♫ I Knew You Were Waiting (For Me) ♫

I have what I think of as a bouncy mind … one thought leads to another and before you know it, I’ve completely lost the original thought and am miles away, sometimes stranded on a deserted island trying to remember what the heck I was even thinking about.  Does this ever happen to you guys?  Anyway, last night, I was looking over Keith’s list of songs, trying to get an idea for this morning’s music post, and I started out with Danny’s Song by Kenny Loggins, then jumped to Annie’s Song by John Denver, and I don’t remember the journey or how I ended up with Aretha Franklin and George Michael, but somehow I did.  This song topped the charts at #1 in both the UK and the U.S. and #4 in Canada in 1987, so I figure it’s a safe bet that at least some of you will remember and enjoy it, as well.

According to SongFacts …

When John Landis was asked how he got Aretha Franklin to appear in his 1980 film The Blues Brothers, he replied: “I asked her.” The point being that the Queen of Soul had fallen out of favor and was looking for work (many other music legends – Ray Charles, Tina Turner and Roy Orbison among them – were also at career nadirs).  Her fortunes were revived by her 1985 album Who’s Zoomin’ Who, which contained two US Top 10 hits: the title track and Freeway of Love. It took this duet with George Michael, however, to return her to the top of the chart, where she had not been for 20 years.  Michael was coming off a string of hits with his group Wham!, but had not yet released his first solo album, Faith, which came out later in 1987.

This was was written by Simon Climie and Dennis Morgan; the pair met in 1983 after Morgan attended an Everly Brothers concert. It was the third song they wrote together. Morgan explained in The Billboard Book of Number One Hits: “That was one of those songs that came out of mid air – a gift from above, if you will.”

The song was not originally written as a duet. Climie and Morgan pitched the song to Tina Turner as well to Aretha Franklin and Arista Records head Clive Davis. It was Davis’ idea to get Franklin and George Michael to record the song as a duet. It appeared on Franklin’s 1986 album Aretha.

Narada Michael Walden, who worked with Aretha on her Who’s Zoomin’ Who album, produced this track. He also produced the song this displaced at the top spot of the Hot 100: “Nothing’s Gonna Stop Us Now” by Starship.

This made him the eighth producer in the Rock Era to score back-to-back #1 hits.

George Michael usually did his own production work; before recording this song, he had only been produced by someone else on one occasion: the “Do They Know It’s Christmas?” single by Band Aid.

Michael was so used to self-producing that he had a difficult time knowing when to stop singing. Narada Michael Walden explained: “He looked at me with those innocent virgin eyes, like he’d never been told, ‘you oughta stop, kid.'”

Michael wrote about his experience recording this song in his book, Bare, saying that he and Franklin recorded the song together but did their ad-libs separately. He also went on to praise Walden for being “brilliant” at getting a good atmosphere in the studio.

Michael admitted to being nervous, but he knew there was no point in trying to copy Franklin’s style. “Nobody can emulate Aretha Franklin,” he said. “It’s stupid to try. I just tried to stay in character, keep it simple – it was very understated in comparison to what she did.”

In 1987, Franklin and Michael won the Best R&B Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal Grammy for this song.

Aretha Franklin reflected on her collaboration with George Michael in Entertainment Weekly’s 2017 tribute issue. “The first time I heard George was with Wham! and I liked it then,” she said. “He had a very unique sound, very different from anything that was out there. When Clive [Davis] suggested we get together for ‘I Knew You Were Waiting,’ I was all ready. It reminded me of Jerry Wexler. We’d go in the studio and cut songs. If we were happy with what we recorded, Jerry would say, ‘Let’s wait until tomorrow. If we feel the same way that we do now, maybe we have a hit.’ ‘I Knew You Were Waiting’ had that. Musically, it does not grow old.”

Regarding the video, Franklin said, “We had a super time. He was calling most of the shots: how he wanted this, how he wanted that. My older sister, Erma, just fell for him right away. He was very friendly and personable, easy to talk to.”

Enough chatter … on to the music!

