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Reply #1230 posted 12/11/10 12:30pm

paisleypark4

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Militant said:

BabyBeMine said:

Awesome job man and much appreciated. I was hoping Sony used Michaels vocals on this particular version.

So was I, although I do like the new version too. I'm gonna try and finish this over the next few days when I have a bit more free time, cos unless MJ's original version leaks any time soon, this will have to suffice.

I really wish they would release original versions of songs as well as remixes.

THANK YOU so much for that....I knew something was kind of off about that song. He sound like his young self over a recent beat...almost not fitting anywhere in a timeframe. I thought the original music was a little louder than his vocals, but I have some crappy headphones to listen to it on my computer, but I thought you did a damn good job!11

Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records.
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Reply #1231 posted 12/11/10 12:59pm

ali23

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Michael and Celine

Céline Lavail first crossed Michael Jackson’s path in 1996 while the superstar was staying in Monte Carlo, but it was only two years later that Michael, particularly touched by one of her creations, commissioned a first piece for his private collection. This was the beginning of a collaboration that gave birth to several commissioned portraits of the star : "Peter Pan", "Inspiration", "Archangel", "Allegory" and "Scared of the Moon".

"Mad Hatter", the very last piece produced for Michael Jackson that was meant to be delivered to him during the Summer of 2009 will be auctioned in early 2010 within the frame of "The Official Michael Jackson Opus" charity auctions.

Most of the pieces that Céline Lavail created for Michael Jackson are featured in the luxurious publication "The Official Michael Jackson Opus" (Kraken Opus Ed.). The Opus features tributes to the star by those who new him best, worked with him and those inspired by his work including Reverend Jesse Jackson, Quincy Jones, Berry Gordy, Smokey Robinson, Shaquille O’Neal, Paula Abdul, John Landis, Sugar Ray Leonard, Jimmy Jam, Spike Lee, Teddy Riley, Jane Fonda and many more.

"The Official Michael Jackson Opus" website : http://www.michaeljacksonopus.com


The Official Michael Jackson Opus


Celine's story

"I was only 17 years old when I first met Michael Jackson. It was 1996 and he was staying in Monte Carlo for a few days. I’d always been a fan of his music and I’d heard he was also a massive art lover. At that time I used to draw and sketch a lot as a hobby. My plan was to go to his hotel and give some of my pictures to his security staff in the hope that they would reach him in some way. When I got there with the pictures, the security guards handed them to a member of his staff.

Amazingly, I was told that Michael wanted to see me. I couldn’t believe it. I was shaking. Thank god I had the drawings — if the worst came to the worst, I could always hide behind them. Suddenly I was being ushered up to his suite, by now terrified. As I entered the room — surrounded by his aides, people in suits — Michael was just standing there, welcoming me with a big smile. That relaxed me a little, but I knew things would be difficult because my English was not so good. I lived in Perpignan in France at the time, a town near the Spanish border, but I had only learned some of the language at school. “I’ve done something for you,” I said. He stared at my pictures. I’d brought five or six sketches, they were rough but I was pleased with them. “You study art?” he said. I told him that I didn’t and this caused the most unusual reaction: he started clapping. “You’ve got a gift,” he said. “It comes from God, you have to cherish this gift and feed it. Please keep on creating, I want to see more.” I felt proud and embarrassed at the same time. It was such a surreal experience. As I walked out of the suite, one member of his staff handed me a piece of paper. On it was the name of Michael’s assistant with a telephone number. I was told that “Mr Jackson would love to see more art,” and I walked away from the hotel, my head spinning, lost for words.

Almost immediately, I started sending sketches to Los Angeles without knowing exactly if they would eventually end up in Michael’s hands. I soon found out that they were getting through: I would sometimes get feedback from him or suggestions. I would ask Michael for hints. I wanted to know what I should work on and his answers varied from a single word like “royalty”, or a very precise scene he wanted to see. Most of all, he said, he wanted me to pull from my guts and be creative. He even called one day. The phone rang and a voice enquired, “Celine?” I recognised him straightaway, but I couldn’t believe it. Michael Jackson, the man who made Thriller, the dancer who moonwalked at the Motown 25 show, had called me. Still it was hard to match that person to the voice because he was so humble and normal. I had sent him some sketches of Peter Pan and he told me he loved them. I’d been drawing other Disney characters for him, but he told me to be “more creative.”

“You’ve got imagination, I know it,” he said. “Do something that has never been done before.”

He told me several times to study and to be inspired by the great artists. I was astonished when I realised how knowledgeable he was when it came to classic art. He told me about Michelangelo, Delacroix, Leonardo Da Vinci and Nicolas Poussin. We talked about modern popular illustrators such as Norman Rockwell or Scott Gustafson. In his hotel room there were often piles of art books. He was very fond of the figurative style and enjoyed everything related to fantasy. Following his advice I paced up and down most of Paris’ museums, staring at the work of all the greatest masters and worked hard to improve my craft.

