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Reply #30 posted 10/30/14 7:45am

alphastreet

datdude said:

Ok, i know i'm mad late, but i just copped Xscape last week and its been in HEAVY rotation. Blue Gangsta is KILLER! It made me sad, because I KNOW this song would have had a bangin' video in the vein of Smooth Criminal/U Rock My World. TPWNN is tight too and actually the Jeep commercial is what prompted me to go get the disc (that groove underneath is just....). LNFSG didn't quite get me to the store, but i'm thoroughly enjoying this disc now! Hate i missed the thread from when it first came out.

Glad you enjoy it, I like it too, better than other posthumous releases but it's alright. Chicago and Loving You are my favourites.

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Reply #31 posted 10/30/14 1:15pm

Cloudbuster

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Reply #32 posted 11/01/14 3:52pm

HAPPYPERSON

Sources: Connect Amarillo – By Chelsea Goss| Edited By – All Things Michael

allthingsmichaeledit

AMARILLO — It’s a jam-packed production featuring dancers, singers, Michael Jackson music, a Biblical lesson and a message of hope. The show, put on by the Break-Free Foundation, is meant to propel the mission and vision of the organization as they try to impact the community and change lives.

“It’s about the human condition, the heart, hope, destiny and the possibility of a changed life,
said Aaron Saavedra, the playwright and director. When asked if he thinks people are surprised by the story line, featuring Michael Jackson as one of the main characters but including a moral Bible lesson, Saavedra laughs and said it was likely.

“You hear Michael Jackson and he’s a great artist, and to hear those two things, and intertwine it with our vision and our mission (of the Break-Free Foundation), people are taken by surprise when it comes to the conclusion of this story. But it’s worked to where they are able to grasp the entirety of the message,” said Saavedra.

The Break-Free Foundation is focused on helping people who may have struggled with obstacles in their past and are looking to overcome those. The production, which is both a fundraiser and an outreach, is meant to help share the organization’s message.

“It helps us to be more effective in our community, to do more products and to help those that are less fortunate, those that need help with addiction, abuse, alcoholism,” explained Luis Diaz, The Break-Free foundation’s director.

The play is mostly based off of the late Michael Jackson. Saavedra explained that the pop star’s tragic death had touched him, especially acknowledging that everyone, even superstars, have a hidden, internal struggle. And since The Break-Free Foundation focuses on helping people overcome that internal struggle, the message of the faith-based ministry is clear.

“The audience comes and they see the change that God has done in people’s lives and it makes a difference, and it gives the hope that God can do something in their lives,” said the foundation’s director, Luis Diaz. “Even Michael Jackson had a problem, and there was hope for him. There’s hope for anybody. Jesus can change anybody’s life.”

The cast and crew, made up of members of the foundation, worked hard to create the production, decked out with tech, props, costume changes, and a live band.

“It is a lot of work and it is very time consuming. Many of the people that are involved have kids and full time jobs,” said one of the lead actors, Adrian Farley. But for Farley, the time is well worth it. ““I love being involved with it because there are so many opportunities to see lives changed for one, because of what was changed in my life.”

http://vallieegirl67.com/2014/11/01/faith-based-foundation-uses-michael-jacksons-life-and-music-for-outreach/

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Reply #33 posted 11/02/14 2:30am

MattyJam

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So Tom Sneddon is dead.

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Reply #34 posted 11/02/14 12:29pm

kremlinshadow

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MattyJam said:

So Tom Sneddon is dead.

Every day has a silver lining .....

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Reply #35 posted 11/03/14 12:11pm

Rodney

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FbI2JFMwKCo

Audio of mj recording childhood cool

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Reply #36 posted 11/03/14 8:10pm

NaughtyKitty

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^Very cool Rodney, thanks for posting!


Here's a really great mashup of "Dirty Roxanne" Michael Jackson vs. the Police. It's really well done and both songs work very well together! thumbs up! music



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Reply #37 posted 11/04/14 9:22am

alphastreet

That's incredible, sting sounds awesome over the dirty diana beat...the two should have collobarated!

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Reply #38 posted 11/04/14 9:53am

NaughtyKitty

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alphastreet said:

That's incredible, sting sounds awesome over the dirty diana beat...the two should have collobarated!

A Sting+MJ collab would have been HOTT! cool

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Reply #39 posted 11/04/14 10:49am

LiLi1992

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Reply #40 posted 11/04/14 7:46pm

scorp84

fluid said:

No electronic soulnds on Thriller



Michael was always cutting edge. His ablbumms since Bad had electronics sounds on them. Interesting cause syntheseizers were out then. Only songs which really had any were PYT and Baby Be Mine. I guess there was some slight ones in other songs like Thriller. But those were 70s ELectro-Boogie sounds. No 80s synth sounds. Cause MJ loved to experiment and do things weird. Funny he hadn't caught to the electronic sound everyone waqs using.



Part of his being "cutting edge" was his reliance on both electronic and acoustic instruments. Synthesizers and the Linn LM-1/ Roland TR-808 drum machines were used throughout the "Thriller" album along with live instruments and percussion.
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Reply #41 posted 11/04/14 9:26pm

fluid

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scorp84 said:

fluid said:

No electronic soulnds on Thriller

Michael was always cutting edge. His ablbumms since Bad had electronics sounds on them. Interesting cause syntheseizers were out then. Only songs which really had any were PYT and Baby Be Mine. I guess there was some slight ones in other songs like Thriller. But those were 70s ELectro-Boogie sounds. No 80s synth sounds. Cause MJ loved to experiment and do things weird. Funny he hadn't caught to the electronic sound everyone waqs using.

Part of his being "cutting edge" was his reliance on both electronic and acoustic instruments. Synthesizers and the Linn LM-1/ Roland TR-808 drum machines were used throughout the "Thriller" album along with live instruments and percussion.

Not sure of that. Thriller sounds basically like Disco-Funk. Bad and later albums have a Dance sound. Infact his last one escape is categorized as Dance.

Working up a purple sweat.
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Reply #42 posted 11/05/14 10:39am

scorp84

fluid said:



scorp84 said:


fluid said:

No electronic soulnds on Thriller



Michael was always cutting edge. His ablbumms since Bad had electronics sounds on them. Interesting cause syntheseizers were out then. Only songs which really had any were PYT and Baby Be Mine. I guess there was some slight ones in other songs like Thriller. But those were 70s ELectro-Boogie sounds. No 80s synth sounds. Cause MJ loved to experiment and do things weird. Funny he hadn't caught to the electronic sound everyone waqs using.



Part of his being "cutting edge" was his reliance on both electronic and acoustic instruments. Synthesizers and the Linn LM-1/ Roland TR-808 drum machines were used throughout the "Thriller" album along with live instruments and percussion.



Not sure of that. Thriller sounds basically like Disco-Funk. Bad and later albums have a Dance sound. Infact his last one escape is categorized as Dance.



Yeah, alot of those typical "80's" sounding dance records were left on the cutting room floor once Thriller got trimmed down. His team used all of the newest and popular gear of that time, but they made it come alive by blending them with live instrumentation. Yamaha CS-80s, Roland Jupiters, Sequential Circuit Prophet-5s, and Moog synths are sprinkled all over the Thriller album.
[Edited 11/5/14 10:39am]
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Reply #43 posted 11/06/14 1:43pm

HAPPYPERSON

How Branding Launched Michael Jackson’s Solo Career

“Don’t Stop Till You Get Enough” was the first big hit from Off the Wall, the album that first and finally distinguished Michael Jackson from the rest of the Jackson 5. And that phrase could also describe Mike Salisbury’s process of art directing what became Michael’s most iconic cover image. This is in spite of the fact that Epic Records used dumb and inappropriate title lettering and did a lousy printing job.

Salisbury_TBækmarkAbove: concept sketch illustrated by Toril Bækmark

For the past half-century Mike Salisbury has successfully branded magazines and motorcycles, perfumes and theme parks, Levi’s and Gotcha, Raiders of the Lost Ark and Jurassic Park. And, most notoriously, Joe Camel. Smokin’ Joe was actually the subject of my first Print interview with Mike, and was recently reprinted and deconstructed in Steven Heller’s Writing and Research for Graphic Designers.

Off the Wall was released in 1979, when Michael Jackson’s personal reputation had not yet been blemished. And since this year marks the 35th anniversary of Mike’s ushering in Michael’s coming out on his own, I got a behind-the-curtains account of Mike’s creative triumph over a variety of temperamental and logistical obstacles in order to produce his seminal image. And the man who branded the “King of Pop” wraps up the interview with an extended riff on his early career trajectory.

Salisbury_MJacksonMichael Dooley: How does Michael’s shoot compare with album covers you’ve art directed for other pop stars?

Mike Salisbury: George Harrison took more work. He wasn’t difficult but we were way out in Henley on Thames, England shooting film that was sent to London for processing then back to us at Friar Park, his estate, to review, then shoot more. It was a tight deadline and there was no way to get prints and retouching. And I had no concept. Nor did I get one from anyone else.

I wanted the cover to be a big deal portrait of just George, yet impressionist. Wandering through his ancient greenhouse one of the days I was there I went outside and saw him through a mossy broken window and had him move close to that and shot him with a longish lens to create, I think, an almost painterly portrait.

