Wham!
(Read about WHAM after the video)
(In memory of George Michael)
Wham! were an English musical duo formed by members George Michael and Andrew Ridgeley in 1981.[1][2] They were briefly known in the United States as Wham! UK due to a naming conflict with an American band. Wham! sold more than 25 million certified records worldwide from 1982 to 1986.[3]
History
Michael and Ridgeley met at Bushey Meads School in Bushey near the town of Watford in Hertfordshire. The two at first performed in a short-lived ska
band called The Executive, alongside three of their former school
friends David (Austin) Mortimer, Harry Tadayon and Andrew Leaver. When
this group split, Michael and Ridgeley eventually formed Wham!, signing
with Innervision Records.
Michael took on the majority of roles and responsibilities within the
band—composer, producer, singer, and occasional instrumentalist. Still
teenagers, they promoted themselves as hedonistic youngsters, proud to
live a carefree life without work or commitment. This was reflected in
their earliest singles which, part-parody, part-social comment, briefly
earned Wham! a reputation as a dance protest group.
The debut record to be released by the band was "Wham Rap! (Enjoy What You Do)" in June 1982. It was a double A-side including the Social Mix and the Anti-Social Mix. The record was not playlisted by BBC Radio 1 in the UK, partly because of the profanity in the Anti-Social Mix. Separate videos were recorded for each set of lyrics.
"Wham Rap!" did not chart for the group, but in October 1982 "Young Guns (Go for It!)" was issued. Initially, it also stalled outside the UK Top 40 but the band got lucky when the BBC programme Top of the Pops scheduled them after another act unexpectedly pulled out of the show.
Increasing success
Wham!'s
first manager was Bryan Morrison. The effect of Wham! on the public,
especially teenage girls, was felt from the moment they finished their
début performance of "Young Guns (Go for It!)" on Top of the Pops.
Michael wore espadrilles, an open suede jacket, and rolled-up denim
jeans. Ridgeley stood behind him, flanked by backing dancers Dee C. Lee and Shirlie Holliman.
Afterwards, the song shot into the Top 40 at No. 24 and peaked at No. 3
in December. The following year (1983), Dee C. Lee began her work with Paul Weller in The Style Council, and was replaced by Pepsi DeMacque. Holliman and DeMacque would later record as Pepsi & Shirlie.
Wham! followed up "Young Guns (Go for It!)" with a reissue of "Wham Rap! (Enjoy What You Do)", "Bad Boys" and "Club Tropicana". By the end of 1983, Wham! were competing against pop rivals Duran Duran and Culture Club as Britain's biggest pop act. Their début LP Fantastic spent two weeks at No. 1 in the UK album charts in 1983.[4] Notoriety and increased newspaper and magazine coverage were duly achieved with their antics of placing shuttlecocks down their shorts during performances on their first tour, the Club Fantastic Tour.
Legal disputes with Innervision
Soon
after this Ridgeley became conscious of legal problems with their
initial contract at Innervision. While the legal battle raged,
Innervision released a medley of non-single album tracks from Fantastic, entitled "Club Fantastic Megamix".
Wham! publicly denounced the release and urged fans not to buy it.
After all the legal wrangling, Innervision admitted there were royalty
discrepancies with Wham!'s contract, the fall-out of which led to the
bankruptcy and eventual dissolution of Innervision altogether in 1985.[citation needed]
Switch to Epic and continued success
Now signed to Epic Records (and other CBS Records
imprints around the world), Wham! returned in 1984 with an updated pop
image. These changes helped to propel Wham!'s next single, "Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go",
to the top of the charts around the world. It became their first UK #1
single and rose to that position in the USA as well, accompanied by a
memorable video of the duo with Pepsi and Shirlie, all wearing Katharine Hamnett T-shirts with the slogans "CHOOSE LIFE" and "GO GO".
The next single "Careless Whisper"
was issued as a George Michael solo piece, yet unlike any Wham! single
except "Wham Rap!" and "Club Tropicana", it was co-written by Ridgeley.
The song, about a remorseful two-timer, had more emotional depth than
previous releases. It quickly reached No. 1, selling over 1.3 million
copies in the UK.[5]
"Careless Whisper" marked a new phase in George Michael's career, as he
somewhat distanced himself from Wham!'s playboy image. In the U.S.—so
as not to confuse American listeners just being exposed to Wham!—the
single was billed as "Wham! featuring George Michael".
In the autumn of 1984, Wham! returned as a duo with "Freedom",
another UK chart-topper and the first single for quite some time to
reach #1 in the UK without an accompanying video. Wham! subsequently
decided to use a video edited together from footage of their tour of
China in time for "Freedom's" U.S. single release. The group by then had
achieved three number-one singles in a row. In November, they released
their second album, Make It Big, which quickly climbed to #1 on the album charts, and the band set off on an arena tour at the end of 1984.[6]
The double A-side single "Last Christmas/Everything She Wants"
became the highest-selling single ever to peak at No. 2 in the UK
charts. It stayed at No. 2 for five weeks and, to date, is the 24th
best-selling single of all time in the United Kingdom, selling over 1.4
million copies in the UK.[5]
Wham! donated all their royalties from the single to the Ethiopian
famine appeal to coincide with the fund-raising intentions of Band Aid's
"Do They Know It's Christmas?",
the song which kept them out of the top spot. Nevertheless, Band Aid's
success meant that Michael had achieved #1 status in the UK within three
separate entities in 1984—as a solo artist, as one half of a duo, and
as part of a charity ensemble.[7]
At the end of 1985, the U.S. Billboard charts listed "Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go" as the number-three song and "Careless Whisper" as the number-one song of the year.[8]
China (1985)
In
March 1985, Wham! took a break from recording to embark on a lengthy
world tour, including a ground-breaking 10-day visit to China, the first
by a Western pop group.[9] The China excursion was a publicity scheme devised by Simon Napier-Bell (one of their two managers—Jazz Summers
being the other). It culminated in a concert at the Workers' Gymnasium
in Beijing in front of 15,000 people. Wham!'s visit to China attracted
huge media attention across the world. Napier-Bell later admitted that
he used cunning tactics to sabotage the efforts of rock band Queen
to be the first to play in China: he made two brochures for the Chinese
authorities – one featuring Wham! fans as pleasant middle-class
youngsters, and one portraying Queen lead singer Freddie Mercury in typically flamboyant poses. The Chinese opted for Wham![10]
British Director Lindsay Anderson
was engaged to accompany Wham! to China and make a documentary film
about the visit. The film was shot over two weeks of March and April and
edited over late spring and summer 1985 in London. Anderson called his
one-hour and 18 minute film If You Were There. In the final stages of editing, Anderson was dismissed[11] by Wham!'s management, the editing team quit, and the film was entirely re-edited, renamed and released as Foreign Skies: Wham! In China. According to a 2006 interview with The Independent,[12]
Andy Stephens, manager for George Michael, says that the film
[Anderson's version] was simply not good enough to be shown in public.
