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One
of the summer's most anticipated music events is the Pet Shop Boys' Somewhere.
But really it is going nowhere as it is a residency at London's Savoy
Theatre (June 5 to 7 and 9 to 14 inclusive) that will represent the duo's
first live appearances since 1991, and only the third set of British concerts
in a 12-year chart history.
While
some bands claim addiction to life on the road, Neil Tennant and Chris
Lowe have taken a far more restrained approach.
It
is the quality and impact of the shows they have staged before that is
making Somewhere such a big attraction .Past performances - received rapturously
by public and critics - set new standards.
Before
their first UK dates in 1989, the Pet Shop boys live experience was limited
to a two-song contribution to Before The Act, a benefit organised by Sir
Ian McKellen and held the previous year at the Piccadilly Theatre. That
they had one of the best - and best-selling - collections of work in Eighties
pop to their credit only raised expectations. But the spectacular show
directed for them by the late film-maker Derek Jarman did not disappoint.
Derek
Jarman said at the time "They asked for a theatrical concert and
that's what were doing. I suppose that some people think pop music
and theatre should not mix, but I think pop music is theatre, and I don't
see why it shouldn't be so."
The
performance in 1991 went even further. Tennant said in preview: "its
going to be more theatrical than the last tour, which still had elements
of the rock concert that we like to get rid of."
Put
together in conjunction with the director David Alden and the designer
David Fielding, celebrated for their avant-garde productions for English
National Opera, and with a troupe of ten dancers choreographed by Jacob
Marley, it drew uniform praise from reviewers.
"It
was an evening of jaw-dropping flamboyance, frequent hilarity and superior
entertainment," wrote one. And another: "It was a Vegas show-stopper
by way of Salvador Dale. Astonishing."
Tennant
and Lowe have never shown a fondness for repeating themselves, however,
and expectations are the Somewhere will be a very different venture.
With
its atmosphere of art deco richness, the recently restored Savoy is unlike
those venues that they have played before.A seating capacity of 1,000
means that the two - alone on stage, save for no backing singer - will
be able to achieve a closeness to their audience impossible from a top
a huge stage at one end of an arena.
Such
intimate surroundings should be perfect for the appreciation of a collection
of songs that stands comparison with any in recent pop history.
Perhaps
because some of their hits have been driven by an energetic electronic
pulse, there are critics who have found it possible to overlook tennant's
and low's sure touch with melodies, and the intelligence and acuity
of their lyrics.
As
commentators on contemporary Britain, they shame many more frequently
lauded names. Somewhere will, I hope, be the environment in which to reappraise
the pair.
They
are planning the stage environment in collaboration with Sam Taylor-Wood,
an artist known for her use of video and close-circuit television. This
suggests that it will not be quite the back-to-basics cabaret approach
one might otherwise imagine.
Tennant
said last year: " We come from a modernist tradition, believing that
music progresses through technical innovation. Beethoven wrote for the
newfangled pianoforte. In the Forties and Fifties, people played with
the newfangled electric guitar. Then, in the Seventies and Eighties, we
heard the newfangled synthesisers. In the early Nineties, it was the newfangled
samplers that enabled you to use drum and percussion loops. Music has
always advanced through technology."
But
from their 1985 debut hit West End Girls (a No1 hit world-wide, America
included), to their most recent single, the Top Ten success A Red Letter
Day, songs rather than just beats per minute have been at the heart of
the Pet Shop Boys appeal.
Their
ability as writers has been recognised at the annual Ivory Novella Awards,
and among the other artists to have benefited from this talent are Dusty
Springfield, Tina Turner and Liza Minnelli (Tennant and Lowe have also
collaborated with Blur, Suede, and David Bowie).
Indeed,
it is their appreciation not just of the dance music tradition, but also
that of classic musical song-writing that has made the duo such an idiosyncratic
and distinctive presence on the world charts. Appropriately Somewhere
takes its title from Leonard Bernstein's and Stephen Sondheim's
West Side Story composition, a version - "definitive, I'm
afraid," says Tennant - which is due for release as a Pet Shop Boys
single on Parlophone.
As
the critic Andrew Smith noted of this cumulative appeal: "Hip enough
to play in underground clubs, cute enough to spin at Tramp, tuneful and
insistent enough to excite radio producers, and clever enough for enthusiasts
of traditional song-writing, they became the group that anyone could like."
Album
sales of more than 25 million attest to this, as foes a run of 29 Top
30 singles in Britain. With four of these having achieved No1 status,
Tennant and Lowe have equalled the record previously held jointly by Wham!
and the Everly Brothers for the most chart-toppers ever by a duo.
Meanwhile,
that they are always looking for a further challenge is indicated not
just by the Sabot shows, but by the fact that they are currently involved
in the writing of a stage music with Jonathan Harvey, writer of the acclaimed
play and film Beautiful Thing (Tennant is also co-ordinating the production
of Twentieth Century Blues, an album of cover versions of songs by Noël
Coward, due to benefit the Red Hot Aids Trust).
It
is perhaps unsurprising that they rarely perform live. Lowe said after
their last UK appearance, a four-song set at the London Palladium: "I'm
amazed people go on tour so much, because it's very stressful.
It's very enjoyable too, but not the kind of thing we want to do
after every album."
All
the more incentive, then, to catch them at the Savoy. It may be some time
before you have another opportunity.
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