The ballads are what made that album. I still dig it. Especially "Break of Dawn" and "Heaven Can Wait". "Don't Walk Away" is another favorite. He sang from his gut on there in some parts. | |
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why can't elvis (presley or costello- or mitchell) be a teacher? if we've found some value in what they've contributed in the world and we've learned something significant from them, i'd say they can be just as effective a teacher as anyone else licensed to do so. to me, teachers are not about hierarchies. the idea of teaching and learning are reciprocal- the best teachers allow room for questioning them.
we all have the ability to be teachers... children indeed are the best teachers.
i happen to consider michael my life's teacher- i learned a whole lot about myself in learning about him. there are many teachings in his art. to me, 'another part of me' is his greatest teaching, which speaks of the universal laws. the thing about a great teacher is that they continue teachings which have resonated for centuries; they just do it their way.
i see no reason for separating yourself from other thinkers who get paid for it. they were in the same position as you. they are no better than you or i. this is why i emphasize a connection with non-professionals on these things. we have to get rid of the social castes in terms of professions. this is another thing which made michael such a great teacher. he was highly competitive, but was indeed humble in many ways. | |
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ya, and I do say those things idealistically, that is to say, if I were to meet Prince, i'd become a 15 year old fan again, no doubt. But experience has taught me that you have to seperate the the art from the artist. Does Springsteen really care about the working Poor? I doubt it but his best art speaks to me. Dylan has always been a bastard but that doesn't stop a lot of people from connecting to his music. And I do wonder if a Marvin, or and Elvis or a Michael was a predestined type of figure, I mean, lots of talent, lots of people, why them, why their meaning? It just seems fated. | |
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I totally know what you mean. I put Stevie Wonder in that category. There's.....something about them, an aura that just radiates love and I wonder why other people don't "get it".
After Michael passed, I wrote something that during the last few years of his life, you saw that he brought the best and the worst in some people and with the worst, it was downright UGLY in some. You can call it whatever you want, but it's definitely something in some people.
I'll never forget the night I went to see This Is It. For someone who in the past got teased and insulted (and had to punk people ) because Michael Jackson was a hero of his, what I saw was surprising to me. I walked in to the theater. I saw black, white, samoan, asian, latino, young, and old... I saw a terminally ill woman who wheeled in an oxygen tank with her and sat in the front row. People were dancing in the aisles, singing along... a beautiful atmosphere. I've never seen that before and I sat back and simply smiled "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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i prefer the ballads in michael's catalog overall... i also prefer the political/message songs over the romantic/sexual songs. but for some reason, i didn't mind the fact that the majority of songs in invincible were about romantic love. it's actually one of my top four favourite albums (i've gotten laughed at for this before)... i think it's because his delivery had a maturity rarely heard in michael albums prior. i think fatherhood may have contributed to this, i cannot say.
but 'break of dawn', 'heaven can wait', 'whatever happens' and 'don't walk away' for sure are amazing. it was as if he grew to be a beautiful swan, so to speak. and sadly, it was his swan song... | |
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[img:$uid]http://images2.fanpop.com/image/photos/12600000/1979-Ebony-Magazine-the-jackson-5-12610708-555-800.jpg[/img:$uid] | |
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Yeah, lots of questions I have too, about Michael, black folk and America. Lots of stuff there aren't really answers for yet, but give it time, people will come forward with more truths (and lies of course). I'd like to know what exactly happened to make Michael, a guy who grew up at the peak of the Black is Beautiful movement and no doubt got lots of personal reinforcement felt it so necessary to sculpt his features the way he did. Why are black people so forgiving? Why do they allow their Tupacs, their Malcolms their Michaels fall when there is so much love out here for them. Is it a case of learned helplessness? Is it a reflection of their own lives? A million things like that would interest me. | |
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ironically, with my two favourite artists in the whole world, i get the opposite effect when seeing or listening to them. with STEVIE, even when he's doing a song like 'feeding off the love of the land' or 'evil' i see a glow of optimism... i feel pure joy when i see or hear him. but when i see or hear michael i feel sadness, which has nothing to do with his transition.
go figure.
