| RADIO
2 CONCERT
May 7,2006.
Studio One, BBC Maida Vale
studios, London. It is the day before the Pet Shop Boys will play a live
concert with the 60-piece BBC Concert Orchestra, and this morning they
are rehearsing with the orchestra for the first time. (The last two days
they have been rehearsing with just the band - a remarkable line-up itself,
led by Trevor Horn who is playing bass, and including famed Oscar-winning
arranger and composer Anne Dudley on piano, noted producer Steve Lipson
on guitar and 10 CC and Godley & Creme's Lol Creme as one of the backing
vocalist.)
Neil and Chris arrived here at 10.30 on this Sunday morning, and when
Literally arrives nearly an hour later they are working on "Casanova
in Hell". More specifically, Chris is swinging round in his chair
between the keyboards while Neil is singing along to Anne Dudley's piano,
as the orchestra builds behind them. Neil won't even be singing this song
in the concert - Rufus Wainwright, one of the guests, will be doing so
- but right now he is helping everyone understand the arrangement. They
move through "After all" and "Integral", then the
conductor, Nick Ingman, says, "Neil, we have to have a break:' Orchestras
operate under very strict union rules - each session is three hours long
with a fixed break in the middle.
"I love all this union stuff ," says Chris. "Bring back
the unions - that's what I say."
Neil wanders over and says that he saw their performance on Popworld yesterday,
recorded days earlier, in a tone of voice which confirms that it was fine
without saying so.
"You
know I'm missing the last game at Highbury to be here," says Chris.
Chris is a long-term Arsenal fan and season ticket holder, and today they
play their final match at the stadium, against Wigan. They need an unlikely
series of results today - beating Wigan while Tottenham lose to West Ham
- for them to qualify for next year's Champions League.
"You've made the ultimate sacrifice," says Neil, perhaps without
the necessary sincerity.
"I have
made the ultimate sacrifice," says Chris.
After a few minutes, the orchestra efficiently re-take their seats. During
"Luna Park", the percussionist hits the metal sheet used to
simulate the sound of thunder. It will be at an appropriate volume during
the concert, when everything else is louder, but today it sounds comically
loud. At the piano, Anne Dudley gets the giggles. The song still sounds
good, though, and at its end Marcus, the BBC soundman, mutters what a
wonderful track it is.
Neil sings "Jealousy" - another song he won't be singing tomorrow
- and stands there during the final, long orchestral blow-out.
"Hilarious," he says, as it finishes. They rehearse the final
two songs -"Indefinite leave to remain" and "West End girls"
- and Neil worries that the gap between the two of them is too large.
He wants the sound effects at the beginning of "West End girls"
-the ambient city noise and the echo of footsteps in the street - to fade
in over the end of the previous song. He talks to the conductor and Pete
Gleadall and they agree to re-edit the backing track to make this possible.
They have finished the rehearsal a little early for lunch, and so they
decide to run through that transition. Chris, meanwhile, sits at the keyboard
reading Heat magazine. He studies the merchandise from the new Take That
tour, proclaiming most of it "crap" though he is somewhat taken
by the boxer shorts, some of which say It Only Takes A Minute, others
How Deep Is Your Love.
"Lunchtime," finally comes the
announcement. It is 1.21.
"We've finished early$' says Chris. (Nine minutes early, in fact.)
Neil and Chris have been advised to race for the front of the queue at
the BBC cafeteria so that they're not caught behind the orchestra, so
this they do. There's still a short wait, during which Chris sings to
himself a song about chilli con carne. Over lunch they discuss some practical
matters to do with tomorrow night's concert. Should their guests, for
instance, come back onstage and take a bow at the end?
"I imagine Rufus will already be having dinner at J Sheeky,"
predicts Neil.
As they eat, another guest, the actress and star of Closer to Heaven,
Frances Barber,
amves.
"I'm so frightened..? she says, in a way which manages to seem both
sincere and rather actress-y. "But what a wonderful thing for you
guys. Everyone wants tickets:'
"I was scared," Neil says, "but it's not that
scary here. I've never sung live with an
orchestra before... well, not very much:'
She mentions that she recently did an interview for the Channel 4 documentary,
and that after half an hour - during which she felt she was delivering
what was needed rather well
- they told her there was something wrong with the camera and they wanted
her to start again.