For the inside of the covers I used another long lens and from a distance shot him full figure, looking down, walking along a hedge, with him at the far left edge of the frame. Sort of Sergio Leone. That gave me a contrast to the full head shot. And, I think, it gave me two views of George Harrison not captured before. He went with my choices. No problem.

With George, Randy Newman, James Taylor, and Ricky Lee Jones I had the support of their producer, Russ Titelman. But no problems. The music business was very much teamwork. Unlike some jobs, such as the marketing of over 300 movies I worked on. That had a lot of voices and opinions on the client side, with a lot of input but also a lot of change orders.

I had Norman Seeff shoot Ricky Lee for me because she was perfect, with her own styling, for his style of glamor shot. And James had specific ideas, and to carry them out I again used Norman, to have the shots be technically perfect, to have James’ concepts read without any interpretation by the photographer.

I had Steve Harvey shoot Michael for me because we just got along.

Salisbury_albumsDooley: It was Michael’s performance in The Wiz that made you want to brand him. What did you see there?

Salisbury: To me he was no longer that kid on the Saturday morning kids’ TV show. He was a major performer. And I think he had to hold back not to upstage the rest of the headliner cast. I thought he needed to be positioned as his own star. He needed to be branded as Michael Jackson.

Dooley: How did you hit on the tuxedo metaphor to connect his emerging from his family’s shadows with Frank Sinatra’s early opening in Vegas?

Salisbury: Sinatra coming onstage in a tux said big deal performer. And I wanted Michael to taken as a big deal performer. And Michael got it.

Dooley: At first, his agent had rejected the concept. Luckily for you, Michael had been in the office throughout your pitch, but he was hiding behind the drapes. Did you find that odd?

Salisbury: It was odd but very cool. And businesslike that he was there to see the presentation. That was Michael Jackson.

Dooley: Why did he originally insist on shooting at the Griffith Observatory?

Salisbury: My only thought was it was the iconic teenage location: Rebel Without a Cause and that memorable scene there with the knife fight. But there was no way the classic deco architecture would not overpower Michael as an individual.

He was late for the shoot, roaring up the hill in a blue Rolls with his new driver’s license in his wallet and a dent in every fender. He had the tux on a hanger, and the loafers. Park guards continually patrolled the observatory and we didn’t have much time between their rounds.

Michael ran to the men’s room, but it was closed! Without a pause he went to the ladies’, changed, did his own makeup, and was out and ready. A real trouper.

The architecture of the entire building meant nothing to my concept but I had found a circular stairway on the side of a tower overlooking the Hollywood sign in the distance behind the bust of James Dean that might work as a simple stage.

I got Michael up a few stairs and he leaned against the wall of the tower and with the sun setting over the Hollywood hills behind him we got it just as the park guard was passing the observatory and on his way to our location.

Salisbury_GriffithObDooley: Why did he want to wear white socks?

Salisbury: It was a very typical ’40s, ’50s American young adult thing, but also emulated by Cary Grant, almost, I think, to offset his too-much handsomeness. I also wanted to use the socks and make it work for the concept.

Dooley: And why did you outfit him in a women’s tux?

Salisbury: He was too thin for a men’s fit. And most mens’ tuxedos didn’t have the style of Yves St. Laurent.

Dooley: After the Observatory shoot failed to capture the attitude and style you wanted, how easy was it to convince him to do a reshoot?

Salisbury: No problem. Michael Jackson was about getting it done right.

Dooley: So now you have a studio location, but it’s not working out. You walk outside, see a loading dock area, and get inspired. You give it a backstage Broadway theater vibe, and there’s your set. A neat bit of serendipity and creative improvisation. Do you recall another shoot that came together for you in the final moments?

Salisbury: Truman Capote wanted me to shoot him in his Palm Springs home to replicate the Cartier-Bresson shot of him on the back cover of his first book, Other Voices, Other Rooms. It’s a photo which he said the world found so scandalous because of his age and the pose. After a day of doing that he took off the silly hat, gold rimmed aviator sunglasses and art director attitude and quit posing. And I said, “Just look at me.” And he did.

http://www.printmag.com/design-inspiration/mike-salisbury-and-michael-jackson/

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Reply #44 posted 11/10/14 3:31pm

DonRants

So I just got back from traveling. My trip included a short stop at Disney World for the first time. I got to see "Captain EO" for the first time the way it was meant to be seen... in 3D. What a great show! I could easily have gone on no other rides and it would have been worth it. The theatre was packed at Epcot Center. Amazing 28 years after its release. You also get a sense of how Disney really influenced MJ. The whole Disney World experience is so awe-inspiring.

To All the Haters on the Internet
No more Candy 4 U
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Reply #45 posted 11/11/14 5:09am

Cloudbuster

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Reply #46 posted 11/11/14 12:26pm

HAPPYPERSON

Spike Lee Announces New Michael Jackson Documentary For Off The Wall

Filmmaker Spike Lee Interview

Nearly three thousand young people gathered at the Centro Banamex to attend a presentation by filmmaker Spike Lee, one of the special guests at the festival TagCDMX technology and creativity.

The director of Malcolm X and Do The Right Thing, among other films, urged attendees to look for something that inspires them in life and are devoted to it in soul, mind and heart.

“People always say you find something you love and work it. Not only looking to make money, but work on something that makes them better people.

The filmmaker said that if people really focus on this and follow their dreams, the world would be a better place to live.

“There are people with lots of money in the bank commiting suicide every day and it is because they are not happy and know that money buys anything but.

“So, if you find something to love, that is the greatest wealth, because it is no longer a job. I do not even need an alarm to get up, because I’m excited to go to my job.”

Besides talking about the future of film, US history and sport, announced that Lee is working on a documentary about the making of the album Off The Wall, Michael Jackson.

He didn’t give many details, but it is believed that the making of the film would be in the style of “BAD 25,″ which is filled with some previously unseen images, trivia and interviews about the songs and music videos from the album.

http://vallieegirl67.com/2014/11/11/spike-lee-announces-new-michael-jackson-documentary-for-off-the-wall/

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Reply #47 posted 11/11/14 4:25pm

Rodney

What a show and what a sight to see this man perform at his absolute best..fukkin vocal beast!

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Reply #48 posted 11/11/14 5:10pm

scorp84

HAPPYPERSON said:

Spike Lee Announces New Michael Jackson Documentary For Off The Wall




Filmmaker Spike Lee Interview


Nearly three thousand young people gathered at the Centro Banamex to attend a presentation by filmmaker Spike Lee, one of the special guests at the festival TagCDMX technology and creativity.


The director of Malcolm X and Do The Right Thing, among other films, urged attendees to look for something that inspires them in life and are devoted to it in soul, mind and heart.


“People always say you find something you love and work it. Not only looking to make money, but work on something that makes them better people.


The filmmaker said that if people really focus on this and follow their dreams, the world would be a better place to live.


“There are people with lots of money in the bank commiting suicide every day and it is because they are not happy and know that money buys anything but.


“So, if you find something to love, that is the greatest wealth, because it is no longer a job. I do not even need an alarm to get up, because I’m excited to go to my job.”


Besides talking about the future of film, US history and sport, announced that Lee is working on a documentary about the making of the album Off The Wall, Michael Jackson.


He didn’t give many details, but it is believed that the making of the film would be in the style of “BAD 25,″ which is filled with some previously unseen images, trivia and interviews about the songs and music videos from the album.



http://vallieegirl67.com/2014/11/11/spike-lee-announces-new-michael-jackson-documentary-for-off-the-wall/



Bring it on!!!!!
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Reply #49 posted 11/12/14 3:29pm

Marrk

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I think in some circles this might be known as 'swag'

.

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Reply #50 posted 11/12/14 3:48pm

Marrk

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This too. In front of a crowd of German zombies.

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Reply #51 posted 11/13/14 2:59pm

DarlingDiana

HAPPYPERSON said:

Spike Lee Announces New Michael Jackson Documentary For Off The Wall

Filmmaker Spike Lee Interview

Nearly three thousand young people gathered at the Centro Banamex to attend a presentation by filmmaker Spike Lee, one of the special guests at the festival TagCDMX technology and creativity.

The director of Malcolm X and Do The Right Thing, among other films, urged attendees to look for something that inspires them in life and are devoted to it in soul, mind and heart.

“People always say you find something you love and work it. Not only looking to make money, but work on something that makes them better people.

The filmmaker said that if people really focus on this and follow their dreams, the world would be a better place to live.

“There are people with lots of money in the bank commiting suicide every day and it is because they are not happy and know that money buys anything but.

“So, if you find something to love, that is the greatest wealth, because it is no longer a job. I do not even need an alarm to get up, because I’m excited to go to my job.”

Besides talking about the future of film, US history and sport, announced that Lee is working on a documentary about the making of the album Off The Wall, Michael Jackson.

He didn’t give many details, but it is believed that the making of the film would be in the style of “BAD 25,″ which is filled with some previously unseen images, trivia and interviews about the songs and music videos from the album.

http://vallieegirl67.com/2014/11/11/spike-lee-announces-new-michael-jackson-documentary-for-off-the-wall/


I thought Bad 25 was well done. Not just the Spike Lee documentary. The live concert DVD, the unreleased bonus tracks, the packaging. I didn't care for the remixes, but whatever. I hope they give all his albums (at least the first 4 - Off The Wall through Dangerous) the Bad 25 treatment. It'd be good if Spike Lee, or whoever, did a documentary (like Bad 25) for each of those albums. I'd like HIStory and Invincible too, but they probably aren't considered "classic" enough.

