Battle
of Trafalgar Square(Filed: 02/09/2004)
Silent movie classic 'Battleship Potemkin' is to be shown in an outdoor
spectacular with a new score by the Pet Shop Boys. They talk to Lynsey Hanley
The Pet Shop Boys' 20-year career has been full of moments that only they
could get away with. They've managed to do the most highbrow things while
retaining full membership of the pop mainstream, gaining the respect of
cultural snobs without losing their knack for making proper pop hits. They're
a walking advert for the highest common denominator.
Only the Pet Shop Boys could do the impossible and help Liza Minnelli to
make a dignified comeback, as they did in 1989. Only they could enlist the
help of Derek Jarman, the English National Opera and Sam Taylor-Wood to
stage successive tours of the world's giant performance sheds without alienating
one half of their audience and being ridiculed by the other. Only they could
do these things and keep having hits - 35 to date.
So it seems perfectly normal, in the culture-straddling world of the Pet
Shop Boys, that their latest venture is writing and performing a new soundtrack
to that silent-movie buff's favourite, Sergei Eisenstein's Battleship Potemkin,
at a free concert in Trafalgar Square.
Even more rarefied, it's a collaboration between the duo and the Dresdner
Symphoniker, a group of musicians who perform only contemporary music and
who hit the charts in Germany last year with a classical take on a song
by Teutonic rock gods Rammstein.
"One thing we've always tried to do is to make things into an event,"
says Pet Shop Boy Neil Tennant, sitting at a rickety picnic table outside
a recording studio in one of Berlin's near-bucolic outer suburbs, where
the duo are overseeing the production of the Dresdner Symphoniker's string
parts with composer Torsten Rasch.
"I really like the European aspect of what we're doing: it's a Russian
film score made by two English people, with a German orchestra, and it's
performed on Trafalgar Square, which feels like a European piazza these
days."
Made in 1925, Eisenstein's dramatisation of the brutal suppression of the
1905 revolution in Russia is not the most obvious choice for an evening
of free entertainment subsidised by the Greater London Assembly. In fact,
both the film and its new composers were chosen by departing ICA director
Philip Dodd, who was given the run of the square for the evening by London's
mayor Ken Livingstone.
"Eisenstein apparently said that he wanted there to be a new soundtrack
written for the film every decade," says Tennant, "and it's interesting
how it changes your whole experience of the film. It's not so much background
music as foreground music. Battleship Potemkin is about a revolution, and
Trafalgar Square is one of the arenas for extra-parliamentary political
expression. It's amazing to be given Trafalgar Square for a night."
Chris Lowe, historically the Pet Shop Boys' Quiet One, stays true to his
role as Tennant's silently smirking foil, only entering the conversation
in order to bring it crashing down to earth.
On the question of Livingstone's success as mayor, he scowls. "I was
so shocked when I found out it was £2 to go on the tube! I can't believe
it! It used to be 20p! I'm sure we have the most expensive tube in the world."
"I think it must be," nods Tennant, knowledgeably. He's as urbane
as his references to the cities he has come to know in his life as "a
player in the continental game", to quote their Top 40 jet-set satire
Single-Bilingual.
"I know New York well. I vaguely know Budapest, I vaguely know Riga.
I know St Petersburg quite well. But we spend most of our time in England."
Indeed, London has always seemed like the third member of the Pet Shop Boys.
From the dispassionate lyrics of their first number one West End Girls,
with its talk of underground dive bars and East End boys, to the twinkly,
London-Eye-enhanced night skyline that graces the cover of their remix album
Disco 3, it's hard to imagine how the duo's illustrious pop career and image
of effortless cosmopolitanism could have had quite the same impact without
the capital's regular starring role in their songs.
Trafalgar Square even inspired one of the three songs that feature in their
75-minute Potemkin soundtrack, which is likely to be released on CD later
this year.
One, called After All was written after Tennant started "thinking about
all the political meetings there have been in Trafalgar Square. You could
say that, effectively, Mrs Thatcher's government ended there. The song's
refrain is, 'How come we went to war?', which is something you hear quite
often in Britain these days. It's rather romanticised, but the idea of people
getting together to improve their lot is a completely timeless notion."
Only the Pet Shop Boys could get away with being such quiet revolutionaries.
· 'Battleship Potemkin' will be shown in Trafalgar Square at 8.30pm
on Sept 12. |