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Patience

Patience
  • List Price: $7.99
  • Buy New: $2.33
  • as of 5/25/2012 22:55 EDT details
  • You Save: $5.66 (71%)
In Stock
New (40) Used (148) from $0.01
  • Seller:cfrucht52
  • Sales Rank:111,258
  • Media:Audio CD
  • Rating:Unrated
  • Region:0
  • Discs:1
  • Shipping Weight (lbs):0.2
  • Dimensions (in):5.6 x 4.9 x 0.4
  • Release Date:May 18, 2004
  • MPN:827969208021
  • UPC:827969208021
  • EAN:0827969208021
  • ASIN:B00020SHH6
Availability:Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks
  • Patience
  • Amazing
  • John And Elvis Are Dead
  • Cars and Trains
  • Round Here
  • My Mother Had A Brother
  • Flawless (Go to the City)
  • American Angel
  • Precious Box
  • Please Send Me Someone (Anselmo's Song)
  • Freeek! '04
  • Through


Editorial Reviews:
Album Description
George Michael buries the hatchet with his former employers & returns to Sony with his first album of new material since 1996. This International version features two tracks that were left off the US pressing, 'Shoot the Dog' and 'Patience Pt.2'. 14 tracks in all including the lead off single, 'Amazing' and the follow-up 'Flawless'. The album also includes the tribute, 'John & Elvis', which was composed on John Lennon's piano. Epic. 2004.
Amazon.com
It must be hard being a George Michael fan. Patience is only his fourth studio effort in the 18 years since Wham! split, so its release must be some cause for celebration. There always seems to have been something preventing him from releasing a new album--from arrests for lewd behavior, protracted battles with record companies, or prolonged periods of grieving for departed family and friends. Thankfully, Patience is pretty good.

Flitting between fraught ballads and up-tempo adult pop (the misguided sample-laden single "Freeek!" being the unnecessary exception), George here returns to the structure and mood of 1990s Listen Without Prejudice, Vol. 1. Patience is at its most delicate and moving with its title track, the intense, tabloid-attacking "Through" and the painful family memories of "My Mother Had a Brother." To balance this, hearts will be raised by "Amazing," with its echoes of the Bee Gees, "Round Here," in which George remembers his early days scampering around Bushey with Andrew Ridgley, and "Cars and Trains," which celebrates the kind of lifestyle that so riled the LAPD back in 1998. That's the thing about George Michael these days. Love him or loathe him, he is unapologetically himself. And fans should be very grateful for that. --Dominic Wills


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