Dangerous will be 25 years old in 2016, right? I really hope they do something good for that. It's an underrated album and it has a heap of out-takes. A lot have been leaked over the years. A lot have already been released via The Ultimate Collection and the Xscape Deluxe Edition. But it'd be nice to have them all in one place. And there might be some we haven't heard. Dangerous also had a lot of videos. A lot of good concert footage. You could put together a great collection for the 25th anniversary. I hope they don't neglect it.

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Reply #52 posted 11/14/14 1:43am

GoldDolphin

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DarlingDiana said:

HAPPYPERSON said:

Spike Lee Announces New Michael Jackson Documentary For Off The Wall

Filmmaker Spike Lee Interview

Nearly three thousand young people gathered at the Centro Banamex to attend a presentation by filmmaker Spike Lee, one of the special guests at the festival TagCDMX technology and creativity.

The director of Malcolm X and Do The Right Thing, among other films, urged attendees to look for something that inspires them in life and are devoted to it in soul, mind and heart.

“People always say you find something you love and work it. Not only looking to make money, but work on something that makes them better people.

The filmmaker said that if people really focus on this and follow their dreams, the world would be a better place to live.

“There are people with lots of money in the bank commiting suicide every day and it is because they are not happy and know that money buys anything but.

“So, if you find something to love, that is the greatest wealth, because it is no longer a job. I do not even need an alarm to get up, because I’m excited to go to my job.”

Besides talking about the future of film, US history and sport, announced that Lee is working on a documentary about the making of the album Off The Wall, Michael Jackson.

He didn’t give many details, but it is believed that the making of the film would be in the style of “BAD 25,″ which is filled with some previously unseen images, trivia and interviews about the songs and music videos from the album.

http://vallieegirl67.com/2014/11/11/spike-lee-announces-new-michael-jackson-documentary-for-off-the-wall/


I thought Bad 25 was well done. Not just the Spike Lee documentary. The live concert DVD, the unreleased bonus tracks, the packaging. I didn't care for the remixes, but whatever. I hope they give all his albums (at least the first 4 - Off The Wall through Dangerous) the Bad 25 treatment. It'd be good if Spike Lee, or whoever, did a documentary (like Bad 25) for each of those albums. I'd like HIStory and Invincible too, but they probably aren't considered "classic" enough.

Dangerous will be 25 years old in 2016, right? I really hope they do something good for that. It's an underrated album and it has a heap of out-takes. A lot have been leaked over the years. A lot have already been released via The Ultimate Collection and the Xscape Deluxe Edition. But it'd be nice to have them all in one place. And there might be some we haven't heard. Dangerous also had a lot of videos. A lot of good concert footage. You could put together a great collection for the 25th anniversary. I hope they don't neglect it.

They'll for sure make something for the HIStory tour, I believe they were thinking of releasing the Munich concert in 3D as a theatrical release (since that tour was filmed with 3D cameras if I'm not mistaken). HIStory might not be big in the US, but worldwide it is very much considered a Michael Jackson classic - that album made him known even in rural places in the Amazones in South America... In certain countries in Europe, they even had HIStory candy and cans, so yes it was influential and people still remember the statue that floated on the Thames river... Just think about all the flash mobs that have been done in his honor- "they don't care about us"... Honestly though, I'm actually most excited about this era, since we have very little unreleased material from this era and I'd like to see some behind-the-scenes stuff, (perhaps the childhood performance on video!).

When the power of love overcomes the love of power,the world will know peace -Jimi Hendrix
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Reply #53 posted 11/14/14 9:34am

dm3857

GoldDolphin said:

DarlingDiana said:


I thought Bad 25 was well done. Not just the Spike Lee documentary. The live concert DVD, the unreleased bonus tracks, the packaging. I didn't care for the remixes, but whatever. I hope they give all his albums (at least the first 4 - Off The Wall through Dangerous) the Bad 25 treatment. It'd be good if Spike Lee, or whoever, did a documentary (like Bad 25) for each of those albums. I'd like HIStory and Invincible too, but they probably aren't considered "classic" enough.

Dangerous will be 25 years old in 2016, right? I really hope they do something good for that. It's an underrated album and it has a heap of out-takes. A lot have been leaked over the years. A lot have already been released via The Ultimate Collection and the Xscape Deluxe Edition. But it'd be nice to have them all in one place. And there might be some we haven't heard. Dangerous also had a lot of videos. A lot of good concert footage. You could put together a great collection for the 25th anniversary. I hope they don't neglect it.

They'll for sure make something for the HIStory tour, I believe they were thinking of releasing the Munich concert in 3D as a theatrical release (since that tour was filmed with 3D cameras if I'm not mistaken). HIStory might not be big in the US, but worldwide it is very much considered a Michael Jackson classic - that album made him known even in rural places in the Amazones in South America... In certain countries in Europe, they even had HIStory candy and cans, so yes it was influential and people still remember the statue that floated on the Thames river... Just think about all the flash mobs that have been done in his honor- "they don't care about us"... Honestly though, I'm actually most excited about this era, since we have very little unreleased material from this era and I'd like to see some behind-the-scenes stuff, (perhaps the childhood performance on video!).

I'm ALL about getting Bad 25 treatment for each album, but I don't think they should have a Theatrical release of the HIStory Tour. MJ lipsynched 90% of the time during the tour, and critics would have a field day with that.

I wish they would go ahead a just repackage "Off The Wall" and "Thriller" as both anniversaries of these have passed. Repackage Off The Wall with a few outtakes and some extended mixes, this Spike Lee documentary, and a Triumph Tour DVD. And then Thriller with a few additional outtakes (I'd love to hear Buffalo Bill,Who Do You Know(i'm assuming is the original version of Behind The Mask), and Victory with Freddy Mercury, some extended mixes, a Spike Lee Documentary for Thriller, which in my opinion they should pull all the stops with and release to theatres, as the general public would be interested in it. Everything from the creation of the album, in the studio, the impact, the videos, the records, everything. And of coarse a Victory Tour DVD.

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Reply #54 posted 11/14/14 4:22pm

Marrk

avatar

dm3857 said:

GoldDolphin said:

They'll for sure make something for the HIStory tour, I believe they were thinking of releasing the Munich concert in 3D as a theatrical release (since that tour was filmed with 3D cameras if I'm not mistaken). HIStory might not be big in the US, but worldwide it is very much considered a Michael Jackson classic - that album made him known even in rural places in the Amazones in South America... In certain countries in Europe, they even had HIStory candy and cans, so yes it was influential and people still remember the statue that floated on the Thames river... Just think about all the flash mobs that have been done in his honor- "they don't care about us"... Honestly though, I'm actually most excited about this era, since we have very little unreleased material from this era and I'd like to see some behind-the-scenes stuff, (perhaps the childhood performance on video!).

I'm ALL about getting Bad 25 treatment for each album, but I don't think they should have a Theatrical release of the HIStory Tour. MJ lipsynched 90% of the time during the tour, and critics would have a field day with that.

I wish they would go ahead a just repackage "Off The Wall" and "Thriller" as both anniversaries of these have passed. Repackage Off The Wall with a few outtakes and some extended mixes, this Spike Lee documentary, and a Triumph Tour DVD. And then Thriller with a few additional outtakes (I'd love to hear Buffalo Bill,Who Do You Know(i'm assuming is the original version of Behind The Mask), and Victory with Freddy Mercury, some extended mixes, a Spike Lee Documentary for Thriller, which in my opinion they should pull all the stops with and release to theatres, as the general public would be interested in it. Everything from the creation of the album, in the studio, the impact, the videos, the records, everything. And of coarse a Victory Tour DVD.


Jackson tours and unreleased stuff from that era. That's all i need now. I think we have most stuff of note beyond 'Thriller' anyway.

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Reply #55 posted 11/15/14 2:37pm

HAPPYPERSON

Armond White on MJ

MR. White spoke nothing but truth!! Michael's most importants works were his 90's output.

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Reply #56 posted 11/15/14 2:41pm

HAPPYPERSON

I highly recommend you guys to get a copy of Keep It Moving: The Michael Jackson Chronicles by Armond White! It's available on his website for $10

REVIEW OF ARMOND WHITE’S “KEEP MOVING: THE MICHAEL JACKSON CHRONICLES”

Quote:
Armond White’s book, KEEP MOVING: The Michael Jackson Chronicles is the first crucially important book of Michael Jackson criticism I have been privileged to read. It eclipses Pulitzer-prize winning journalist Margo Jefferson’s On Michael Jackson by considering not the imagined internal life of a carnival freak, but the very real social and political impact of a powerful artist. It shames opportunistic Nelson George’s The Michael Jackson Story, and more recently, Thriller: The Musical Life of Michael Jackson by its honest response to artistic merit. It elevates itself above Dave Marsh’s Michael Jackson and the Crossover Dream by its examination of Black musicians’ impact and commentary on society rather than Marsh’s ugly, prejudiced, patronizing commentary interspersed with a timeline-type narration of Afro-American music history. And it answers Saying the Unsayable: The Non-verbal Vocalisations of Michael Jackson, Melissa Campbell’s vacuous media-mimicry about a very important topic in MJ’s work, by talking about non-verbal anger, urgency, connection, solidarity, and a stance against bigotry and racism, instead of the media-favorite topics of race, sexuality and gender. Along the way we get treated to a glimpse of the participation in the white media’s defamation of Blacks by Henry Louis Gates Jr. and a couple of shrewd condemnations of Obama, whose grudging condolence revealed the same kind of participation. It is truly an important book - necessary reading for all those embarking on scholarly work about MJ’s art and personage or for those who don’t want to go through life thoughtless or unchallenged.