"It's a dreadful film ... It's 20 years old and it's rubbish. Why on
earth should we allow it to be shown?"
Live Aid (1985)
Sporting a beard, Michael appeared with Ridgeley onstage at Live Aid on 13 July 1985 (although they did not perform as Wham!). Michael sang "Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me" with Elton John while Ridgeley joined Kiki Dee in the row of backing singers. In September, Wham! released the single "I'm Your Man" which went to No. 1 in the UK charts.
Around this time, Ridgeley began a relationship with Keren Woodward of Bananarama. Ridgeley also took up the hobby of rally driving. "Last Christmas"
was re-issued for the festive season and again made the UK Top 10,
peaking at No. 6, while Michael took up offers he was starting to
receive to add his voice to other artists' songs. He performed backing
vocals for David Cassidy, and also for Elton John on his successful singles "Nikita" (UK No. 3) and "Wrap Her Up" (UK No. 12), on which he sang co-lead vocals.
Breakup (1986)
Michael
was keen to create music targeted at a more sophisticated adult market
rather than the duo's primarily teenage audience and therefore, Michael
and Ridgeley officially announced the breakup of Wham! in the spring of
1986. Before going their separate ways, a farewell single "The Edge of Heaven", and a greatest hits record titled The Final would be forthcoming, along with a farewell concert entitled The Final. Announcing the breakup, Michael said: "I think it should be the most amicable split in pop history."[13]
The farewell single reached No. 1 in June 1986. "Where Did Your Heart Go?" was the group's final single in the United States. The song, originally recorded by Was (Not Was),
was a gloomy and sombre affair. The duo's last release was a double-LP
collection of all the singles to date, including some extended versions.
This was released in North America as the severely pared-down Music from the Edge of Heaven with alternate tracks.
At London's Wembley Stadium
on Saturday 28 June 1986, Wham! bade goodbye to their fans and each
other with an emotional embrace at the end of its final concert. 72,000
people attended the eight-hour event,[6]
which included support artists, on a scorching hot day in London. The
band had been together for five years, selling over 25 million albums
and 15 million singles. Foreign Skies, the documentary of their tour of China, received its world premiere as part of the festivities.
Post-Wham! and George Michael's death
For
several years after becoming a solo artist, George Michael spoke
negatively, in public, about his time with Wham!, partly because of the
negativity of intense media coverage on Ridgeley. Michael complained of
the constant pressure he felt, and he claimed that the duo had been
mistreated financially. He also spoke disparagingly about some of the
songs from the Wham! repertoire, especially the songs from the first album.[14]
However, his perspective on the era softened somewhat in the later
years of his life. At his solo concerts he would still perform "I'm Your
Man" and "Everything She Wants", one of the more critically acclaimed
songs from the Wham! era.
Andrew Ridgeley moved to Monaco after Wham!'s break-up and tried his hand at Formula Three
motor racing. Meeting with little success, Ridgeley moved to Los
Angeles to pursue his singing/acting career, the failure of which caused
him to return to England in 1990. Regardless, CBS Records, having taken
up the option on Wham!'s contract that specified solo albums from
Michael and Ridgeley, released a solo effort from Ridgeley, Son of Albert, in 1990. After poor sales, CBS declined the option of a second album.
On 25 June 1988, George Michael's 25th birthday, he played the third of three dates at Birmingham's NEC as part of the Faith World Tour.
He appeared deeply moved when he was surprised on stage by many members
of his family with Andrew Ridgeley, who was pushing a trolley carrying a
huge birthday cake. They led the 13,000-strong crowd in a rendition of "Happy Birthday", before Ridgeley accompanied Michael in a performance of "I'm Your Man".
In January 1991, Ridgeley joined George Michael on stage for a few songs at the encore of his performance at the Rock in Rio event at the Maracanã Stadium in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.[6]
On 21 November 2009, there was a Wham!-themed night on television's The X Factor
in the UK. Michael later appeared on the show's final episode,
performing a duet of "Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me" with finalist and
eventual winner Joe McElderry.
In 2012, Michael said that there was no truth in speculation that he
and Ridgeley were set for a Wham! reunion to mark the 30th anniversary
of the group's first record.[15]
On 25 December 2016, George Michael died peacefully at his home in Goring-on-Thames, Oxfordshire,
England at the age of 53. Ridgeley paid his respects on Twitter,
saying, "Heartbroken at the loss of my beloved friend Yog", with Yog
being Michael's childhood nickname.[16]
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