I Knew You Were Waiting (For Me)

Aretha Franklin & George Michael

Like a warrior that fights and wins the battle
I know the taste of victory
Though I went through some nights consumed by the shadows
I was crippled emotionally

Somehow I made it through the heartache, yes, I did
Oh, I escaped (aha ha)
I found my way out of the darkness
I kept my faith (I know you did), kept my faith

When the river was deep, I didn’t falter
When the mountain was high, I still believed
When the valley was low, it didn’t stop me, no no
I knew you were waiting, I knew you were waiting for me
Uh huh

With an endless desire, I kept on searching
Sure in time our eyes would meet
And like a bridge that’s on fire, the hurt is over
One touch and you set me free

No, I don’t regret a single moment, no, I don’t
(I know you don’t) Looking back
When I think of all those disappointments
I just laugh (I know you do), I just laugh

When the river was deep, I didn’t falter
When the mountain was high, I still believed
When the valley was low, it didn’t stop me, oh
I knew you were waiting, hey, I knew you were waiting for me

So we were drawn together through destiny, ooh boy, ooh!
I know this love we share was meant to be, oh
(Knew you were waiting) Ooh, yeah
(Knew you were waiting) I knew you were waiting
(Knew you were waiting for me)

(I didn’t falter) I didn’t falter, no
(I still believed) When the valley was low
(It didn’t stop me) Nothing can stop me, no
(Knew you were waiting) No, I
(Knew you were waiting for me)
(I didn’t falter) When the mountain was high
(I still believed) Oh, when the valley was low
(It didn’t stop me) No, it didn’t stop me, no
(Knew you were waiting) stop me
(Knew you were waiting for me)
(I didn’t falter) Oh, oh yeah
(I still believed) Oh, I still believed
(It didn’t stop me) Do you know it couldn’t stop me now? No
(Knew you were waiting)
Someday (someway), some place (somehow)
For me
(I didn’t falter) When the valley was low
(I still believed) I still believe (I believed, I believed)
(It didn’t stop me) Yeah, it couldn’t stop me

Writer/s: Dennis Morgan, Simon Climie
Publisher: BMG Rights Management, Kobalt Music Publishing Ltd., Universal Music Publishing Group
Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

♫ Last Christmas ♫

With just 11 days until Christmas, I suppose it’s time for me to play at least a few Christmas songs, eh?  I chose this one tonight because … it was a hit on both sides of the pond, and those wonderful people who still put up with Filosofa’s snark and ranting are about equally divided between the two geographical sides of the big pond.  

Written and produced by George Michael, this song actually has very little to do with Christmas – it’s about a failed relationship. Only the phase “Last Christmas,” when the relationship comes to a head, refers to the festive season. Despite this, it has become an annual Christmas standard, especially in the UK.

This was released as a charity record with its proceeds going to famine relief in Ethiopia. Apart from Do They Know It’s Christmas, which prevented it from reaching #1, Last Christmas is the biggest selling Christmas song in the UK. George Michael features on both songs. (Hint:  you will be hearing ‘Do They Know It’s Christmas’ before the end of next week)

The song originated one Sunday in 1984 when George Michael and Andrew Ridgely were visiting Michael’s parents.  Says Ridgely …

WHAM-Christmas“We’d had a bite to eat and were sitting together relaxing with the television on in the background when, almost unnoticed, George disappeared upstairs for an hour or so. When he came back down, such was his excitement, it was as if he had discovered gold which, in a sense, he had.

We went to his old room, the room in which we had spent hours as kids recording pastiches of radio shows and jingles, the room where he kept a keyboard and something on which to record his sparks of inspiration, and he played me the introduction and the beguiling, wistful chorus melody to ‘Last Christmas.’ It was a moment of wonder.

George had performed musical alchemy, distilling the essence of Christmas into music. Adding a lyric which told the tale of betrayed love was a masterstroke and, as he did so often, he touched hearts.”

Two chart facts:

  • Last Christmas is the biggest selling single in UK chart history not to reach #1.
  • In Japan it has sold over 600,000 copies, making it the best-selling single that did not reach that country’s Top 10.