This book could almost equally be titled KEEP MOVING: The Armond White Chronicles because we see Michael Jackson’s influence on Armond White’s development as a social commentator and critic as much, if not more than we see Jackson’s artistic development through White’s eyes. Starting with White’s first written mention of Michael in his article Janet, The Last Black Jackson, written in 1986, the book moves from White’s initial elite-music-circle-influenced opinion of Michael as seen through the lens of Janet Jackson’s Control to a series of kairos moments in which White experiences growing recognition of MJ’s true importance to the world.

Armond White moves from thinking of MJ’s Thriller videos as being enigmatic, banal, and inept to The Gloved One is Not a Chump where he acknowledges that no one else can touch “the most significant personal gesture any American artist has made in years.” The next moment in the string of epiphanies is in Michael Takes a Bow for Jam in which White recognizes MJ’s artistic achievement as “important as anything being done in this era.” In Screaming To Be Heard, Book I, White articulates that Michael Jackson “takes American ideology to its extremes and disrupts it.” He notes that Jackson’s “genius expresses unexpected, complicated feelings in any musical form.” And in Screaming To Be Heard, Book II, White concludes Michael is “today’s most interesting pop figure.” White has kept moving from banality to recognizing the genius of individual works to MJ’s supremacy as an art figurehead. He has moved from the specific to the general.

White keeps moving - to the overarching. In Earth Song Moves Music Video Mountains he places MJ’s Earth Song “among the most magnificent combinations of music and imagery in the centenary of motion pictures,” a video that “once seen can never, reasonably, be denied,” doing something that is “almost miraculous – dramatizing hubris for the purpose of enlightening and improving life for others.” White moves on again in In MJ’s Shadow where he states, “If Bob Dylan, Kurt Cobain, P.J. Harvey and Eminem are pop’s ‘geniuses,’ what word can adequately describe the world-changing creativity, astounding craft and miraculous precision of Jackson’s output?” White’s perception of Jackson has changed from the almost miraculous to beyond genius.

Finally, in Twenty-First Century Renaissance, White sees MJ’s expression as “world-shaping.” His death has “unmoored” us. Throughout this book, White’s astute observations have often had to do with Black issues, rightfully so. But here, in this last essay written last summer, he finally moves into the universal and theological, because ultimately, that is where Jackson is located. He says Berry Gordy’s accolade that Michael was the greatest entertainer who ever lived doesn’t go far enough – it doesn’t “settle one’s awe” because there was always God’s word “in MJ’s love-spreading and truth-telling messages.” White concludes that Michael Jackson “solicited call-and-response from the world – and got it.” That, my friends, is the definition of redemption. It is the pinnacle kairos moment of these essays, and, I think says more about Armond White than Michael Jackson, for that universal message of redemption was always there in Michael’s music-making from the beginning. That is why the resolution of the “other” in the words “I used to say ‘I’ and ‘Me’ / Now it’s ‘Us’ / Now it’s ‘We’" from the song Ben causes even children to cry.

Not included in this collection is his review for This Is It which can be found at The New York Press. Also not here are the never-written reviews for Invincible, Moonwalker or Ghosts, all of which are among MJ’s most important works, which were sorely missed by me, and of which I hope he will choose to grace us with his thoughts.

I was riveted from the moment I sat down and turned to the first page. I did not move from my chair until I closed the book, having read it straight through at one sitting. Then I immediately started again, this time taking three days and scribbling notes in almost every margin. My reactions did not diminish the second time through, and I took time to savor, meditate upon, and cry over the most important observations, of which there are many. This book should be in a nice hardback edition illustrated by some of the beautiful pencil drawings which exist of Michael. It is a shameful comment on our society that that is not the case. I hope, over time, it becomes a “classic,” thus proving White’s company name – Resistance Works. So please, buy this book. It is worth every penny. The essay “The Gloved One is Not a Chump” easily makes the cost worthwhile, but there is so much more wealth in store after that. Thank you to Armond White for his redemptive words about an artist that has no parallel in our history.

Lisa Marsnik
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Reply #57 posted 11/15/14 2:42pm

HAPPYPERSON

“The Voice in the Mirror”. Michael Jackson: from a vocal identity to its double in sound

2011 young researcher IASPM French-Speaking Europen branch prize


Michael Jackson is an artist whose career became, with a definite paroxysm, the emblem of pop music in a trans-cultural and technological twentieth century. He brought to a certain height the paradigms of the international pop aestheticism which are the high-scale impact and broadcasting and shaped an image representative of the synthesis of artistic expression and trans-racial figures which make up the cement of pop music.
2The taking over of esthetical influences that impacted the singer, strengthened by a continuous spirit of innovation, was at the root of the creation of an artistic identity in its own right, medium of an expressive authenticity which, on a vocal level, is comparable to what we can call a personality.

3Not limiting himself to any aesthetical fetters, the artist, all along his career, tried to develop and renew an obvious expressive plurality. Plurality which, combining spoken and sung voices, voiced and non-voiced sounds, oral percussions, bruitism, breathing games and voiced choreographies, was taken over and centralized by a body with a great phonic presence in the musical sphere, confirming what Roland Barthes said: “In pop music, there is the physical component which is so important for this type of counter-culture. There is a new relation to the body, which we need to defend”. (Barthes,1981: 164)

4But apart from the physical aspect, we will see that this plurality is underpinned by a vocal work directed by a teacher coming from the lyrical world, Seth Riggs, as well as by the spontaneous use of more original or less aestheticized forms of expression.

5Concerned that his vocal personality shouldn’t be diluted or diminished, Michael Jackson - conscious of the reach and responsibility of recording in the media - took a high interest in its fixing and the shaping of what had to be not only his sonorous image but also his recorded double. In doing so, he appointed, for his whole career, a figurehead sound-engineer, Bruce Swedien, who was in a parallel quest of sound authenticity and whose technical choices, guided by this quest, will make up the second part of this study.

6But first, we propose to study the components of Michael Jackson’s vocal identity, through technical criteria but also in the light of a work on the tone which made this notion of identity develop into the more colorful notion of personality.


Michael Jackson’s voice: from identity to personality

Cradle and beginnings

7Michael Jackson’s vocal identity took its roots in his youth’s music career. Endowed with a definite vocal expressiveness since his boyhood (which made even professionals [2] Th... is, in... [2] doubt his young age), and a gift for dancing, Michael Jackson initiated his artistic career – which lasted almost 50 years – by a first very dense amateur career starting at the age of 5, with daily evening rehearsals, along with competitions and frequent shows. At this time, he absorbed the classical and country music his Mom, a clarinetist, was listening to, but also Little Richard, Chuck Berry, The Temptations, Aretha Franklin, Fats Domino and other rhythm and blues singers. The goal the family set themselves during these competitions was not limited to “taking up” a famous title but to bring the musical, expressive or scenic element which will create the demarcation.

8That is how his training started, under the aegis of a strict and efficient father, leading to the signature of a contract with the Motown label at the age of 11:

9

« The five young brothers […] impressed Berry Gordy with their precocious professionalism, discipline, and raw talent at their audition in the summer of 1968 ». (Smith, 1999 : 229)

10The “artist development” program of the Jackson 5 group was then drawn up according to the Hitsville tradition, with every aspect of the performance or the public image being under control. Motown’s writers and producers created a repertoire of specific songs and covers [3] Pl... Motown... [3] of various aestheticisms for the Jackson 5, without letting them the slightest possibility to propose one of their own compositions, and thus feeding little by little the reasons for the breaking-off in 1976.

11While signing with the Epic Records label, at an age when others are only starting their careers, Michael Jackson necessarily felt the deep need to create his style. Having made during these seven years the most of the expressive, rock, country, soul and funk inspirations of the Motown’s repertoire, he will start, little by little, to aggregate these references in a unique artistic identity. This period, covered by six albums [4] Th...Destiny... [4] , was characterized by a ferment of ideas and composition initiatives, but also by vocal initiatives. If, with the eponymous album The Jacksons [5] Th..., prod.... [5] in 1976, Michael Jackson devoted himself, from then on, to writing and composing, he already dared, in his first two songs [6] Th...ife »,... [6] , a few idiomatic vocal phrases that are less polished and orientated towards a rythmicity and a bruitism which will indeed soon form his own identity. On the album Goin’ Places [7] Th...ssette,... [7] in 1977, the singer integrated his first interjections, the future symbolic elements of his vocal style.