By 1999, I decided it was time to show Michael the new piece I’d been working on: a portrait of him as Peter Pan. I knew he would love it, he was so fond of the Disney character. He was staying at the Ritz in Paris so I arranged a visit. When he saw the picture, he opened his eyes wide and hugged me really hard. “I love Peter Pan,” he laughed. “I am Peter Pan!”. That wasn’t all. Michael was about to commission an artwork from me. He pointed to the delicate mouldings on the walls that represented cherubs and softly explained the exact scene he had in mind: “Babies are adoring me with love and affection, which represent peace, love and harmony of all races,” he said. This artwork would later be named Inspiration.

During the creative process of this piece I occasionally received instructions from Michael’s part, asking me to add or remove details in the composition. In the picture, Michael is pictured reaching for the finger of a cherub who is Prince, his first son. When he finally found out about this “detail” he seemed happy. He believed I’d been inspired by Michelangelo’s Creation Of Adam. At first, this painting was hung in Neverland. Later it would be reproduced on the carts that were used to drive around the ranch, though I don’t know where they are now. Overall, I think he had five paintings of mine, plus a jacket I made for him and a book.

Looking back, one moment summed up our collaboration. I remember that Michael loved the fact that Michelangelo — one of his favourite artists — had inspired generations of others. His great achievements were still widely acknowledged centuries after his death. One day, I had a very interesting discussion with him about the power of art and the way it can transcend life, space and races. At the end of our meeting, Michael handed me a piece of paper. On it was written, “I know the creator will go, but his work survives, that is why to escape death I attempt to bind my soul to my work.” He looked at me. “Michelangelo said this,” he explained, though in hindsight, it’s probably a perfect way with which to describe Michael Jackson’s life".
YOU DON'T NEED A BUS PASS FOR ME TO BUS YOUR ASS,NIGGA !
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Reply #1232 posted 12/11/10 1:04pm

ViintageJunkii
e

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seeingvoices12 said:

Mcclain's hands should be broken for trying to destroy some classics , He is a horrible producer..... I hate the accordion he added on Much too soon...doesn't fit with the song at all...

LMFAOOO!

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Reply #1233 posted 12/11/10 1:22pm

Marrk

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ali23 said:

Michael and Celine

Céline Lavail first crossed Michael Jackson’s path in 1996 while the superstar was staying in Monte Carlo, but it was only two years later that Michael, particularly touched by one of her creations, commissioned a first piece for his private collection. This was the beginning of a collaboration that gave birth to several commissioned portraits of the star : "Peter Pan", "Inspiration", "Archangel", "Allegory" and "Scared of the Moon".

"Mad Hatter", the very last piece produced for Michael Jackson that was meant to be delivered to him during the Summer of 2009 will be auctioned in early 2010 within the frame of "The Official Michael Jackson Opus" charity auctions.

Most of the pieces that Céline Lavail created for Michael Jackson are featured in the luxurious publication "The Official Michael Jackson Opus" (Kraken Opus Ed.). The Opus features tributes to the star by those who new him best, worked with him and those inspired by his work including Reverend Jesse Jackson, Quincy Jones, Berry Gordy, Smokey Robinson, Shaquille O’Neal, Paula Abdul, John Landis, Sugar Ray Leonard, Jimmy Jam, Spike Lee, Teddy Riley, Jane Fonda and many more.

"The Official Michael Jackson Opus" website : http://www.michaeljacksonopus.com


The Official Michael Jackson Opus


Celine's story

"I was only 17 years old when I first met Michael Jackson. It was 1996 and he was staying in Monte Carlo for a few days. I’d always been a fan of his music and I’d heard he was also a massive art lover. At that time I used to draw and sketch a lot as a hobby. My plan was to go to his hotel and give some of my pictures to his security staff in the hope that they would reach him in some way. When I got there with the pictures, the security guards handed them to a member of his staff.

Amazingly, I was told that Michael wanted to see me. I couldn’t believe it. I was shaking. Thank god I had the drawings — if the worst came to the worst, I could always hide behind them. Suddenly I was being ushered up to his suite, by now terrified. As I entered the room — surrounded by his aides, people in suits — Michael was just standing there, welcoming me with a big smile. That relaxed me a little, but I knew things would be difficult because my English was not so good. I lived in Perpignan in France at the time, a town near the Spanish border, but I had only learned some of the language at school. “I’ve done something for you,” I said. He stared at my pictures. I’d brought five or six sketches, they were rough but I was pleased with them. “You study art?” he said. I told him that I didn’t and this caused the most unusual reaction: he started clapping. “You’ve got a gift,” he said. “It comes from God, you have to cherish this gift and feed it. Please keep on creating, I want to see more.” I felt proud and embarrassed at the same time. It was such a surreal experience. As I walked out of the suite, one member of his staff handed me a piece of paper. On it was the name of Michael’s assistant with a telephone number. I was told that “Mr Jackson would love to see more art,” and I walked away from the hotel, my head spinning, lost for words.

