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The
fourth Pet Shop Boys studio album, was released in Ootober 1990. 'This
was five years fiom 'West End gins',' notes Neil. 'Five years in pop music
is a long time.' Since their previous album, Introspective, the Pet Shop
Boys had produced the album Results for Uza Minnelli, also writing most
of its songs, had collaborated with Bernard Sumner and Johnny Marr on
the first Electronic album, and had appeared onstage for the first time
in America when Electronic supported Depeche Mode at Dodgers Stadium in
Los Mgeles.
They
had also left Tom Watkins' management operation and set up their own office,
run by Jill Carrington. They began work on Behaviour, which would turn
out to be their most moody and contemplative album yet, with a fairly
straighiforward sense of purpose. 'At the time,' Neil remembers, 'I believe
we were thinking of bringing out an album of fab pop songs, like ten Kylie
Minogue singles.' They decided that they wanted, for the first time since
Please, to make an album with one producer.
They also had a couple of specific musical guidelines they wanted to follow:
'We had the idea before we started that we were going to use analogue
synthesisers, and we weren't going to use samples, because even by the
beginning of 1990 everything was mega-samples, and we wanted to make something
much cleaner. We thought it would sound fuller and more original if all
the sounds were programmed for it.' When they considered who might be
able to create such analogue sounds, they thought of the German disco
records of the seventies made by Giorgio Moroder atrain of thought which
led them to Harold Faltermeyer; who had bean Moroder's programmer and
had since achieved success on his own, most famously with the instrumental
'Axe F'. 'At the end of 1989 Chris and I flew to Munich to meet him,'
recalls Neil.
'He
has a positive museum of ancient synthesisers. And he had an engineer
from America, Brian Reeves, who worked on a lot of Donna Summer records.'
They agreed to make the album in Faltermeyer's Munich studio over ten
weeks the following spring, in two blocks with a month's break in the
middle. Neil enjoyed being in Germany rather more than Chris did. 'We
stayed in this little apartment hotel in the centre of Munich,' says Neil.
'They were very ordinary rooms. 'Very depressing,' says Chris. 'I kept
wanting to hire a suite in the best hotel in Munich,' Neil recalls, 'but
Chris wanted to save the money. Chris hated that he was away from the
rave culture explosion he'd been enjoying back home. 'The Germans then
hadn't heard of house music,' he says.
'There was nowhere to go. Miserable times. I felt like I was missing out
on so much that was happening in England - it was possibly the most exciting
time in English culture ever including the Sixties, and we were in Munich.
But Neil liked it.' 'I used to like walking in the English garden,' Neil
says. 'I occasionally went to the opera. I like the beer; I liked the
buildings. Every morning we had a hired BMW and we would drive to Munich
airport and pick up the English papers - Chris would park the car and
I would rush in - and one morning I got back in and there was a strange
the wrong car.' man sitting there. I'd got in 'Because everyone has a
grey BMW,' says Chris. 'We were listening to '4olatorby Depeche Mode,'
Neil remembers,
'which was a very good album and we were deeply jealous of it.' 'They
had raised the stakes,' Chris agrees. Harold Faltermeyer lived on a kind
of private estate just outside Munich. The Pet Shop Boys would arrive
a little before midday, have a cup of coffee and begin work. They would
usually order in pizza for lunch. Around four o'clock they would adjourn
to his beer hut in the garden for some of Faltermeyer's German draught
beer. 'And,' says Chris, 'he'd tell us anecdotes about Giorgio Moroder.'
On the property Faltermeyer had his own abattoir. (He is a keen hunter.
'He makes his own sausages, Chris observes.)
At
one point during the recording process they tried feeding the vocals through
the abattoir; re-miking a speaker in there for a reverb effect. 'It didn't
really work out,' Neil says. In Germany, they kept to the concept of using
analogue synthesisers and no samples, but when they returned to London
to mix the album at Sarm West, they somewhat relaxed these rules. However,
they were still resolved to release an album which sounded consistent,
and made the final song selectior with that in mind, at the last minute
removing 'Miserablism' and replacing it with 'The end of the world'. 'When
this album came out people said they were amazed that the whole rave thing
seemed to have passed us by,' says Neil. 'We, of course, though we had
shamelessly jumped on the rave bandwagon. 'The thing is, we were ahead
of it, because some of Behaviour is like deep house,' reasons Chris 'and
the naff old ers were still trapped in acid house. Whereas we had moved
on.' The sombre images of the Pet Shop Boys, some red roses and an abandoned
chair which appeared on the album sleeve were taken by Eric Watson.
'We
had this idea for the photographs with the roses because we'd been to
Liza Minnelli's apartment in New York and she had this fantastic photograph,
I think by Richard Avedon, of Judy Garland as atramp holding a huge bunch
of red roses,' says Neil. 'So we just nicked the idea of the huge bunch
of red roses and suggested it to Eric. We got all the roses from about
three florists in Fulham because we wanted trillions of them.' 'They didn't
have the thorns removed either;' says Chris. 'It was very painful.' 'But
there was something luscious about it - the beautiful red roses,' says
Neil. 'At the end of the session Eric had the idea of photographing just
the chair and the roses. Then we did the solo portraits, and Eric thought
they were too brutal, but we really liked them.' 'I like that picture
of me,' Chris reflects. 'I think I should always be photographed from
behind.' 'Mark Farrow had the idea of using the four photographs like
that,' remembers
Neil.
He says that one detail has always annoyed him: 'I've always thought the
full stop after the word Behaviour is over- designed. It looks a bit naff.
I probably thought it looked cool at the time but now I think it's irritating,
because it's not a sentence.' IFor the American version of the album,
in deference to local spelling custom, it was released as Behavior. Neil
remembers the title Behaviour as being Chris's idea. (Chris says he can't
remember. 'Was it? I've got no idea. I don't see why I should take the
blame for it.') 'It seemed to sum up the album,' says Neil. 'I think we
felt this was a much more personal- sounding album. I think we were fed
up at this point with the whole notion of irony that we particularly got
landed with, because of records like 'Opportunities'.
Behaviour seemed completely un-ironic and slightly serious. This is basically
a sad album, from 'Being boring' through to 'Jealousy', with the exception
of 'How can you expect to be taken seriously?' which is a satire. I suppose
'So hard' which is about the end of a relationship, is funny as well.
But otherwise they're all rather sad songs.'
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