12When he met Quincy Jones on the shooting of the movie The Wiz [8] Th...eleased... [8] , the singer, now of age, clearly expressed his resolution to break up his image of a star-child. The artist proved in the last family albums that he could, beyond his scenic performance, write, compose, produce and arrange. He then wanted to replace his brothers and sisters with professional musicians and decides to oversee each step of production and to set himself as the final arbiter in all artistic and aesthetic decision.

13

“I don’t want to be a copy of those who were there before me, I don’t want to constantly repeat myself, I must always innovate”. (Cachin, 2009 : 39)

14Michael Jackson’s precept is an echo, at this crucial moment of his career, to Glynne Jones’ words:

15

« It is important for singers to develop a unique style […] The singer must cultivate those aspects of his singing which are unique to him ». (Martin, 1983: 98)

16Michael Jackson will inscribe his vocal personality and his catalogue in a soaring dynamic which gave up the comfort of repeats for an evolution that is sometimes destabilizing for the audience.

17We now propose to analyze the components of Michael Jackson’s vocal demarcation. And we will see how this plural identity is fed by a network of multi-aesthetical references with as a common point the interest shown by the singer-composer to textures and tone colors.

Vocal profile: technical and aesthetical elements

18We will now evoke Michael Jackson’s voice according to the four main criteria of analysis mentioned by Allan F. Moore: tessitura and ambitus, tonal sense, vocal rythmicity and “resonance degree”, and we will endeavor to show that the vocal work performed by the singer did not alter his quest of authenticity. On the contrary, we will complete these criteria by showing how this work brought about an increased malleability which was propitious to the plural references characterizing his timbre panel in a fundamental way.

19Michael Jackson’s voice, made of multiple expressions (melodies, buccal sounds, guttural sounds and vocalized noises at every level of his ambitus) was regularly worked and taken care of. Wanting to optimize his vocal instrument in all circumstances, Michael Jackson took up, from 1979, the advice of a vocal coach, Seth Riggs [9] Se... of the... [9] , who trained him all along his career, in a tailored way, daily, and even outside recording periods or shows.

Tessitura and ambitus

20When Seth Riggs met Michael Jackson, the latter already owned a very broad ambitus. Quincy Jones, the artist’s producer and arranger, wanted at that time to reduce by a minor third the tone of some songs of the album “Off the wall” so as to give the singer’s voice more ease, suppleness and a timbre richer at the register’s extremities. So Seth Riggs worked to further broaden the singer’s ambitus and made him gain another fourth. Over daily sessions, his method of work and the exercises he required him to carry out had a view to (and this is an essential element of Seth Riggs’s Speech Level Singing) gaining and retaining a vocal homogeneity on all his tessitura – Michael Jackson’s one ranged from E1 to G#4 without resorting to head voice or falsetto – erasing the color interruptions and sensations of going from one register to the other. Cultivating, all along his career, the melodic, clear and expressive vocality of a tenor but also of a baritone, Michael Jackson even started working on the French lyric repertoire, although this work has remained unedited for strategic commercial reasons [10] S...cord an... [10] .

21Apart from this work on ambitus and equality between registers, the goals fixed by Seth Riggs were acquiring and maintaining vibrating tones by means of a constant harmonic balance and a relaxation vibrato allowing the artist to sing without being tired. Many exercises had also a view to managing the breathing, which was essential for the dancer.

22We have to underline that the choice of Seth Riggs as a vocal coach clearly fell within Michael Jackson’s quest of authenticity, since his method of work, although generically called Speech Level Singing, allows him to tailor and respect his pupils’ vocal specificities.

Resonance

23So with his vocal technique, Michael Jackson covered the resonance stratums evoked by Allan F. Moore linked to the voice’s physical localization: head voice, nasal voice or chest voice. By erasing the changes of register, he allowed a unicity of transversal vocal emission that was contrary to the association that was generally admitted for pop music singers in terms of timbre inequality.

24If the voice’s nasal position is seldom taken into account in Michael Jackson’s habits, the head voice is far more used although very often imperceptible thanks to a homogeneous management during the change of register. This head voice, confined to a very high-pitched tessitura no more goes with a loss of clarity and vocal strength than the extremely low-pitched chest voice of a song such as “2000 watts [11] M...ssette,... [11] ”. It is worth highlighting that Michael Jackson’s use of a de-toned head voice is due, in the few existing cases, to environmental or emotional reasons and not to a technical flaw – part of the work with Seth Riggs being focused on the vocal enrichment of vowels and their purified and distinct enunciation, even in the far ends of the tessitura [12] A...d voice... [12] .

Tonal sense and vocal rythmicity

25The other elements of analysis mentioned by Allan F. Moore: tonal sense and rhythm management are, in Michael Jackson’s case, influent artifacts in the vocal restitution and the work in voice recording.

26The tonal sense encompasses precision and accuracy and thus a voice’s capability to place itself in a harmonic and polyphonic context. If Bruce Swedien‘s phrase: “Michael was able to hear a sound around the corner [13] Q...ing the... [13] conjures up an acute musical ear, the consequences of this image are translated in practical terms into the vocalized broadcasting of his compositions (including his melodic and harmonic components as well as a vocalized simulation of the expected instrumental timbre) via the producer or arranger whose task it is to record them, or if applicable, to each musician, without the intermediary of a prior recording. But this tonal sense also translated into developing and recording abundant vocal harmonies [14] J...mer who... [14] , which allowed the sound engineer to create a specific technique [15] W...er II.4.2. [15] precisely playing on tonality, technique he never used in works others than his work with Michael Jackson.

27As for the singer’s vocal rythmicity, this feature is not insignificant since, as we said before, it started developing as early as childhood in contact with the Motown repertoire, and led to a rhythmic potential that was from then on voluntarily exploited and highlighted since the album “Off the wall [16] M...ition),... [16] ” by the composer Rod Temperton [17] M... ibid.,... [17] , who indeed explained that he voluntarily used his capabilities by giving him changing and rhythmic melodies such as those of the couplets from “Off the wall”, or vocal up-tempo leads with a sharp delivery whose most striking example is “Working day and night”. This management of rhythm and offbeat is a permanent feature that we will find again in a later repertoire, with, among others, the couplets from a title like “Jam [18] M...e, CD],... [18] ”.

A vocal personality anchored in pluralism: from melodicity to bruitism

28Since ever passionate about sound, timbre, be them instrumental, vocal or concrete, Michael Jackson developed his experience by growing up in recording studios. The sound experiments he was interested and took part in went through creating complex textures that were then original [19] M...ime and... [19] , often directly linked to concreteness and bruitism. Staked in the diversity of instrumental, electronic and concrete timbres, used or created, this interest was from the origin naturally exploited by his own instrument, his voice. And using “sleeker” influences such as funk, rock or rap, Michael Jackson implemented more original vocal expressions, which were complementary to his polished and well maintained vocal practice.

29From the point of view of timbre and melody, he thus developed a vocality close to what Jean-Claude Eloy calls the dirty sound (Eloy, 22nd June 1999), using raucous and saturated vocal textures, or keeping to unusual low notes, and he also gave their own musical status to shouting and interjections, which are consigned to vocal commentaries in funk or rock. By combining these timbre aspects to rhythmic parameters, he continued the work started by the Afro-American trends such as jazz and funk, making his voice a real percussion instrument that often uses the words’ sonority as a priority (though without neglecting their sense), or that is totally moving away from them to plunge into a vocal and buccal bruitism, which finds its best expression in beatboxing [20] T...i-vocal... [20] . Thus, in a song like “Shout [21] M...] prod.... [21] ” or in the rap of “Can’t let her get away [22] M...Future,... [22] ”, he drastically modified his vocal texture to make it a raucous flow away from any measurable height but playing with vocal impulsions and words’ rythmicity until reducing the text to its purest sound frame, away from sense. The singer’s voice oscillates then between a physical and concrete verve and a synthetic unreality (without using any artificial effect though), between a human voice bearing a text and an instrumentalist mutation of this voice. Michael Jackson pushed these practices further; he displayed them and in a way imposed them, to the point that they became the symbols of his vocal personality. An interjection or some vocal noises at the start of a song like the famous t-k-tch-tch or hee! hee! which open respectively (and among others) “Billie Jean [23] M..., op. cit. [23] ” or “The way you make me feel [24] M..., prod.... [24] ”, quickly became an instant mean of identification for the audience, in the way of initials or a vocal signature.

30By combining in his melodic expressions some multi-aesthetic and poly-expressive principles which combine unpolished, aggressive or strange timbres, shouting and rythmicity, Michael Jackson created a vocal personality that is his own and is at once recognizable by a large audience. He admittedly levelled at the surface some clearly anti-establishment expressions by melting them in his music and vocality’s eclecticism, but he also contributed, in doing so, to make these expressions popular and to galvanize them, in a more massive acceptation conveyed by the pop inspiration. And even among the anti-establishment inspirations, he, with this personality, dared and allowed to conciliate [25] R...osition... [25] (Thonon, 1998: 95) rock and rap by often combining them in the same song [26] W...ite »,... [26] . It is then by uniting and overhanging these popular aesthetics that Michael Jackson managed to create an authentic personality and be the mirror of the greater number.

