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Discuss Anything & Everything MJ
The other thread got too long ............ Continuing with a new one. Please use this thread to discuss everything and anything MJ. Any created threads will automatically get the and be directed to this sticky. NOTE: DO NOT FEED THE TROLLS, REPORT THEM - Trolling will NOT be tolerated on the org http://prince.org/msg/3/257367 Take note folks --- requests for copies for songs in any variation of asking/hinting etc. Temp bans will be handed out generously, I shit you not. Absolutely no illegal file sharing (via yousendit or any other site). Please be aware that the moderators here strictly enforce this. Ohh purple joy oh purple bliss oh purple rapture! REAL MUSIC by REAL MUSICIANS - Prince "I kind of wish there was a reason for Prince to make the site crash more" ~~ Ben |
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Frank Dileo's quote on how Michael saved the record business with the Thriller album[Edited 10/13/14 5:09am] | |
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Michael Jackson's music is being used to help prevent & manage diabetes through dance
Sources: Dance Out Diabetes | Edited By – All Things Michael
Event: Totally Michael Jackson with DJ Charis | |
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The Biblical Meaning Of Dangerous Album Art
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Hey all! Could someone help me out, I'm trying to compile a list of all fully leaked concerts (In good Quality) I'm mainly looking for things pre HIStory tour, as there is TONS of full HIStory shows in circulation. So far I have
Victory Tour Dallas Victory Tour Toronto Bad Tour Yokohoma Bad Tour Brisbane Bad Tour Wembley Bad Tour Japan Dangerous Tour Bucharest Dangerous Tour Buenos Aires Dangerous Tour Monza Royal Brunei
Any others you know of ? | |
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Is Michael dead? People have been asking thid online. There's even a DVD with elegid proof that Michael is living. WHat do you really think? DId Michael fake his death and this is one big hoax? Or did he really.......... Working up a purple sweat. | |
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I want to ask "Come and get it the rare pearls for christmas. Does anyone here have that album ? Is it worthwhile? | |
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Michael's dance steps come from an obscure 1974 musical called The Little Prince
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eUTEhEPONgc#t=64
Such an artist. | |
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Earth Song: Inside Michael Jackson’s Magnum Opus by Joseph Vogel (Blake Vision, 2011) - A Book Review by Elizabeth Amisu
This article was first published on the Michael Jackson Academic Studies Journal, 15 August 2014.
[img]https://michaeljacksonstudies.files.wordpress.com/2014/08/img_3805-e1407952438155.jpg[/img]
The cover of ‘Earth Song: Inside Michael Jackson’s Magnum Opus’ 'Man in the Music: The Creative Life and Work of Michael Jackson' (Sterling 2011) was a huge and well-researched text, which will doubtless become a staple in schools, universities and colleges the world over when the level of Jackson's genius is finally accepted on the international academic stage and given the respect and study it deserves. Vogel's other book on Jackson, 'Featuring Michael Jackson: Collected Writings on the King of Pop' is targeted more towards lay-readers, giving a simple but effective series of published articles from publications like 'The Atlantic'. 'Earth Song: Inside Michael Jackson's Magnum Opus' completes the triumvirate of groundbreaking studies in Michael Jackson's art by academic, Dr. Joseph Vogel.
One of the most evident reasons that Michael Jackson’s art was so poorly reviewed by critics in the last decades of his career was because he often went ‘over their heads’ in terms of complexity, artistic influences, self-expression and sincerity while simultaneously reaching the “uneducated” masses, who in the eyes of many rock critics must have been in a shared delusion to buy into ‘Jacksonmania’.
Academic study of Michael Jackson’s art is always a fresh wind which blows away old prejudices and re-appreciates the artist. Vogel comes to ‘Earth Song’, possibly the single-most important and effective song of Jackson’s career, through the prism of intense research and study. When Vogel writes about Jackson, one would do very well to listen. If there were a Professorship in Michael Jackson Studies, he would have been the first recipient. He is a veritable scientist, tackling Jackson study with the same focused tenacity as a Shakespeare scholar.
Several of Vogel’s sources are primary and ‘Earth Song: Inside Michael Jackson’s Magnum Opus’, at a short and easily readable 112 pages features first-hand interviews with Bill Bottrell, Matt Forger, and Brad Buxer, as well as secondary contextual sources that range from the King James Bible (1611) and Wordsworth to Bjork and Emmerson.
