Classic Pop - UK (2019-11)

(Antfer) #1
ALBUM BY ALBUM

GEORGE


MICHAEL


THE PRE-EMINENT SONGWRITER OF HIS ERA,
LESS WAS DEFINITELY MORE DURING THE
FORMER WHAM! STAR’S SOLO CAREER
STEVE HARNELL

F


ew, if any, artists have
made the transition from
teen idol to mature solo
artist in the way George
Michael managed with debut
album, Faith.
As a showcase for the
diversity of his songwriting,
it was impeccable – Faith
seamlessly moves through the
gears of tough R&B, homage
rock’n’roll, soulful balladry and
sparkling electro-pop.
By the time George called time
on Wham!, he’d already proved
himself as a sophisticated
balladeer with Careless Whisper
and A Different Corner while a
subsequent hook-up with Elton
John and an emboldening duet
with Aretha Franklin showed that
Michael was now elevated to the

FAITH
Released 1987
Label Columbia/Epic
Chart Position
UK No.1 and US No.1

© Michael Putland/Getty Images

“AS A
SHOWCASE
FOR THE DIVERSITY
OF GEORGE’S
SONGWRITING,
FAITH WAS
IMPECCABLE”

heights of the music world’s
biggest stars.
As a statement of intent about
his new direction, the audacity of
making I Want Your Sex t h e fi r s t
single from Faith remains
impressive. While its plea for
monogamy was lost in translation
amid George’s sexualised
grunting, the song still gave the
star a No.3 hit in the UK singles
chart and enough notoriety to
make the biggest of media

splashes. But Faith’s nine songs
were far more than a button-
pressing exercise in baiting the
Establishment; its opening title
track is an irresistible slice of
upbeat 50s-infl uenced rock’n’roll


  • intro’d by a church organ
    playing the refrain of Wham!’s
    Freedom – the death knell on his
    former life had been sounded.
    Essentially a Bo Diddley homage
    with a wonderfully concise
    rockabilly-style twanging guitar
    solo, by the end of 1988 Faith
    was the biggest-selling single of
    the year in the US.
    Similarly styled to stress the
    move away from his teen idol
    image, the hushed Father Figure
    details a man in turmoil; by now,
    Michael was beginning to write
    more personal lyrics. The song


explains his confusion over his
sexuality: “That’s all I wanted/
But sometimes love can be
mistaken for a crime.” A
tastefully arranged gospel choir
adds nuance to one of George’s
best ballads.
The centrepiece of Faith
remains the ambitious I Want
Your Sex Pts 1 & 2, a nine-minute
epic split into three acts (Lust,
Brass In Love and A Last
Request). Its funky second half
doffs its hat to horn-infused Philly
Soul and even includes a brief
Italo House-style breakdown.
Few artists could tread into
genuinely emotive tear-stained
soul like George without
resorting to mawkish over-
sentimentality but his visceral
examination of a fractured
relationship on One More
Try still sounds
astonishing from the
pen of someone
aged only 24.
Taking a leaf
out of Prince’s
book and his
alter-ego Camille,
Michael then
seamlessly tweaks
his vocals to duet
with himself on the
electro-funk of H ard Day,
before returning to more serious
territory for Hand To Mouth‘s
social commentary. The track’s
story of two Americans, a
prostitute and 25-year-old Jimmy
who embarks on a shooting
spree, remains sadly pertinent
more than 30 years later.
Equally hard-hitting is Look At
Your Hands, a bluesy song
about domestic violence dating
back to George’s Wham! days.
After George was impressed
by Janet Jackson’s Nasty, Jam &
Lewis were asked to remix
Monkey for its single release but
the album version here is less
gimmicky and more cohesive.
By closing ballad Kissing
A Fool, Michael’s transformation
was complete and global
stardom assured. Faith was
a masterpiece straight out of
the box.
Free download pdf