Opportunities (Let's Make Lots Of Money)
What Have I Done To Deserve This? (feat Dusty Springfield)
Where The Streets Have No Name / I Can't Take My Eyes Off You
Was It Worth It? (7" version)
I Wouldn't Normally Do This Kind Of Thing (7" version)
Yesterday, When I Was Mad (single version)
Se A Vida E (That's The Way Life Is)
I Don't Know What You Want But I Can't Give It Any More
New York City Boy (USA radio edit)
You Only Tell Me You Love Me When You're Drunk
It Doesn't Often Snow At Christmas (New version)
Memory Of The Future (New single mix)
Love Is A Bourgeois Construct (Nighttime radio edit)
Thursday (feat Example - radio edit)
The Pop Kids (radio edit)
Twenty-something (radio edit)
Say It To Me (New radio mix)
Dreamland (feat Years & Years)
Monkey Business (radio edit)
I Don't Wanna (radio edit)
Review: Although some listeners stopped paying attention after the early 90s, the Pet Shop Boys have continued to make top-notch pop music, much of it rooted in their collective love of dance music. 'Smash', their third 'greatest hits' retrospective, offers extensive proof of this assertion. Across three discs, we're treated to every single released so far by the iconic synth-pop duo over their close to 40-year career. Yes, the familiar favourites are all present, but also lesser-celebrated gems from the past two decades including fan favourites such as 'Monkey Business' (with its cheery evocation of 1970s disco), 'The Pop Kids' (a deliberately nostalgic affair that will appeal to those who got into them back in the day) and the second Iraq War-era 'I'm With Stupid'.
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