Even with the author’s wider knowledge in Jacksonism, Vogel uses the artist himself as his primary source: Jackson’s interviews, words, lyrics, harmonies, and personal convictions lie at the heart of this short but incisive book and this is where its key strength lies.
In 112 pages, the author takes the reader from the 1988 to 2009, charting with startling accuracy Jackson’s creative process, inspiration and visual representation of a single song, ‘Earth Song’ from his 1995 album, ‘HIStory: Past, Present and Future Book 1’. The various guises ‘Earth Song’ took, its varied reception throughout the world, its lack of an American release and its anachronistic nature are presented alongside Jackson’s own intentions.
Throughout the book, ‘Earth Song’ is also placed into the context of contemporary music as well as timeless artistic expression, placed in the context of prejudices against the artist and the artist’s struggle to present a new view to his listeners and truly change the world.
'Earth Song' is Michael Jackson and Michael Jackson, in many ways was 'Earth Song'. It is widely known that this song was his last performance in 2009 and this fact gives it an ethereality which only adds to its urgency:
The messenger has gone but the message remains. I really do hope that Dr. Vogel goes on to write a series of books like this on a range of songs that epitomise Jackson’s art and life. Songs that are only given a “light touch” in ‘Man in the Music’ could do with an entire book each. This would make such a great series to collect and own. Some of my particular favourites would be ‘Man in the Mirror’, ‘Morphine’ and ‘History’. It would be quite something to read how those songs metamorphosed and grew over the years into the tracks we know and love.
Whether you’re an academic, a fan or spectator this book will captivate and teach you things you never knew.
Elizabeth Amisu is a postgraduate scholar of Early Modern English Literature at King’s College London. It is her goal to bring wider attention to Michael Jackson as artist by creating an academic model for the study of his art. Find out more here.
http://elizabethamisu.com/post/100193640625/earth-song-inside-michael-jacksons-magnum-opus-by | |
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"A mark of respect for a fellow human being is silence. Michael Jackson will never get it. There will be no silence for him as his body is laid to rest and hundreds huddle around remembering his warmth.
I join the clamour now with my clattering keyboard because somewhere in the commotion, I read something which reminded me of a long-gone thought of mine.. “I hope they tell his story right”. He told his story enough but it never was given due attention. MJ’s Creator knows his story and that’s the comfort.
There’s something that surprises me, and something that does not surprise me. What does not surprise me is all the different expert theories on the tragedy of his life. What still surprises me is that this man’s life is seen by so many as a tragedy. That, to me is poignant. The tragic failing of the human spirit in so many of this world - the inability to celebrate the gifted among us. Michael Jackson never disappointed me, but it seems from most reports, that he disappointed many others who, to forgive their own hasty conclusions of his character, shamefully acknowledge his “talent” or rather - acknowledge his 13 minutes of talent - since ‘Thriller’ is the only thing that is ever mentioned from the fifty years of his life.
I tried fighting the usual suspects through the ‘Vince Era’ and it was clearly not about the music anymore as I could tell sadly, from listening to the album itself. Finally, as a result of the 2003 raid on Neverland and the - as MJ would say - ‘ignorant’ three million dollar bail amount, I produced an untitled 48 minute experimental documentary for my Master’s Project that earned me less credit, respect and understanding than any other piece I have ever created. Months later, I took the opportunity to personally thank his lawyer and give him a copy of ‘The Hindu’, India’s national newspaper with the acquittal news hogging the frontpage.
MJ got me listening to Gandhi, Beatles and Tchaikovsky. I learnt new words like ‘paraphernalia’ and ‘catatonic’ from hearing him talk. I celebrated his irreverant fashion sense and I really admired his way with the English language. He inspired me overnight to stop biting my nails. I learned his accent, ‘Jacksonese’- a severely underrated dialect of American and I discovered a new strength in my falsetto while singing endlessly along with his songs. Of course I can Moonwalk. All MJ represented to me was creativity, simple joy and good values that I was raised with. Yet, I have received both curious acceptance and sharp rejection within different cultures because of my open appreciation for him and his lifework. A fact I find surprising to this day. Its possible I made an early bad judgement in choosing him as a source of inspiration, but I further chose to rather find inspiration in MJ than sweat justifying my decision to the inquisitive.
