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"Pet Shop Boys" 1984 Tennant, Lowe, Orlando B-side of the original 1984 single of "West End Girls." [48] "Playing in the Streets" 2017 Nightlife: Further Listening 1996-2000: Tennant, Lowe "The Pop Kids" 2016 Super: Tennant, Lowe First single from the album. "Positive Role Model" 2002 Disco 3: Tennant, Lowe, Barry White, Tony Sepe, Peter Radcliffe
"West End Girls" is a song by English synth-pop duo Pet Shop Boys. Written by Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe, the song was released twice as a single.The song's lyrics are concerned with class and the pressures of inner-city life in London which were inspired partly by T. S. Eliot's poem The Waste Land.
A version of "West End Girls" produced by Orlando had been released as an unsuccessful single that year. For their debut album Pet Shop Boys re-worked the songs in a slightly slower tempo with producer Stephen Hague (after their record company initially had suggested that they should work with producers Stock Aitken Waterman).
I Get Along (Pet Shop Boys song) I Get Excited (You Get Excited Too) I Want a Lover; I Want to Wake Up; I Wouldn't Normally Do This Kind of Thing; I'm Not Scared (song) I'm with Stupid (Pet Shop Boys song) Integral (song) It Always Comes as a Surprise; It Doesn't Often Snow at Christmas; It Must Be Obvious; It's a Sin; It's Alright (Pet Shop ...
Ultimate was released to celebrate 25 years since the band's first single release "West End Girls" [2] in standard single-CD and expanded CD/DVD configurations. [3] It charted at number 27 on the UK Albums Chart on 7 November 2010, with first-week sales of 8,886 copies. [4] On the European Top 100 Albums it reached number 50 on 20 November 2010 ...
"I Don't Know What You Want but I Can't Give It Any More" is a song by English synth-pop duo Pet Shop Boys from their seventh studio album, Nightlife (1999). Released on 19 July 1999 as the album's lead single, it peaked at number 15 on the UK Singles Chart , number two on the US Hot Dance Club Play chart, and number 66 on the US Hot Singles ...
British synth-pop group the Pet Shop Boys are the latest to call out Drake for allegedly not getting permission to use their lyrics in his newly-dropped “For All the Dogs” record. PSB issued a ...
The Los Angeles Times said the Pet Shop Boys "don't deserve the cruel fate they receive here. They are purveyors of pleasant and popular bubble-gum rock who have been caught up in what is essentially a string of MTV-type numbers overlaid with a pseudo-surreal style and snatches of confounding philosophical discourse that might have something to ...