Almost immediately, I started sending sketches to Los Angeles without knowing exactly if they would eventually end up in Michael’s hands. I soon found out that they were getting through: I would sometimes get feedback from him or suggestions. I would ask Michael for hints. I wanted to know what I should work on and his answers varied from a single word like “royalty”, or a very precise scene he wanted to see. Most of all, he said, he wanted me to pull from my guts and be creative. He even called one day. The phone rang and a voice enquired, “Celine?” I recognised him straightaway, but I couldn’t believe it. Michael Jackson, the man who made Thriller, the dancer who moonwalked at the Motown 25 show, had called me. Still it was hard to match that person to the voice because he was so humble and normal. I had sent him some sketches of Peter Pan and he told me he loved them. I’d been drawing other Disney characters for him, but he told me to be “more creative.”

“You’ve got imagination, I know it,” he said. “Do something that has never been done before.”

He told me several times to study and to be inspired by the great artists. I was astonished when I realised how knowledgeable he was when it came to classic art. He told me about Michelangelo, Delacroix, Leonardo Da Vinci and Nicolas Poussin. We talked about modern popular illustrators such as Norman Rockwell or Scott Gustafson. In his hotel room there were often piles of art books. He was very fond of the figurative style and enjoyed everything related to fantasy. Following his advice I paced up and down most of Paris’ museums, staring at the work of all the greatest masters and worked hard to improve my craft.

By 1999, I decided it was time to show Michael the new piece I’d been working on: a portrait of him as Peter Pan. I knew he would love it, he was so fond of the Disney character. He was staying at the Ritz in Paris so I arranged a visit. When he saw the picture, he opened his eyes wide and hugged me really hard. “I love Peter Pan,” he laughed. “I am Peter Pan!”. That wasn’t all. Michael was about to commission an artwork from me. He pointed to the delicate mouldings on the walls that represented cherubs and softly explained the exact scene he had in mind: “Babies are adoring me with love and affection, which represent peace, love and harmony of all races,” he said. This artwork would later be named Inspiration.

During the creative process of this piece I occasionally received instructions from Michael’s part, asking me to add or remove details in the composition. In the picture, Michael is pictured reaching for the finger of a cherub who is Prince, his first son. When he finally found out about this “detail” he seemed happy. He believed I’d been inspired by Michelangelo’s Creation Of Adam. At first, this painting was hung in Neverland. Later it would be reproduced on the carts that were used to drive around the ranch, though I don’t know where they are now. Overall, I think he had five paintings of mine, plus a jacket I made for him and a book.

Looking back, one moment summed up our collaboration. I remember that Michael loved the fact that Michelangelo — one of his favourite artists — had inspired generations of others. His great achievements were still widely acknowledged centuries after his death. One day, I had a very interesting discussion with him about the power of art and the way it can transcend life, space and races. At the end of our meeting, Michael handed me a piece of paper. On it was written, “I know the creator will go, but his work survives, that is why to escape death I attempt to bind my soul to my work.” He looked at me. “Michelangelo said this,” he explained, though in hindsight, it’s probably a perfect way with which to describe Michael Jackson’s life".

I'd heard the 'bind my soul' quote before, but really, just wow.

He slways made time for his fans and admirers. Never turned down photos and autographs. Top bloke all round.

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Reply #1234 posted 12/11/10 1:28pm

bboy87

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seeingvoices12 said:

Mcclain's hands should be broken for trying to destroy some classics , He is a horrible producer..... I hate the accordion he added on Much too soon...doesn't fit with the song at all...

Whoa! I gotta disagree with you on that SV. I think he did a pretty good job on Much Too Soon and Behind The Mask. It made me wonder how his mixes of the other songs sounded

"We may deify or demonize them but not ignore them. And we call them genius, because they are the people who change the world."
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Reply #1235 posted 12/11/10 1:29pm

ali23

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Ahh,time for this weeks installment of

"Silly hoes,Jackie O. Edition"

When Jackie Met Jackson

by William Kuhn Info

Only one thing could bring together the former first lady and reigning pop star: books. William Kuhn on the story of how Jackie, a book editor at Doubleday, got Jackson to write Moonwalk—and how he almost killed the whole deal.

“They both actually talked the same,” remembered Rolling Stone publisher Jann Wenner. Michael Jackson talked “in that same breathy voice” Jackie sometimes used. Nevertheless, it wasn’t Jackson’s idea to approach Jackie about editing his autobiography, which became Moonwalk in 1988. Nor was it the sort of project Jackie would have proposed to do on her own. Bill Barry remembered of the Jackson autobiography that Jackie “took one for the home team”; the book for her was “an exercise in pure for-profit responsibility” and one that he “suspected she came to regret.” The journalist Hillel Italie described the book as the “classic celebrity project,” because it wasn’t written or conceived by Jackson himself. Rather, it was an idea that originated at Doubleday, and Jackie agreed to sponsor it. One of the unspoken expectations at Doubleday was that the publisher might support the more speculative books that she was passionate about if every once in a while she agreed to go after a commercial book that might generate significant profit.

In the mid-1980s, Jackie and [her editorial assistant] Shaye Areheart flew out to Encino, California, in order to meet Jackson, something she rarely did for her authors. Those who weren’t already based in New York usually flew there to meet her. Areheart tells one version of this meeting and the sub­sequent writing of Jackson’s book in the new edition of Moonwalk, rushed out in 2009 after Jackson’s unexpected death.