Neil nods, and says that they have long had a rule about that kind of
thing. "We quite often say," he says, "'we only say things
once':'
A man who was sitting near the entrance when we came in walks over to
say hello. He turns out to be the novelist and scriptwriter Hanif Kureishi,
and the man he has left at his table is the composer Michael Nyman, who
soon also comes over and offers his hand. (The two of them are working
together on a piece in one of the nearby studios.)
"We've never met," he says to Neil and Chris, and starts talking
to Neil about his work with Damon Albarn on Damon's contribution to Twentieth
Century Blues, the album of Noel Coward songs Neil put together some years
back. (Neil struggles to remember the details.) When he goes, Frances
Barber says how justifiably annoyed he has always been that he wasn't
even nominated for an Oscar for his score for the movie The Piano.
Neil asks Frances Barber whether she will help them out with another part
of tomorrow's show, speaking the introduction to "The Sodom and Gomorrah
Show".
She nods, looking relieved. "No, speaking I
can do," she says.
"We could do it on computer," Neil says,
"but I thought you could do it in your Nurse
Ratchett voice:' "Absolutely," she says. "That's easy:'
She wants to check one detail herself. "I should just dress as me?
Not as Billie?"
Sunday, Maida Vale, with Sally Bradshaw.
ISunday, Maida Vale, Rufus Wainwright with Neil.
Sunday, Maida Vak, Frances Barber rehearsing.
star of Closer to Heaven, Frances Barber, amves.
"I'm so frightened..:' she says, in a way which manages to seem both
sincere and rather actress-y. "But what a wonderful thing for you
guys. Everyone wants tickets:'
"I was scared," Neil says, "but it's not that scary here.
I've never sung live with an orchestra before... well, not very much:'
She mentions that she recently did an interview for the Channel 4 documentary,
and that after half an hour - during which she felt she was delivering
what was needed rather well
- they told her there was something wrong with the camera and they wanted
her to start again.
Neil nods, and says that they have long had rule about that kind of thing.
"We quite often say," he says, "'we only say things once':'
A man who was sitting near the entrance when we came in walks over to
say hello. He turns out to be the novelist and scriptwriter Hanif Kureishi,
and the man he has left at his table is the composer Michael Nyman, who
soon also comes over and offers his hand. (The two of them are working
together on a piece in one of the nearby studios.)
"We've never met," he says to Neil and Chris, and starts talking
to Neil about his work with Damon Albarn on Damon's contribution to Twentieth
Century Blues, the album of Noel Coward songs Neil put together some years
back. (Neil struggles to remember the details.) When he goes, Frances
Barber says how justifiably annoyed he has always been that he wasn't
even nominated for an Oscar for his score for the movie The Piano.
Neil asks Frances Barber whether she will help them out with another part
of tomorrow's show, speaking the introduction to "The Sodom and Gomorrah
Show".
She nods, looking relieved. "No, speaking I can do," she says.
"We could do it on computer," Neil says, "but I thought
you could do it in your Nurse Ratchett voice:'
"Absolutely," she says. "That's easy:'
She wants to check one detail herself.
"I should just dress as me? Not as Billie?"
"No,"
says Neil. "No," echoes Chris. "As you' says Neil.
"What are you wearing?" she asks.
"Just a tailcoat," says Neil.
"Just a tailcoat," repeats Frances Barber, laughing.
"I'm doing the look of the album," he explains.
"The whole thing's intimidating for me," she says.
"It's intimidating for me," says Neil, "but as it gets
closer I get less intimidated. I'll probably get more intimidated again
tomorrow:'
She goes off to run through "Friendly fire" with Anne Dudley
before the orchestra go back into the studio. Chris mentions seeing The
Beautiful South's Paul Heaton on Andrew Marr's political interview programme
on TV with Gordon Brown. They've been asked to do political programmes
recently, but they've turned them all down.
When the orchestra do return, Frances Barber sings "Friendly fire"
with them, a little tentatively, but captivating nonetheless.
