February 1992
On February 16th an hour-long film about the Pet Shop Boys is broadcast by the TV arts programme The South Bank Show.
On February 16th an hour-long film about the Pet Shop Boys is broadcast by the TV arts programme The South Bank Show.
‘Was It Worth It?’ is released as a single on December 8th. “It’s a reaffirmation of the worth of love” remarks Neil, “an ‘I am what I am’ sort of song”. The video mixes footage from the Heaven concert with the Pet Shop Boys amongst a clubland crowd mostly recruited from the London event Kinky Gerlinky.
‘Discography’, a collection of the Pet Shop Boys’ hit singles from ‘West End girls’ to the forthcoming ‘Was it worth it?’, is released on November 4th. Only six of the eighteen songs have previously appeared on an album in their single versions. At the same time a video compilation, ‘Videography’, is also released.
The Pet Shop Boys play a one off concert at the London Nightclub, Heaven, at a party after the premiere of Derek Jarman’s latest film, ‘Edward II’ on October 15th. It is a deliberately untheatrical, straight-forward concert, for which they are backed by the three singers from this year’s tour, J.J. Belle on guitar and Lawrence Cedar on keyboards. They are introduced by Derek Jarman, and supported by Cicero.
A single, ‘DJ Culture’, co-produced by British dance music duo Brothers In Rhythm, is released on October 14th. “It is about how facile and pretentious modern life is”, Neil explains, “just as in DJ records everything is sampled to sound authentic, so in a lot of aspects of modern life — for instance in politics — it is almost as though attitudes are sampled. People pretend to sound concerned; everyone pretends that the Gulf War was a real war, and that President Bush or John Major are successful war leaders. In fact they sample the past — the Second World War, or a war movie — and the public also samples their response from wars in the past. The whole thing is sort of fake”. In the video Neil and Chris appear in appropriate costumes: as soldiers and doctors; as a referee and a soccer player; as Oscar Wilde and his trial Judge.
The Pet Shop Boys launch their own record label Spaghetti with a single ‘Heaven Must Have Sent You Back To Me’, by a 21 year old Scottish singer, synthesizer player and songwriter called Cicero. They had first met him when he came backstage at the Pet Shop Boys’ Glasgow concert in 1989.
Neil and Chris are invited to take over Simon Bates’ mid-morning show on Radio One, Britain’s national pop radio station, for a week. They choose all the records, principally dance music. Chris only swears on air once, and they are invited back to fill the same role in July 1992.
In Dublin on June 17th the Pet Shop Boys play the final date of their tour.
The third collection of Pet Shop Boys promotional videos, aptly titled ‘Promotion’, is released on June 3rd and includes videos for all their singles from ‘Left to my own devices’ to ‘Jealousy’.
‘Jealousy’, remodelled to include a real orchestra, is released on May 28th. It is a song that they had actually written nine years ago, in the spring of 1982, and is, quite simply about jealousy. “There’s some good lines in there”, observes Chris, “like ‘you didn’t phone when you said you would’. You know when you stay in and they say they’re going to phone at eight o’clock and they don’t all night and you go absolutely bonkers?” The twelve inch version contains a quote from Shakespeare’s tragic study of jealousy, Othello. In the video, shot in a west London car showroom, the Pet Shop Boys stand by as a roomful of dining villains move from jealousy to violence.
Chris and Neil tour Aztec pyramids and temples in Mexico while on a brief break during the Latin American leg of their DiscoVery tour.
The Boys attend a rehearsal of David Almond’s play My Dad’s a Birdman, for which they have written songs and music.
This evening, at London’s Queen Elizabeth Hall, the BBC Concert Orchestra performs a program titled Exstatica, consisting of works that convey ‘states of ecstasy’ in various forms. Among the works performed is a specially commissioned setting of the PSB song ‘I Wouldn’t Normally Do This Kind of Thing,’ arranged by Richard Niles and sung by soprano Kate Winter. The concert is broadcast live on BBC Radio 3.
The Pet Shop Boys perform in Mexico City: the final show of the North American leg of their Super Tour.
They kick off the 2023 Latin American leg of their extended Dreamworld Tour with a concert this evening at the Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez in Mexico City.