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Album
George Best is the debut album by The Wedding Present. It was released in October 1987 by their own record company, Reception Records. After self-releasing five singles on Reception Records label, the band turned to recording their first album, continuing their collaboration with producer Chris Allison, who had produced their previous single, "My Favourite Dress". The album's somewhat tinny sound reflects the low recording budget. David Gedge's songwriting chronicles relationships breaking up or never taking off. A digression is CD bonus track "All About Eve", which is about apartheid, a subject Gedge came into contact with during his childhood in South Africa. Disagreement on production values with Allison led to the album being remixed by the band and engineer, Steve Lyon. The larger part of these conflicts seemed to lie with the personal and musical incompatibility of Allison and drummer Charman. The band sought and received permission to name the album after Northern Irish football legend George Best. Best agreed to appear on promotional shots with the band. The original Reception Records compact disc release added two bonus tracks from the B-side of single "Anyone Can Make a Mistake". All later CD re-releases of George Best, starting with the 1997 re-release by Canadian reissue label Pearls from the Past, added all tracks of 1988 singles "Nobody's Twisting Your Arm" and "Why Are You Being So Reasonable Now?", including a cover of The Beatles' "Getting Better". By the
Everyone Thinks He Looks Daft
The Wedding Present
What Did Your Last Servant Die Of?
The Wedding Present
Don't Be So Hard
The Wedding Present
A Million Miles
The Wedding Present
All This and More
The Wedding Present
My Favourite Dress
The Wedding Present
Shatner
The Wedding Present
Something and Nothing
The Wedding Present
It's What You Want That Matters
The Wedding Present
Give My Love to Kevin
The Wedding Present
Anyone Can Make a Mistake
The Wedding Present
You Can't Moan Can You?
The Wedding Present