George Michael Ladies And Gentlemen The | Best Of George Install

Before installing, it helps to know what you are installing. Ladies and Gentlemen is a 2-disc set, each with a distinct mood.

| Disc | Title | Vibe | Key Tracks | |------|-------|------|-------------| | Disc 1 | For the Heart | Ballads, slow jams, emotional | “Jesus to a Child”, “Careless Whisper”, “Kissing a Fool” | | Disc 2 | For the Feet | Upbeat, dance, funk | “Fastlove”, “Outside”, “I Want Your Sex” |

The album also includes two brand new tracks at the time: “Outside” (a funky, tongue-in-cheek response to his 1998 arrest) and “As” (a duet with Mary J. Blige).

Why two discs? George famously said the compilation reflected his two “halves.” The clean-cut, sensitive songwriter, and the unapologetic, leather-clad dance-pop provocateur.

Quote from George (1998): “If you only know me from Wham! or only from the ballads, you’ve only got half the story.”


Below are the four most common installation scenarios. Choose your case. Before installing, it helps to know what you are installing

| # | Track | Original Album | |---|-------|----------------| | 1 | “Jesus to a Child” | Older (1996) | | 2 | “Father Figure” | Faith (1987) | | 3 | “Careless Whisper” | Make It Big (Wham!) | | 4 | “Don’t Let the Sun Go Down on Me” (live with Elton John) | Duets | | 5 | “You Have Been Loved” | Older | | 6 | “Kissing a Fool” | Faith | | 7 | “I Can’t Make You Love Me” (live) | Cover | | 8 | “Heal the Pain” | Listen Without Prejudice Vol. 1 | | 9 | “A Moment with You” | Older (bonus) | | 10 | “Desafinado” (with Astrud Gilberto) | Red Hot + Rio | | 11 | “Cowboys and Angels” | Listen Without Prejudice | | 12 | “Praying for Time” | Listen Without Prejudice | | 13 | “One More Try” | Faith | | 14 | “A Different Corner” | The Final (Wham!) |

Today, Ladies & Gentlemen stands as the definitive document of George Michael’s career. It encapsulates a rare duality: he was a sex symbol who sang about loneliness; a pop idol who wrote jazz standards; a man who lived a very public life while guarding a very private truth.

The album proved that George Michael was never just a "Blue-Eyed Soul" singer; he was one of Britain's finest songwriters. It bridged the gap between the screaming fans of the Wham! era and the discerning listeners

It sounds like you’re referring to George Michael’s greatest hits album, specifically Ladies & Gentlemen: The Best of George Michael, and perhaps there’s a typo or autocorrect issue with “george install” (likely meant to be “George Michael” or “George Michael’s” or even “installing” the album digitally).

Here’s the story behind that album — because it’s a fascinating one: Quote from George (1998): “If you only know me from Wham


George Michael insisted on a unique structure:

He wanted to honor both sides of his musical identity — the introspective singer-songwriter and the pop/dance showman.


To ensure proper sorting, manually check or set the following tags:

| Field | Value | |-------|-------| | Album Artist | George Michael | | Album | Ladies & Gentlemen: The Best of George Michael | | Year | 1998 | | Disc Number | 1/2 or 2/2 | | Genre | Pop / Dance / Soul | | Cover Art | Embed high-res JPEG (min. 600x600) |

Tip: Use MusicBrainz Picard or MP3tag to auto-tag from online databases. Below are the four most common installation scenarios


In the era of the CD, double albums were common, but George Michael did something unique with the structure of Ladies & Gentlemen. He split the collection into two distinct distinct movements: "For the Heart" and "For the Feet."

This was a nod to the vinyl era, but it also served a narrative purpose. It forced the listener to engage with Michael’s work not just as a radio hit parade, but as a dynamic emotional landscape.

Disc One: For the Heart This disc is a masterclass in the ballad form. It opens with the Jimmy Cagney sample from Angels With Dirty Faces, setting a tone of noir-ish introspection. We are then guided through the silky, sophisticated soul of "Careless Whisper" (a song Michael wrote when he was just 17, proving his prodigious talent) and the haunting "Jesus to a Child."

The latter is crucial. Written as an elegy for his partner, Anselmo Feleppa, who died of AIDS-related complications in 1993, "Jesus to a Child" is perhaps the most vulnerable song Michael ever wrote. Placing it early on the "Heart" disc anchors the compilation in genuine tragedy, stripping away the tabloid facade to reveal the grieving man underneath.

Disc Two: For the Feet If the first disc is the man in the shadows, the second disc is the superstar in the spotlight. It is a relentless barrage of pop-funk perfection. "I'm Your Man," "Faith," "Hard Day," and the iconic "Freedom! '90."

This disc highlights Michael’s debt to Black American music—Motown, disco, and funk. It reminds the listener that before he was a tabloid fixture, he was a rhythm-obsessed artist who understood how to make a club move. The sequencing creates a euphoric release, balancing the melancholia of the first disc.

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