The songwriters of Barry Manilow’s hit single Can’t Smile Without You sued George Michael for plagiarism in the mid-’80s, claiming that this song lifted its melody from their tune. The case was settled out of court with Michael giving his first year’s royalties to Band Aid.  Hmmmm … I don’t see the two tunes as being the same at all, but then, I am legally deaf, so perhaps my opinion doesn’t count.

Last Christmas
Song by Wham!

Ah, aha
Ooh
Oh

Last Christmas, I gave you my heart
But the very next day you gave it away
This year, to save me from tears
I’ll give it to someone special

Last Christmas, I gave you my heart
But the very next day, you gave it away (you gave it away)
This year, to save me from tears
I’ll give it to someone special (special)

Once bitten and twice shy
I keep my distance
But you still catch my eye
Tell me, baby
Do you recognize me?
Well, it’s been a year
It doesn’t surprise me
(Happy Christmas) I wrapped it up and sent it
With a note saying, “I love you, ” I meant it
Now, I know what a fool I’ve been
But if you kissed me now
I know you’d fool me again

Last Christmas, I gave you my heart
But the very next day, you gave it away (you gave it away)
This year, to save me from tears
I’ll give it to someone special (special)

Last Christmas, I gave you my heart
But the very next day, you gave it away
This year, to save me from tears
I’ll give it to someone special (special, oh)

Oh, my baby
(Ooh)

A crowded room, friends with tired eyes
I’m hiding from you, and your soul of ice
My God, I thought you were someone to rely on
Me? I guess I was a shoulder to cry on

A face on a lover with a fire in his heart
A man under cover but you tore me apart, ooh
Now, I’ve found a real love you’ll never fool me again

Last Christmas, I gave you my heart
But the very next day, you gave it away (you gave it away)
This year, to save me from tears
I’ll give it to someone special (special)

Last Christmas, I gave you my heart
But the very next day, (you gave) you gave it away (me away)
This year (ohh), to save me from tears
I’ll give it to someone special (special)

Face on a lover with a fire in his heart (I gave you my heart)
A man under cover but you tore him apart
Maybe next year, I’ll give it to someone
I’ll give it to someone special (special, someone)

Source: LyricFind
Songwriters: George Michael
Last Christmas lyrics © Warner Chappell Music, Inc

♫ Careless Whisper ♫

A couple of nights ago, I played a song by British duo Wham!  I discovered from a few friends here that the song, “Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go”, was not exactly their favourite George Michael song!  So, I asked them what their favourite was, and luckily, while there were numerous answers, they overwhelmingly agreed on “Careless Whisper”, which is also one of my favourites, though I already played it in January 2019.  Still, you can’t get enough of a good song, right?


I keep a list of songs I might want to post, sometimes of ones that readers have mentioned as being ones they like, or just ones that I think about and would like to post in the future.  So, tonight I went to the list and found “Careless Whisper — George Michael”.  Okay … Google that, and I come up with Careless Whisper by … WHAM!  Try again … still no version by ‘George Michael’.  Daughter Chris, my music expert, had just gone to bed, so I texted her:

“Is George Michael and WHAM the same thing?”

She responds:

“Sort of.  George Michael was the singer for WHAM!.  That was a funny question.” 

So then I had to trudge up the stairs to ‘splain why I asked.  Now that is straightened out, let’s get down to business.

This song, released in July 1984, was George Michael’s first solo single, although he was still performing in Wham! at the time (the song is included on Wham!’s album Make It Big).  It was released as a single and became a huge commercial success on both sides of the Atlantic and on both sides of the Pacific. It reached number one in nearly 25 countries, selling about 6 million copies worldwide—2 million of them in the United States.

The song was written by George Michael and the other half of WHAM!, Andrew Ridgeley when they were only seventeen!  According to George Michael’s autobiography …

“When I was twelve, thirteen, I used to have to chaperone my sister, who was two years older, to an ice rink at Queensway in London. There was a girl there with long blond hair whose name was Jane. I was a fat boy in glasses and I had a big crush on her – though I didn’t stand a chance. My sister used to go and do what she wanted when we got to the skating rink and I would spend the afternoon swooning over this girl Jane.