According to Areheart, Jackie and Jackson got along well. Jackie was present at the initial meeting with Jackson in Encino in 1983, but it was Areheart who had to follow up when the project got messy. At the first meeting Jackson took Areheart and Jackie to his trailer adjacent to the studio where he was making the music video for his song “Thriller,” and there they talked about what the book might look like. Jackson proposed a kind of picture book with text, and both Doubleday editors were willing to entertain that as an idea. It was in his trailer that Jackson asked Jackie to write the foreword and she agreed. She also wanted something unusual from him, though: to reveal something important about a life lived in the spotlight. Areheart noticed that he was enthusiastic about setting the record straight when so many false things had been written about him but that he also felt some conflict. Some things he wanted to stay private.

Areheart found that writing the book was less interesting to him than making music, and that delayed the book’s appearance. When the first writer who was assigned to the project didn’t work out, Areheart got more actively involved. She flew to California with a tape recorder to record Jackson’s responses to her questions about his life and career. She had a full-time job in New York, however, and eventually handed off her material to a second writer, Stephen Davis, who had written books on Bob Marley and Led Zeppelin. He took the recorded material and shaped it into a narrative. At this point Jackson was on tour in Asia and Areheart had to fly to Australia to get his approval of the text. He didn’t want to read it, so she read it to him, line by line, for two weeks in 1987, making notes of his changes. They could work only on the nights when he wasn’t performing, and they would sit on his bed, Areheart in a pair of jeans and Jackson in red silk pajamas, going over the manu­script.

Article - Kuhn Jackie O

“How the hell did I get [to be] doing a book on Michael Jackson? I’m still trying to think of why,” [Jackie’s] voice says on the tape.

When they were finished, and after Areheart had flown to Los Angeles so Jackson could approve Doubleday’s plans for promotion, Jackson decided that he didn’t want the book published after all. After all the expense of time and production—the book was ready at that point to go to the printer—the people at Doubleday were shocked. Areheart thought this about-face happened because Jackson suddenly felt “terribly exposed,” in a way he had never done before. Eventually, after some high-level persuading, he relented, and Moonwalk immediately went to first place on The New York Times bestseller list, as well as else­where around the world.

Jackie’s colleagues remembered different dimensions of the story. Areheart herself told one literary agent that dealing with Jackson was “a huge nightmare, just a lot of Sturm und Drang.” J. C. Suarès, the designer hired from outside Doubleday to work on the book, was present at Jackie and Areheart’s second meeting with Jackson in California, when they showed Jackson some layout ideas. Even before Jackie went to California, Suarès’ answering machine recorded a fragment of her dismay at being involved in the project. “How the hell did I get [to be] doing a book on Michael Jackson? I’m still trying to think of why,” her voice says on the tape. “Someone must have told me to go and do it.” Suarès remembered the Encino meeting as a bizarre occasion. He, Jackie, and Areheart had arrived at Jackson’s house and been seated at a long table. Jackie was at one end. At the other was an empty spot for Jackson. He was late. It was not enough that Jackie had flown out to meet him; he had to show his superior star power by being the last to arrive. On the plane back to New York, Jackie asked Suarès, “Do you think he likes girls?” and she went back to the subject several times while they were working together. The star’s studied ambiguity on the question made them curious.

Jackie told Edward Kasinec, whom she sometimes met over a sandwich and a can of V8 juice when she went to work quietly at the New York Public Library on days when the library wasn’t open to the public, “Michael Jackson is driving me mad with his phone calls.”

Jackson would make lengthy calls to her house on Martha’s Vineyard to complain about something he was sure she would understand: the burdens of fame. She didn’t want to talk about that. Few of her authors remember her ever being willing to discuss it, except by mistake or in passing. She refused to entertain it as a topic of discussion, although she listened politely to the singer’s complaints.

When a first draft of the book arrived, it was much shorter than everyone had anticipated. Nancy Tuckerman recalled experimenting with the old college student trick of double-or triple-spacing it so it would come out at a respectable length. Suarès described it as “all puff and no substance.” Jackie called Jann Wenner and asked him what she should do. “The book she thought she was getting,” said Wenner, “was an autobiography. Michael was not going to provide anything like that. He was not going to write it, let alone speak it. He wanted to provide a photo book of how wonderful he was. His idea of a good photograph book was him receiving this award or that award. It wouldn’t even have been a good photo book, because it was going to be his personal achieve­ment scrapbook.”

Book Cover - Reading JackieReading Jackie: Her Autobiography in Books By William Kuhn 368 pages. Nan A. Talese/Doubleday. $27.95. After thinking long and hard about it, Jackie decided to reject Jackson’s manuscript. “But she didn’t want to upset Michael,” recalled Suarès. “She gave him an ultimatum in a calm, firm voice. She instructed him to open up and give the reader a sincere show of feeling—about growing up black in show business, for example.” She finished by telling him that if the book was only public-relations or promotional material, “we’d all be made fools of.” Suarès said that Jackie’s performance was vintage Bette Davis. Jackie loved that, but it wasn’t the end of the troubles for the book.