"Great," encourages Neil.
She speaks with one of the soundmen about using headphones and the potential
problems. "My ears are tiny," she explains.
At just before three in the afternoon, Rufus Wainwright arrives. (He has
flown in from America just for this concert.)
"Hello, sweetie," he says, as he enters, in Neil's general direction.
"Have you guys started?"
"Nearly finished," says Chris. "Have you prepared?"
"I know the song," he says.
Neil studies the "Casanova in Hell" lyric that has been printed
out for him and notices a mistake. "Her sharp perception" has
been typed, when it should read "her sharp suggestion". He draws
Rufus's attention to the error, and corrects it himself by hand.
"I'm not promising a perfect first job," says Rufus, taking
his place on a stool. The music begins. "I just have to be cued as
when to start, that's all:'
He messes up a couple of moments, but sounds wonderful. He does it again,
and then Neil walks over.
"In the end section you could rock out a bit," says Neil.
"Walk out?" wonders Rufus, mishearing.
"Rock out," says Neil.
"Oh. Rock out. OK..." he says. Under his breath, he repeats
this advice to himself. "Rock out," he murmurs.
He does it again.
"Excellent," says Neil. "It sounds lovely:' He turns to
Rufus's friends who are sitting near the doorway. "It sounds like
he wrote it," Neil says.
Chris goes over and chats with Sister Bliss from Faithless, who has dropped
in from one of the other studios where she is working on a 15-minute symphonic
piece. (It seems that this is probably the same piece Michael Nyman and
Hanif Kureishi are doing.)
The "I'm with Stupid" seven-inch picture discs arrive - the
first time Neil and Chris see the finished article. Chris laughs at how
black the vinyl is. "Why has no one else thought of doing this?"
he says. He studies it some more:
the picture disc, the sleeve, the inner sleeve. "I love our picture
disc. It's over-packaged:'
"It's the eighties again," says Neil. "It's literally a
waste of wood' says Chris. Rufus surveys the musical mix in front of
him. "You've got every medium," he tells Neil, then thinks of
something that may be missing. "You need a rapper:'
"No," Neil corrects him, "I'm the rapper:'
They start a final complete run-through for the day, but it breaks down
during the first song, "Left to my own devices". When they finally
get through it, Trevor Horn looks at Neil and wipes some imaginary sweat
from his brow. Meanwhile, the musicians in the orchestra are complaining
about the sound from the PA coming back at them, distracting them. The
soundman tells them that they need to get used to it, as tomorrow it will
only be worse.
As Neil begins to sing "Rent" in the arrangement Angelo Badalamenti
did for Liza Minnelli's Results album, Chris wonders whether he has time
to pop over to Sister Bliss's
studio. During
this performance, he doesn't stay onstage during the songs where he has
nothing to play. "There's no miming going on," he points out.
(He sensibly decides that there isn't time to leave and return.)
When they reach "Casanova in Hell"~ Rufus trips over a few parts.
Neil suggests he might want to run through it some more with Anne Dudley
but he says not - that when he returns tomorrow he'll have it - and takes
his leave.
"I'm going to start singing it like Rufus now," Neil tells Chris.
"He should have sung it on the album," says Chris.
Neil nods. "He should be lead vocalist. It'd be best for all concerned:'
Chris gets a football score update as they play - Arsenal will not be
in the Champions League as things stand.
They do "It's alright", but it falls apart because no one gives
Sally Bradshaw, the opera singer who sings on this and "Left to my
own devices", her cue. The second time round, Neil gets the words
wrong and sings the "generations will come and go..." verse
twice, but they carry on anyway.
"It's one of those round-and-round chord changes," he says at
the end.
As they're nearly finished, Chris gets another football update - incredibly,
Arsenal are now winning and Tottenham losing. When the sessions breaks
up at 4.56 - over half an hour early - it is confirmed, and Chris quietly
celebrates. Neil picks up the lyric sheet Rufus has left behind - his
homework. Neil is seeing him for dinner and will give it back to him then.