A few years later, when I was sixteen, I had my first relationship with a girl called Helen.

It had just started to cool off a bit when I discovered that the blonde girl from Queensway had moved in just around the corner from my school. She had moved in right next to where I used to stand and wait for my next-door neighbor, who used to give me a lift home from school. And one day I saw her walk down the path next to me and I thought – now where did SHE come from? She didn’t know it was me. It was a few years later and I looked a lot different. Then we played a school disco with The Executive and she saw me singing and decided she fancied me. By this time she was that much older and a big buxom thing – and eventually I started seeing her. She invited me in one day when I was waiting for my lift and I was … in heaven.”

Michael observed that after he stopped wearing glasses, he began getting invited to parties.

“And the girl who didn’t even see me when I was twelve invited me in. 

So I went out with her for a couple of months but I didn’t stop seeing Helen. I thought I was being smart – I had gone from being a total loser to being a two-timer. And I remember my sisters used to give me a hard time because they found out and they really liked the first girl. The whole idea of “Careless Whisper” was the first girl finding out about the second – which she never did. But I started another relationship with a girl called Alexis without finishing the one with Jane. It all got a bit complicated. Jane found out about her and got rid of me … The whole time I thought I was being cool, being this two-timer, but there really wasn’t that much emotion involved. I did feel guilty about the first girl – and I have seen her since – and the idea of the song was about her. “Careless Whisper” was us dancing, because we danced a lot, and the idea was – we are dancing … but she knows … and it’s finished.”

Interestingly, one source I checked said that the whole story related above was made up, but yet … it’s in his autobiography, so I’m confused.  But at any rate … it’s a good song, and I especially love the saxophone riff!

Careless Whisper
George Michael

I feel so unsure
As I take your hand and lead you to the dance floor
As the music dies, something in your eyes
Calls to mind the silver screen
And all its sad good-byes

I’m never gonna dance again
Guilty feet have got no rhythm
Though it’s easy to pretend
I know you’re not a fool

Should’ve known better than to cheat a friend
And waste the chance that I’ve been given
So I’m never gonna dance again
The way I danced with you

Time can never mend
The careless whispers of a good friend
To the heart and mind
Ignorance is kind
There’s no comfort in the truth
Pain is all you’ll find

I’m never gonna dance again
Guilty feet have got no rhythm
Though it’s easy to pretend
I know you’re not a fool

I should’ve known better than to cheat a friend
And waste the chance that I’ve been given
So I’m never gonna dance again
The way I danced with you

Never without your love

Tonight the music seems so loud
I wish that we could lose this crowd
Maybe it’s better this way
We’d hurt each other with the things we’d want to say

We could have been so good together
We could have lived this dance forever
But no one’s gonna dance with me
Please stay

And I’m never gonna dance again
Guilty feet have got no rhythm
Though it’s easy to pretend
I know you’re not a fool

Should’ve known better than to cheat a friend
And waste the chance that I’ve been given
So I’m never gonna dance again
The way I danced with you

Now that you’re gone
(Now that you’re gone) What I did’s so wrong, so wrong
That you had to leave me alone

Songwriters: Andrew J. Ridgeley / George Michael
Careless Whisper lyrics © Warner/Chappell Music, Inc

♫ Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go ♫

I was looking for something fun and light for this morning’s music post, and just trolling through the music archives, I came across this by British duo Wham!, consisting of George Michael and Andrew Ridgeley.

The inspiration for the song’s title is rather fun.  Andrew Ridgeley was living with his parents at the time, since Wham! was on the road most of the time and he was never home anyway.  One day, Ridgeley needed a wake-up call, so he left a note for him mum on his door. He wrote, “Wake me up up,” and realizing he duplicated a word, finished the sentence with “before you go go.”