Before his 2005 trial, I saw MJ as someone who handled pain very well and shared that strength with many others. After his trial, actually since the day of the ‘not guilty’ verdict on all ten counts, I started to see him as someone who could not handle pain very well and needed strength. I never thought this was a tragic fact about him, I mistakenly believed this was part of the general human experience and wished him well in his endeavours to overcome his troubles since, which were definitely many and mostly related to his money. I didn’t realize that common human vulnerability looked like a tragic failing to some.
It is not the death of MJ that is disturbing, its the fact that he candidly shared the rawest emotions in public and yet died leaving an undying curiosity in most who care more for information on his private matters such as the mother of his children, his health, his finances, the shape of his nose, the texture of his hair and let’s not forget, the colour of his skin. There is no one recognized person whose story will be believed. The clamour now will be to claim that spot as the person closest to MJ with the most intimate details to share.
I am sad for the little boy from Gary, Indiana whose dreams about making movies were thwarted. I think about the children MJ leaves behind who will forever live in the shadow of their father’s presence as sadly many children in this world do. I am speechless for all the fans, who still look to MJ for needs ranging from a daily gossip fix to a remote parent to a messiah. I mostly grieve for the people who could never get themselves to see any beauty in his being here with us. How anyone could dismiss the good in Michael Jackson is and always has been a curiosity of mine. I will not miss MJ, he is not a part of my life in that sense but I will remember him when I see any performance stage. As a student of art, I can continue to learn from a genius who, through shared thoughts or demonstrated action provided enough lessons on, and access to, the most ready and refined appreciation for life and art. I regret that there is no photograph of the First African American President shaking hands with the Permanent President of Showbiz. MJ is deeply revered in the African American community and has shaken hands with many political leaders, including the beloved Madiba, and four American Presidents: Ronald Reagan, Jimmy Carter, George Bush Sr. and Bill Clinton.
MJ is always high-level. If his expressed level of compassion did not hit the mark, distinguished intellectuals could probably attest to this by reducing him to a Mathematical formula - taking into consideration the worth of the staggering statistics related to his various seminal works as artist and philanthropist. There is something to be explored for the sheer recurrence of majority numbers and disproved probabilities in any impact measurement study. This, despite his place in society representing that of one who was marginalized even within a perceived minority group. If he was once called a one-man rescue team for showbiz it is no credit to the title-giver, for such is the sustaining power of sincerity in his art and charity. A stage is the worshipped ground of performers all over the world. Now, with the key light gone, no stage anywhere in the world will ever sparkle as much as it could with MJ being around. The corner of darkness will always be present despite advances in technology, the talents of performers and skills of lighting experts in the times to come. And all he needed was one spotlight.
There is no need for clamour around a man’s struggles. Yet there is no end to the ready discourses on the ‘tragic life’ of this man. MJ would have never had his say because what’s to be said can only be understood in silence. Michael Jackson will never have this undisputed moment of silence. Not from this world. Not in this lifetime. This much has been proved so far, only time can tell otherwise and I suspect he knew this very well .. “Lies run sprints. Truth runs marathons” - Michael Jackson. Being a fan of MJ, I have very low tolerance for cynicism. Yet, my prayers in this world have been for strength not peace - it’s because I always thought MJ’s prayers for peace had already reached the ear of God. Satyameva Jayathey (Truth alone Triumphs)
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motownlover said: I want to ask "Come and get it the rare pearls for christmas. Does anyone here have that album ? Is it worthwhile? I've got it. It's pretty good - like almost all of Motown's J5 vault releases. I especially like the funky Jermaine-led stuff like "Keep Off The Grass" and "Idinnit". It's very nicely presented and includes a 7" vinyl single of "If The Shoe Don't Fit" as well. [Edited 10/18/14 15:54pm] | |
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New York Times: Moonwalk a Mile in His ShoesExamining Michael Jackson Impersonators and ‘Dangerous’
[img:$uid]http://static01.nyt.com/images/2014/10/20/arts/20BOOKTURNER-COMBO/20BOOKTURNER-master675.jpg[/img:$uid] | |
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Michael Jackson's Unparalleled Influence> Epic
Michael Jackson was the most influential artist of the 20th century. That might sound shocking to sophisticated ears. Jackson, after all, was only a pop star. What about the century's great writers like Fitzgerald and Faulkner? What about visual artists, like Picasso and Dali, or the masters of cinema from Chaplin to Kubrick? Even among influential musicians, did Michael really matter more than the Beatles? What about Louis Armstrong, who invented jazz, or Frank Sinatra, who reinvented it for white people? Or Elvis Presley, who did the same with blues and gospel, founding rock in the process? Michael Jackson is bigger than Elvis? By a country mile.