May 8,2096. The Mermaid Theatre. The Pet Shop Boys prepare for their final
run-through onstage. Already there is a little fuss. Chris is unhappy
about the two transparent Radio 2 logos which have been dangled in the
middle of the stage above their heads and wants them removed. Neil isn't
so bothered. "It gives it an event feel," he suggests. He's
more worried about how low the stage is ~- just a few inches high - which
he seems to find unsettling, and
how cold
it is in here. People are still setting things up. In front of where the
Pet Shop Boys will be, monitors are being wrapped in black cloth, and
people shout out, in urgent voices, phrases like, "Flutes, Marcus!"
Neil talks to Frances Barber about where she could stand to the side,
behind the curtain. She nods, but looks a little deflated. It turns out
that they are at cross purposes - Neil is working out how she will do
her spoken part on "The Sodom and Gomorrah Show" but she is
imagining that this is for her main performance.
"No, not for 'Friendly fire' ," he exclaims. "That'd be
ridiculous:'
She looks relieved.
Robbie Williams - tonight's other guest performer - walks in with his
friend Jonathan Wilkes and takes a seat in the front row to watch the
first part of the run-through. He grins when Neil speak-sings the line
"Che Guevera to a disco beat". At the end of the song Neil says,
once more, Hilarious," then adds, "at this point I'll explain
the orchestra, say what we're doing tonight, and then I'll say what this
is?
Robbie is asked whether he wants some "Jealousy" lyrics to prepare
himself.
"I've got some," he says, taking them, "but it's always
good to have two:'
Neil and Chris have been bumping into Robbie since he was in Take That,
and have got to know him somewhat better recently, and they wrote a song
together a few months ago: a studio date arranged after Chris bumped into
him at Soho House. They asked him to sing "Jealousy" because
he's mentioned several times publicly that it is his favourite Pet Shop
Boys song.
They do "Rent", "You only tell me you love me when you're
drunk" ("Good song," notes Robbie when it starts) and "The
Sodom and Gomorrah Show", and then Neil explains how he will introduce
Rufus. After "Casanova in Hell", a screen comes down - very
slowly - so that the appropriate Odessa steps section of Battleship Potemkin
can be projected as they perform "After all". Chris sits in
the audience. "I like watching this," he says. ("This'll
come out well on the radio," murmurs Jonathan Wilkes.) On its way
up the screen sticks. "Carry On at the
Kremlin," says Robbie, who is asked whether he wants to stand for
his song. "No," he says. "If at all possible:' (He will.)
After the
final two songs of the first half -"Friendly fire" and "Integral"
- Neil suggests that they break and rehearse Robbie singing "Jealousy".
He steps onto the stage and shakes hands with Lol Creme and Trevor Horn.
He sings with his eyes shut until the beginning of the second verse when
he has to check the lyric sheet, then misses the quick beginning of the
third verse coming out of the first chorus, then misses his cue to come
back in after the instrumental break. But what he sings sounds very good
indeed.
"You don't think you should come on later," wonders Chris once
he has finished. There is quite a long instrumental introduction when
he will just be standing there.
"Do you think you should come on during the instrumental," suggests
Neil.
"I think I should send my trainers on first," says Robbie.
Neil suggests that they run through it again. This time Robbie makes a
later entry, raising his hand to acknowledge an audience that isn't yet
here, buttons up his coat and launches in with more gusto than before.
He still makes some mistakes, of course.
"Excellent,"
says Neil.
"I'll get it right tonight," he promises.
"That sounds brilliant, mate," says Jonathan Wilkes.
"Thanks," says Robbie.
"Like Stars In Their Eyes," says Jonathan Wilkes.
The musicians take a Musicians' Union break, which Chris once more applauds.
Robbie chats with Neil. "Have you been doing a lot of promo?"
he asks.
"We've been doing too much," says Neil.
Trevor Horn comes over.
"What a great pleasure it is to meet you," says Robbie earnestly,
and talks about how much he likes Fundamental. "My favourite is 'Numb',"
he says.
Lol Creme joins them. Robbie asks if they've met before - they haven't
- and they discuss
their places
of origin. "Prestwick?" says Robbie. "The train stops there:'
Neil tells Lol: "A lot of people are coming because they've heard
you're singing. If they shout 'Wall Street Shuffle'~just ignore them..."
