Sunday, July 5, 2026

80's Throwback: Pet Shop Boys - 'Love Comes Quickly'



You can live your life lonely
heavy as stone
Live your life learning
and working alone
Say this is all you want
but I don't believe that it's true
'cause when you least expect it
waiting round the corner for you
Love comes quickly
whatever you do
you can't stop falling
Love comes quickly
whatever you do
you can't stop falling

When the Pet Shop Boys arrived in America in 1986, they did so in a big way. "West End Girls" became an undeniable smash, climbing all the way to No. 1 and helping usher synth-pop into the mainstream at a time when the genre was absolutely everywhere. Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe suddenly found themselves among the biggest names in pop music.

Their follow-up single, "Love Comes Quickly," didn't enjoy the same chart success in the United States, but for many fans, it's one of the duo's finest moments. In fact, it's long been considered one of the Pet Shop Boys' own favorite songs, and it's always been one of mine too.

There's something wonderfully understated about "Love Comes Quickly." Instead of delivering an over-the-top love song, it captures that quiet realization that you've already fallen for someone before you even had a chance to stop it. Love doesn't ask permission. It doesn't wait until the timing is perfect. One day you're going about your life, and the next, those feelings have completely taken over.

The song's shimmering synths, elegant melody, and Neil Tennant's cool, understated vocals make the message even more powerful. It's romantic without being overly sentimental, proving that sometimes the strongest emotions are expressed with the fewest words.

Looking back, "Love Comes Quickly" may have been overshadowed by the massive success of "West End Girls," but it has aged beautifully. It's one of those songs that reveals something new every time you hear it, reminding us why the Pet Shop Boys became one of the most respected and enduring acts of the synth-pop era.

Not every great song becomes a blockbuster hit. Sometimes the ones that leave the deepest impression are the quieter follow-ups that loyal fans continue to treasure decades later. "Love Comes Quickly" is one of those songs for me, and forty years later, it still sounds just as elegant and heartfelt as it did in 1986.