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Please,
the first Pet Shop Boys album, was released in March 1986. Neil Tennant
and Chris Lowe had met in London during August 1981 and began writing
songs together soon afterwards, eventually settling into a routine of
regularly deeming new songs in a Camden recording studio owned by Ray
Roberts. In August 1983 - when Neil was working at the pop magazine Smash
Hits and Chris was studying architecture - Neil was sent to New York by
Smash Hits to interview The Police and took the opportunity to play some
songs to the cult disco producer; Bobby Orland, whose records Chris and
Neil admired. Bobby '0', as he was known,
announced that they would make a record together. The first Pet Shop Boys
single, the Bobby 'O'-produced version of 'West End girls', was released
in April 1984 and was a modest underground dance hit, at the time satisfying
their one stated ambition: to have a twelve-inch single available on import
in the trendiest London record shops. A second, 'One more chance’, followed.
By March 1985 the Pet Shop Boys were extricated from their Bobby '0' contract
and signed to EM Records' subsidiary, Parlophone. A single, 'Opportunities
(Let's make lots of money)', was released that August but, to their disappointment,
only reached number 116 in the British charts.
When
they began to plan their first album, the Pet Shop Boys decided they wanted
to work with the producer Stephen Hague, because of his recent work with
The World's Famous Supreme Team ('Hey DJ') and Malcolm McLaren ('Madame
Butterfly'). Their manager, Tom Watkins, suggested, amongst others, The
System and a newly-successful British production team, Stock Aitkin and
Waterman, who were working with another of his acts, Spelt Uke This. EMI
also had doubts about Hague and made other suggestions, but it was agreed
they could record a new version of 'West End girls' as atria track with
Stephen Hague, after which they were given the go-ahead for the album.
Please
was recorded with Stephen Hague at Advision studios in London between
November 1985 and January 1986, working from midday until midnight, breaking
mid-evening to visit Efe's Turkish kebab house down the road. 'We would
drink a bottle of retinas, if not two bottles, and come back half-drunk,'
says Neil. Occasionally they would take time off to perform 'West End
girls' on Top Of The Pops and Wogan, as it slowly rose to number one in
the British chart. At one point during the recording, the studio manager
said, 'so you're the singer; Neil? I thought you were the manager'.
They
decided the album would include ten songs, already written, and set aside
a number of other contenders, including 'It's a sin' (which Hague said
they should leave to their next album), 'Rent' (which programmer Blue
Weaver thought had too similar a chord change to 'I want a lover'), 'What
have I done to deserve this?' (they had yet to persuade their chosen collaborator
Dusty Springfield), 'Jealousy', 'One more chance' and 'In the club or
in the queue' (which the Pet Shop Boys would revisit in 1999 but which
remains unreleased).
Please
was recorded on a tight deadline. 'West End girls' had already been finished,
and they already had recordings of 'I want a lover', 'Opportunities...'
and 'Why don't we live together?' which Stephen Hague would do further
work on, but they were still under time pressure. The last song they finished,
'Suburbia', was a straightforward remake of their demo version partly
because there was no time to do anything else.
Though
it was hardly a concept album, as the Pet Shop Boys recorded Please, they
realised that the songs they had chosen could be sequenced to form a loose
storyline. 'We had the idea for the album that it was sort of linked together;'
says Neil. 'They run away in the first song, they arrive in the city ('West
End girls'), they want to make money ('Opportunities'), they fall in love
('Love comes quickly'), move to suburbia ('Suburbia), go out clubbing
('Tonight is forever'), there's violence in the city ('Violence') and
casual sex ('I want a lover'), someone tines to pick up a boy ('Later
tonight').. it does sort of work.'
During
the recording, there was much talk of how the first Pet Shop Boys album
sleeve should look. 'One of the great strengths of our relationship with
Tom Watkins is that there was a lot of negative energy in it, and Chris
and I would react against Tom, says Neil. 'It really worked in a quite
a positive way, creatively. Tom spent the whole time we were in Advision
saying he was coming up with this amazing packaging idea: paper engineering.
Finally one day he comes in and says, "Right, I've got it, the mock-up
of the album cover; it's unbelievable".'
'He'd
been describing this in words for ages and you just couldn't imagine what
it was, remembers Chris. 'Every copy of the album, would be unique. It
was these folds of paper that came together. It was basically a lifelike
work.'
'We
looked at it and thought it was ridiculously complicated,' says Neil.
'As a result we and Mark Farrow promptly came up with the idea of having
a white sleeve with a tiny picture of us. As ever, we didn't have a photo.'
(Mark Farrow, a designer who at that time worked in Tom Watkins' office,
has worked on every Pet Shop Boys sleeve since.) Most of the existing
Pet Shop Boys photos had been taken by Eric Watson, a photographer friend
Neil had known since his youth. They chose one, which had already been
printed in Smash Hits news section, Bitz, in which they were draped with
white towels. 'Eric's never been very happy with it because if you look
at it it's not completely in focus,' says Neil. 'We whacked it on the
front cover simply because the towels were white.'
'At
the time,' says Chris, 'it looked completely different from everything
else.'
Still,
in an era where most record sleeves were fussy, garish and cluffered,
not everyone appreciated its minimalism: their American record company
insisted that the title and their name be printed at the top of the sleeve
so that it could be easily identified in The racks, and the French record
company, to the Pet Shop Boys' fury, simply redesigned the sleeve using
a much larger photo. Later; when it was released on CD, the Pet Shop Boys
didn't scale down the photo in the same ratio as on the album sleeve,
and they have always felt the CD sleeve doesn't work so well.
On
the album's inner sleeve, they used 98 more photos, mostly from the many
sessions they had done with Enc Watson, though one- Chris's self-portrait
in a mirror-was taken in Neil's New York apartment in 1984 when Neil was
launching Smash Hits' Armenian version, Star Hits, and Chris had been
flown over by Bobby '0' 50 that the Pet Shop Boys could do more recording.
After
'West End girls', three more singles were released from Please. 'Love
comes quickly' came out in February, before the album, the updated version
of 'Opportunities' was released in May, and an EP centred around a re-recorded
version of 'Suburbia' came out in September. they also released an album
of six dance mixes, Disco, in November.)
The
Pet Shop Boys had come up with the album's title fairly early on. Though
Neil thinks Chris probably suggested it, it derives from the habit at
Smash Hits magazine of saying 'pur-leaze!' at the end of sentences. 'I
think if you look at my obituary when I left Smash Hits it quotes me as
saying 'such and such, pur-leaze',' says Neil. 'Meaning, 'for goodness
sake'. It seemed to be associated with me. It was just a weak joke that
you could go into a record shop and say, 'have you got the Pet Shop Boys,
Please?' Not even a joke, really.
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