31We will now explain how Bruce Swedien, bearer of a philosophy of the sound that continues Michael Jackson’s quest of authenticity and unicity, was the technical architect of what he established as the real vocal double of the artist, and we will evoke the sound engineer’s conceptual and technical approaches, traditional or innovative, but always converging towards the same goal: keeping and reproducing the distinctive identity and harshness of Michael Jackson’s voice.

Translation of a sound into image and recorded restitution of Michael Jackson’s vocal personality

A key character: Bruce Swedien

32«The best engineers draw their reservoir of knowledge and experience to manage the interface between music and machine, art and technology, with a sensitivity to musical expression guiding their own technical “performance”». (Zak III, 2001 : 168)


Sonorist and architect of Michael Jackson’s voice from Off the wall in 1979 to Invincible in 2001 [27] E...rojects... [27] , Bruce Swedien, nicknamed “the philosopher of sound” by his peers, is the one who dramatically changed the status of sound engineer from technician to co-artist. His career sweeps all the evolutions of studio work that have lined the twentieth century: indeed, his career started in the 1950s, when studio work was only in its infancy, with recording orchestras and classical choirs in Minneapolis, but also with experimenting his techniques with great names such as Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Dizzy Gillespie, Lionel Hampton, Oscar Peterson, Sarah Vaughan; he saw the multi-track evolution since the acquisition of his first four-track in 1959, and he saw the digital revolution. And yet, this colleague and admirer of Bill Putnam – who was a pioneer in technologies still used today like reverberation and echo – kept, all along his career, this motto: “Music first”, relegating to the background the use of technology that he often considers too systematic and artificial [28] Q... the au... [28] in popular music.
34Just as mastering does not constitute, for Bruce Swedien, an ultimate step where one saves music, he claims not to be an adept of corrective technology (and this even in terms of equalization, which he prefers to manage directly in the musician’s position in front of the mike, instrument by instrument, even in the case of an orchestra), and clearly prefers a creative function.

35It is worth noting that the care shown to the details of the sound field orchestrated by Bruce Swedien was made possible by a choice that was then avant-garde, and that remained his exclusivity for a long time: the use of Monster Cables (Swedien, 2009a : 110-111) created by his friend Noel Lee [29] N...Monster... [29] . Those were the first high-fidelity cables to compensate, once and for all, for the variable degrees of audio performance achieved by the standard zip-cords, cables that were up to then used indistinctly for sound, domestic electricity and lamps. It is thanks to the use of connectors in 24-carat gold that these high-performance audio-phonic cables were created; they were going to considerably improve for Bruce Swedien, from 1987 and the album Bad [30] M..., op. cit. [30] , the sharpness of the perception of the elements staged in the sound field, and in particular the approach of Michael Jackson’s voice, whose forms of expression, lyrical or pointillist, scatter the song’s different stratums.

A common quest

36«Certain producers (…) choose their engineers very carefully, because the producers know that those engineers are going to bring certain aspects to the record». (Zak III, 2001: 170)

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Reply #58 posted 11/15/14 2:44pm

HAPPYPERSON

If the producer Quincy Jones was the vector of the encounter between Bruce Swedien and Michael Jackson in 1979, it was however Michael Jackson himself, as a producer but above all as an artist, who will extend and cement his collaboration with the sound engineer for many years, well after the break-up with his initiator.
38Supplying a work of precision and taking special care of every slightest detail are two professional features that brought the two men together. But beyond that, it is around the quest of a certain authenticity that their collaboration was sealed, implemented by the singer’s vocal corporality and the engineer’s most natural technical approach possible.

39Authenticity, for Bruce Swedien, starts with respecting the original musical substance of a song. Indeed, he explains that if, most of the time, finalized songs are, following countless remodeling in studios, generally very different to their original concept to end up dissolved in the fashionable sound landscape, his reasoning, particularly with Michael Jackson, was exactly meant to be the contrary. Anxious not to move from the original concept that is always precisely defined by the artist (or often even recorded vocally and very thoroughly [31] M...sential... [31] , which allowed him to regularly go back to it), mindful of the musical spirit inherent in each song, he always tried to restitute with fidelity the singer’s vocal intentions, in a high fidelity that has – in its own words – nothing impersonal or sterile.

40We will now see how, sharing with Michael Jackson this concern for a precise sound restitution, Bruce Swedien opted for technical choices that always put the emphasis on the proximity with the mike, the natural spaces or effects, and a three-dimension management of the sound space in which each form of the singer’s vocal expression finds its place.

The mike as a vector of authenticity

41The first tool to convey the components of Michael Jackson’s vocal personality is the microphone. It will be used as the extension of the singer’s body and not as a tool of artificial remodeling. Indeed, the apparition of mikes and technological tools allowed, in the sacred den of the studios, to rework the human voice as well as the instrumental timbres. It resulted in experiments which contributed to make of these tools and other computers the new bellies where everything was created, shaped, artificially redesigned. These techniques, applied to pop music, are the very foundations of the synthetic inspiration, but they also spread to all currents. Yet, unfortunately, they were too often the ones which were, due to their emphatic use, made to simplify or correct, at the origin of the notion of easy effect that symbolizes, and often shades, the image of pop music.

42Thus, for a while, the microphonisation of the voice provoked the indignation of some theoreticians, such as Raoul Husson (1962: 75), for whom singing with a mike could only alter the voice’s own timbre and lead to negating the individual vocal culture. On the contrary, composers like John Cage saw in the mike the means to reproduce a more natural voice than the technique of organic amplification of the Bel Canto. Indeed, and as regards dematerialization, the microphone allowed, in Michael Jackson’s case, to bring the ear closer to the body by contributing to reveal his gesture in the phonation. This is really about the instrumental use mentioned by Michael Chanan in his book Repeated takes (Chanan, 1995), which inspired and initiated new vocal practices, among which close miking, put to practice by Bruce Swedien.

43The notion of vocal personality as used by Bruce Swedien to talk about Michael Jackson’s voice is interestingly similar to the idea of “acoustic photography [32] I...d Bruce... [32] ” expressed by Sophie Herr (2009: 108) which is indeed defined, from the start and beyond the simple outline of a dematerialized body, by the recording of a style, a way of being, an authenticity of “the being-in-life” that a breathing shows before anything else. With this shared conception, Bruce Swedien gives us more to listen than the singer’s voice. He makes us prick up our ears to the sound body, full-fledged member of the visible body, which it outstrips and overtakes:

44

«Close microphone placement brings the sound forward, suggesting, as one writer says of Bing Crosby’s crooning, “an intimate, personal relationship with fans”». (Chanan, 1995 : 128)

45A new phenomenon of intimacy, underlined by Simon Frith (Frith et al., 2001: 98), then springs up between the audience and the artist, who participates in the barthesian voice grain and who, thanks to the mike, lets the audience suddenly hear a voice tone that was until then kept for intimate conversations. And this approach, relayed by Bruce Swedien and Michael Jackson, also participated in this intensification of the vocal supremacy, started in the late 1940s, and which ended up by superseding the compositional touch in the aestheticism of popular songs.

46More than amplify and bring the singer’s voice, the mike indeed allowed Bruce Swedien to do a close-up on where the voice is born, the body, making in his own way from the barthesian vocal grain this “erotic mix of timbre and language” (Barthes, 1973: 88-89) in close relation to the cinematographic sound take by which the semiologist defined his thoughts.

47

“The cinema only needs to take the voice sound from very close and let hear in their materiality, their sensuality, the breathing, the rocky sound, the lips’ flesh, a whole presence of the human muzzle...”(Barthes, 1973: 88-89)

48

«What I listen for is transparency, where the idea moves from its inception to the listener with the least amount of forces impeding it». (Zak III, 2001: 169)

49To implement this approach and reproduce with fidelity the corporeal vocality of this vocal body, Bruce Swedien’s technical choices resulted in processes of sound capture that were the most natural possible (in the non-technological meaning of the word) – which met his friend George Massenburg’s [33] G...cer and... [33] concern for transparency. Operated by the necessarily invisible hand of the engineer, this capture had to comprehend a whole sonorous and bruitist body, generated by the body theatre of its source, always moving and interacting somehow with the voice’s rhythmic impulsions. His irrepressible dance movements during recording sessions and the percussive and emotional use of the singer’s body and mouth (breathing, sonorous inspirations, vocal hiccups, distorted or exaggerated pronunciation of words, finger snapping or feet stamping) could only be, as reflects of his personality and his ethnic and social origins, necessary stakeholders of his vocal field. And this does not take into consideration the direct and traditional research of effects, highlighted by Matt Forger [34] Q...ew with... [34] , another of the artist’s sound engineers, and which translates into deliberated attitudes towards the mike (moves or occasional distancing) as well as a parsimonious use, reduced to minute exceptions, of the compression tool on the singer’s voice (use that is otherwise widespread and almost inevitable for most pop artists), and this so as not to write off or alter this assumed bruitist dimension.

50It is in the same spirit that Bruce Swedien chose to record the singer’s voice analogically, preferring to avoid the artifacts that are added during the digital process and distort, even minutely, reality. This marked preference for an analogical and mono-phonical image of the source point allowed him to preserve the richness of the sound prism and a natural profile. The main point, for Bruce Swedien, really consisted in recording and mixing the singer’s voice so that the information coming back from the speakers keep and respect as much as possible the sound field’s value.

