Please (album)
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Please | ||
Studio album by Pet Shop Boys | ||
Released | March 24, 1986 | |
Recorded | 1984-1985 | |
Genre | Synthpop | |
Length | 44:02 | |
Label | EMI Manhattan | |
Producer(s) | Stephen Hague | |
Professional reviews | ||
---|---|---|
Pet Shop Boys chronology | ||
Please (1986) |
Disco (1986) |
Please is the first album by the UK electronic music group Pet Shop Boys, released in 1986. According to the duo, the album's title was chosen so that people had to go into a record shop and say "Can I have the Pet Shop Boys album, Please?".
Hits from Please include "West End Girls", "Opportunities (Let's make lots of money)", and "Love comes quickly". "West End Girls" was a hit in both the UK and the United States.
Contents |
[edit] Overview
Please is musically simpler than, but lyrically just as rich as, Pet Shop Boys' later work. The instrumentals are comparable to other techno pop of this period. As with many early PSB albums, the lyrics were considered androgynous, the stories they contain being equally applicable to gay and heterosexual relationships. Tennant, in particular, enjoyed this ambiguity and refused to comment on his own sexuality until he came out before 1993's Very hit the charts.
The tiny cover photograph enclosed by a sea of white has been seen by some design obervers as a reaction to the traditional album cover. With the new CD cases of the time being necessarily smaller than designs seen on 12" albums, the passport-sized photograph is far removed from standard cover artwork. The actual size of the image is the same size as a 35mm photographic negative.
"Two Divided by Zero" samples a SHARP "talking" calculator from the 1980's.
Please was rereleased in 2001 (as were most of the group's albums up to that point) as Please/Further Listening 1984-1986. The rereleased version was not only digitally remastered but came with a second disc of B-sides and previously unreleased material from around the time of the album's original release.
"Suburbia" was dramatically remixed for the single release.
"Violence" was later rerecorded by the Pet Shop Boys for a charity concert at the Hacienda nightclub in the early 1990s. This version, known as the 'Hacienda Version', was released as one of the b-sides to "I wouldn't normally do this kind of thing" and was then made available on the b-sides album Alternative and the 2001 2-disc rerelease of the Very.
The Pet Shop Boys later sampled the Please version of "Love comes quickly" for their song "Somebody else's business", which appeared on the Disco 3 album.
"Tonight is forever" was later covered by Liza Minelli on the Pet Shop Boys-produced album Results.
[edit] Track listing
- "Two divided by zero"
- "West End girls"
- "Opportunities (Let's make lots of money)"
- "Love comes quickly"
- "Suburbia"
- "Opportunities (reprise)"
- "Tonight is forever"
- "Violence"
- "I want a lover"
- "Later tonight"
- "Why don't we live together?"
[edit] Further Listening 1984-1986
- "A man could get arrested" (Twelve-inch b-side)
- "Opportunities (Let's make lots of money)" (Full length original seven-Inch version)
- "In the night"
- "Opportunities (Let's make lots of money)" (Original twelve-inch mix)
- "Why don't we live together?" (Original New York mix)
- "West End girls" (Dance Mix)
- "A man could get arrested" (Seven-inch b-side)
- "Love comes quickly" (Dance mix)
- "That's my impression" (Disco mix)
- "Was that what it was?"
- "Suburbia" (The Full Horror)
- "Jack the lad"
- "Paninaro" (Italian remix)
[edit] Singles
[edit] Personnel
- Neil Tennant
- Chris Lowe
Guest musicians
- Andy Mackay - Saxophone on track 4
- Helena Springs - Additional vocals on tracks 2 & 8
- Stephen Hague - Keyboards and programming (uncredited)
- Ron Dean Miller - Original production and guitar (uncredited) on track 11 and "New York overdubs" on track 3
- Blue Weaver - Original production on track 9
- J.J. Jeczalik & Nicholas Froome - Original production on track 3
[edit] External link
Pet Shop Boys |
Neil Tennant | Chris Lowe |
Discography |
Albums: Please | Actually | Introspective | Behaviour | Very | Bilingual | Nightlife | Release | Fundamental |
Soundtracks and scores: Closer to Heaven (Original Cast Recording) | Battleship Potemkin |
Remix albums: Disco | Disco 2 | Disco 3 |
Compilations: Discography: The Complete Singles Collection | Alternative | PopArt: The Hits | Back to Mine: Pet Shop Boys |
Live: Concrete |
Singles: "West End girls" | "Love comes quickly" | "Opportunities (Let's make lots of money)" | "Suburbia" | "It's a Sin" | "What Have I Done to Deserve This?" | "Rent" | "Always On My Mind" | "Heart" | "Domino dancing" | "Left to my own devices" | "It's alright" | "So Hard" | "Being Boring" | "Where the streets have no name (I can't take my eyes off you)" | "How can you expect to be taken seriously?" | "Jealousy" | "DJ Culture" | "Was it worth it?" | "Can you forgive her?" | "Go West" | "I wouldn't normally do this kind of thing" | "Liberation" | "Yesterday, when I was mad" | "Paninaro '95" | "Before" | "Se a vida é (That’s the way life is)" | "Single-Bilingual" | "Somewhere" | "I don't know what you want but I can't give it any more" | "New York City boy" | "You only tell me you love me when you're drunk" | "Home and dry" | "I get along" | "London" | "Miracles" | "Flamboyant" | "I'm with Stupid" | "Minimal" | "Numb" | "She's Madonna" |
Related Articles |
Other projects: It Couldn't Happen Here | Reputation | Results | Spaghetti Records | Closer to Heaven |