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I hope it will mean a lot to youngsters out there... a Top 10 placing in the singles chart bodes reasonably well for them being on the radar... i.e. you didn't see Saint Etienne getting a single higher than #40 from their last record. The Pet Shop Boys seem still able to reach out to a wider audience... their material maybe isn't as good as it was, but it's still pretty affecting. It's only really comparison to the great heights they scaled that really makes their recent stuff seem bad.
The ironic thing for me is I was very well acquainted with 'Discography', in the mid 1990s, but hadn't listened to it for years and years. So buying PopArt is allowing me to explore them anew.
Yeah, possibly "Go West" strikes me as not a perfect opener; "Very" being the PSB album I am most familiar with and the only one I actually own. The only thing I can say is that maybe a few tracks could have been added; "Your Funny Uncle", "Hey Headmaster"... that sort of thing. Possibly instead of stuff like "Paninaro '95" which isn't the most engaging (though I like in general the idea of this compilation being of all/most of their hits...).
The Pet Shop Boys, are probably the best *pop* group, in my life span. Certainly one of my earliest musical memories, at 4 or 5 was "It's a Sin", which bore a melodramatic, melancholic mark on me, I'm sure. That sample, the synth-orchestral minor key grandeur of it, it was *there* for me in 1987... and my memories from that time are very fragmentary. "Always on Your Mind" to a slightly less intense extent, I remember from the time as well. They are inextricably tied up in memory with their being my younger brother's favourite band bar none from 1993-97 roughly; I got to hear all their albums through him.
Seriously, can any group have been said to have achieved so much from 1985-2003, in terms of pop singles? With an eye also to some very good albums. Saint Etienne are very much personal favourites of mine, yet my appreciation of them has been in the last few years, and largely via the albums. It is a marker that I can't remember having heard their songs at the time of their early 1990s ascendancy; they never quite broke into the Top 10, which is where you have to be to get heard by a wide audience. Being a child I was only really exposed to very popular music, in terms of singles. I didn't start listening to the chart show until 1995.
Pulp could have been contenders... but they seem to have become more album focused, at least in the eyes of the public - no Top 10 singles for 6 years. A shame as "The Trees" was a wonderful single, and I liked most of the "This is Hardcore" singles.
I agree with many of your likes, Geir, but 'destroy' "Always on My Mind" and "What Have I Done to Deserve This?"?? Stellar singles, both, my good man.
― Tom May (Tom May), Friday, 28 November 2003 01:35 (twenty years ago) link
eight years pass...
three years pass...
three years pass...
“Really quite often, a publisher says, ‘Let’s get Neil Tennant to write his autobiography’ and it’s quite nice that they do […] I’m not convinced my life’s been interesting enough."
Gah. I really can't think of a biography that I'd be more interested in reading.
― Vast Halo, Monday, 22 October 2018 19:20 (five years ago) link
two years pass...