51Before addressing in detail the technologies used, on top of which we will put the choice of mikes, we have to study a paramount tool whose use was made necessary by the importance of retaining the components inherent in this vocal image: plywood.

Function and impact of plywood in the singer’s vocal image

52

«One aspect of an engineer’s task is to afford performers a sense of well-being in the studio » (Zak III, 2001 : 166)

53Michael Jackson was as much a singer as a dancer. The practice of these two arts participated in a one and only nature, so much so as the fact of singing irrepressibly generated corporeal movements in the artist. Forbidding the interpret to dance or eliminating the sound and vocal impacts his movements had by means of compression would have been close to what Bruce Swedien calls a totally distorted surgery approach.

54So as to let Michael Jackson freely use his movements and keep, without having to artificially treat them, the fair necessary part of sounds and corporeal percussions being integral part of his vocal personality, Bruce Swedien ordered, in 1979, a plywood stage that became the recording center of the singer-dancer. This platform was thought and made accordingly: created by the studio’s carpenters, eight feet wide and ten inches over the ground, it was doubly reinforced. Its surface was kept unvarnished and unpainted so as to allow a porosity of the material and thus some phonic absorption. It also made it possible to avoid that a direct contact with the ground bring about a resonance that would spread and create interferences.


Mikes: choices, position and technical features

55

“[The voice grain] implies a certain erotic connection between the voice and the listener”. (Barthes, 1981 : 200)

56The eroticism Roland Barthes brings to light here is closely linked to the singer’s body tangibility, his own “body contributions to the piece“, according to Paul Valery’s [35] S... sur le... [35] own phrase, underlined by a physical proximity to the mike which, we will see, was precisely used to amplify the barthesian vocal grain found in Michael Jackson. If choosing a type of mike was carefully done for this restitution, we will see that it was indeed the same for the position of the singer.

57Thus, for the main melodic lines of songs, or vocal leads, close miking was Bruce Swedien’s favorite technique: by placing the singer very near the mike, he could naturally erase most of the echo and surrounding noises, keeping the voice’s direct sound. Contrary to studios’ common practices, he did not use any windscreen, so that he did not lose the small corporeal noises of the singer, then he adapted, if necessary, the predelay, according to the piece speed, using the emblematic EMT 250 Electronic Reverberator Unit, considered until today by professionals as the best reverberation tool and the reference from which all the current digital reverberations have been defined.

58By placing in this way the mike near the mouth and by recording the slightest buccal, breathing and corporeal noises made by Michael Jackson, yet without inducing any expressive surcharge, Bruce Swedien actually revealed and staged this proximity, this vocal intimacy that Michael Chanan was mentioning above, and he brought to light, in a way, part of this “worrying strangeness [36] W...mliche,... [36] ” which fascinated and sometimes disturbed the audience.

59Concerning the choice of mikes, if he owns one hundred and five of them, Bruce Swedien only privileged two, taking into consideration Michael Jackson’s vocal parameters. The mikes, unequally used, are not the fruits of the latest technologies but result from reliable products that he judges un-superseded [37] Q...ew with... [37] . But, since, for the engineer, it is not about producing a music that is scientifically state-of-the-art and that “would not communicate anything” (according to his own words), he makes uncompromising choices, without being fundamentally conservative, but guided by his experience of technological evolutions.

This is how Bruce Swedien’s favorite mike, the very one he will use to record all Michael Jackson’s vocal parts (except for a sole song we will later mention), is the dynamic Shure SM-7 mike. Bought in 1977 from the Westlake Audio in Hollywood, his Shure SM-7 was the first one to be used in great-scope musical projects. The sound engineer explains his choice in relation to Michael Jackson’s prerogatives and particularly to the quality of the sound that it reproduces, transparent, accurate, non artificial in the high-pitched sounds and offering much presence. Well suited to dynamic voices, the Shure SM-7 does not flay the sibilant consonants the singer frequently uses. These ones appear smoothed, with a slightly piping sonority, without losing body. On the contrary, the mike slightly enriches the texture. The Shure SM-7 indeed requires, in accordance with Bruce Swedien’s practices with Michael Jackson, to be used very near the source of sound emission, and gives a great warmth that flatters the voice, as much as an acute restitution of the vocal dynamic. By recording Michael Jackson with this mike, Bruce Swedien obtained a very neat and acute sound image. Being, moreover, hardly reactive to the surrounding sounds, the Shure SM-7 was a first “natural” filter to the singer’s corporeal sounds, and warranties, with the plywood, to only keep the necessary part. This is the reason why Bruce Swedien did not assign any more windscreens, which would have run the risk to erase the breathing sounds and the explosives sonorous emissions that were indeed intended.
61The only song that was not recorded with the Shure SM-7 was “Earth Song” on the album HIStory Past, Present and Future [38] M..., op. cit. [38] in 1995, song bearing a half-apocalyptic, half-prophetic message in which Bruce Swedien chose to underline and timbre the singer’s voice with a mike offering a warm sound, capturing a larger sound spectrum: the Neumann M-49. This electrostatic mike was created in 1949, commercialized in 1950, and bought by Bruce Swedien soon after his very first mike (that was the Telefunken U-47). For the engineer, it is an excellent mike for voice recording, even though its specificities allow it to be used for many other applications [39] Q...ew with... [39] . The Neumann M-49 is multi-directional and totally adjustable, and allows an omni-directional use, which is interesting for capturing vocal backgrounds for example. The rich and round tone it reproduces gives the harshest sounds some pleasant and warm colors. And it is the incantatory structure of this song’s chorus, made of high-pitched singing exercise, and the final ad libitum treated as shouting, that made it necessary to incorporate additional warmth to the vocal image, and thus dictated to Bruce Swedien the choice of this mike.

62As we saw, the voice became significantly important as an identity in the popular aestheticisms, even overriding the role of the composer, to the extent that it became a major milestone in the arrangements, so much so as often dethroning the instruments.

63

«Voices became central to the group’s musical arrangements – vocal harmonies and back-up chorus sounds had to do the job of the strings and echoes and studio tricks of the teen pop records». (Martin, 1983 : 32)

64This very paradigm spreads the vocal structures of Michael Jackson’s songs, notably when beyond the vocal leads which form the emerging part carried and expressed by his voice, his vocal personality fans out in the different musical stratums of the songs, from the melody harmonization to the almost-instrumental implementation of melodic, rhythmic or buccal and unvoiced elements of the accompaniment. All these elements were suitably recorded so as to find a position in a sound space that Bruce Swedien does not only want to be stereophonic but also tri-dimensional.

A multi-expressive vocal personality in the sound space

Bruce Swedien’s tri-dimensional sound space

65The sound space and the three dimensions play a large part in Michael Jackson’s recorded vocal aestheticism. The sound space as it is explored by Bruce Swedien can be compared to Roberto Casati and Jerome Dokic’s (1994: 102) description of a “space accessible to the corporeal movement, and in which (that is to say, in some parts of which) sounds are produced, that can be located by a listener”. It is in this seemingly empty material surrounding the body that Michael Jackson’s vocal personality and the sonorous events it is formed of were organized by the engineer to create a sensory substance and a sound image in the three-dimension space. One supports and adds value to the other, as the décor and dramatization stage the character, here a real organic vocality.

66If, for Bruce Swedien, the stereophonic space is deeply tri-dimensional, it is because he does not consider it as a mere effect of lateralization, but as a full occupation of the acoustic panorama by sonorous characters whose respective vital spaces do not muffle each other. In the manner of Sophie Herr for whom the “acoustic photography” (Herr, 2009: 74) breaks the mirror of a thought according to the eye and thus could not be the reflection of anything, Bruce Swedien does not consider the sound image as the reproduction of any realist space positioning of the sound and takes this conception after the 1950s, conception that emerged following the success of an emblematic song by Les Paul and Marie Ford “How high the moon [40] L...78 rpm,... [40] ”. This song, indeed, long before multi-track recorders appeared, was built around an overlapping of pre-recorded vocal and harmonic lines called overdubbing, on which, during television shows promoting this novelty [41] A...listair... [41] , the main melody was the only voice that was put live, in reality. The awareness linked to this song was, for Bruce Swedien, to change the notion of sound exactness, this quest of purity symbolized by high-fidelity, to a notion of comprehensive sound image, endowed with a depth of field and an acoustic relief whose limits were from then on fixed by the creator-composer-engineer’s imagination. And the idea of transparency, mentioned above, occurs precisely when the handling of the sound reality becomes, for the listener, a reality in itself.