After the break, they run through the second half of the show, which begins
with "Numb".
"I will then say the arrangement for that," Neil announces,
"and then the next song, which is a bit more cheerful?
It's "It's alright". Then comes "Luna Park" and -
"at this point I will say something about Dusty Springfield"
- "Nothing has been proved", during which Neil messes up his
entrances into the verses and Robbie leaves his seat to take his place
at the side of the stage (followed, as ever, by his security man).
Neil now introduces "Jealousy" without reference to Robbie,
and stays on stage to speak the Shakespearean introduction over the opening
music, then says, "Will you please welcome a very special guest tonight,
Robbie Williams?"
"Merci... beaucoup," he says then looks a bit flustered and
silently mouths the words "lyrics?" until he finds them, just
in time. At the end, he unbuttons his coat and spins round, clenches his
fist, and heads over to chat with Chris. He shakes both Pet Shop Boys'
hands, says "See you later on," and heads off, as though to
leave, though he stays by the door to watch a little of "Dreaming
of the Queen" first.
After "It's a sin"~ the final song before the slightly artificial
encores - artificial because though the Pet Shop Boys can leave the stage
the orchestra cannot - the vocalists work on their "Amen" harmonies.
Sally Bradshaw asks Chris what the lighting will be like tonight so that
she can be prepared.
"I've asked to be in complete darkness," he says. "I imagine
you're going to be lit:'
"How am I going to know about that?" she quite reasonably asks,
and he directs her to the lighting man.
Chris fingers the Chris Lowe Chord Charts And Parts document on his music
stand.
"What's to stop a member of the public running onstage and putting
these in the wrong order?" he worries, though it seems an
improbable threat.
Andy, the tour manager, walks over. "Are you happy?" he asks
Chris, perhaps foolishly.
"Happy?" repeats Chris, incredulous. "Tolerably OK?
In an upstairs room there is a buffet dinner featuring what Neil declares
to be some of the finest sausages he has ever eaten. As they eat, Sally
Bradshaw asks Neil how one might go about singing someone else's song.
She will be performing a series of songs about love at Cambridge Folk
Festival and she would like to include "Casanova in Hell". He
says that she doesn't need permission - she should just go ahead.
"You could do the original lyric," says Trevor Horn. (It used
to be "his aging fate to masturbate...", rather than .... .to
contemplate".)
Neil thinks this is a fine idea. "You have to put 'masturbate' back
in," he says. "You have to:' He sings it.
"I'd be happy to," she says.
"I just couldn't cope with it," he explains.
Conversation turns to sausages. Steve Lipson says he also knows where
to get some excellent ones near his home in the countryside, and it turns
out Sally Bradshaw knows one of the places he mentions, and they start
mentioning places like Chipping Norton and Stow-on-theWold in the Cotswolds.
"This is a very P G Wodehouse
conversation," Neil observes.
Trevor Horn points out that he has just been reading a Wodehouse compendium.
"My favourites," says Neil, "are the Blandings Castle ones:'
He speaks in favour of the Ralph Richardson TV version in the sixties,
and Sally Bradshaw defends the Stephen Fry and Hugh Laurie incarnation,
which prompts Trevor Horn to muse on Hugh Laurie's sexiness, and a general
appreciation of his accent and limp in the current American TV drama House.
"My favourite Wodehouse," says Trevor, "is The Clicking
Of Cuthbert?
"Is that an American one?" asks Neil.
"No," says Trevor, "it's a golfing one:'
"Oh, I don't read the golfing ones," says Neil.
This, it
turns out, is the kind of conversation that takes places before an orchestral
Pet Shop Boys concert.
"Do you know how old Orson Welles was when he wrote and directed
and staffed in Citizen Kane?" asks Steven Lipson (who, amongst many
other things, is the man responsible for S Club 7's finest moment, "Don't
Stop Movin"'.)
"23," says Lol Creme, authoritatively.
Steven Lipson nods.
"He was on a roll then," says Neil.
