Wham
Wham! sparked something of a pop revival in
the mid-'80s and could arguably be held responsible for sparking off the boy
band trend of the '90s. They were unashamedly pop, to the point of padding the
front of their trousers for television appearances. At the heart, however, was a
string of catchy singalong singles written by George Michael (born Georgios
Kyrriacos Panayiotou in London to a Greek restauranting family).
George met Wham!'s other half, Andrew Ridgeley, at school in the London suburb
of Bushey, and in 1979 they started performing together as part of the ska-based
band the Executive. When that group dissolved, they wrote songs, made demos, and
rushed into a recording contract with the equally eager independent label
Innervision, scoring an instant hit with "Wham Rap!" (they thought that "wham"
was the sound they made when Michael and Ridgeley performed together). In order
to move to a recording contract with Sony label Epic, Wham! was forced to walk
away from most of the royalties from their debut album, Fantastic. None of that
mattered when their 1984 single, "Wake Me up Before You Go Go," became a
worldwide hit, accompanied by a video of the pair cavorting in their sportswear.
Almost immediately, George Michael started thinking of a solo career, and
released "Careless Whisper," issued in the U.S. under George Michael of Wham!
Wham!'s end came suddenly two years later, in 1985, reputedly when the group's
manager, Simon Napier-Bell (later to manage Take That), decided to sell a share
of his management to a South African entertainment conglomerate. Supposedly, as
part of a stand against South African politics, George Michael immediately
announced Wham!'s breakup. They gave their farewell performance before a
sold-out audience of 72,000 fans at London's Wembley Stadium.
George Michael comfortably stepped straight into his own highly successful solo
performing and recording career. Andrew Ridgeley's post Wham! album, Son of
Albert, sold poorly and produced just one
minor hit, "Shake."