Alberto Vitale, who was then the CEO of the holding company, Bantam Doubleday Dell, into which Doubleday had been merged, reported that it was nearly impossible to pin down Jackson when he needed to give final approval to his manuscript. “He was like a moving target,” and that’s why Vitale approved spending the money to fly Areheart out to see Jackson in Australia. When Jackson wanted to back out of his contract with Doubleday, Vitale and the head of Doubleday, Nancy Evans, had to meet with him in New York in order to per­suade him to stay in. It was a civilized meeting, but Vitale thought the people surrounding Jackson were not necessarily helpful. Jackson ultimately abided by his contract, but Vitale remembered publishing the book as an exasperating experience. The fact that no paperback followed the hardback was a testament to the bad blood between Jackson and the publisher.

Jackson discussed his fame in several lines of his finished manuscript. He said that he had tried to “shun personal publicity and keep a low profile as much as possible.” This was the only way he could sur­vive, he said. “The price of fame can be a heavy one,” he continued. “Is the price you pay worth it?” He admitted to being obsessed with privacy. He said that the dark glasses and the surgical mask he often wore were his ways of taking a break from having everyone look at him. In the final version, he wrote, “My dating and relationships with girls have not had the happy endings I’ve been looking for. Something always seems to get in the way.” Reading this, a music critic for The New York Times observed that Moonwalk was “eccentric, contradictory and helplessly revealing.” Jackson was “a master of deadpan banality” who had given out “significant information between the lines of psy­chobabble.”

Ultimately, what Jackie disliked about celebrity was the cheapness of it, its transience, the fact that it so often lacked substance, that she could be lumped into a category with Michael Jackson on the basis of fame alone. What gave her greater satisfaction was to think about the way something small and light and impermanent, like a singer’s fame or her own, could be transformed into something bigger, heavier, and riper with potential significance. That was the subject that Bill Moyers investigated with Joseph Campbell in The Power of Myth, which came out in the same year as Moonwalk. It was a bestseller too, and understandably gave her a lot more pride than the Jackson book.

This excerpt is taken from Reading Jackie by William Kuhn, Copyright 2010. Reprinted with permission from Nan A. Talese/Doubleday.

YOU DON'T NEED A BUS PASS FOR ME TO BUS YOUR ASS,NIGGA !
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Reply #1236 posted 12/11/10 1:42pm

babybugz

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Swa said:

babybugz said:

Guys which songs aren’t him again I’m hearing Michael on most of this album not finish listening though. Best of joy is good. Smh at anybody who think this album is better than invincible though. The guy at the cd store near me selling it early lol

If you have to ask which songs aren't him - then maybe you have your answer there in your question. At the end of the day until proof comes that satisfies us one way or the other it comes down to what you hear. If you hear MJ then enjoy it. If you don't, then skip it and enjoy it where you do.

I just ask calm down smh and I already heard it . The album is crap except for Best of Joy . *back to listening to Forever Michael*

[Edited 12/11/10 13:43pm]

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Reply #1237 posted 12/11/10 1:46pm

babybugz

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Timmy84 said:

Marrk said:

And yet i listen to it alot. i..umm.. kinda like it. boxed

I used to be in love with him lol , I miss him on wrestling.

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Reply #1238 posted 12/11/10 1:57pm

seeingvoices12

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bboy87 said:

seeingvoices12 said:

Mcclain's hands should be broken for trying to destroy some classics , He is a horrible producer..... I hate the accordion he added on Much too soon...doesn't fit with the song at all...

Whoa! I gotta disagree with you on that SV. I think he did a pretty good job on Much Too Soon and Behind The Mask. It made me wonder how his mixes of the other songs sounded

NO confused
MICHAEL JACKSON
R.I.P
مايكل جاكسون للأبد
1958
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Reply #1239 posted 12/11/10 2:02pm

babybugz

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seeingvoices12 said:

bboy87 said:

Whoa! I gotta disagree with you on that SV. I think he did a pretty good job on Much Too Soon and Behind The Mask. It made me wonder how his mixes of the other songs sounded

NO confused

lol

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Reply #1240 posted 12/11/10 2:04pm

bigd74

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Militant said:

For the folks that feel the new version of "Behind The Mask" is a little overproduced....

I've attempted to recreate what the original MJ version would have sounded like by filtering out as much of the music from the new version as possible, then blending it with the instrumental of Greg Phillinganes 1985 version, taken from the official vinyl release of the single.

It's still a work in progress and I wasn't able to make a full acapella from the new version, so it's kinda messy, but I did what I could.

I've posted a clip for you guys here:

http://soundcloud.com/s-e...e-mix-clip

Let me know what you think. If you guys dig it I can try and finish it.

Bravo! awesome stuff.

cool

She Believed in Fairytales and Princes, He Believed the voices coming from his stereo

If I Said You Had A Beautiful Body Would You Hold It Against Me?
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Reply #1241 posted 12/11/10 2:06pm

bboy87

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Militant said:

seeingvoices12 said:

Maybe Militant can answer if sony has full access to MJ's unreleased vault and can use any song from it?

