Interviews Actually What have I done to deserve this?
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Neil We wrote this in the beginning of 1985. Tom Watkins was managing a songwriter and artist called

Allee Willis I think he might have just been managing her art career.

Chris She had an asymmetric haircut. Because it was the Eighties.

Neil She was quite a distinguished songwriter, in that she'd written 'Boogie Wonderland' for Earth Wind & Fire, and at the time she had a big hit with The Pointer Sisters' 'Neutron Dance'.

Chris Since then she's co-written the theme from Friends.

Neil  My way, Tom Watkins said, 'why don't you write a song with Allee?' We'd never written a song with someone else in the same room. EMI used to have a studio in their basement and we went in there. In fact we started off in a rehearsal studio, where Chris threw a strop. He walked out of the studio and I had to persuade him back in. I think he felt under pressure.

Chris Yeah. I was having to fight to get to a keyboard.

Neil
Then, after the stop, it got quite good. So there's three bits of the song, one by Chris, one by me and one by Allee Willis. Chris wrote the riff which starts the song and the music which is underneath 'I bought you drinks I bought you flowers', I wrote the verse, and Allee wrote, in my opinion the best bit of the song, the 'since you went away...' bit. She was a very good musician and she'd brought an effects unit with her, which she programmed to make the drums sound like Prince.

Chris I remember there was lots of discussion about what the song meant. I thought, 'does it really matter?'

Neil
She was right, though. I wrote most of the words. The story of the song is that two people have broken up, and they're both in different places regretting that they've split up, and at the end of the song they get back together again. The man is a pathetic feeble wreck and the woman is meant to be this major capitalist. I suppose I disguise the plots of the songs because I sometimes think they're a bit corny and they're not the most interesting part of the song - it's how it's manifested, how it's discussed, and the words that are used to express it. All these things have been said three million times before, so it's how you say them. The details. I wrote the words on the top of a number 22 bus going home from Smash hits one night. I was going down Piccadilly when I thought of 'what have I done to deserve this?', and then I remember driving past The Ritz and thinking 'I bought you drinks/I brought you flowers...' and I even got my pen out of my briefcase and wrote it down. And then lee went through the lyrics and simplified some of them and said 'what's happening?' I would never have written things like 'hanging around' - I had something slightly more English than that. Me we were very very excited about it and we played the demo to Tom Watkins who was really iffy about it. It was going to be on our first album, and we couldn't think of who could sing the female part, and Nike Slight, who worked in Tom Watkins' office, said, 'well, you like Dusty Springfield so much -why don't you ask her?' And from that point we knew we just had to have Dusty, so Dusty was approached but it never happened. Everyone said she couldn't sing anymore. She had a very bad reputation. Then later, after Please came out, we heard that Dusty wanted to do it.

Chris and I met her and talked through the song.

Chris I think she was wearing a shell suit.

Neil No. She was wearing black leather.

Chris I always picture her wearing a shell suit- pink shell suit and Reeboks.

Neil She did later on, when we recorded the solo album.

Chris That's the classic Dusty, with straggly bleached hair.

Neil She came in. Chris and I were sitting in the office in Advising. Frankly, I was terrified. 'What do you want me to sound like?' she asked, and she seemed surprised by the answer: 'you'. And then Chris and I had to go to Newcastle to do 'Paninaro' on The Tube, so we missed her recording the vocal. When we came back, it sounded fantastic. After we had recorded it, Chris and I went off the track, in our classic way.

We decided we didn't want it to be a single. It had such an unusual stricture and we worried it didn't hang together. But we changed our mind again. Originally the record started with an aeroplane noise, because he comes back to her; but we thought it complicated the issue so we took it off. We remixed our own twelve-inch version [CD2, track 6] with Julian Mendelsohn. It's very Eighties. I like the fact that the bass is louder than the seven-inch mix.

Chris
It's got a real build.

 
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