Back in the dressing room, the Pet Shop Boys stylist, Frank, gives them
a good-luck present: a copy each of Infernal's "From Paris To Berlin".
"I think we should do a cheesy album," says Chris. "I'm
fed up with quality
"I know what you mean," says Neil. "It doesn't come naturally
to us, quality:' He considers whether this might be a little harsh. "Well,
it does and it doesn't:'
He looks at the good luck flowers from Gary Barlow and reads a letter
from a fan detailing all the Pet Shop Boys concerts she has attended.
"Chris," he asks, "what jeans are those?"
"Those are Prada," says Chris. "They're my jeans for the
season. Frank brings me a new pair every time he sees me. They cost about
250 quid. Four pairs are a thousand:'
"Whereas,"
says Neil, "four Dior pairs cost only £600:'
By now, they are each lying on one of the two couches which are lined
up end to end so that they could be squeezed into such a thin dressing
room.
"This'd be what it's like doing a Wednesday matinee and an evening
performance," comments Neil.
Chris tells Neil about the Take That underwear merchandise.
"We should do a range of underwear," Chris suggests. "'NUMB':'
"'BEING BORING," suggests Neil. "'THE SODOM AND GOMORRAH
SHOW:'
"'LOVE COMES QUICKLY' ," says Chris. "All our songs work
as underwear.
"'HOW CAN YOU EXPECT TO BE
TAKEN SERIOUSLY?"' says Neil. Chris picks up a box of chocolates
they have
been sent. "I hope they're Fair Trade," he scowls, and reads
the side of the box. "They contain nuts," he notes, as though
this is a minor outrage.
"Well," Neil sighs, "It's finally the night. I've been
dreading this concert for three months:' Radio 2 approached them to do
this concert towards the end of last year. At first they planned to perform
with nothing but an orchestra, then they changed their mind and decided
to use more traditional Pet Shop Boys instrumentation augmented by an
orchestra. ("I just imagined everyone being disappointed," says
Neil.) They also realised that this fitted in better with the style of
Fundamental, on which most of the songs are electronic but with an orchestra.
So they made a list of all of the Pet Shop Boys songs they most liked,
old and new, which had been recorded with an orchestra, and decided to
add orchestration to two more which have never before had it: "West
End girls" and "It's a sin". Even so, Neil has been somewhat
dreading it. "Now it's here," he says, "weirdly, I'm almost
enjoying it:'
Tony Wadsworth, EMI's managing director, pops by to see them, and they
talk about the Channel 4 documentary.
"I don't hate us by the end of it," says Chris, "which
is what normally happens:'
"I thought, 'I might quite like to buy their album' ," Neil
agrees.
Tony Wadsworth talks about how well things are going, and how good the
reviews are. "It's all 'return to form' ," he says.
"I always hate 'return to form' ," says Neil. "Q said it,
and they gave our last three albums four stars:'
They begin to prepare. Neil puts in his contact lenses.
"It starts very early, doesn't it?" says Chris. They are due
onstage at 7.30.
"Good thing is," says Neil, "it finishes early:' He continues
what he is doing. "You're so lucky not to wear contact lenses:'
"You don't have to wear them," says Chris. "You could wear
glasses, or have laser surgery, or...
Dave Dorrell tells them that Stuart Maconie
from Radio
2, who will be introducing them, will be coming up to say hello at 7.15.
"7.17 now," reschedules Neil, "because we're running a
bit behind:'
With difficulty, Neil frees a new toothbrush from its clear plastic packaging,
and runs the tap in the dressing-room basin.
"Oooh," Chris exclaims, "you're going to wash your teeth
with water from that tap?"
"No," Neil says, "you're right:' He reaches for a bottle
of Evian instead, and brushes.
"You don't want a stray piece of rocket on your teeth," says
Chris. "In The Sun. Or in Heat magazine:'
"No, that'd be typical:' says Neil. He sings to himself the chorus
of one of the new songs Rufus Wainwright played him last night from his
forthcoming album.
Chris says he might just wear the hoodie he's got on.
