being disappointed”.

May 1992

The Pet Shop Boys play a concert at the Hacienda Nightclub in Manchester on May 13th to coincide with an exhibition of Derek Jarman’s paintings at Manchester City Art Gallery and with the Hacienda’s tenth anniversary. They perform with J.J. Belle and Sylvia Mason-James. In rehearsals they decide they want to play a suitable cover version and — after tinkering with, then discarding The Beatles’ ‘Fool On The Hill’ — choose the Village People’s 1979 hit ‘Go West’. The following month, on June 8th, the Pet Shop Boys performed with the same line-up at Roseland in New York, a benefit for Lifebeat, an organization for people in the music business with AIDS.

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.