George Michael got a kick out of it and decided to use it as a song title. Michael put together this song called Wake Me Up Before You Go Go, and it became Wham’s first U.S. hit.

George Michael (born Georgios Panayiotou) and Andrew Ridgeley met at Bushey Heath Comprehensive School in Hertfordshire when both were in their early teens. They became friends and after leaving school they made a demo of Wham! Rap at Andrew Ridgeley’s parents’ house, which was picked up by the record label Innervision and released without success. Their next release Young Guns (Go For It) was more successful rising to #3 in the UK.

Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go
Wham!

Jitterbug
Jitterbug
Jitterbug
Jitterbug

You put the boom boom into my heart (hoo, hoo)
You send my soul sky high when your lovin’ starts
Jitterbug into my brain (yeah, yeah)
Goes a bang-bang-bang ’til my feet do the same
But something’s bugging you (ha-ha, ha-ha)
Something ain’t right (ha-ha, ha-ha)
My best friend told me what you did last night (ha-ha, ha-ha)
Left me sleepin’ in my bed (ha-ha, ha-ha)
I was dreaming, but I should have been with you instead (ha-ha)

Wake me up before you go-go
Don’t leave me hanging on like a yo-yo
Wake me up before you go-go
I don’t want to miss it when you hit that high
Wake me up before you go-go
‘Cause I’m not plannin’ on going solo
Wake me up before you go-go
Take me dancing tonight
I wanna hit that high (yeah, yeah)

You take the grey skies out of my way (hoo, hoo)
You make the sun shine brighter than Doris Day
Turned a bright spark into a flame (yeah, yeah)
My beats per minute never been the same
‘Cause you’re my lady, I’m your fool (ha-ha, ha-ha)
It makes me crazy when you act so cruel (ha-ha, ha-ha)
Come on, baby, let’s not fight (ha-ha, ha-ha)
We’ll go dancing, everything will be all right (ha-ha)

Wake me up before you go-go
Don’t leave me hanging on like a yo-yo
Wake me up before you go-go
I don’t want to miss it when you hit that high
Wake me up before you go-go
‘Cause I’m not plannin’ on going solo
Wake me up before you go-go
Take me dancing tonight
I wanna hit that high (yeah, yeah, yeah)

Jitterbug (baby)
Jitterbug (woo)

Cuddle up, baby, move in tight
We’ll go dancing tomorrow night
It’s cold out there, but it’s warm in bed
They can dance, we’ll stay home instead

Jitterbug

Wake me up before you go-go
Don’t leave me hanging on like a yo-yo
Wake me up before you go-go
I don’t want to miss it when you hit that high
Wake me up before you go-go
‘Cause I’m not plannin’ on going solo
Wake me up before you go-go
Take me dancing tonight

Wake me up before you go-go (don’t you dare)
Don’t leave me hanging on like a yo-yo
(Leave me hanging on like a yo-yo, yo-yo, yo)
Wake me up before you go-go
I don’t want to miss it when you hit that high
(Take me dancing)
(A boom-boom-boom-boom, oh)
Wake me up before you go-go
‘Cause I’m not plannin’ on going solo
(A boom-boom-boom-boom)
Wake me up before you go-go (ah)
(Yeah, yeah, yeah)
Take me dancing tonight

Ooh ah
Yeah

Source: LyricFind
Songwriters: George Michael
Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go lyrics © Warner Chappell Music, Inc

♫ Careless Whisper ♫

I keep a list of songs I might want to post, sometimes of ones that readers have mentioned as being ones they like, or just ones that I think about and would like to post in the future.  So, tonight I went to the list and found “Careless Whisper — George Michael”.  Okay … Google that, and I come up with Careless Whisper by … WHAM!  Try again … still no version by ‘George Michael’.  Daughter Chris, my music expert, had just gone to bed, so I texted her:

“Is George Michael and WHAM the same thing?”

She responds:

“Sort of.  George Michael was the singer for WHAM!.  That was a funny question.” 

So then I had to trudge up the stairs to ‘splain why I asked.  Now that is straightened out, let’s get down to business.