I actually do have some experience in this area due to my association with the Shakur estate and Tupac's unreleased material.

Here's the deal. Legally - the Estate own the rights to all unreleased work. However, that doesn't mean they physically own it and are able to release it. In order to have something to work with, the Estate need one of the following for every unreleased song, in order of preference:

1. Full multi-track masters (IE, every vocal track and instrument track individually)

2. 2-track master tapes (music on one track, vocals on another)

3. Isolated vocal track.

Now what's important is that we have absolutely NO idea how many songs the Estate does have the masters for. I'm going to go out on a limb and say they don't have many. Why? Because we already saw a report that specifically stated "John McClain was calling around producers to try and find songs".

Michael obviously had master copies of a lot of unreleased songs, but who knows what happened to them? He moved around a lot, some probably got misplaced or damaged. Perhaps he even had some in private storage and nobody has yet found where they were stored. Neverland was emptied after he stopped living there, but he obviously didn't take all his belongings to the Holmby Hills house because he was only renting it. Obviously he didn't take things to Bahrain, Ireland or Vegas because he wasn't in any of those places for any amount of time. Remember how there were reports of MJ's belongings being stolen? Remember how some of those private businessmen had roomfuls of MJ's belongings and were going to auction some of them because at some point MJ had owed money and stuff had been repossessed? No doubt some master copies of songs were among that stuff and are probably collecting dust somewhere.

It's certainly possible that he stored some at the family home in Hayvenhurst. Hell, most people store shit at their family home if they move around a lot. But ask yourself this - who would know if he did? Katherine's not going to spend time rooting through the attic looking through MJ's belongings. And if any of the family DID know - would they give them to the Estate? Probably not, because they're upset that they don't have any control over what the Estate does.

Who else would have access to masters and multitracks? The producers who produced the songs in question. Now here's the thing with that - they don't have to hand over what they have either. They can claim they don't have them - the Estate aren't going to literally raid people's studios, are they? Why wouldn't they hand them over? Maybe because they don't want things they worked on remixed to fuck and bastardized.

This exact scenario happened with Tupac. My friend Quincy "QD3" Jones III, had a song he had done with Tupac called "Soon As I Get Home" that had leaked online in approximately '98 or so. Not too long after 'Pac died. But he always said that he had lost the masters to that song so it was never released. Tupac's estate were remixing the fuck out of everything they were releasing (tastefully in some cases, not so in others), and then, in 2006, in the last few weeks of the Estate working on the "Pac's Life" album, QD3 "just so happened" to discover the master "in a closet" lol lol lol

The Estate, knowing how much fans loved this song rushed to put it on that album. And it was the ONLY song that was on that album that had not been remixed. It appeared in it's original form but in perfect quality. I've never asked Quincy directly, but I've always wondered perhaps he knew where it was the whole time but didn't want to see such a good song get remixed and ruined.

There's also situations where it might be a hassle for people to dig out stuff they have and so they just haven't gotten around to it. For example, Barry Gibb of the Bee Gees has at least 4 unreleased songs with Michael. He's a busy man, still touring, and I doubt he's in any hurry to dig out the masters of those songs from wherever they're stored. Not like he needs the money. And again, people such as him might want to finish these songs themselves if they were unfinished - if they just hand shit over to the Estate then they might not be given that opportunity even though it's their song as well.

Then you've got things like "Victory" and "There Must Be More To Life Than This".... two people worked on these songs, Michael and Freddie Mercury, and neither of them are here any more. The people maintaining Freddie's estate probably aren't gonna go digging around his belongings for the masters of these, either.

I'm sure most of you have seen the lists of unreleased songs that myself and bboy amongst others have posted. There's NO shortage of unreleased material that exists. So why is McClain having to call around producers looking for songs, and why is he having to resort to this bullshit Cascio fakery, and songs that have already been released like "The Way That You Love Me"?

The only logical reason is that, as I suggested, he simply doesn't physically have the masters of most of these unreleased songs. Some will turn up, given time. Others may not. It's all up to the individuals who have them. If they need the money, they'll sell 'em to the Estate. Others won't.

I remember hearing Michael said he kept much of his unreleased songs and masters in a vault or storage room at MJJ Productions

He registered these tracks with Library of Congress

Slipped Away (written by Michael and Marlon) (1980)
Who Do You Know? (written by Michael) (1981)
Happy Birthday, Lisa (written by Michael) (1991)
Hot Fever (written by Michael) (1985)
Dirty Diana (written by Michael) (1985)
Smooth Criminal (written by Michael) (1985)
Tomboy (written by Michael) (1985)
What You Do To Me (written by Michael) (1985)
What You Do To Me (written by Michael) (1998)
Learned My Lesson (written by Michael) (1981)
Much Too Soon (written by Michael) (1981)
Nymphette Lover (written by Michael) (1981)
Ode To Sorrow (written by Michael) (1977)
People Of The World (written by Michael) (1998)
The Price Of Fame (written by Michael) (1986)
Stand Tall (written by Michael) (1982)
Susie (written by Michael) (1978)
Thank Heaven (written by Michael) (1998)
That (written by Michael) (1998)
The Toy (written by Michael) (1981)
Under Your Skin (written by Michael) (1979)
We Are The Ones (written by Michael) (1978)
Somewhere In Time (written by Michael (1980)
Why Can't I Be (written by Michael) (1980)
You Told Me Your Lovin' (written by Randy) (1979)
You Told Me Your Lovin' (written by Michael) (1979)

