The Jerusalem Post

2016 curse

Pop singer George Michael dies at age 53

- • By DENNIS MCLELLAN (Henning Bagger/Reuters)

George Michael, the English singer-songwriter who shot to stardom in the 1980s as half of the pop duo Wham! and went on to become one of the era’s biggest pop solo artists with hits such as “Faith” and “I Want Your Sex,” died over the Christmas holiday. He was 53.

Michael died peacefully at his home in Goring, England, according to his publicist. She said he had not been ill. In a statement, Thames Valley Police called Michael’s death “unexplaine­d but not suspicious.”

Teamed with guitarist Andrew Ridgeley in Wham!, Michael soared to fame in the United Kingdom in the early ’80s with hits such as “Young Guns (Go For It!)”, “Wham Rap! (Enjoy What You Do)” and “Bad Boys.”

Michael was born Georgios Kyriacos Panayiotou on June 25, 1963, in North London, the son of a English mother and a Greek Cypriot immigrant father who ran a local restaurant.

He was 7 when he began dreaming of musical stardom.

“It’s not like I had a remarkable voice as a child,” he said in a 2004 interview with the Sunday Telegraph. “I got thrown out of choir, but that didn’t stop me from telling everyone I was going to be a famous pop star.”

Michael was 12 when he met Ridgeley, a fellow student. After leaving school, they spent more than a year in a ska band called the Executives and began writing songs together.

A demo tape that included two of their songs, “Wham Rap” and “Careless Whisper,” led to their 1981 signing with a British independen­t label and the launch of Wham!

The duo’s “Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go” was an internatio­nal million-selling single that put Wham! on the map in America, where it reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 in late 1984.

Two other Wham! songs went to No. 1 on the Billboard chart in 1985: “Careless Whisper” (released in Britain as a solo single by Michael) and “Everything She Wants.”

Their internatio­nal popularity was further confirmed in 1985 when they became the first Western pop group to play in Communist China.

The stylishly coiffed duo, who wore tight-fitting short-shorts in their “Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go” video and appeared shirtless in leather jackets in promotiona­l stills, are described in The Encycloped­ia of Popular Music as “the most commercial­ly successful teen-oriented group of the ’80s.”

Michael was known as the creative half of the duo, whose stage appearance­s whipped young female fans into a frenzy with music that some critics dismissed as juvenile and exploitati­ve. Yet Michael maintained that he was not writing songs specifical­ly for teenage girls.

“People who accuse me of that just don’t know what they’re talking about,” he told The Los Angeles Times in 1984, while promoting the Wham! album Make It Big, which was produced, arranged and mostly written by Michael.

“I’m writing for my own age group, but they’re put off by all these screaming young girls who like us,” he said. “It’s really a shame. That’s not a good reason not to listen to our music.”

With Michael reportedly feeling restricted in Wham! and wanting to do other things musically, the duo split up in 1986; a crowd of 72,000 fans turned out at London’s Wembley Stadium for their farewell concert.

“I Knew You Were Waiting (For Me),” a duet Michael recorded with Aretha Franklin, was a No. 1 hit in the spring of 1987 and earned them a Grammy Award.

Michael’s debut solo album, Faith, released later that year.

The album, which won a Grammy for Album of the Year, spawned the No. 1 hit singles “Faith,” “Father Figure,” “One More Try” and “Monkey” – as well as the controvers­ial “I Want Your Sex,” which rose to No. 2 and was banned by many US radio stations.

Michael had another No. 1 hit with “Praying for Time,” a 1990 single off his Listen Without Prejudice, Vol. 1 album. During this time, Michael achieved the critical success that had eluded him and became considered as one of the era’s top vocal stylists.

Despite Michael’s success, the ’90s proved a difficult period for him, marked by a protracted legal battle with Sony Music Entertainm­ent in an attempt to escape his longtime contract. There was also a series of personal was upheavals, including the 1993 death of his Brazilian lover, Anselmo Feleppa, whom he had met at a rock festival in Rio in 1991.

In 1998, Michael was arrested for lewd conduct in a men’s restroom at Will Rogers Memorial Park in Beverly Hills. He pleaded no contest and completed 80 hours of community service with a youth leadership program, paid $910 in fines and underwent counseling.

Though rather tame as celebrity scandals go, the incident amounted to a public outing of the singer and a possible threat to his career. In an interview with CNN the week after his arrest, he apologized to fans and acknowledg­ed that he was gay.

“I have no problem with people knowing that I’m in a relationsh­ip with a man right now,” he said at the time. “I have not had a relationsh­ip with a woman for almost 10 years.”

Of his arrest, he said: “I don’t feel any shame. I feel stupid, and I feel reckless and weak for having allowed my sexuality to be exposed this way.”

Seven months after his arrest, Michael made fun of the high-profile incident with the satirical single “Outside,” which former Times pop music critic Ann Powers later described as “a highly danceable paean to public sex.”

The accompanyi­ng music video included a sequence in which Michael, wearing shades and a police uniform, appears in a public restroom that morphs into a flashy disco dance palace.

Years later, in an interview with the BBC, Michael said that the manner of his unintentio­nal outing had made his life more difficult. Yet he did not shy away from who he was; he raised money to combat AIDS and supported gay rights.

Michael’s drug use – he admitted to using prescripti­on sedatives and marijuana – led to several run-ins with law enforcemen­t in the 2000s, after his career had reached its apex.

In 2010, his driver’s license was revoked for five years after he drove his Land Rover into the side of a photograph­y shop with so much force that his vehicle dented the wall.

A passer-by rememberin­g Michael’s early career wrote the word “WHAM” on the spot his SUV had hit.

Michael’s sudden death stunned the music world, given his young age and the fact he had been working on a documentar­y film called Freedom in recent months. He was also beginning work on a new album.

Michael’s longtime manager, Michael Lippman, told Billboard magazine that the singer died “peacefully” in his bed of apparent heart failure.

In 2011, Michael suffered a severe case of pneumonia during a tour and later revealed he had come close to dying. “It was by far the worst month of my life, but I am incredibly, incredibly fortunate to be here,” he told the Guardian.

Friends and fellow performers offered tributes. “I am in deep shock,” Elton John said on Instagram. “I have lost a beloved friend – the kindest, most generous soul and a brilliant artist.” – LA Times/TNS

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? MICHAEL PERFORMS in 2011 at Boxen Arena in Herning.
MICHAEL PERFORMS in 2011 at Boxen Arena in Herning.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel