Introspective (album)
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Introspective | ||
Studio album by Pet Shop Boys | ||
Released | October 11, 1988 | |
Recorded | 1988 | |
Genre | Synthpop | |
Length | 48:08 | |
Label | EMI Manhattan | |
Producer(s) | Pet Shop Boys, Trevor Horn, Stephen Lipson, Lewis A Martinee, David Jacob, Julian Medelsohn | |
Professional reviews | ||
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Pet Shop Boys chronology | ||
Actually (1987) |
Introspective (1988) |
Behaviour (1990) |
Introspective is the fourth album, the third of entirely new music, by the UK electronic music group Pet Shop Boys. It was first released in 1988.
It is so named because "all the songs, although it's a dance album, are introspective". Perhaps the biggest changes in Pet Shop Boys' sound evident on this album are an increasing attention to orchestration using real orchestras, particularly so on the Trevor Horn-produced "Left to my own devices," which took months to produce. The album was also unusual in that it completely reversed the typical process by which pop/dance acts released singles: Instead of releasing an album of regular-length (3-5 minute) songs, then releasing more lengthy remixes of those songs on subsequent singles, "Introspective" was released as an EP consisting of songs that all lasted six minutes or more. Songs from the album that were released as singles were released as shorter, more radio-friendly tracks. Of the four tracks on the album that were released as singles -- "Left to my own devices," "Domino dancing," "Always on my mind," and "It's alright" -- none of them were released as radio singles in the same form that they appeared on the album.
Introspective was re-released in 2001 (as were the group's first six albums up to that point) as Instrospective/Further Listening 1988-1989. The re-released version was digitally remastered and came with a second disc of B-sides and previously unreleased material from around the time of the album's original release.
Neil Tennant, in a speech he later gave to the Oxford Union, said that he regretted releasing Introspective so soon after Actually as he felt that the 12" nature of the songs may have put some fans off the band, and that this probably impacted on the sales of Behaviour, the subsequent album which is critically regarded to be the Pet Shop Boy's finest album but commercially one of their least successful.
[edit] Track listing
- "Left to My Own Devices" – 8:16
- "I Want a Dog" – 6:15
- "Domino dancing" – 7:40
- "I'm Not Scared" – 7:23
- "Always on My Mind/In My House" – 9:05
- "It's Alright" – 9:24
[edit] Further Listening 1988-1989
- "I get excited (you get excited too)"
- "Don Juan (demo version)"
- "Domino Dancing (demo version)"
- "Domino Dancing (alternative version)"
- "The sound of the atom splitting"
- "What keeps mankind alive?"
- "Don Juan (disco mix)"
- "Losing my mind (disco mix)"
- "Nothing has been proved (demo for Dusty)"
- "So sorry i said (demo for Liza)"
- "Left to my own devices (seven-inch mix)"
- "It's alright (ten-inch version)"
- "One of the crowd"
- "It's alright (seven-inch version)"
- "Your funny uncle"
[edit] Personnel
- Neil Tennant
- Chris Lowe
Guest musicians
- Richard Niles - Orchestra arrangement and conduction on track 1
- Sally Bradshaw - Additional vocals on track 1
- Frankie Knuckles - Mix and additional production on track 2
- Josh Milian - Piano solo on track 2
- Fro Sossa & Mike Bast - Additional keyboards on track 3
- Nestor Gomez - Guitar on track 3
- Tony Conception, Kenneth William Faulk, Dana Tebor & Ed Calle - Brass on track 3
- The Voice In Fashion - Backing vocals on track 3
- Blue Weaver - Fairlight programming on track 4
- Andy Richards & Gary Maughan - Fairlight programming on track 5
- Judy Bennett, Sharon Blackwell, H Robert Carr, Mario Friendo, Derek Green, Michael Hoyte, Herbie Joseph, Paul Lee, Gee Morris, Dee Ricketts, Iris Sutherland & Yvonne White - Additional vocals on track 6
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 |