Praying for Time#American Idol
{{Short description|1990 single by George Michael}}
{{Use British English|date=December 2016}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2016}}
{{Infobox song
| name = Praying for Time
| cover = Praying for time george michael.jpg
| alt =
| type = single
| artist = George Michael
| album = Listen Without Prejudice Vol. 1
| B-side = "If You Were My Woman" (live at Wembley Stadium, 11 Jun '88)
| written = October 1989{{cite AV media notes|title=Listen Without Prejudice Vol. 1|others=George Michael|year=3 September 1990|type=liner notes|publisher=Epic Records|id=467295 2|page=3}}
| released = {{start date|1990|8|13|df=y}}{{cite magazine|date=11 August 1990|title=New Singles|url=https://worldradiohistory.com/UK/Music-Week/1990/MW-1990-08-11.pdf|magazine=Music Week|page=27|access-date=28 July 2022}}
| recorded =
| studio =
| genre = Pop
| length = 4:41
| label = Epic
| writer = George Michael
| producer = George Michael
| prev_title = Kissing a Fool
| prev_year = 1988
| next_title = Waiting for That Day
| next_year = 1990
| misc = {{External music video|{{YouTube|goroyZbVdlo|"Praying for Time"}}}}
}}
"Praying for Time" is a song written, produced, and performed by English singer and songwriter George Michael, released on Epic Records in the United Kingdom and Columbia Records in the United States in 1990. It was the first single from his second studio album, Listen Without Prejudice Vol. 1 (1990), spending one week at number one on the US Billboard Hot 100, and two weeks on the US Cash Box Top 100, making it Michael's seventh number one in the US and his last solo single to reach the top of both charts. "Praying for Time" also reached number one in Canada for two weeks, becoming Michael's penultimate number-one solo hit there.
Release
The song was Michael's first single in almost two years, entering the UK Singles Chart in August 1990. A dark and sombre reflection on social ills and injustice, it was hailed by many critics. It was the first song of political motivation he had released as a single since his earliest days with Wham!.
The song was the first of five released in the UK from the album Listen Without Prejudice Vol. 1, although it was the only one of the quintet to make the UK top 10, peaking at number six. As of October 2017, the single sold 140,000 copies in UK.{{cite web|url=http://www.officialcharts.com/chart-news/remembering-george-michaels-listen-without-prejudice-vol-1__20742/|work=Official Charts Company|title=Remembering George Michael's Listen Without Prejudice Vol. 1 |date=13 October 2017|access-date=25 October 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171025184029/http://www.officialcharts.com/chart-news/remembering-george-michaels-listen-without-prejudice-vol-1__20742/|archive-date=25 October 2017|url-status=live}}
Critical reception
In a retrospective review, Matthew Hocter from Albumism wrote that the song, "which examines the many social injustices faced by so many, questions the listener into the conditioning that society has created and why it can be so hard to be kind to one another." He added, "Timeless and still so relevant in this day and age."{{cite web|first= Matthew |last= Hocter |title= George Michael's 'Listen Without Prejudice Vol. 1' Turns 30: Anniversary Retrospective |publisher= Albumism |date= 31 August 2020 |access-date= 16 November 2020 |url= https://www.albumism.com/features/george-michael-listen-without-prejudice-vol-1-turns-30-anniversary-retrospective}} Stephen Thomas Erlewine from AllMusic picked it as a "highlight" from the album.{{cite web|first= Stephen Thomas |last= Erlewine |title= George Michael – Listen Without Prejudice, Vol. 1 |publisher= AllMusic |access-date= 4 November 2020 |url= https://www.allmusic.com/album/listen-without-prejudice-vol-1-mw0000690256 |author-link= Stephen Thomas Erlewine}} Upon the release, Bill Coleman from Billboard noted, "Previewing the long-awaited Listen Without Prejudice Vol. 1 album is a dramatic, socially conscious ballad, delivered with the kind of unabashed soul and bravado we've come to expect (and love) from Michael. The countdown to No. 1 starts now ..."{{cite magazine|first= Bill |last= Coleman |title= Single Reviews |magazine= Billboard |date= 25 August 1990 |page= 87 |access-date= 28 October 2020 |url= https://worldradiohistory.com/Archive-Billboard/90s/1990/BB-1990-08-25.pdf}} In a 2008 review, The Daily Vault's Melanie Love said that "Praying for Time" "features Michael singing in a lower range to more formally distance himself from the realm of sunny pop, his tone oddly soothing". She added, "It's the expressiveness of his voice that makes this track such a potent opener, switching seamlessly from scathing to aching to helpless on this rumination on social injustices."