in terms of artists, i think the intent is what's most important. if an artist is sincere in their art (especially if the actions match the lyrics) then many are able to connect with them as artists. | |
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I don't know why folks even do that... I wanted to say idiots but I'd be looking like a fool... | |
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all good questions... in terms of the plastic surgery and rhinoplasty, whenever he was asked about it he would refer to how his father treated him, and told him that his features were ugly... i suppose the one person he wanted personal reinforcement from never gave it to him in the way he wished to receive it.
i grew up in the same way as michael (being told the same things by a person who was supposed to love and support and guide you) so i'm not mad at him at all for doing all that. i empathise. | |
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Well, in my life, I've been under some strong influences and learned the hard way that it's not good to give up so much of your self to anyone. I don't like teachers anymore and reject any offers I get, and as long as some jackass can make money they want to put themselves in that position. But Elvis or Michael never wanted to be a teacher, neither was particularly good in academia, I think their music at it's peak was meant to be what we are to be challenged by, but the men themselves, I don't think they really meant to be seen as teachers or leaders, even though there are some similarities. I'm a musician, I learned a million things from all my heroes but it's my responsibility to filter all of that through my own spirit and come up with my own voice. I also try to learn in my own tiny way from their mistakes and follies, things where there egos led them astray or they didn't know when and how to fight like hell and for the right reasons. I try to feel good about myself even though I'm a failure, I did learn, I never let anyone walk over me, use me abuse me and likewise, I never stopped believing in my talent, hard work and music itself. Other than that, I'm sure these men, if they were here, would tell you not to look up to them that way. | |
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Few artists have been able to accomplish this. I'm still awaiting for any of today's artists to attract that same attention. | |
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well, i'll put it another way, if an Elvis or a Springsteen were in some of those positions meaning loads of bullshit in my opinion, white people would kill someone, so would many other groups (mine included) no diss black folk, I love you but I don't always understand. | |
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this is the point i have been trying to state- but i guess i'm not stating it well... NEVER relegate teachers to academics. teachers exist all around us. again: we can learn from anyone- children, birds, cats... we ALL have the ability to become teachers. it is not about sitting in an institution and pointing at a board. the world is a teacher.
we are way to conditioned to the idea of teaching... we've learned to accept the hierarchies.
the thing is, james brown, fred astaire, charlie chaplin, berry gordy, diana ross, etc. were all teachers to michael. he has acknowledged this. no, they were not in a classroom with him, but they taught him a lot about life. he utilized something from them in which he learned. that's all teaching is.
why is it we don't accept ourselves as teachers. just think, you may be teaching someone RIGHT AT THIS MOMENT without realizing it. true teachers do not separate themselves or find themselves better than anyone else. i don't think michael would oppose anyone calling him a teacher. teachings are not always relegated to academics either.
as i also keep stating, michael's art are series of lessons. to me, he is the greatest teacher, for many reasons i have written about in the past. | |
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Every time I hear this, I'm like... But I don't think they would get into that pile of shit that surrounded Michael... don't know why. It's confusing. [Edited 4/19/11 23:51pm] | |
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Of course they wouldn't but if they hypothetically did, you'd see some crazy fucks coming out. Lets see the most famous chinaman, or korean or whatever attacked, there'd be hell to pay. People protect what they love. | |
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ok, but for myself, i'll give you an example, I was a pretty talented boxer, I copied loads of stuff off of Muhammad Ali but even he would tell you that everything he did was technically wrong, you have to try to take the best and leave what doesn't work, at least that's the way I do it. Ali never intended to teach anyone and would most likely tell others not to do the things he did because most people would get hurt, the point is, with heroes like that, the teaching or lesson are incidental and not always intentional. I do think though that Michael and Elvis did lay down challenges for us as humans with potential to do more, some take them up on those, some fail, some succeed, some don't even bother with all that. You know, when I was young and just starting out as a composer I heard that Wagner was antisemitic, I swore I'd never listen to his music, then i heard Ride of the Valkries and could come to no other conclusion that the music and the gift to bring it to reality is a divine one, the rest of the stuff is seperate. No matter how many Peanut butter and banana sandwiches or monkeys on shoulders can change that, ever. | |
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oh i totally appreciate what you're saying here, but for me, the best teachers do not do it intentionally. even if someone is licensed to teach, the greatest lessons are the ones outside of the curriculum.
in terms of muhammad ali, i think the fact he acknowleged that his moves were technically wrong; that is a great teaching moment. the fact that he was humble enough to let peoiple know this makes him a great teacher to those who admire him. so yes, teaching and learning are reciprocal, but they are also not made to be linear, if the most effective teaching and learning are going to occur.
in fact, the reason why i consider michael to be the greatest teacher is essentially because of his imperfections. and what you said right there (which i highlighted) is something which is a great lesson. | |
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Don't mean to steer off from the current discussion but....
