Search - George Michael :: Twenty Five (Snyp)

Twenty Five (Snyp)
George Michael
Twenty Five (Snyp)
Genres: Pop, R&B, Broadway & Vocalists
 
  •  Track Listings (15) - Disc #1
  •  Track Listings (14) - Disc #2

In 25 years, George Michael can already look back on more than 80 million in record sales worldwide. He has notched up six No. 1 singles from his debut album, eleven British No. 1 singles, and six No. 1 albums to date.

     
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CD Details

All Artists: George Michael
Title: Twenty Five (Snyp)
Members Wishing: 4
Total Copies: 0
Label: Epic
Original Release Date: 1/1/2008
Re-Release Date: 4/1/2008
Genres: Pop, R&B, Broadway & Vocalists
Styles: Dance Pop, Adult Contemporary, Vocal Pop
Number of Discs: 2
SwapaCD Credits: 2
UPC: 886970246224

Synopsis

Album Description
In 25 years, George Michael can already look back on more than 80 million in record sales worldwide. He has notched up six No. 1 singles from his debut album, eleven British No. 1 singles, and six No. 1 albums to date.

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CD Reviews

Curiously, George
Michael Kerner | Brooklyn, New York U.S.A. | 04/01/2008
(4 out of 5 stars)

"The past couple of years have been a bit difficult on George Michael. With problems with substance abuse, and invasions of his personal life, it has been one difficult ride from the fallen star. Though his career has fizzled in America the past several years, his music has recently taken a turn with the success of the ABC show Eli Stone. With his songs like Faith being shown and showcased on the show, his voice has been introduced slowly but surely to a whole new generation. Even though he still hasn't made it big in America, he still has shown it by being a status symbol all throughout Europe. But last year, he celebrated his 25th anniversary of being a recording icon, and has shown it on a new greatest hits album for American audiences. But, is this something worth having Faith with?



Twenty Five, the 2006 greatest hits album from George Michael which was widely released overseas, has finally made its 2008 American debut for listeners. The collection though focuses on his mainly his overseas success, and not as much on his status with American hard core fans. The collection falls similar to George's 1998 hits album Ladies & Gentlemen: The Best Of George Michael, as a double-album of his classics, one being of his top dance songs, the other by being about his somber but classic ballads. The collection throws in a few surprises, one of them bringing in more of his mainstream hits during his era as a part of Wham! during the 80's with classics like Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go!, Last Christmas and the somber Careless Whisper. The collection also includes his classics from both sides of the Atlantic, including his mainstream radio standards like Freedom '90, the deep and delicate Jesus To A Child, as well as the #1 smashes Father Figure, Faith and Don't Let The Sun Go Down On Me with Elton John. The collection also highlights a few new tracks here including a cover of the Stevie Wonder classic As with Mary J. Blige, which has made its official U.S. debut after being a hit overseas 10 years ago, as well as the delicate and intimate This Is Not Real Love, and a collaboration of his song Heal The Pain with Paul McCartney. While the album highlights in his new songs as well as some fan favorites the album does overlook a few of George's great #1 hits from his 80's era like the provocative I Want Your Sex, Monkey and his classic I Knew You Were Waiting For Me with the legendary Aretha Franklin.



While Twenty Five isn't as definitive as Ladies & Gentlemen: The Best Of George Michael, it still is a decent buy for hard core fans of George throughout the years who still enjoy his melodies, and works nicely as a sample for anyone who doesn't at all own any George Michael album to date. While there have been so many greatest hits albums that haven't worked that well the past few years, Twenty Five by George Michael is a good addition to your album collection, and that is something is is of a decent value from a father figure.



Album Cover: B



Songs: B-



Price: B-



Remastering: B+



Overall: B 1/2-"
A reminder of the gobsmacking range of his work.
joemacktheknife | East Hampton, NY | 06/07/2008
(4 out of 5 stars)

"The title marks George's 25 years in the music business. But it is worth noting that, for the last 20 of those years he has, quite ingeniously, remained at the top of the tree while maintaining the workrate of an arthritic tortoise - just five new studio albums, and one of those was a covers collection.



OK, his disenchantment with the music industry is well known, but even diehard fans must be a bit miffed that the record release which coincides with his world tour is not a new collection of songs, but another retrospective.



It is only eight years since the "Ladies And Gentlemen : best of" with which Twenty Five's track listing overlaps considerably.



No amount of cunning packaging - such as dividing the collection into themed sections with the twee titles "For Living", "For Loving" and, on the triple CD version, "For The Loyal" - can disguise the fact that fans will be buying some songs for the second, maybe third time.



OK, that's the "buyer beware" message.



"Twenty Five" offers a handful of inessential new cuts (the likes of "Heal The Pain" with Paul McCartney, "This Is Not Real Love" with Mutya . . . yawn) but it is also a reminder of the gobsmacking range of Michael's work.



That means everything from the gorgeous, saccharine-tinged glory of "Careless Whisper" to the most cack-handed protest song ever in "Shoot The Dog".



It's a journey from the shuttlecock-down-the-shorts frippery of Wham!'s "Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go" to the big band crooning of "My Baby just Cares For Me", from brilliant throwaway pop like "Faith" to songs of disarming autobiographical honesty like "My Mother Had A Brother".



George is a pop everyman capable of the sublime (the cover of Stevie Wonder's "As" with Mary J Blige) and the ridiculous (the afore-mentioned "Shoot The Dog").



Pity he's not capable of upping the work rate.



Real Girl

TwentyFive

"
An Odd but Good Collection
D. Miller | Minneapolis, MN USA | 04/06/2008
(3 out of 5 stars)

"This is kind of a lame release, simply because it's so similar to his earlier Greatest Hits album and because it has some fairly glaring omissions and some similarly strange inclusions, and his limited back catalog doesn't exactly warrant the need for TWO separate Greatest Hits releases, but you can't really argue the fact that these are amazing songs.



My one real problem with the collection is the Re-Mastering on songs like "Heal the Pain" (one of my personal favorites) where they felt the need to re-record the vocal track, and he didn't even try to sing it with the same tone or inflections, plus his voice sounds considerably older now, which means it now sounds like an entirely different song altogether - and not nearly as good. Maybe there was a problem with the original vocal track when it came time to Re-Master? I'm not sure, but I'd rather have the old analog version with less than perfect audio than this beastly recreation.



Other than that, it's a pretty great record from start to finish."