First, there is no question that musicians in the 20th century had far more cultural impact than any other sort of artist. There is no such thing, for instance, as a 20th-century painter that is more famous than an entertainer like Sinatra. There are no filmmakers or movie stars that had more cultural sway than The Beatles, and no 20th-century writers who touched more lives than Elvis. Consider that thousands of human beings, from Bangkok to Brazil, make their living by pretending to be Elvis Presley. When was the last time you saw a good impression of Picasso? Even Elvis, though, is overshadowed by Jackson's career.
First, with the possible exception of Prince and Sammy Davis Jr., Michael Jackson simply had more raw talent as a performer than any of his peers. But the King of Pop reigns as the century's signature artist not just because of his exceptional talent, but because he was able to package that talent in a whole new way. In both form and content, Jackson simply did what no one had done before.
Louis Armstrong, for instance, learned music as a live performer and adapted his art for records and radio. Sinatra and Elvis were also basically live acts who made records, ultimately expanding that on-stage persona into other media through sheer force of charisma. The Beatles were a hybrid; a once-great live band made popular by radio and TV, forced by their own fame to become rock's first great studio artists.
Jackson, though, was something else entirely. Something new. Obviously he made great records, usually with the help of Quincy Jones. Jackson's musical influence on subsequent artists is simply unavoidable, from his immediate followers like Madonna and Bobby Brown, to later stars like Usher and Justin Timberlake.
Certainly, Jackson could also electrify a live audience. His true canvas, though, was always the video screen. Above all, he was the first great televisual entertainer. From his Jackson 5 childhood, to his adult crossover on the Motown 25th anniversary special, to the last sad tabloid fodder, Jackson lived and died for on TV. He was born in 1958, part of the first generation of Americans who never knew a world without TV. And Jackson didn't just grow up with TV. He grew up on it. Child stardom, the great blessing and curse of his life, let him to internalize the medium's conventions and see its potential in a way that no earlier performer possibly could.
The result, as typified by the videos for "Thriller," "Billie Jean," and "Beat It," was more than just great art. It was a new art form. Jackson turned the low-budget, promotional clips record companies would make to promote a hit single into high art, a whole new genre that combined every form of 20th century mass media: the music video. It was cinematic, but not a movie. There were elements of live performance, but it was nothing like a concert. A seamless mix of song and dance that wasn't cheesy like Broadway, it was on TV but wildly different from anything people had ever seen on a screen. The oft-repeated conventional wisdom—that Jackson's videos made MTV and so "changed the music industry" is only half true. It's more like the music industry ballooned to encompass Jackson's talent and shrunk down again without him. Videos didn't matter before Michael, and they ceased to matter at almost the precise cultural moment he stopped producing great work. His last relevant clip, "Black or White," was essentially the genre's swan song. Led by Nirvana and Pearl Jam, the next wave of pop stars hated making videos, seeing the entire format, and the channel they aired on, as tools of corporate rock.
The greatest impact of the music video wasn't on music, but video. That is, on film and television. The generation that grew up watching '80s videos started making movies and TV shows in the '90s, using MTV's once-daring stylistic elements like quick cuts, vérité-style hand-helds, nonlinear narrative and heavy visual effects and turning them into mainstream TV and film movie conventions.
If Jackson had only been a great musician who also invented music video, he still wouldn't have mattered as much. Madonna, his only worthy heir, was almost as gifted at communicating an aesthetic on-screen. The aesthetic Jackson communicated, however, was much more powerful, liberating and globally resonant than hers. It was more powerful than what Elvis and Sinatra communicated, too. Hence, that whole "Most Influential Artist" thing.
American popular music has always been about challenging stereotypes and breaking down barriers. Throughout the century, be it in Jazz, Rock or Hip-Hop, black and white artists mixed styles, implicitly, and often explicitly, advocating racial equality. Popular music has always challenged sex roles, too. Top 40 artists especially, from Little Richard and proto-feminist Leslie Gore, to David Bowie, Madonna and Lady Gaga have pushed social progress by bending and breaking gender rules.
