Please | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Pet Shop Boys |
Cover: | PetShopBoysPlease.jpg |
Border: | yes |
Alt: | Original CD cover |
Caption: | Cover art for the original CD release. |
Released: | 24 March 1986 |
Studio: | Advision (London) |
Genre: | |
Length: | 42:50 |
Label: | Parlophone |
Producer: | Stephen Hague |
Next Title: | Disco |
Next Year: | 1986 |
Please is the debut studio album by English synth-pop duo Pet Shop Boys, released on 24 March 1986 by Parlophone in the United Kingdom and by EMI America Records in the United States. According to the duo, the album's title was chosen so that people had to go into a record shop and say "Can I have the Pet Shop Boys album, 'Please'?".[2] Please spawned four singles: "West End Girls", "Opportunities (Let's Make Lots of Money)", "Suburbia", and "Love Comes Quickly"; "West End Girls" reached number one in both the UK and the US.
Most of the tracks on Please had been demoed with American producer Bobby Orlando in 1984, taking influences from Italian disco, Orlando's lo-fi electronic dance music and the bourgeoning American rap scene. A version of "West End Girls" produced by Orlando had been released as an unsuccesful single that year. For their debut album Pet Shop Boys re-worked the songs in a slightly slower tempo with producer Stephen Hague (after their record company initially had suggested that they should work with producers Stock Aitken Waterman). Lyrically, the songs were inspired by the duo's life in London at the time, with lyricist Neil Tennant assuming different characters and occasionally writing satirical lyrics, such as the song "Opportunities (Let's Make Lots of Money)".[3]
Please was re-released on 4 June 2001 (as were most of the duo's studio albums up to that point) as Please/Further Listening 1984–1986. The re-released version was not only digitally remastered but came with a second disc of B-sides and previously unreleased material from around the time of the album's original release. Yet another re-release followed on 9 February 2009, under the title of Please: Remastered. This version contains only the 11 tracks on the original. With the 2009 re-release, the 2001 two-disc re-release was discontinued. On 2 March 2018 a new remastered edition of Further Listening was released, with 2001 edition content.
"Suburbia" was dramatically remixed for the single release.
"Violence" was later re-recorded by the Pet Shop Boys for a charity concert at The Haçienda nightclub in the early 1990s. This version, known as the 'Haçienda version', was released as one of the B-sides to "I Wouldn't Normally Do This Kind of Thing" and was then made available on the B-sides album Alternative and the 2001 Further Listening re-release of the Very album.
The Pet Shop Boys later sampled the Please version of "Love Comes Quickly" for their song "Somebody Else's Business", which appeared on the Disco 3 album.
"Tonight Is Forever" was later covered by Liza Minnelli on the Pet Shop Boys-produced album Results.
Please has received critical acclaim. Upon its release in March 1986, Smash Hits reviewer Chris Heath gave the album a 9 out of 10 rating describing the content as "ten thoroughly catchy songs".
Writing in 1986 for Billboards "Dance Trax" column, Brian Chin described the album as an "amusingly complete compendium of recent dance music styles. It should be a long-running hit for clubs if the remixes keep coming."[4]
Retrospectively, in a 2009 review for the BBC, Ian Wade wrote: "Please really hasn't dated at all and should be the textbook example of how brilliant a pop debut could be."[5]
Credits adapted from the liner notes of Please.[7]
Peak position | |
Australian Albums (Kent Music Report) | 10 |
---|---|
European Albums (Music & Media)[8] | 18 |
Finnish Albums (Suomen virallinen lista)[9] | 4 |
Icelandic Albums (Tónlist)[10] | 8 |
Italian Albums (Musica e dischi)[11] | 21 |
Spanish Albums (AFYVE)[12] | 8 |
Position | ||
Australian Albums (Kent Music Report) | 59 | |
---|---|---|
Canada Top Albums/CDs (RPM)[13] | 15 | |
European Albums (Music & Media)[14] | 46 | |
New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[15] | 8 | |
UK Albums (Gallup)[16] | 34 | |
US Billboard 200[17] | 39 |