 See Larger Image | Please Artist : Pet Shop Boys List Price : $16.98 USD Your Price : $14.99 USD ProductGroup: Music Release Date : 1986-05-02 Studio : Capitol Label : Capitol Avg. Customer Rating : (27 reviews)
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Reviews Customer Reviews for Please Poorly Rating: When I opened the package, there was NO CD in there. I had to mail and pay to send it back. After sending a rather threatening note inside, then and ONLY then did I recieve credit back. How many times does this happen???
Customer Reviews for Please Cd Excellent debut Rating: I had a better review typed up and sent to amazon. But for some reason that system didnt take it. I will make this one short and sweet by saying that "Please" is an excellent debut from PSB. Especially "West End Girls", "Tonight Is Forver" and "I Want A Lover" (they have an awesome message) being that they are looking someone just like other people a guy but still someone to be with and love as well.
It is great to see a band being able to stay in the music business for so long and is a testament to how great they are and how they make music not only for us but for themselves as well and they had loads of fun doing it. An all around excellent debut disc from Pet Shop Boys and is just one of many in a long and encompassing career that continues til this very day.
I will be buying more from the guys in the future, no doubt about it. They represent a time when pop music was just getting started and are an excellent example of what it means to stay true what you do and enjoy it while you can.
Love Please and anything that they have to offer as well.
Editorial Reviews for Please Audio Cd Amazon.com In many ways, Please brought Euro-techno into the unsuspecting homes of millions like no other album before. This time, the boys--in this case the Pet Shop Boys--were doin' it for themselves. "I Want a Lover" and "Tonight Is Forever" are songs by boys for boys about boys that snuck past so many because of the genderless (for the most part) objects of affection in the lyrics. Please announces with every synthesizer swell layered over electronic beats, that the boys came to dance and they could complain about their love lives while they were at it. There is also a snide swat or two at the socioeconomic state of things ("Opportunities"), but the Pet Shop Boys' debut will always be most remembered for Neil Tennant's Al Stewart-like vocals in "West End Girls." --Steve Gdula
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