Pet Shop Boys, not my Elysium, yet


Awaiting the release of a new Pet Shop Boys album is always a difficult time. Are they going to dress up in silly outfits or grow their hair long and scowl in shades? Is the music a series of electro classics or is it a guitar driven dirge? So many questions to be answered.

With Elysium due to be released next month I was on tenterhooks until I heard it. Now I have listened to it a few times, I will pass my considered opinion. I will start by saying I hope this new album grows on me; a classic slow burner. The first impressions haven’t been good. The Andrew Dawson production seems to drag the sound of the album down and can hardly be considered fresh in the same way as its predecessor “Yes”. The whole album is very ‘down tempo’ and brooding: a pop tour de force it is not.

The opener “Leaving” is as upbeat and “pop” as this album gets, and thus becomes the logical choice for their second single cut. “Invisible” sounds out of place as the second track and kills any atmosphere the opening track may have created. Don’t get me wrong, I like the song very much, it is just in the wrong place in the running order. Next comes the first single “Winner” with the fun of “Your Early Stuff” close on its heels. Here Neil treats us to snippets of the acerbic comments he has (presumably) received in recent years in the same way as he did with “Yesterday, When I Was Mad” in 1993. Not a new idea admittedly but entertaining none the less.

“Face Like That” sees Neil complimenting the looks of an unknown individual whilst Chris turns his synths back to the sounds they used in 1988 (and that is a very good thing). This track is the logical opener for the album but, in this crazy running order, it is lost at number 5. “Breathing Space” is one of those sweeping, orchestral tracks that highlights what outstanding songwriters Messers Tennent and Lowe are, whilst “Ego Music” and “Hold On” do everything they can to undermine this statement. Here the album loses its way and the quality of both the production and the song writing takes a sharp downward turn. “Hold On” starts well enough but soon turns into a toe curling pastiche of the worst musical you have ever heard. “Memory of the Future” tries to return us to electronica nirvana, but the memory of the previous three tracks is just too much for it to overcome. “Everything Means Something” is intricate and sounds like it should have been sung by Elbow: not a natural fit for the Pet Shop Boys. However, “Requiem in Denim and Leopardskin” is as natural a fit as is possible for Neil and Chris, but not a logical end to the album for me.

To make a version of “Elysium” better for me, I would chop out “Ego Music” and “Hold On”. I would then take the tracks in the order of

  1. Face Like That
  2. Winner
  3. Leaving
  4. Your Early Stuff
  5. Requiem in Denim and Leopardskin
  6. Memory of the Future
  7. Invisible
  8. Everything Means Something
  9. Give it a Go
  10. Breathing Space

But what do I know?

I just hope it grows on me and that I can begin to cope with “Hold On” in the same way as I do “Happiness is an Option” and “Release” et al.

The death of the physical single

Things change. Music has moved on. The days when an artists released their singles as physical discs are almost at an end. And it upsets me greatly.

I have collected records by the Pet Shop Boys for 25 years and their singles have always been important epochs for me. Every release evokes a memory or is associated with a person, a place or a point in time. I still recall the thrill of going into a record store the week after a single was released to buy the Remix 12" ('It's Alright' and 'So Hard' stick out for some reason). Import singles were like some magical exotica with different covers and remixes that always cost far too much. I still marvel at the cover of the 'DJ Culture' 12" and the double sleeve edition of 'Suburbia' is a work of art that I treasure. In short, it isn't just about the music these discs contain; it is also the experience of owning and buying them.

The fact that Neil and Chris had to persuade EMI to release a physical disc of 'Winner' is a stark contrast to the myriad of single formats that were being released  in the late 80's. We are losing an art form and the soulless click of a mouse on iTunes or amazon doesn't feel anything like walking in to Our Price and seeing a display stand bursting with shiny new 12" singles.

Yes, vinyl and CD singles are not totally dead, but they are on the endangered species list. I for one, will miss them more than I ever thought I would.