Jackson was clearly a tragic figure, and his well-documented childhood trauma didn't help. But his fatal flaw, and simultaneously the source of his immense power, was a truly revolutionary Romantic vision. Not Romantic in the sappy way greeting card companies and florists use the word, but in its older, Byronic sense of someone who commits their entire life to pursing a creative ideal in defiance of social order and even natural law. Jackson's Romantic ideal, learned as a child at Motown founder Berry Gordy's feet, was an Age of Aquarius-inspired vision using of pop music to build racial, sexual, generational and religious harmony. His twist, though, was a doozy.
He not only made art promoting pop's egalitarian ethos, but literally tried embody it. When that vision became an obsession, a standard showbiz plastic surgery addiction became something infinitely more ambitious—and infinitely darker. Jackson consciously tried to turn himself into an indeterminate mix of human types, into a sort of ageless arch-person, blending black and white, male and female, adult and child. He was, however, not an arch-person. He was just a regular person, albeit a supremely talented one, and time makes dust of every person, no matter how well they sing. Decades of throwing himself against this irrefutable wall of fact ravaged him, body then soul, and eventually destroyed him.
At his creative peak, though, it almost seemed possible. Michael could be absolutely anything he wanted; Diana Ross one day, Peter Pan and the next. Every breathtaking high note, every impossible dance-step and crazy costume projected the same message. There are no more barriers of race, sex, class or age, he told his audience. You, too, can be and do whatever you want. We are limited only by our power to dream. A performer who can make you believe that, to feel it, even for a moment, comes along once in a lifetime. Maybe. If you're lucky.
As years pass and history sanitizes his memory, Jackson's legend will only grow. One day, in addition to being the most influential artist of the 20th century, he may well topple Elvis become the most-impersonated as well. Jackson, after all, only died a year ago. Elvis has been gone since 1977. Another two or three decades and Michael might have the most impersonators from Bangkok and Brazil. Let's just hope that they don't take it too far.
http://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2010/06/michael-jacksons-unparalleled-influence/58616/2/ | |
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MJ L.O.V.E: https://www.facebook.com/...689&type=2 / YOUTUBE: http://www.youtube.com/us...nderSilent | |
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*Orignally posted on Lipstickalley. Very interesting comments.*
When was Michael at his peak commercially, artistically/creatively speaking?
Something else that shows that Michael never sacrificed quality for the sake of record making is the fact that he only put out 6 (not including BOTDF Remix Album) albums in his entire solo career. If he was all about breaking records and getting acclaim, he would of put out a lot of filler material/records just for the sake of it. It's very rare for a person who's been around that long, and now people put out mixtapes/albums every other year it seems. It shows just how dedicated Michael was to the quality, integrity, and message of his music.
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Got it when it first came out. Solid collection, for sure. The packaging was great, with a nice vinyl single and booklet. The music itself is solid. Some strong songs that could've easily benn singles (If The Shoe Don't Fit, their cover of You Can't Hurry Love).
To be honest, while Xscape was a step in the right direction, Motown has released far better material. I guess given the era/age of the material it wouldn't make sense to update it, but still. Between Unreleased Masters, Live At The Forum and Rare Pearls, Motown has had some quality releases.
