Being Boring

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“Being Boring”
Single by Pet Shop Boys
from the album Behaviour
B-side "We All Feel Better in the Dark"
Released 12 November 1990
Format 7", 12", Cassette, CD
Recorded Munich, 1990
Genre Synthpop
Length 4:50 (7" edit)
Label Parlophone - R 6275
Writer(s) Neil Tennant, Chris Lowe
Producer Pet Shop Boys, Harold Faltermeyer
Pet Shop Boys singles chronology
"So Hard"
(1990)
"Being Boring"
(1990)
"Where the Streets Have No Name (I Can't Take My Eyes Off You)" / "How can you expect to be taken seriously?"
(1991)
The capitalization of song titles in this article may be disputed. Please see the centralized discussion on this subject before making changes.

"Being Boring" is a single by the British pop group the Pet Shop Boys.

As the second single from the 1990 album Behaviour, after "So Hard" which was released before the album, "Being Boring" was not particularly successful upon release, only reaching number twenty in the UK singles chart and being the first single released by the group not to get into the Top 10 since "Opportunities (Let's Make Lots of Money)" four years previously.

The song is concerned with the idea of growing up and how people's perceptions and values change as they grow older. The title apparently materialised after someone in Japan accused the duo of being boring. The title is also derived from a Zelda Fitzgerald quotation, "she refused to be bored chiefly because she wasn't boring".

The track was originally pieced together in a studio in West Glasgow, where the music for "My October symphony," "The end of the world" and the unreleased "Love and war" were also done.[1]

Contents

[edit] Live

Despite the moderate success of the track on album charts, "Being Boring" has been a regularly-played song at concerts and it's widely considered one of the best and most beautiful "Pet's songs" by the fans. Ironically, due to various factors, including it being hard to sing, it wasn't performed on the Performance Tour in 1991. This led to many fans, including Axl Rose, complaining of its omission.[2]

[edit] Video

The video, the first by fashion-photographer Bruce Weber, totally in black and white, shows a house party and begins with a nude swimmer and a message: "I came from Newcastle in the North of England. We used to have lots of parties where everyone got dressed up and on one party invitation was the quote 'she was never bored because she was never boring'. The song is about growing up - the ideals that you have when you're young and how they turn out".

Australian singer Merril Bainbridge covered the song as the tenth track from her debut album The Garden released in 1995.

[edit] B-side

The b-side, "We all feel better in the dark" was written around a piece of music Chris Lowe had composed. As he explains, "The idea came from a tape I bought from a health food shop round the corner from the studio:The Secrets Of Sexual Attraction. The words are terrible. Awful. Embarrassing." [3]

The track proved to be a fan favourite and was performed live during their Performance Tour in 1991. The remix 12" includes two mixes of the track by Brothers In Rhythm.

[edit] Track listing

[edit] 7": Parlophone / R 6275 (UK)

  1. "Being boring" (4:50)
  2. "We all feel better in the dark" (4:00)

[edit] 12": Parlophone / 12 R 6275 (UK)

  1. "Being boring" (Extended Mix) (10:38)
  2. "We all feel better in the dark" (Extended Mix) (6:45)
  3. "Being boring" (4:50)
  • also available on CD (CDR 6275)

[edit] 12": Parlophone / 12 RX 6275 (UK)

  1. "Being boring" (Marshall Jefferson Remix) (9:04)
  2. "We all feel better in the dark" (After Hours Climax) (5:29)
  3. "We all feel better in the dark" (Ambient) (5:20)

[edit] Chart performance

Chart (1990) Peak
position
Germany 13
Austria 30
Sweden 16
Switzerland 16
Australia 82
UK 20

[edit] External links

[edit] References

Languages