67To place Michael Jackson’s voice, with all its aesthetic and organic components, in a sound frame that underlines it or wraps it without using any artificial effects at the opposite of the intended authenticity, Bruce Swedien strove to create real and adjustable acoustic spaces in the studio. His choice was, as for the Monster Cables, state-of-the-art material with the adoption, from the album Bad in 1987, of gobos from the newest generation called Tubetraps, thought and created by his friend Arthur M. Noxon from Acoustic Sciences [42] A...ated by... [42] . These Tubetraps are cylinders with designed shapes, mounted on a base and equipped with special acoustic coatings allowing to modulate spaces endowed with sonorous features that can be, despite outside variables, highly predictable. The Tubetraps, variation of the Quick Sound Fields, are quick in terms of installation as well as of reactivity, since they recreate a realist sound field without unwelcome reflection or floating echo. Some cylinders are hollow and covered with a densely woven fiberglass. It results a great rate of pressure between the highly resistant surface and the hollow inside, pressure differential that contributes to maximize the acoustic speed. The innovative particularity of these Tubetraps was that, at the same time, the whole surface of the cylinder would absorb the spectrum of low-pitched sounds, whereas a half of it also let diffuse the high-pitched spectrum with brightness and a controlled clarity. This hybrid acoustic is made possible by suspending a thin but heavy sheet of perforated soft plastic covering half the front face of the cylinder. The hybrid features of the plastic sheet allow absorbing the low-pitched frequencies and reflecting the high-pitched ones. These Tubetraps were then placed around the plywood on which Michael Jackson was singing, and disposed on a circle with a diameter of three meters. However, it is worth noting that the singer, familiarized with the studios’ tools and their technical constraints, would adjust himself their position according to the vocal reflections he wanted to obtain.


It is thus within these controlled acoustic spaces that the singer was recorded, and, coupled with the techniques of voice take we will now mention, this staging plays on proximity and physicality while underlining the characteristic vocal aspects called by the mind and the musical energy peculiar to each song.
The vocal leads: an underlined presence

69As we saw, Michael Jackson’s vocal leads were monophonically and analogically recorded, the singer being placed very near the microphone Shure SM-7 so as not to lose all the bruitist and corporeal particles linked to his sound identity. But Michael Jackson also created himself his vocal harmonies, overlaying, with an accuracy Bruce Swedien insisted on, his vibrato on each line. In this phase of recording, the singer first doubled the same track while keeping the same proximity to the mike, then, at the third take, he would take a step back and record again the same melodic line. Bruce Swedien would then turn the sound level of this third take up to the same degree as the first two. This process resulted in an increase in the proportion of early reflections and created a first reinforcement of the sound richness.

70A fourth take allowed him to record from an even further distance, but this time in stereophony, by using two mikes, set up in an X-Y pair, or “Blumlein Pair [43] B...cording... [43] ”. This method was conceived by Alan Dower Blumlein [44] A... 1942),... [44] : it is the best known stereophonic technique and the one Bruce Swedien favored. Very simple, it consists in placing two bidirectional microphones, one opposite the other so that the capsules converge as much as possible while keeping an angle of 90 degrees between them. The result of this take is added to the previous ones.

71It is this addition of early reflections that is at the origin of the depth of field present in the different blocks of vocal harmonies in a number of Michael Jackson’s songs’ choruses. The title “Rock with you [45] M...ition),... [45] ” of the album Off the Wall was the first one to display this process, and creates an acoustic effect that was innovative at that time, the outcome being, at the other side of his career, the large vocal unfolding of the song “Butterflies [46] M...ssette,... [46] ” in 2001. Let’s note that the same process was applied to Andrae Crouch’s choir in the song “The man in the mirror [47] M..., op. cit. [47] ” of the album Bad, and creates there a sound density that amplifies the choir and makes it exist in the whole field. It is worth adding that in this particular case, and since a great reverberation was added to this vocal part, Bruce Swedien precisely made sure to plan enough initial delay for this reverberation not to cover the early reflections.

Vocal harmonies: impact of stereophony and depth of field

72The poly-expressive nature of Michael Jackson’s vocal personality was thereby exploited, underlined and emphasized through recording techniques. We saw how the singer’s vocal harmonies were not only stratified but also put into perspective in the acoustic field and what impact the stereophonic sound takes play in this sound staging: applied to the vocal backgrounds, they play on the depth of field; applied to the choir, they give it a tangible presence. Finally, used for the orchestra, as in the song “Childhood [48] M...uture ,... [48] ”, the stereophony exploited by Bruce Swedien weaves a network of spatial relationships between the instrumental ensemble and the listener and maintains the latter in a real perspective of concert audience. Bruce Swedien has also been raising an interest in stereophony since the 1950s, when many directors of recording companies did not anticipate the upcoming revolution and did not want to invest in this field. Whereas some of them bet that, not more than a “shower with two heads [49] I...n front... [49] ”, stereophony had not any interest, Bruce Swedien, like his model and friend Bill Putnam, had, on the contrary, installed a separated control station hidden at the back of the studio to make some experiments in stereo, which allowed him later to be a step ahead in this field. He had indeed grasped from the beginning its interest in terms of depth of sound space and expressive impact.

73Let’s note that Bruce Swedien’s recordings by stereo pairs, applied to vocal backgrounds but most of all systematically applied to the instruments, were for a long time a unique method of work, called Acusonic Recording Process by Quincy Jones, and had a whole generation of engineers think about the notion of stereophony again. Suspected at a certain time to be a new technological tool kept secret, the Acusonic Recording Process (combination of accurate, referring to the accuracy of the sound image of real stereophony, and sonic, referring to the sound one tries to personalize) actually designated a process designed by Bruce Swedien, aiming to combine several multi-track recorders, so as to multiply the stereophonic pairs [50] B...ophonic... [50] . He used up to ninety-six of them for the song “Places you find love [51] A... Jones,... [51] ” by Quincy Jones. Michael Jackson’s music required on average sixty-six audio tracks (that is three linked appliances of twenty-four tracks, given that a track of each appliance was used to synchronize the time code SMPTE and that another one was kept empty to avoid generating any interference) (Swedien, 2009a: 109-110). The fact to have on disposal as many tracks as necessary [52] N...ations,... [52] indeed allowed Bruce Swedien to multiply the stereo images in the sound fields of Michael Jackson’s music and this process contributed more than any other to create a qualitative demarcation and a new sound identity.

74But the singer’s vocal harmonization also led to other specific recording processes. Indeed, very early in his collaboration with Michael Jackson, Bruce Swedien grabbed the opportunity to create, from the singer’s voice, a sound perspective using the width and depth of the space. He explains that the artist’s vocal abilities, coupled with his interest and his liking for sound experiments, made him a great laboratory of experiments. Moreover, Quincy Jones and Michael Jackson being always enthusiastic about Bruce Swedien’s creative sense, the latter was always entirely free to bring his own personality to music. It is in this favorable context that, supporter of natural techniques, Bruce Swedien had Michael Jackson make, singing live, effects on the dubbing of his main voice: to give even more relief to the sound texture of these vocal blocks, the sound engineer would very slightly slow down the recording of the main voice during the dubbing (three or four percents), and thus, at the same time, very slightly lower its tone. Michael Jackson would record the dubbing keeping into account this new micro-tone. Then, Bruce Swedien would combine the two voices, with their near imperceptible gap in frequency, by mixing the sound level of the double track slightly below that of the vocal lead. This technique, which needs a good relative sense of tone and a great vocal precision, as Bruce Swedien, for which this experiment remained unique, underlines, allowed bringing support to the voice by enriching its sound spectrum in a natural and real way, without resorting to any artificial reprocessing.

Conclusion

75So, if Michael Jackson did not stop developing, improving or renewing his vocal and musical personality, he particularly took care, in parallel, to convey it with fidelity. He was committed to developing an innovative and independent aestheticism, symptomatic of a driving force consisting in always going forward instead of enjoying the safe comfort of the previous success. By coupling his vocal abilities with daily work on his tessitura and vocal timbre, he managed to create an original sound personality, summoning and restoring the entire corporeal sphere in his voice.

76In the manner of contemporary creation which has a taste of this barthesian voice grain and which lends an ear to the body, Michael Jackson’s approach focused on reinstating a tangible physicality in the vocal field. Using his voice as a music instrument in its own right, the singer laid it on his songs’ every musical stratum including melody, harmonies, voiced cells or rhythmic projections of the melodic-rhythmic framework, low-pitched vocalized lines. He did not confine it to conveying an expression of intellect and emotion, but established it as the sound media of a whole body organically interacting in the vocal image and whose smallest particles of presence, maintained in the final mix spectrum, play a major part in restoring this authenticity. The techniques used to that effect by the sound engineer Bruce Swedien aimed to, by studio strategies avoiding artificial reprocessing, structure each vocal intervention, be it linear or pointillist among an acoustic space that is deeply three-dimensional, without losing any of the link of auditory intimacy woven between the interpreter, through his sound double, and the listener.

77Michael Jackson established his vocal personality through a very large popular musical aestheticism, not stigmatized, by developing an expressive plurality looking into the multiplicity of aesthetical, ethnical or social references of the pop cultural syncretism. Admittedly, the work conditions offered by the artist, in terms of budget and time, will remain for a long time an exception accounting for the long studio strategies often implemented – from parsimonious recording of orchestras to the creation of unprecedented sound entities combining concrete elements, electronic and instrumental timbres – as well as the hard-line character of the approach. Indeed, Michael Jackson self-funded a great part of his work in studio, trying at the same time to keep certain autonomy; he also equipped the studios with state-of-the-art facilities and allocated much extended work deadlines, sometimes facing the contracts requirements; in short, he managed to gather paramount factors which all and each of them contributed to achieve a substantive work.


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Reply #59 posted 11/15/14 2:50pm

HAPPYPERSON

I have got to say no other artist have made such a global impact with their artistry like Michael did.

United States

United Arab Emirates

Uganda

Sri Lanka

South Africa

Saudi Arabia (1)

Saudi Arabia (2).

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