I also remember seeing Bruce Swedien have tapes in his posession (He showed the ORIGINAL master to Thriller, the one Michael cried about lol )

My belief is that with this album, since they're trying to market it as "Michael's last album", and since some people Michael worked with in his last years weren't so co-operative (Will.I.Am, RedOne) and some may have not fit the flow (Do You Know Where Your Children Are, Slave To The Rhythm, Lovely Ways), they may have felt they had to go with the Cascios. I think we all know if Will had agreed to work on the album, Monster, Breaking News, and Keep Your Head Up wouldn't have been on the album lol

"We may deify or demonize them but not ignore them. And we call them genius, because they are the people who change the world."
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Reply #1242 posted 12/11/10 2:07pm

Marrk

avatar

babybugz said:

Timmy84 said:

I used to be in love with him lol , I miss him on wrestling.

But what's more fake? Wrestling or 'Monster'?

whistling

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Reply #1243 posted 12/11/10 2:22pm

ali23

avatar

Marrk said:

babybugz said:

I used to be in love with him lol , I miss him on wrestling.

But what's more fake? Wrestling or 'Monster'?

whistling

Monster!

As staged as wrestling maybe,i'm pretty sure that shit can hurt!Pain is pain.

[Edited 12/11/10 14:22pm]

YOU DON'T NEED A BUS PASS FOR ME TO BUS YOUR ASS,NIGGA !
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Reply #1244 posted 12/11/10 2:35pm

babybugz

avatar

Marrk said:

babybugz said:

I used to be in love with him lol , I miss him on wrestling.

But what's more fake? Wrestling or 'Monster'?

whistling

I'm seeing alot of people loving Monster.

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Reply #1245 posted 12/11/10 2:42pm

seeingvoices12

avatar

As everyone knows I downloaded the album Illegally , destroyed the fraudascios tracks and threw to where they belong "recycle bin trash"

Then created my own album ....The tracklisting in order...

Hollywood tonight

Best of Joy

Blue Gangster

Hold my hold

Do you know where your children are

The way you love me ( The ultimate collection version (nothing beats the original) )

Another day

Behind the Mask (waiting for militant 's version)

Much too soon ( version with no accordion)

The other fake messes don't belong to my collection...

MICHAEL JACKSON
R.I.P
مايكل جاكسون للأبد
1958
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Reply #1246 posted 12/11/10 2:52pm

babybugz

avatar

seeingvoices12 said:

As everyone knows I downloaded the album Illegally , destroyed the fraudascios tracks and threw to where they belong "recycle bin trash"

Then created my own album ....The tracklisting in order...

Hollywood tonight

Best of Joy

Blue Gangster

Hold my hold

Do you know where your children are

The way you love me ( The ultimate collection version (nothing beats the original) )

Another day

Behind the Mask (waiting for militant 's version)

Much too soon ( version with no accordion)

The other fake messes don't belong to my collection...

That's it.

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Reply #1247 posted 12/11/10 3:06pm

paisleypark4

avatar

seeingvoices12 said:

As everyone knows I downloaded the album Illegally , destroyed the fraudascios tracks and threw to where they belong "recycle bin trash"

Then created my own album ....The tracklisting in order...

Hollywood tonight

Best of Joy

Blue Gangster

Hold my hold

Do you know where your children are

The way you love me ( The ultimate collection version (nothing beats the original) )

Another day

Behind the Mask (waiting for militant 's version)

Much too soon ( version with no accordion)

The other fake messes don't belong to my collection...

I am not in2 Blue Gangster...looked it up...chile..... omg I thought it was going to be an all MJ song

Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records.
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Reply #1248 posted 12/11/10 3:15pm

seeingvoices12

avatar

paisleypark4 said:

seeingvoices12 said:

As everyone knows I downloaded the album Illegally , destroyed the fraudascios tracks and threw to where they belong "recycle bin trash"

Then created my own album ....The tracklisting in order...

Hollywood tonight

Best of Joy

Blue Gangster

Hold my hold

Do you know where your children are

The way you love me ( The ultimate collection version (nothing beats the original) )

Another day

Behind the Mask (waiting for militant 's version)

Much too soon ( version with no accordion)

The other fake messes don't belong to my collection...

I am not in2 Blue Gangster...looked it up...chile..... omg I thought it was going to be an all MJ song

It's an all mj song eek Entire solo track by MJ and it has leaked ....you Missed something:lol: ?

