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[Album review] Pet Shop Boys stay danceable and electric on ‘Super’

April 8, 2016 - 11:10 By KH디지털2

Pet Shop Boys

“Super”

(x2 Records)


Pet Shop Boys take another drink from the fountain of youth on “Super,” offering more dance than pop 13 studio albums and more than 30 years after “West End Girls.”

Written in Berlin and recorded in Los Angeles, “Super” is the second installment of a probable trilogy with triple Grammy-winning producer Stuart Price, and the duo delves into the nightclub scene with their usual aplomb.

Neil Tennant is a keen observer with sharp storytelling skills, allowing him to shape all that data into tunes like “The Pop Kids,” the album’s first single, a tale of 1990s club-goers looking back 15 years as if it were another lifetime.

“Twenty-something” shows the difference 15 years can make and how traditional careers have become more elusive -- “Thirty’s calling round the bend/ Will your ideas ever trend?” --and come with sometimes soul-crushing pressures.

Chris Lowe has an uncanny ability to keep even the most overfamiliar keyboard sounds from drifting to the far side of cheesy and there’s enough variety to ensure that none overstay their welcome. (AP)