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I do have "the unreleased masters . I liked it and i was just curious because this has more material and i was curious about the quality. Xscape could have been better if they used other mixes, EG the mix for SHe was loving me and i like the leak of "do yo know where your children are better [Edited 10/21/14 0:50am] | |
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‘Crack Music’: Michael Jackson’s ‘Invincible’ - Dangerous Philosophies 4/12‘Crack Music’: Michael Jackson’s Invincible By Elizabeth Amisu Inspired by the chapter, ‘Invincible, The Denouement Album’ from The Dangerous Philosophies of Michael Jackson by Elizabeth Amisu (Praeger, 2016). Abstract: Little academic writing has been devoted to Michael Jackson’s final studio album, Invincible. This article explores Invincible through Kanye West’s metaphor of Crack Music from the 2005 album, Late Registration and places it in the context of black aspiration as a threat to dominant Western ideologies. ‘CRACK MUSIC’: MICHAEL JACKSON’S INVINCIBLE 'Sometimes I feel the music is the only medicine Listen to the track, Crack Music from Kanye West’s 2005 album, Late Registration. The political, ‘Ronald Reagan cooked up an answer’ is intertwined with the historical, ‘we’ve been hanging from the same tree ever since’ and religious, ‘God, how could you let this happen?’ West’s gospel harmonies soar, as if reaching for impossible dreams while his lyrics remain entrenched in the gutter. A similar bittersweet-ness is found in the rising choruses of Whatever Happens and Heaven Can Wait from Invincible. Both songs deal with existential themes and death is at the centre. There is a heavenwards reach, ‘tell the angels no’ tempered with an earthbound fear, ‘if the Lord should come for me before I wake’.[ii] The curious dichotomy between what nourishes us and what kills us is the stage on which all Jackson’s songs were performed. Like Jackson did years before him, ‘black man, blackmail, throw the brother in jail’, West continually questions how blacks can forge identity in a predominantly white Western world, ‘they wanna pack us all in a box like styrofoam’. While Jackson encodes his sentiments in metaphor, ‘I’m not a ghost from Hell, but I’ve got a spell on you’, West laces them with taboo lexis, ‘that’s that crack music nigga’.[iii] Some critics may disparage rap music as in binary opposition to art, and ‘one can readily find aesthetic reasons which seem to discredit it as a legitimate art form’ but West’s career was made by using the form to engage in tough racial discourse. It is unsurprising then that both were soon deemed eccentric and ridiculous, ‘West is an idiot, so mired in a fog of narcissism and self-delusion that he doesn’t realise the full implications of what he’s saying’. [iv] But what exactly is ‘crack music’ and what does it have to do with Michael Jackson’s final studio album?Well, although Invincible is the least known of all Michael Jackson’s solo albums, (much like his book of poetry, Dancing the Dream), it was undoubtedly ‘explosive’, ‘intoxicating’ and an example of a black man selling “black” music to a predominantly white (Western) world. Invincible was also a ‘crack’ in Jackson’s career.[v] Invincible marked the beginning of a new phase, a change of artistic and musical direction and unsurprisingly, it jarred with contemporary music critics, ‘he does need to leave Michael Jacksonland, that place where every sign points back to the spectacle of himself’. This particular critic simply ignores the fact that many of us were born (musically, metaphorically and artistically) in “Michael Jacksonland” and will continue to live there as long as his unparalleled influence pervades.[vi] Performance poet Malik Yusef, who speaks on West’s Crack Music iterates the eponym as the way ‘former slaves trade hooks for Grammys’. However, that exchange is mired because respect cannot be bought. Still, the black artist has no choice but to own all of it: the otherness and fragmentation. It is the dynamic repossessing of these difficulties which transforms poison into power, ‘this dark diction has become America’s addiction’.[vii] By 2001 and Invincible’s release, the world of popular music had changed radically. Jackson was no stranger to leaping across the decades but this time things were (as in the Thriller short film) different. He was simultaneously a living legend, a caricature and a has-been.Jackson’s dream of beating Thriller’s phenomenal record sales was distant. Even if he ever stood a chance of accomplishing it, he could never have done so without the fair wind of public opinion. The shadow of suspicion raised by extortion decimated his reputation and by proxy, his sales.[viii] The poison which spiked Jackson’s career was ‘thinly veiled racism’ which effectively barred him from the artistic recognition he sought and deserved. Jackson’s delinquency was the outrageous notion that he was both extraordinarily successful and black. Kanye West’s ‘crack music’ is predominantly black music. It ‘oozes through nooks and crannies’ so black women don’t have to remain ‘cooks and nannies’. It changes the status quo, turns poison into power and must be silenced at all costs.[ix] For many, the Invincible was a drug that did not do what it had promised. As in J.M. Barrie’s Peter Pan, happy thoughts alone cannot give flight. Jackson recognised Tinker Bell as the true hero of her story and was eventually buried with her ‘slinging a stream of the dust he so loved inside the right breast of [his] jacket. It is a combination of fairy dust and ‘happy thoughts’ that convinces the wearer they can fly. Perhaps the problem with ‘crack music’ is the audacity of the aspiration, that black men like Michael Jackson and Kanye West have the gall to attempt such dizzying heights. [x] One thing is certain, in the case of a man who can fly, ‘it’s all done in the heavens’, awe must eventually turn to resentment, no matter his colour. Invincible was Michael Jackson’s successful attempt to craft his own musical world, while his multiple personas sped ahead of him. Yet, Invincible, though still largely relegated to a “lesser work”, far surpasses much of what was released in the same decade, yet alone the same year. [xi] Like William Shakespeare’s most dismissive critics and staunchest supporters, all will be long dead by the time Invincible’s fate is decided, and just like Shakespeare’s Tempest, the latter works of a great artist can be overlooked by audiences in their time. People forget that Shakespeare’s plays, now so exalted, were the common entertainment of prostitutes and peasantry in the seamier side of seventeenth century London. The playhouses were far from the air conditioned theatres of today but plague-filled pits which incubated disease. As our modern actors spout four-hundred year-old lines in Received Pronunciation on brand new stages made of imported wood, ‘we cannot recreate the stenches, the clothes of the audience, their mindset, the surrounding city’. Shakespeare’s Thames teemed with sewage and his lyrical constructions have more to do with ‘crack music’ than most would like to admit. It is easy to forget how working class William Shakespeare actually was and it took several years for Shakespeare to be regarded as a genius. Let us hope it doesn’t take so long for Michael, his blackness notwithstanding, ‘people will not understand this album right now. It’s ahead of its time[…] the album will live on forever’ because ‘music is what lives and lasts’.[xii] Elizabeth Amisu is a postgraduate scholar of Early Modern English Literature at King’s College London. It is her goal to bring wider attention to Michael Jackson as artist by creating an academic model for the study of his art. Find out more here.
