~ Pet Shop Boys - Left To My Own Devices
Views: 41136 |  |  |  |  | "Left To My Own Devices"
(Uuu.....us)
I get out of bed at half past ten
Phone up a friend, who's a party animal
Turn on the news and drink some tea
Maybe if you're with me we'll do some shopping
One day I'll read, or learn to drive a car
If y ...More ou pass the test, you can beat the rest
But I don't like to compete, or talk street, street, street
I can pick up the best from the party animal
I could leave you, say goodbye
Or I could love you, if I try
And I could
And left to my own devices, I probably would
Left to my own devices, I probably would
Pick up a brochure about the sun
Learn to ignore what the photographer saw
I was always told that you should join a club
Stick with the gang, if you want to belong
I was a lonely boy, no strength, no joy
In a world of my own at the back of the garden
I didn't want to compete, or play out on the street
For in a secret life I was a round head general
I could leave you, say goodbye
Or I could love you, if I try
And I could
And left to my own devices, I probably would
Left to my own devices, I probably would
Oh, I would
I was faced with a choice at a difficult age
Would I write a book? Or should I take to the stage?
But in the back of my head I heard distant feet
Che Guevara and Debussy to a disco beat
It's not a crime when you look the way you do
The way I like to picture you
When I get home, it's late at night
I pour a drink and watch the fight
Turn off the TV, look at a book
Pick up the phone, fix some food
Maybe I'll sit up all night and day
Waiting for the minute I hear you say
I could leave you, say goodbye
Or I could love you, if I try
And I could
And left to my own devices, I probably would
Come on, baby, say goodbye
I could love you, if I try
And I could
And left to my own devices, I probably would
Left to my own devices, I probably would
Out of bed, at half past ten
The party animal phones a friend
Picks up news about the sun
And the working day has just begun
Sticks with the gang - at the back of the street
Pass the test - and you don't compete
Drive the car, if you're with me
Che Guevara's drinking tea
He reads about a new device
And takes to the stage in a secret life
(Uuu.....us)
Left to my own devices, I probably would
If I was left to my own devices, I possibly would
(Uuu.....us)
If I was left to my own devices, I probably would
Left to my own devices, I probably would
I could leave you, say goodbye
Or I could love you, if I try
And I could
And left to my own devices, I probably would
Left to my own devices, I probably would
Come on, baby
Left to my own devices, I probably would |
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~ Pet Shop Boys - Always on My Mind
Views: 71614 |  |  |  |  | Pet Shop Boys es un grupo de synthpop procedente de Reino Unido. Sus integrantes son Neil Tennant y Chris Lowe, y han alcanzado reconocimiento internacional desde mediados de los años 80 gracias a éxitos como "West End Girls", "Left to my own devices", "I ...More t's a Sin" y "Go West". Además de sus propias canciones, Pet Shop Boys escriben y producen para otros artistas, además de música para bandas sonoras de películas. Hasta ahora Pet Shop Boys han vendido más de 50 millones de discos en todo el Mundo. |
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~ Pet Shop Boys - Go West
Views: 62841 |  |  |  |  | Pet Shop Boys es un grupo de synthpop procedente de Reino Unido. Sus integrantes son Neil Tennant y Chris Lowe, y han alcanzado reconocimiento internacional desde mediados de los años 80 gracias a éxitos como "West End Girls", "Left to my own devices", "I ...More t's a Sin" y "Go West". Además de sus propias canciones, Pet Shop Boys escriben y producen para otros artistas, además de música para bandas sonoras de películas. Hasta ahora Pet Shop Boys han vendido más de 50 millones de discos en todo el Mundo |
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~ Pet Shop Boys - So Hard
Views: 18026 |  |  |  |  | Pet Shop Boys es un grupo de synthpop procedente de Reino Unido. Sus integrantes son Neil Tennant y Chris Lowe, y han alcanzado reconocimiento internacional desde mediados de los años 80 gracias a éxitos como "West End Girls", "Left to my own devices", "I ...More t's a Sin" y "Go West". Además de sus propias canciones, Pet Shop Boys escriben y producen para otros artistas, además de música para bandas sonoras de películas. Hasta ahora Pet Shop Boys han vendido más de 50 millones de discos en todo el Mundo. |
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~ Pet Shop Boys Left to my own devices (Prince's Trust 2004)
Views: 35509 |  |  |  |  | Pet Shop Boys Left to my own devices played on the Prince's Trust 2004 concert, which celebrated the 25th anniversary of Trevor Horn's production career.
The DVD from this concert is available only in Japan. The link at the bottom of this message will ...More show you the way to get it. Price: 25 euro / 18 pounds (UK) (shipping included!!).
