Pet Shop Boys – Always On My Mind
Performed On Elvis Special With A Demo—Then Beat The Pogues For Christmas Number One
Released on November 30, 1987, Pet Shop Boys’ hi-NRG synth-pop transformation of “Always on My Mind” reached number one in the UK on December 19, holding the top spot for four consecutive weeks and becoming the Christmas number one single for 1987, beating The Pogues and Kirsty MacColl’s “Fairytale of New York.” The song also peaked at number four on the Billboard Hot 100, number one in Germany and Spain, number two in Austria, Ireland, and Switzerland, and reached the Top 10 across Europe, Australia, and New Zealand. It became Pet Shop Boys’ third UK number one and their best-selling British single, moving over 800,000 copies in the UK alone. In 2014, the BBC named it the greatest cover version of all time in a public poll. What nobody watching the ITV special Love Me Tender in September 1987 knew was that Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe were performing a hastily-prepared demo version they’d recorded just days before the broadcast, and their manager saw the performance, recognized the hit potential immediately, and decided to rush out a polished version as a standalone single despite releasing “Rent” just a month earlier.
While “Always on My Mind” topped charts across Europe and reached number four in America, it spent 16 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 and became Pet Shop Boys’ fourth Top 10 hit in the United States following “West End Girls,” “What Have I Done to Deserve This?,” and “It’s a Sin.” The track finished at number 22 in France despite peaking there at number one on airplay charts, reflecting the peculiarities of French sales tracking. The overwhelming response to the single demonstrated Pet Shop Boys’ ability to reimagine classic material without losing emotional resonance, a skill they’d repeat later with covers of U2’s “Where the Streets Have No Name” and Village People’s “Go West.” The track was later reworked and included on their third studio album Introspective in October 1988 as a nine-minute medley titled “Always on My Mind / In My House,” combining the original cover with an acid house segment that showcased the duo’s embrace of late-1980s club culture.
The song’s origin as a cover for an Elvis Presley tribute special seemed almost accidental. ITV commissioned Love Me Tender to commemorate the tenth anniversary of Presley’s death on August 16, 1977, inviting various British acts to perform their interpretations of Elvis classics. Pet Shop Boys were invited to participate and chose “Always on My Mind,” originally written by Wayne Carson, Johnny Christopher, and Mark James in 1971 and first recorded by Brenda Lee and Gwen McCrae in 1972. Elvis’s version, recorded just weeks after his separation from Priscilla in March 1972, became his standout song of the 1970s, reaching number 16 on the Hot Country Singles chart and the UK Top 10. Willie Nelson’s Grammy-winning 1982 version reached number one on both US and Canadian country charts and crossed over to pop, making the song a country standard. Tennant later explained he and Lowe chose it because they could relate to the lyrics about emotional distance and regret, themes they’d explored in their own compositions.
Recording sessions for the television performance happened quickly with minimal preparation. The duo created a demo at their studio, transforming the tender country ballad into a pulsing Hi-NRG dance track built around drum machines, layers of synthesizers, and Tennant’s detached vocal delivery. The television performance featured the duo dressed in leather, walking through fog along railway tracks in a stark, minimalist set that contrasted sharply with the song’s romantic sentiment. The performance made such an impression that Pet Shop Boys’ manager Tom Watkins immediately recognized the commercial potential and proposed releasing it as a single. The original plan had been to include it as a B-side to “Rent,” the third single from their album Actually, released in October 1987. Watkins convinced them to reverse course and make “Always on My Mind” the A-side of a brand new standalone single, rushing it to market just six weeks after “Rent” hit stores despite concerns about oversaturating the market.
The commercial single version required additional polish beyond the television demo. Producer Julian Mendelsohn worked with the duo to refine the arrangement, though they maintained the core elements from the TV special. Remixer Phil Harding created an extended mix that many fans consider definitive, emphasizing the song’s propulsive rhythm and adding subtle production flourishes that enhanced the dancefloor appeal. The production featured synthesizer strings, sequenced basslines, electronic drums programmed on Roland TR-808 and TR-909 machines, and processed vocals that gave Tennant’s delivery an almost robotic quality that paradoxically heightened the emotional impact. The juxtaposition between the coldness of the electronic instrumentation and the warmth of the lyrics about regret and longing created a tension that became Pet Shop Boys’ signature aesthetic. Critics noted how the duo’s interpretation transformed a song about failed romance into something more ambiguous—possibly about lost love, but equally about friendship, missed opportunities, or existential loneliness.
The B-side “Do I Have To?” provided stark contrast—a slow, haunting ballad with a sad descending melody that showcased Pet Shop Boys’ ability to create emotional depth using minimal instrumentation. The track featured Tennant singing over sparse synthesizer chords and programmed percussion, creating an intimate atmosphere that felt like the flipside of “Always on My Mind”‘s dancefloor urgency. Critics praised it as one of the duo’s finest B-sides, with some arguing it deserved A-side treatment. The 12-inch single included multiple remixes by Phil Harding, Julian Mendelsohn, and eventually Shep Pettibone, who contributed holiday and house mixes to promotional versions. A 7-inch dub version was also released, though fans noted it was essentially an a cappella rather than a true dub mix, featuring Tennant’s isolated vocals over minimal percussion.
The music video, directed by Jack Bond, featured Tennant and Lowe seated in the front of a London taxi when an eccentric passenger played by British actor Joss Ackland climbs in. The clip was extracted from Pet Shop Boys’ surreal feature film It Couldn’t Happen Here, which Bond was simultaneously shooting and which starred Barbara Windsor, Gareth Hunt, and Ackland. The film, released in 1988 to mixed reviews, attempted to create a British answer to The Beatles’ Magical Mystery Tour but confused many viewers with its stream-of-consciousness narrative. At the end of the video, Ackland’s character exits the taxi and the car drives away, leaving him standing alone muttering dialogue from another Pet Shop Boys song, “What Have I Done to Deserve This?”—a meta-textual moment that reflected the duo’s love of literary references and self-aware pop art. The video was later remastered in 4K and helped cement the song’s status as a visual and sonic landmark of 1980s synth-pop.
Pet Shop Boys have sold over 100 million records worldwide since forming in 1981, achieving 42 Top 30 singles in the UK including 22 Top 10 hits and four number ones. They received the BRIT Award for Outstanding Contribution to Music in 2009 and the NME Godlike Genius Award in 2017. In 2016, Billboard named them the number one dance duo since the publication’s dance chart inception in 1976. The duo continues recording and touring, releasing their fifteenth studio album Nonetheless in 2024, which debuted at number two in the UK—their highest-charting studio album since Very in 1993. “Always on My Mind” remains a setpiece of their live performances, with the song’s infectious energy ensuring audiences sing along regardless of whether they were alive in 1987. As Chris Lowe reflected in interviews, the song represents everything Pet Shop Boys aspired to—taking familiar material and reimagining it so completely that it becomes unrecognizable yet somehow more emotionally resonant than the original, proving that great songs can transcend genre and generation when given the right treatment.
SONG INFORMATION
Chart Performance: No. 1 in UK (4 weeks, Christmas No. 1), Germany, Spain; No. 2 in Austria, Ireland, Switzerland; No. 4 in US; Top 10 in Australia, Belgium, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden; 16 weeks on Billboard Hot 100; Over 800,000 copies sold in UK





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