"It is radio:' he points out. "I wonder if I'll be able to see
the music with sunglasses on:'
"In that case:' says Neil, "I'm doing my own make-up. It's 'model's
own':' He begins to do so in the mirror. "I feel very backstage doing
my own make-up:' he says. "It's showbusiness, darling. It's a wonderful
life:' He finishes. "See? I just saved Parlophone eight hundred pounds:'
Chris decides he'd rather keep his blue jeans on than change into the
white ones he has ready. "Somebody's got to keep it a bit street:'
he says. "I've even got dirty trainers:'
At 7.17 Stuart Maconie comes in. He asks whether there's anything he should
say while introducing them.
"Say whatever you like:' says Neil.
"But don't be sarcy:' says Chris.
They have their photograph taken with him and he leaves.
"It's the waiting I don't like:' says Chris. "I wonder what
it feels like when you're waiting for the death penalty. And they say,
'You've got five minutes."'
"I bet it's terrible:' says Neil.
"I wonder if you think, 'Oh, I didn't think it was going to happen':'
says Chris. "Or, 'It's about time - I've been here for 25 years."'
Neil leaves the dressing room then returns to
fetch his lyrics. He asks whether he should wear his top hat and is met
with a chorus of "yes"s. Chris checks himself in the mirror.
"Oh, you scruff:' he says, and strides into the corridor. "The
thing is, you've got to have a bit of contrast. We're not a rock band:'
He feels in his pocket as they go down the backstage stairs. "Oh,
my phone!" he exclaims.
"You haven't got your phone, have you?" says Neil.
"I'll have to put it on vibrate:' says Chris.
"No!" says Neil. "I can hear it in my headphones..."
Stuart Maconie introduces tonight's
performers as "some of the finest musicians ever collected together
on a British stage", listing many of them until he finally builds
up to "the Pet Shop Boys!" At which point they don't come on
and Maconie has to explain to the audience -"because that's the lie
that radio tells" - that he now has to leave the stage, and then
the Pet Shop Boys own build-up to their performance will begin. Though
it's a strange, small auditorium, and the house lights stay up during
"Left to my own devices", it's immediately clear that this is
going to work. As soon as the rhythm track comes in everyone is clapping,
the orchestra sounds wonderful, Neil's voice rings clearly through and
you get a sense that people are aware that this may be the only time in
their life that they hear this - the full, long album version of "Left
to my own devices" with all its lyrics and different movements and
wild instrumental flourishes and Sally Bradshaw's operatic wails.
The top hat lasts until after the third song when Neil chucks in into
the wings - "it's getting a bit sweaty under there". Rufus Wainwright's
performance is greeted rapturously
- he kisses Neil before departing - and then Neil must talk at great length
as the screen slowly lowers. (Towards the end, it starts to rise before
the song and film have finished, then pauses until it is really time.)
"You don't get that in Take That's concert:' Neil points out, and
introduces Frances Barber.
Unlike in
rehearsals, she now falls back into all of Billie Trix's over-the-top
jaded Teutonic mannerisms and hand gestures. Then after "Integral"
- there is applause when Neil explains how it is inspired by the Pet Shop
Boys' opposition to ID cards - it's the intermission.
"I'm quite enjoying it' says Neil in the dressing room.
"It's the best repartee you've done," Chris tells him.
"I feel like a chat show host," says Neil.
"You're the new Bruce Forsyth," says Chris.
"I had to restrain myself to stop asking Rufus about his Judy Garland
project," says Neil.
There is a knock on the door. It is Janet Street-Porter and Elton John.
"The orchestra's great, but you can't hear the rhythm section,"
says Elton, then adds, as though maybe he has realised this sounds a little
blunt (never mind not the only reasonable view on how the music has been
sounding), "it's going to sound great on the radio? He adds: "I
loved 'Rent' - 'Rent' is fantastic:'
"It's a lovely arrangement," Neil agrees.
"It's a great song," says Elton. "And Rufus did a great
job:'
"'Integral' ," says Janet, "is your Rammstein:'
"Did you write it for them?" Elton asks.
"No," says Neil, "but when we were recording it, we kept
telling Trevor it should sound like Rammstein:'
"You're not doing 'Stupid'?" asks Elton.
