With the vocodered count of ‘Time On My Hands’ from ‘Disco 3’ acting as walk on music, the third night of the ‘Obscure’ PET SHOP BOYS’ residency at London’s Electric Ballroom began in aid of War Child.
The choice of venue in the heart of Camden was inspired by a BRONSKI BEAT miners benefit show that Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe attended in 1984; it was ‘The Year Pop Went Queer’ and a time of political polarisation, the effects of which have only worsened today.
The aim of the ‘Obscure’ shows was to provide opportunities for some of the less widely known non-single album tracks and B-sides to be aired on stage; with 35 of them programmed and rehearsed, this was manna that brought loyal fans closer to heaven from all over world, as well as fellow musicians like Blank & Jones, Jori Hulkkonen and Sarah Blackwood over the course of five nights.
Although beginning steadily with ‘Through You’, the B-side of 2024’s ‘Loneliness’, the ‘Hotspot’ was immediately hit with the album’s best number ‘Will‐o‐the‐wisp’. The mighty ‘Please’ opener ‘Two Divided by Zero’ continued the momentum before the filmic Satie-influenced ‘Jack The Lad’ with its lyrics about the Cold War double agent Kim Philby.
As Tennant was passed an acoustic six string by his roadie, he warned the audience there would be a second guitar! Cue Johnny Marr (whose name incidentally in French means “I am fed up”) and a rousing rendition of ‘The Truck Driver & His Mate’! Having been part of PET SHOP BOYS setlists in 1997 and 2002, the inclusion of this OASIS-influence rock out was not that surprising but the airing of THE MONKEES pastiche ‘I Didn’t Get Where I Am Today’ perhaps was. To conclude Marr’s guest spot, ‘Up Against It’ from 1996’s ‘Bilingual’ got its live debut. Even after Marr departed the stage, his spirit continued as the nouveau noir of ‘Hit & Miss’ made it four in a row with the guitars!
Looking at times like he was about to give a sermon while staring at a lectern with lyrical prompts and occasionally seated for the more balladic performances, the Reverend Neil Tennant joked about it being like WESTLIFE although his demeanour recalled George Michael’s ‘MTV Unplugged’ from 1996; indeed, slower songs such as ‘Always’ and ‘King of Rome’ were not that far apart from some of those on the former WHAM! frontman’s ‘Older’ album.
But there were bangers and ‘One in a Million’, a ‘Very’ song originally written for TAKE THAT got segued into CULTURE BEAT’s ‘Mr. Vain’ to party like it was 1993! The chugging rave / indie hybrid ‘Sexy Northerner’ proved again that “it’s not all football and fags” as the chugging ‘Young Offender’ was unexpectedly rescued from obscurity.
A magnificently elegiac moment came with possibly the greatest song in the PET SHOP BOYS cannon ‘It Couldn’t Happen Here’; adapted from the Ennio Morricone composition ‘Forecast’, it was written about a friend who had been diagnosed with AIDS. Tennant had previously remarked that “people said it wasn’t going to develop in England like it had in America” and in 2026, the solemn lyrics could be applied to the virus of the far right. But the message is clear: #FuckTrump #FuckFarage #FuckReformUK #FuckReformUKKK #FuckTommyRobinson #FuckFlagshaggers
Despite ‘King’s Cross’ using the tragic London railway station as a metaphor to the carnage of Thatcherism, it actually prompted an audience singalong while on the other side of the coin, ‘Why Don’t We Live Together?’ was more New York in its euphoric clubby euphoria. Written for Shirley Bassey and accompanied by a Stylophone sample, PET SHOP BOYS really went into their deeper cuts with ‘The Performance Of My Life’; in what could be considered their very own ‘My Way’, it was a fitting main set closer.
For the encore, there was a tear jerking moment as Tennant accompanied himself on keyboards for an emotional ‘Your Funny Uncle’ while livening things up, ‘The Way It Used to Be’ saw Lowe now fully relaxed and even bouncing up and down behind his workstation. Meanwhile, the wonderful ‘Later Tonight’ recalled the nervous live TV performance on ‘Old Grey Whistle Test’ in 1986; “we were not very good in 1986” joked Tennant. To finish, Tennant and Lowe performed a so far unreleased song from their new musical ‘Naked’; ‘I Dream Of A Better Tomorrow’ recalled the hopeful widescreen melancholy of ‘Please’ and ‘Actually’.
Over the five nights of ‘Obscure’ PET SHOP BOYS, the loyal Petheads were treated with surprises that included ‘To Face The Truth’, ‘The Theatre’, ‘Do I Have To?’, ‘Bet She’s Not Your Girlfriend’, ‘Requiem in Denim & Leopardskin’, ‘A Certain Je Ne Sais Quoi’, ‘Positive Role Model’, ‘Happiness Is An Option’ and ‘Miserablism’. Unlike OMD who managed to ruin their 2016 ‘Dazzle Ships’ + ‘Architecture & Morality’ live presentation in Frankfurt by going off-piste with the inane pairing of ‘Sailing On The Seven Seas’ and ‘Locomotion’ in encore, PET SHOP BOYS stuck to their ‘Obscure’ guns. The end result was a brilliant evening that proved that live concepts geared for the cognoscenti can work. It’s not always about music for the masses…
ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK gives its special thanks to Andy De Decker
The book ‘Volume’ is published by Thames & Hudson in hardback, available from the usual book sellers and online retail outlets
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ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK has compiled an Obscure PET SHOP BOYS playlist on Spotify at https://open.spotify.com/playlist/3QfJbKvMDsTwgInxqbpskm
Text and Photos by Chi Ming Lai
11th April 2026




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