When Night Work, Scissor Sistersâ 3rd studio album, was released in June 2010, the bandâs sound had a maturity to it. Even from the album cover of Night Work, which is a departure from the whimsical artwork on the first two albums, had a more mature motif to it. For the album art of Night Work, Shears chose a Robert Mapplethorpe photograph of ballet dancer Peter Reedâs butt.
In an interview with NPR, band member Babydaddy, also known as Scott Hoffman, explained:
“What this photo, I think, represents … is a lost time, a time that was lost to AIDS, to people taking real risks in nightlife.â
During that same interview, lead singer Jake Shears talked about how a lot of creative people from that generation had died of AIDS, including Mapplethorpe and Reed.
In an interview with Digital Spy, Â guitarist Del Marquis talked about how the album cover provoked differing responses:
âThe way someone reacts to it will tell you a lot about that person. People could view it with reactionary homophobia, or they could view it as camp, or high art, or something beautiful.â
The original follow-up to Scissor Sisters’ sophomore album, Ta-Da, was abandoned in June 2009. Shears explained the reason behind scrapping the album after a year and a half of work on it.
âIn my heart I knew it wasn’t right. I didn’t really know what it was trying to say. It left me a little bit cold.â
Shears also expressed in the interview how he felt the second album was âneutered.â
âI felt like we’d packaged ourselves. I felt like we were stuffed animals, a bit. I felt kind of old. And we weren’t going to make good music again until that youthful energy came back into our personalities, especially with me.â
Produced by Stuart Price, known best for producing Confessions on a Dance Floor, Madonnaâs tenth studio album, the inspiration for Night Work came from Shearsâ retreat to Berlin after ditching the original third album. It was in Berlin where Shearsâ love for music renewed.
The first single from Night Work was âFire with Fire,â which debuted on the Top 100 in the UK at number 11 and peaked at number one on the Billboard Dance Songs chart in the U.S. Â
âItâs a different song as to the rest of the album,â Shears said in a video. âItâs super earnest. Itâs the closet thing we have to a ballad on this record.â
Night Workâs next single was âAny Which Wayâ which had an uncredited vocal by Kylie Minogue. Shears revealed on Instagram how former Durham County, North Carolina Assistant District Attorney, Freda Black inspired the song.
One of the best things about âAny Which Wayâ is co-lead vocalist, Ana Matronic and her speaking bridge:
âYou know, baby when I was taking my pantyhose out of their egg this evening, I thought: âIâm going to find that man that is the right shade of bottle tan. A man that smells like cocoa butter and cash.â Take me anyway you like it: in front of the fireplace, in front of your yacht, in front of my parents. I donât give a damn, baby! Just take me!â
Kylie Minogue joined Scissor Sisters onstage during their performance of âAny Which Wayâ at Glastonbury.
The final single from Night Work, âInvisible Light,â featured a vocal cameo by the great Ian McKellen. Shears revealed how McKellen ended up in the song.
âSomebody in the studio said: âWe need a very deep British man’s voice here.â And I instantly thought of Ian. He’s a fan and has come to lots of shows. I’ve hung out with him quite a bit.
He was fully keen to do it, so we took a bunch of recording equipment to his dressing room. He was in Waiting For Godot. We had a really long poem that we’d written. I think he got a kick out of it.â
McKellen performed his oration live when Scissor Sisters appeared on the itv 2 program, One Night Stand.
Posts to commemorate the 10th anniversary of Night Work were posted on Jake Shearsâ and Scissor Sisters official Instagram pages.
Do you have a favorite song off the album Night Work? Let us know in the comments or on our social media.
Sources: NPR, BBC, Official Charts, Billboard, Scissor Sisters Official YouTube channel, Digital Spy, Jake Shears Official Instagram, USA Today