This song, released in July 1984, was George Michael’s first solo single, although he was still performing in Wham! at the time (the song is included on Wham!’s album Make It Big).  It was released as a single and became a huge commercial success on both sides of the Atlantic and on both sides of the Pacific. It reached number one in nearly 25 countries, selling about 6 million copies worldwide—2 million of them in the United States.

The song was written by George Michael and the other half of WHAM!, Andrew Ridgeley when they were only seventeen!  According to George Michael’s autobiography …

“When I was twelve, thirteen, I used to have to chaperone my sister, who was two years older, to an ice rink at Queensway in London. There was a girl there with long blond hair whose name was Jane. I was a fat boy in glasses and I had a big crush on her – though I didn’t stand a chance. My sister used to go and do what she wanted when we got to the skating rink and I would spend the afternoon swooning over this girl Jane.

A few years later, when I was sixteen, I had my first relationship with a girl called Helen.

It had just started to cool off a bit when I discovered that the blonde girl from Queensway had moved in just around the corner from my school. She had moved in right next to where I used to stand and wait for my next-door neighbor, who used to give me a lift home from school. And one day I saw her walk down the path next to me and I thought – now where did SHE come from? She didn’t know it was me. It was a few years later and I looked a lot different. Then we played a school disco with The Executive and she saw me singing and decided she fancied me. By this time she was that much older and a big buxom thing – and eventually I started seeing her. She invited me in one day when I was waiting for my lift and I was … in heaven.”

Michael observed that after he stopped wearing glasses, he began getting invited to parties.

“And the girl who didn’t even see me when I was twelve invited me in. 

So I went out with her for a couple of months but I didn’t stop seeing Helen. I thought I was being smart – I had gone from being a total loser to being a two-timer. And I remember my sisters used to give me a hard time because they found out and they really liked the first girl. The whole idea of “Careless Whisper” was the first girl finding out about the second – which she never did. But I started another relationship with a girl called Alexis without finishing the one with Jane. It all got a bit complicated. Jane found out about her and got rid of me … The whole time I thought I was being cool, being this two-timer, but there really wasn’t that much emotion involved. I did feel guilty about the first girl – and I have seen her since – and the idea of the song was about her. “Careless Whisper” was us dancing, because we danced a lot, and the idea was – we are dancing … but she knows … and it’s finished.”

Interestingly, one source I checked said that the whole story related above was made up, but yet … it’s in his autobiography, so I’m confused.  But at any rate … it’s a good song, and I especially love the saxophone riff!

Careless Whisper
George Michael

I feel so unsure
As I take your hand and lead you to the dance floor
As the music dies, something in your eyes
Calls to mind the silver screen
And all its sad good-byes

I’m never gonna dance again
Guilty feet have got no rhythm
Though it’s easy to pretend
I know you’re not a fool

Should’ve known better than to cheat a friend
And waste the chance that I’ve been given
So I’m never gonna dance again
The way I danced with you

Time can never mend
The careless whispers of a good friend
To the heart and mind
Ignorance is kind
There’s no comfort in the truth
Pain is all you’ll find

I’m never gonna dance again
Guilty feet have got no rhythm
Though it’s easy to pretend
I know you’re not a fool

I should’ve known better than to cheat a friend
And waste the chance that I’ve been given
So I’m never gonna dance again
The way I danced with you

Never without your love

Tonight the music seems so loud
I wish that we could lose this crowd
Maybe it’s better this way
We’d hurt each other with the things we’d want to say

We could have been so good together
We could have lived this dance forever
But no one’s gonna dance with me
Please stay

And I’m never gonna dance again
Guilty feet have got no rhythm
Though it’s easy to pretend
I know you’re not a fool

Should’ve known better than to cheat a friend
And waste the chance that I’ve been given
So I’m never gonna dance again
The way I danced with you

Now that you’re gone
(Now that you’re gone) What I did’s so wrong, so wrong
That you had to leave me alone

Songwriters: Andrew J. Ridgeley / George Michael
Careless Whisper lyrics © Warner/Chappell Music, Inc