“A shiny pop record with the producers du jour” – that’s how Chris Lowe and Neil Tennant summarised Yes, their tenth studio album, in the liner notes for the collection’s reissue (see the 3CD Further Listening set, released in 2017). Xenomania, the production house behind hits from Kylie Minogue, Alesha Dixon, Sugababes and – most notably – Girls Aloud, were the sound of 2000s pop, but Brian Higgins, the head of the unit, was initially wary of collaborating with artists of Pet Shop Boys’ stature. “I’d just had a difficult experience with another big group,” he admitted. But the Lowe and Tennant charm – and a listen to early demo Did You See Me Coming? – soon made Higgins reconsider. What emerged is an 11-track collection of what Lowe has since appraised as “colourful pop” – as revealed by this track-by-track guide through every song on the album…
Listen to ‘Yes’ here.
‘Yes’: A Track-By-Track Guide To Pet Shop Boys’ “Colourful Pop” Album
Love Etc.
An early Xenomania track played to Chris Lowe and Neil Tennant at the start of the Yes writing sessions, Love Etc. ended up being released as the first single from the album. Despite BBC Radio 1 deciding not to support the song, it still managed to make the UK Top 20 – and it’s easy to see why. This clever, textured track, stuffed with catchy electro-pop hooks, is classic Xenomania, and its anti-materialist lyrics captures much of Pet Shop Boys’ inspired social observation (a perennial theme across many of the best Pet Shop Boys songs). Topping the US dance charts for good measure, Love Etc. assured long-term fans that the PSB/Xenomania partnership would work, and reintroduced the pair to the wider public when it featured in a BRITs Awards performance staged for the duo’s acceptance of a Lifetime Achievement award. Ambitious pop is what Pet Shop Boys have always done best, and Love Etc. is precisely that.