{{cite web|first= Melanie |last= Love |title= Listen Without Prejudice, Vol. 1 – George Michael |publisher= The Daily Vault |date= 19 April 2008 |access-date= 22 November 2020 |url= http://dailyvault.com/toc.php5?review=5395}} Chris Roberts from Melody Maker named it Single of the Week, adding that it "marks George entering his loony eccentric British recluse genius phase and displays a staggering excess of ambition."{{cite magazine|first=Chris|last=Roberts|magazine=Melody Maker|title=Singles|url=https://www.flickr.com/photos/nothingelseon/52183015319/|date=25 August 1990|access-date=24 February 2023}}
Pan-European magazine Music & Media stated, "A well-crafted, lovely ballad building up to sizeable proportions. The transparent production gives ample space to Michael's passionate vocals."{{cite magazine|title= Previews: Singles |magazine= Music & Media |date= 18 August 1990 |page= 12 |access-date= 3 November 2020 |url= https://worldradiohistory.com/UK/Music-and-Media/90s/1990/MM-1990-08-18.pdf}} David Giles from Music Week described it as a "glorious ballad that ranks alongside "Careless Whisper" and "A Different Corner" as one of the best things he's ever written." He added, "This has distinct shades of Lennon circa 1975".{{cite magazine|first= David |last= Giles |title= Singles |magazine= Music Week |date= 18 August 1990 |page= 25 |access-date= 31 October 2020 |url= https://worldradiohistory.com/UK/Music-Week/1990/MW-1990-08-18.pdf}} Victoria Segal from NME called it a "splendidly melodramatic breath of apocalypse".{{cite web|first= Victoria |last= Segal |title= GEORGE MICHAEL – Ladies And Gentlemen - The Best Of George Michael |url= http://www.nme.com/reviews/reviews/19981006103726reviews.html |work= NME |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20000817211528/http://www.nme.com/reviews/reviews/19981006103726reviews.html |access-date= 24 November 2020|archive-date= 17 August 2000 }} A reviewer from People magazine commented, "Set to a somber Lennonesque arrangement (unfortunately, that’s Julian, not John), the song murkily bemoans our troubled, faithless times." The reviewer also complimented Michael's "talents for writing, singing, arranging and producing".{{cite magazine|url= https://people.com/archive/picks-and-pans-review-listen-without-prejudice-vol-1-vol-34-no-14/ |title= Picks and Pans Review: Listen Without Prejudice Vol 1. |magazine= People |date= 8 October 1990 |access-date= 13 November 2020}} James Hunter of Rolling Stone described the song as "a distraught look at the world's astounding woundedness. Michael offers the healing passage of time as the only balm for physical and emotional hunger, poverty, hypocrisy and hatred."{{cite magazine|first=James|last=Hunter|url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/albumreviews/listen-without-prejudice-vol-1-19901004|title=Listen Without Prejudice Vol. 1|magazine=Rolling Stone}}
During the Symphonica Tour in 2011–12, Michael performed the song with slightly different lyrics:
:I sang 20 years and a day
:But nothing changed
:The human race found some other god
:And walked into the flame
Music video
While Michael refused to appear in videos to support the album, an experimental video clip directed by Michael Borofsky was released for "Praying for Time", featuring only the lyrics of the song with a blue and black background that, at the end of the clip, reveals itself to be the image on the cover of the album. Some of the written lyrics featured in the video are slightly animated:
- The lines "The rich declare themselves poor", and "And the wounded skies above" have a shimmering quality, as if written on water.
- The lines "I guess somewhere along the way", "he must have let us out to play", and, at the start of the second verse, "These are the days of the empty hand", unroll themselves on the screen, as if written on a ribbon.
- The single words forming the line "'cause God's stopped keeping score" appear on screen one at a time, in sync with the vocals, on both occurrences of that line.
- In the second chorus, the words "love", "hate" and "hope", respectively at the end of the lines "It's hard to love", "There's so much to hate" and "Hanging on to hope", are all left literally hanging on the screen, fading out a few instants later after the other words in the respective lines have faded out.