MICHAEL JACKSON
R.I.P
مايكل جاكسون للأبد
1958
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Reply #1249 posted 12/11/10 3:50pm

Timmy84

paisleypark4 said:

seeingvoices12 said:

As everyone knows I downloaded the album Illegally , destroyed the fraudascios tracks and threw to where they belong "recycle bin trash"

Then created my own album ....The tracklisting in order...

Hollywood tonight

Best of Joy

Blue Gangster

Hold my hold

Do you know where your children are

The way you love me ( The ultimate collection version (nothing beats the original) )

Another day

Behind the Mask (waiting for militant 's version)

Much too soon ( version with no accordion)

The other fake messes don't belong to my collection...

I am not in2 Blue Gangster...looked it up...chile..... omg I thought it was going to be an all MJ song

confused It is. lol

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Reply #1250 posted 12/11/10 3:52pm

Timmy84

^ I know what paisley is referring to now: the Temperamental version. Of course that's not all MJ.

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Reply #1251 posted 12/11/10 4:01pm

Swa

avatar

bboy87 said:

Militant said:

For the folks that feel the new version of "Behind The Mask" is a little overproduced....

I've attempted to recreate what the original MJ version would have sounded like by filtering out as much of the music from the new version as possible, then blending it with the instrumental of Greg Phillinganes 1985 version, taken from the official vinyl release of the single.

It's still a work in progress and I wasn't able to make a full acapella from the new version, so it's kinda messy, but I did what I could.

I've posted a clip for you guys here:

http://soundcloud.com/s-e...e-mix-clip

Let me know what you think. If you guys dig it I can try and finish it.

music

Brilliant job Mil - but wouldn't expect any less.

Now if you can just strip out the stupid unneeded live grabs in the 'Michael' version I might be able to truly love this track than just love it and then go "oh man why did they have to do that".

"I'm not human I'm a dove, I'm ur conscience. I am love"
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Reply #1252 posted 12/11/10 4:04pm

seeingvoices12

avatar

Timmy84 said:

^ I know what paisley is referring to now: the Temperamental version. Of course that's not all MJ.

Yeah, He was referring to messy tempamental version....lol

MICHAEL JACKSON
R.I.P
مايكل جاكسون للأبد
1958
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Reply #1253 posted 12/11/10 4:10pm

Swa

avatar

'Michael' is number 2 on the itunes charts here in Australia since Friday.

Number 1 is Bon Jovi's greatest hits - who are touring the country this week.

I expect MJ to be number one in the next few days, and to within a week be 1 on the Aria Charts (official sales charts for Australia).

"I'm not human I'm a dove, I'm ur conscience. I am love"
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Reply #1254 posted 12/11/10 4:10pm

Swa

avatar

How long before someone does a mash up between MJ and Eric Clapton on behind the mask?

"I'm not human I'm a dove, I'm ur conscience. I am love"
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Reply #1255 posted 12/11/10 4:49pm

bboy87

avatar

I feel had they decided to release a box set (3 or more CDs in one set) of various unreleased tracks, demos, alternate mixes, then they wouldn't have put themselves into a corner IMO

"We may deify or demonize them but not ignore them. And we call them genius, because they are the people who change the world."
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Reply #1256 posted 12/11/10 5:00pm

silverchild

avatar

bboy87 said:

I feel had they decided to release a box set (3 or more CDs in one set) of various unreleased tracks, demos, alternate mixes, then they wouldn't have put themselves into a corner IMO

See now that's what I'm talking about! nod I don't care how long it would've took, it would've been worth the wait.

Check me out and add me on:
www.last.fm/user/brandosoul
"Truth is, everybody is going to hurt you; you just gotta find the ones worth suffering for." -Bob Marley
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Reply #1257 posted 12/11/10 5:19pm

ViintageJunkii
e

avatar

bboy87 said:

I feel had they decided to release a box set (3 or more CDs in one set) of various unreleased tracks, demos, alternate mixes, then they wouldn't have put themselves into a corner IMO

TRUTH!

But if you think about it, do you think we would have been stuck with the Cascio records on the box set?

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Reply #1258 posted 12/11/10 5:34pm

Militant

avatar

moderator

Fuck, this mix is hard. It's like a constant battle between trying to strip out the frequencies of all the drums and percussion without making the vocals too thin in the process....then I end up pushing up the vocals with compressors and the instruments are back LOL.... I cut them out but then everything is too treble-y so I cut some treble frequencies and push up some bass frequencies but then the new bassline comes back.... lol... it's just back and forth, back and forth trying to find a middle ground.

Right now I'm using volume envelopes to push down the album track when the talkbox comes in and immediately push it back up just before Michael's inbetween vocals come in, then drop it out again.... because the talkbox vocals are actually on the instrumental, you see.... there's also some different talkbox lyrics on Michael's version whereas on Greg's version there's just one set..... so I don't know what to do about that bit.

You guys want me to keep the sax solo or cut it completely? It wasn't on the original.

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Reply #1259 posted 12/11/10 5:35pm

babybugz

avatar

You actually think they give us a box set all at once. They are going to keep releasing albums every year so people can spend their money. The want to milk him.

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