DVD:
http://www.cdjapan.co.jp/detailview.html?KEY=DEBR-13807
*Update*
DVD is also available in Europe now; check www.bol.com for the dvd 'Slaves to the rhythm'. |
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~ PET SHOP BOYS Left To My Own Devices 1.12.88 Trevor Horn Production
Views: 34964 |  |  |  |  | Reunited in 2005 with producer Trevor Horn for the first time since 1988's magisterial Left to My Own Devices, Pet Shop Boys encountered an unexpected problem. The man responsible for overblown epics such as Relax and Poison Arrow wasn't giving them the H ...More orn they were looking for. So they didn't have to rein him in? "Au contraire," answers Neil Tennant. "We were trying to rein him out."
In the end, as Tennant and Chris Lowe's new album, Fundamental, proves, they got what they wanted, but it wasn't without a struggle. "We kept saying to him, 'We're making a Trevor Horn album here,'" recalls Tennant. "The reason we started working with him again was because of that tATu single, which was proper Trevor. We thought, 'Oh, he's doing pop again': first of all, a pop record; second, a pop record with two Russian lesbians. I said to him, 'You know, you should only work with homosexuals.'"
The great man's sonic imprint is all over new songs such as Casanova in Hell, Minimal and The Sodom and Gomorrah Show. On the first, the cellos detumesce down the scale seconds after Tennant has sung: "He couldn't get an erection." "Actually, we nearly cut those out," says Tennant, "because we thought they might be too arch." "What's wrong with arch?" asks Lowe. On Minimal, Horn ignores the tenor of the song by pelting it with pizzicato strings that are straight out of ABC's The Lexicon of Love. And on S&G — a giant journey from innocence to depravity to regret — well, Tennant admits he cheated. "We were trying to do a real Trevor there," he says, "and I thought, 'You'd have backing vocals here, wouldn't you?' So I put them on — and it sounds like Dollar."
Tennant in the mood he's in today is unstoppable. Flitting from one subject to another in the space of seconds, he'll marvel at the 24-hour nature and vapidity of contemporary celebrity-mag discourse, then veer off down memory lane about Dollar. "I interviewed them for Smash Hits (which, famously, he once edited). I went and bought make-up at Boots with Thereza Bazar." He's off. "David Van Day is a surviving kind of guy. I know he's got the chip van, but he also tours with a version of Buck's Fizz."
"He was never in Buck's Fizz," Lowe protests. "But there's a kind of weird logic that the guy from Dollar is in Buck's Fizz," reasons Tennant. Do you ever do pub quizzes, Neil? "I've never been in a pub in my life," he splutters. "Although someone said to me, 'You know, everyone who knows you agrees that if they were on Who Wants to be a Millionaire?, you'd be the friend they'd phone.'"
They're not always like this. Lowe, cruelly inaccurate though the stereotype of him as monosyllabic and scowling beneath his baseball cap is, can play to it when he wants. And Tennant in picky, guarded mode can be a scary prospect. If the joke's on you, beware; on him, and you can relax. Asked to settle, once and for all, whether it's Pet Shop Boys or The Pet Shop Boys, he pokes fun at his penchant for pedantry. "It's Pet Shop Boys. We confuse the issue by calling ourselves the Pet Shop Boys." He pauses before pouncing. "With a lower-case 't'."
Yet critical reaction to them can also be contrary, and sometimes wilfully ignorant. Quite apart from releasing some of the greatest pop singles of the past 20 years, PSB have also made at least three classic albums, with Fundamental now making it four. Detractors dwell on their apparent archness or snag on the perceived contradiction between their innate melancholia and giddy, hi-NRG hedonism. This misses, surely, PSB's uniqueness, which is that they locate the sadness that always resides somewhere in silliness, and vice versa.
Tennant's droll vocal style has also attracted criticism. "Some people think my voice sounds disengaged," the singer acknowledges. "But I think that gives the songs emotional punch. When people take a song and drag it by the scruff of the neck, they don't necessarily get emotion out of it." On the great new track I Made My Excuses and Left (a very PSB title), the subject of the song walks into a party to discover his lover with someone else. Tennant's delivery of the line "I walked into the room/Imagine my surprise", manages, by being conversational and resigned, to set the tragic scene with visceral power. He once, famously, told the American songwriter Diane Warren: "We don't do passion." By which he meant? "That I'm not Mariah Carey." And you imagine Carey lathering that same line with demented coloratura and know immediately what Tennant means. Warren has contributed a song — Numb — to Fundamental, though she was keen for PSB to cover another of her compositions. The title proved a problem. "She couldn't get why the Pet Shop Boys wouldn't sing Kisses on the Wind," Tennant laughs. "Imagine getting the label to say: 'The great new Pet Shop Boys single — Kisses on the Wind'." |
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