- The two occurrences of the line "when there is no hope to speak of", one in each chorus, feature different treatments of the word "hope". In the first chorus, the line appears without the word "hope", which flashes briefly on screen when it is sung; in the second chorus, the word does not appear at all and the line is shown with a gap (i.e. "when there is no ____ to speak of"). Similarly, in the line "This is the year of the guilty man", the word "guilty" flashes on screen only when it is actually sung.
The video quickly became a buzz clip on MTV, and stayed in rotation on most video networks for weeks. Similarly, the commercial single had no cover photo, only words. Some have speculated that the style of the video was influenced by Prince's similar promo clip for "Sign o' the Times" released three years previously.
After Michael's temporary move to Virgin in 1996, Sony Music re-made the video in a simplified CGI version, with a uniform black/grey background and no animations at all. This is the one most commonly available as of 2017, and as such it was released in the 2017 Deluxe Edition of the Listen Without Prejudice Vol. 1 album.
An alternate music video for this song has also been released, with Michael actually seen recording and performing the lyrics.
Track listings
- 7-inch: Epic / GEO 1 (UK)
- "Praying for Time" – 4:40
- "If You Were My Woman" (live at Wembley Stadium, 11 Jun '88) – 4:05
Also available on MC (Epic / GEO M1), 12" (Epic / GEO T1) and CD (Epic / CD GEO 1)
- CD: Epic / GEO C1 (UK; limited edition)
- "Praying for Time" – 4:40
- "If You Were My Woman" (live at Wembley Stadium, 11 Jun '88) – 4:05
- "Waiting" (reprise) – 2:27
- Cassette, 7-inch and CD: Columbia 73512 (US)
- "Praying for Time" – 4:40
- "If You Were My Woman" (live at Wembley Stadium, 11 Jun '88) – 4:05
Charts
{{col-begin}}
{{col-2}}
=Weekly charts=
{{col-2}}
=Year-end charts=
=Decade-end charts=
class="wikitable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center"
|+Decade-end chart performance for "Praying for Time" ! scope="col"| Chart (1990–1999) ! scope="col"| Position |
scope="row"| Canada (Nielsen SoundScan){{cite web|url=http://www.jamshowbiz.com/JamMusicCharts/100_1990.html|title=Top 100 singles of the 1990s|last=Lwin|first=Nanda|publisher=Jam!|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20000829070927/http://www.jamshowbiz.com/JamMusicCharts/100_1990.html|archive-date=29 August 2000|access-date=26 March 2022}}
| 98 |
---|
{{col-end}}
Certifications
{{Certification Table Top|caption=Certifications and sales for "Praying for Time"}}
{{Certification Table Entry|region=United Kingdom|type=single|artist=George Michael|title=Praying for Time|award=Silver|relyear=2011|certyear=2022|id=18468-1018-1|access-date=28 October 2022}}
{{Certification Table Bottom|nosales=true|noshipments=true|streaming=true}}
''American Idol''
{{Infobox song
| name = Praying for Time
| cover =
| alt =
| type = single
| artist = Carrie Underwood
| album =
| released = 9 April 2008
| recorded = 9 April 2008
| venue = Kodak Theatre, Hollywood, California
| genre = {{hlist|Country pop|gospel}}
| length = 3:31
| label = Arista Nashville
| writer = George Michael
| producer =
| prev_title = Last Name
| prev_year = 2008
| next_title = Just a Dream
| next_year = 2008
}}
The song was performed by Carrie Underwood for the 2008 Idol Gives Back mini-marathon on 9 April 2008. In a matter of 24 hours, Underwood's rendition of "Praying for Time" reached number 10 on the Hot Digital Songs chart, with all proceeds being donated to charity.{{which |date=January 2017 }} It also peaked at number 27 on the US Billboard Hot 100 on the week of 26 April 2008. George Michael performed the song during the 2008 American Idol finale on 21 May 2008.
{{Clear}}
See also
References
{{Reflist}}
{{George Michael singles}}
{{Authority control}}
Category:Carrie Underwood songs
Category:Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles
Category:Cashbox number-one singles
Category:RPM Top Singles number-one singles
Category:Songs written by George Michael
Category:Song recordings produced by George Michael
Category:Songs about John Lennon
Category:Songs about Martin Luther King Jr.