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D**N
THIS BOOK IS ABOUT THE MOST BRILLIANT POP DUO IN HISTORY.
The Boys have allowed Chris Heath pretty much open access to their professional lives. It is so well-written that anyone, PetHead or just a enthusiast of Pop music in general---it is a GREAT read.
M**R
Must Read for Superfans
This and the companion book are essential reading for any Pet Shop Boys superfans. It offers a close-up look of the first PSB American tour. The sardonic with of Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe shines through.
W**
Good prices
The book arrived in very good condition. My only complaint was that it is listed as being a hard cover book. It was only a trade paperback.
A**R
Inferior reissue to the original book
Very good book. Funny, honest, and a great read. The only issue I have is regarding this edition. I owned the original, and it was a physically much larger and photos were color and far easier to read. As time went by with moves etc. my copy of the original was lost, so it was great to see it out again. This unfortunately is grainy black and white photos, and the hardback makes it ridiculously difficult to physically read. The same is true of the Literally reissue too. It costs far more, but if you can, buy the original book(s).
G**S
A brave and authentic report of two remarkable artists
When in 1991 the Pet Shop Boys toured for the first time in America, they were closely scrutinised by writer Chris Heath and photographer Pennie Smith. The result is this book, or to put it more correctly: this tour report.Much can be said about the format: a transcription of a few conversations the boys had during their eventful American tour. At first you may fear to get bored by this format, but strangely enough it's quite the opposite. Because nothing is really interpreted by the author, it gets a very authentic feel to it. The quite remarkable -not always generally accepted- opinions of Chris and Neil are left untouched, and ready to be put into perspective by the reader himself. That in itself proves the courage of the `boys' to allow such a report to be published. I can imagine that people tend to get a bad opinion -to put it mildly- about the egos of both artists, because what is in this book is not all nice and happy. But if you allow yourself to look behind this curtain of the two personalities, you can only appreciate the dedication they produce for their `art'. Not many artists are prepared to put their image at risk in favour of authenticity.The black-and-white pictures shot by Pennie Smith are completely in line with the works of the Pet Shop Boys. Sombre settings dictate most of the pictures, but at the same time illustrate the feeling of detachment the `boys' suffer while travelling through that strange, but fascinating land: America.To conclude: a warning! Although this book is a must-read for everybody who likes (or dislikes) to be referred to as a `Pet Shop Boys-fan', it might not have the same effect on people who only `like' what the Pet Shop Boys create. This book is a bit too `fan-focussed' to be appreciated by a broader audience, to my humble opinion. As some kind of a footnote: I belong to the first category.
R**Y
A Fast, Fun, and Entertaining Read.
Chris Heath did a wonderful job capturing the quips between Neil Tennent and Chris Lowe. I had no idea their conversations would be so entertaining and lively. Of course, their humor is very british but that is what makes it so humorous...very biting and sarcastic...I loved it. A must read for fans of the boys.
R**N
This must be the book, ive waited years to read!
It was a great book about a great duo. having attended a show during that tour, it was interesting to hear how it went in other cities. I am so glad I finally was able to get this book. It has been a long challenge and I am happy. the book also was in EXCELLENT condition!
C**D
A great read... need a similar book for the next tour
I got both Pet Shop Boys, Literally and Pet Shop Boys versus America earlier this year. I read the first one a few months ago, but have only just finished reading the second. The plan had been to read them both before seeing the Pet Shop Boys in concert in early June, but COVID-19 had other ideas.This book leads on very well from Pet Shop Boys, Literally, but as the 'Afterword' to the 2019 edition notes, the styles are very different and this one is much more like 'one conversation, rolling relentlessly ever onwards'. It's a conversation any Pet Shop Boys fan would want to read. There's nothing particularly shocking in there, particularly after reading the first book and having followed the group since the 1980s, but it was very enjoyable to an opportunity to invade that space into the places and conversations where fans can't normally access.By the end, the things that I wanted hear is that the Pet Shop Boys will release a new album and that a similar book following the Pet Shop Boys will be done when they finally get round to doing the postponed tour from 2020.
A**E
"You're as good as your last show - and we just cancelled it"
This book by Chris Heath ends up being - a little bit surprisingly, the best book on Pet Shop Boys thus far. Some will remember I was far from impressed by "Literally" (also written by Chris Heath) which was a dull, vain and heavily-edited chronicle of the Boys' first tour ever, back in 1989."PSB vs. America" follows the Boys on their first Tour of America (which happened to be the second leg of their world-wide "Performance" Tour in 1991) and the overall telling of this experience is much more compelling than what had happened two years before during the MCMLXXXIX Tour. Why?Firstly, "...vs. America" is a much classier book than its predecessor. The quality of the paper is very good and the book is flooded with beautiful, sincere - and somewhat unflattering pictures of the Boys by legendary photographer Pennie Smith.Second - the book is tighter: by focusing on just one leg of the tour, the author avoid the many repetitions that plagued the first book.Thirdly - and most importantly - on content, the book is very good at describing a band in crisis: crisis because they cannot "crack" the American market, crisis because their latest album "Behaviour." didn't do as well as its predecessors (and the boys bash it quite a lot in the book), crisis because Chris Lowe loses his temper on the "Tonight Show" and leaves, crisis because their new single "Where the streets have no name" struggles to be played on US radios and, overall, crisis because the Boys feel that they are on the slippery slope of indifference after having been one of the most successful acts of the 1980s.Since, on top of it, they make absolutely no effort in becoming artistically approachable by touring with a show which is as ambitious as it is obscure (and documented on the "Performance" DVD - Performance [DVD] [2004 ]), the Pet Shop Boys are self-consciously pressing some sort of artistic self-destruct button which is extremely well narrated in this book.Versus "Literally", there is a sense that there has been much less editing, that the Boys didn't care to be shown in a less than flattering light. One could argue that the situation was the same as in the previous book but the major difference here is that the PSBs end up growing as artists and human beings by facing difficulty, by dealing with the habits of the US market, and by managing this growing insecurity over their talent. Indeed, the failure of "Behaviour.", rightly or wrongly, did raise questions about the band's career, which thus far had been a straight line to commercial and artistic triumph. This uncertainty, this crisis - which lasted three years between 1990 and 1992 and would lead to rumors of disbanding (a possibility that is explored at several stages in the book) tend to make Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe utterly more sympathetic and admirable. It is not with success that one takes the measure of a man - but it is more with how one falls and how one rises again. The glorious answer would only be revealed in "Very", two years after this tour, an album where the Boys would have to re-invent themselves, their image and their music to demonstrate to the world that they were not a historical accident in the first place."Pet Shop Boys versus America" beautifully catches Pet Shop Boys at a critical moment of their career, and by showing them at their most fragile, Chris Heath manages to make them closer, much closer to us working class heroes: a very, very good book indeed... Performance [DVD] [2004
G**T
Pet Shop Boys continuous biography gets hardback release for the brief snippet of history it covers
Over the last 30 plus years , an official biography has been documented via various media by the same collaborator , and true to form , has made available the perspective of the internal day to day of one of Englands greatest pop duos. A page from history , accurately transcribed from diaries and witnessed by the journeymen who happen to be there along for the ride. Subtle wit , sly observation and intellectual recounting of various stories from an exciting period in the PSB history of the attempt to break America and a reflection of the time. A must read for a true fan , maybe too detailed for the casual observer and doesn't cover enough of the bullet point career points , but ..... a great read for anyone that is obsessed with everything Pet Shop Boys.
B**M
Great Book
Great book to read, very honest and snapshot into their lifes in the 90's
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