I'm going through my MJ bootlegs And judging in terms of sound quality and Michael's overall energy...
BAD TOUR '88 "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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and yet and still people copied ali and many people got hurt. Hell, even i did the whole hands down routine, no problem but once in martial arts (different than boxing)got kicked in the head by a beginner and knocked down. Point is, take those "lessons" and tailor them for your own situation because most likely it will be nothing like theirs. | |
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i like this turn, the technical stuff...
i have heard some of the rome stuff, and i liked what i heard. i'd like to hear more. and for sure, there are only some of the wembley performances i liked; i wasn't into all the ones i heard. i really love the brisbane performances i've heard. i'd love to hear what one of the live performances sound like on vinyl.
i also like hearing the intermissions in between, as michael does a clothes change or whatever. this is usually missing in the videos. i'd also love to hear a paris show in full.
do you have recordings from other tours? i posted some of my favourite performances a lot earlier in this thread, but i think it got lost. i could try to find it and repost. i'll go do that, i'd like to see what you think. | |
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i concur. | |
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i found it, bboy... here is a re-post:
what are some peoples' favourite performances of michael's, from his 'solo' tours?
some of mine are :
-human nature (bad tour, brisbane)
-billie jean (dangerous tour, bucharest)
-beat it (dangerous tour rehearsal)
-wanna be startin' somethin' (bad tour, yokohama)
-dangerous (HIStory tour, munich)
-earth song (brunei performance)
-smooth criminal (bad tour, wembley)
-workin' day and night (bad tour, tokyo)
-rock with you (bad tour, yokohama)
-another part of me (the footage is a mixture of the paris and wembley shows, but i believe the audio is from wembley... it's my favourite audio of the live versions- and to me, michael's greatest teaching) | |
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To me, Michael has always also served as some kind of a test on human character. If someone was screaming all the way weirdo, paedophile, making stupid jokes on him etc. that told me more about their character than anything else - I could not trust these people. These were the people I knew I should distance myself from, not becasue they didn't like my hero, but because I knew that deep inside they were not good people. On the other hand, I've met a lot of people who in the beginning had a very distorted picture of the man thus believing he was weird, but they were willing to listen, learn more and then, change their opinion.
And yes, I agree that Michael just radiates love, just too much love and he always puts me in a good mood. Nobody else could do that for me. Just nobody. "When Michael Jackson is just singing and dancing, you just think this is an astonishing talent. And he has had this astounding talent all his life, but we want him to be floored as well. We really don´t like the idea that he could have it all." | |
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Nice.. I am watching this with a big grin on my face and tears in my eyes. I love especially the SIM footage. Is it even possible that someone can make you feel like that? [Edited 4/20/11 9:28am] "When Michael Jackson is just singing and dancing, you just think this is an astonishing talent. And he has had this astounding talent all his life, but we want him to be floored as well. We really don´t like the idea that he could have it all." | |
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Some commented this that Prince laughs like Mike. He really does. Anyways, what an idiot that journalist is. "When Michael Jackson is just singing and dancing, you just think this is an astonishing talent. And he has had this astounding talent all his life, but we want him to be floored as well. We really don´t like the idea that he could have it all." | |
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. [Edited 4/20/11 8:05am] | |
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What’s cool is P shouts “Y’know my boy” at the beginning of the vid then points up to the heavens. Nice to see one legend showing props to another like that. | |
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Beijing, April 18 (IANS) A video showing over 700 children dancing to Michael Jackson's "Dangerous" at a primary school in southwest China has taken the internet by storm. YOU DON'T NEED A BUS PASS FOR ME TO BUS YOUR ASS,NIGGA ! | |
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