âLast Christmasâ is back on the charts, but few know the heartbreaking reason George Michael wrote it
Did you know thereâs a heartbreaking reason behind George Michael and Wham!âs decision to create arguably the greatest festive song of them all, âLast Christmasâ?
Between June 1982 and 1986, the late George Michael and Andrew Ridgeleyâs vibrant pop project Wham! ruled the airwaves.
Watch George Michaelâs performance of âLast Christmasâ below.
During their short but sweet reign, the pair â alongside Helen âPepsiâ DeMacque-Crockett and Shirlie Kemp â put out three studio albums and 14 singles before bringing the curtain down for good at Wembley Stadium.
Following the demise of the band, Michael â whose real name was Georgios âYogâ Kyriacos Panayiotou â embarked on a fruitful solo career up until his sudden and tragic death in 2016.
Meanwhile, Ridgeley, 61, has continued to pour time into charity work and is a former Formula Three motor racing driver.
Two years before Wham!âs breakup, the group decided to record their first â and subsequent last â Christmas single, âLast Christmasâ.
The synth-pop song, which has stood the test of time, was solely written and produced by Michael and was released via CBS Records on December 3 1984.
Why did George Michael and Wham! decide to release âLast Christmasâ?
According to a new BBC Two documentary titled Wham!: Last Christmas Unwrapped, the âFreedomâ singer considered the festive period the most wonderful time of the year. But in a tragic turn of events, he would die of heart disease at the age of 53 on Christmas Day.
Speaking from the Swiss resort of Saas-Fee, were the âLast Christmasâ music video was filmed, Shirlie said of Michael: âChristmas was bigger than him, so he could disguise himself in Christmas.
âThat was one of the reasons he loved that time of year, and why he liked to go carol singing. Imagine if everyone had iPhones back then. Our Christmas Eves were the best.â
Pepsi added that the two-time Grammy Award winner had a penchant for dressing up over the holidays, recalling one particular festive adventure.
âHe lived in a little mews house on Kensington High Street and he went, âRight, letâs go!â. He had all the wigs and everything,â she said. âWe sang in front of a house and then weâd end up in a pub spending the money that we had collected. Then it was like, âOK, letâs go over thereâ, and it was like, âNo, itâs too far to walkâ.
âSo we got on a bus with the wigs and everything, and then weâd end up in another pub, causing havoc.â
The long-lasting legacy of âLast Christmasâ
The TV documentary also reveals how one of Michaelâs lifelong goals was to make a Christmas number-one hit.
Unfortunately, âLast Christmasâ failed to peak higher than second place during his lifetime.
The track lost out at the time of its release to Bob Geldofâs star-studded Band Aid charity single, âDo They Know Itâs Christmas?â.
Of course, Michaelâs vocals do feature on the 1984 trackâso arguably he did fulfil his dream after all!
Seven years after Michaelâs death in 2016, âLast Christmasâ finally reached the coveted Christmas Number 1 for the first time in 39 years.
What did Andrew Ridgely say about âLast Christmasâ finally becoming number one in the UK?
Following the âLast Christmasâ chart triumph, Ridgely sat down with the Official Charts to discuss how pleased Michael would be with the placement.
âYes, nigh on 39 years, Last Christmas has finally ascended to the much-cherished and sought-after Official Christmas Number 1 spot, which was always the main goal,â he said.
âGeorge would be beside himself, after all of these years, finally obtain Christmas Number 1. Itâs mission accomplished!
âYog [George] said that he wrote Last Christmas with the intention of writing a Christmas Number 1. That was the challenge; the goal that he set for himself.â
British public crowns âLast Christmasâ as their third-favourite Christmas song
In 2020, Wham!âs âLast Christmasâ was also crowned as Britainâs third favourite Yuletide song, according to a 2020 poll.
YouGov discovered that seven percent of UK dwellers loved the melancholy anthem best, with 13 percent of those aged 18-24 selecting it as their best pick.
The track was beaten to the top spot by Mariah Careyâs âAll I want for Christmas is Youâ and âFairytale of New Yorkâ, first performed by The Pogues and the late Kristy MacColl in 1988.
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