"No," says Neil. "There's not an orchestra on it:'
"And you're not doing my favourite, 'I made my excuses and left'
' he says.
"I don't know why we're not doing it," says Neil.
"Can you believe the England squad?" Elton asks, and he chats
with Chris about the various merits of various footballers.
"It's hot in here, isn't it?" says Chris.
"It was hot out there," says Janet. "And then there was
the smell of burning:' There was indeed a weird electrical-burning smell
in the auditorium as the show started.
"It's great you've come down," Neil says to Elton.
"Come on, I was looking forward to it," he says. "It's
the first time I've been out, apart from the other night:' They were both
at a charity event the other night where Elton sung, and they laugh about
a rather poor portrait of the Queen they saw there. Neil says that while
he was there he fell into conversation with a man he knew was famous but
who he couldn't identify - for a while he wondered whether it was the
conductor Daniel Barenboim, but he hung on in the conversation without
letting on that he didn't know until he realised he was talking to the
playwright Tom Stoppard.
Elton asks about the Newcastle performance of Battleship Potemkin.
"God, it was cold," says Neil. "We had thermal underwear
on. The sheet music was held onto the music stands by clothes pegs.
"I'm very impressed you've got Lol Creme onstage," says Elton.
Neil says that he nearly sung an extremely rude word in the lyrics to
"You only tell me you love me when you're drunk" tonight by
accident.
"It's not a rhyme," objects Chris. "It's not even a half-rhyme:'
Elton raves about Sally Bradshaw. Or, as he puts it, "The fabulous
woman in the first song. I immediately said, I want one of her just to
have around. She's so camp."
"She was doing Parsifal last week' says Neil. "She's a really
famous opera singer. She normally wears sandals and a cotton dress - we
told her she had to look like an opera singer:'
There is a knock on the door.
"It'll be 'five minutes' ' says Elton, in a how-many-millions-of-times-have-I-heard-that-knock
tone of voice.
"Five minutes!" comes the shout through the door, and they all
roar with laughter. Elton and Janet make their way back to their seats,
and the Pet Shop Boys prepare for the second half.
"I'll sleep well tonight," Neil notes.
"Numb" slides into "It's alright", after which Neil
says, "That's an old rave classic." Most of the audience laugh
- it's probably funny to hear something described as "a rave classic"
when it's played in a theatre like this
with an opera
singer and an orchestra. "Well, it is," says Neil. Later, introduces
"Nothing has been proved". "This song actually tells the
whole story of the Profumo affair in four minutes. So actually you don't
need to see the film."
He introduces "Jealousy" by explaining it as the first song
they ever wrote. Robbie is greeted by a huge roar, and holds up his arms
like a body builder, and grins. He makes a slight blunder or two on his
way through the song, but covers it up well, and by the end of the song
half the crowd are on their feet for the first time. He hugs Neil, gives
a quick thumbs up, and is gone. (When Literally speaks to him a little
later, he is full of beans about the experience.)
"It's just slightly over-the-top, the end of that song," says
Neil.
When they return for the encores, Neil introduces "Indefinite leave
to remain" by noting that "the start sounds a bit like the Hovis
advert". After "West End girls", they are gone.
"I'm glad that's over anyway' says Chris in the dressing room, as
ever the last person on earth to acknowledge a triumph. He runs the tap
in the basin. "This is useless," he fumes. "I've seen it
all now."
Rufus comes in.
"Yes, Rufus' says Neil, "you stole the show."
"Yes' says Rufus. "But then I gave it back."
There is a party in an upstairs bar. Neil is approached by Trevor Horn's
wife and manager, Jill Sinclair.
"Rufus and Robbie did wonderful impersonations of you," she
says.
"The end of 'Jealousy' is so camp I thought I was going to laugh,"
he says, and pays tribute to her husband. "I love watching Trevor
play," he says. "It's like I love watching Chris play -because
they're concentrating so hard."
Soon he disappears back into the thick of the party, where their friends
and family are waiting. One side of the room is lined with the neon signs
spelling out the names of the songs on Fundamental and they won't be switched
off anytime soon.
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