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Great pic! MJ L.O.V.E: https://www.facebook.com/...689&type=2 / YOUTUBE: http://www.youtube.com/us...nderSilent | |
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MICHAEL JACKSON’S THRILLER Collection part one
“THRILLER is timeless. There is not a single pop star today that was not influenced by it. THRILLER changed the entire industry. No one ever thought an album could be a blockbuster event like THRILLER. It was the first time in history an album sold that many copies and fueled a cultural phenomenon.” Tamara Conniff Billboard Magazine
MTV Awards Best Video Best Choreography Video Vanguard Award The Greatest Video in the History of the World The Greatest Video of All Time ROLLING STONE MAGAZINE Video of the Decade
GRAMMY AWARDS Best Video Album AMERICAN VIDEO AWARDS Best Long Form Video Best Home Video GUINNESS BOOK OF WORLD RECORDS Most Successful Music Video of All Time OTHER ACCOMPLISHMENTS VH-1 The Greatest Video of All Time Music Video of the Millennium Most Influential Music Video of All Time “Michael Jackson’s THRILLER video is without any doubt the most successful, most revolutionary, most influential, and most popular music video of all time. This short film is the greatest milestone in music video history. Today, the short film for Michael Jackson’s song THRILLER has cult status. It is also considered legendary, and is still the leveling judgment for all music videos to come. The THRILLER short film premiered on December 2, 1983, one year after the release of the THRILLER album. Even before that, Michael Jackson had already pioneered the music video genre with his videos for BILLIE JEAN and BEAT IT. The videos were costly and had guest actors, professional directors, different camera angles, an entire storyline, and fascinating dance choreographies showing off Michael’s unique dancing abilities. Michael Jackson’s ideas and visions revolutionized the music industry and the standing of Black artists worldwide. The video for THRILLER created the genre of short film within the popular entertainment industry. Instead of a standard music video, Michael produced a “Zombie-Epic” that had a price tag of $1,000,000. It became the most aired video in MTV history.” GRAMMY HISTORY Album of the Year Record of the Year (BEAT IT) Best Male Pop Vocal Performance (THRILLER) Best Male Rock Vocal Performance (BEAT IT) Best Male R&B Performance (BILLIE JEAN) Producer of the Year (Quincy Jones and Michael Jackson) Best Engineered Recording Non-Classical (Bruce Swedien) Best Children’s Recording (E.T.: The Extra Terrestrial with narration by Michael Jackson) The Jackson’s Pepsi Commercials are aired during the Grammy Telecast and are amongst the most successful and most popular ads ever, and the FIRST and ONLY set of advertisements ever to be included in the weekly TV Guide listings. Twenty-eight nominations in eight categories for the 2nd Annual American Video Awards. Michael’s Thriller spent 37 weeks as Number One U.S. Presidential Recognition Award May 14, 1984 To Michael Jackson With appreciation for the outstanding example you have set for the youth of American and the world. Your historic record-breaking achievements and your preeminence in popular music are a tribute to your creativity, dedication, and great ability. The generous contribution of your time and talent to the National Campaign Against Teenage Drunk Driving will help millions of young Americans learn that drinking and driving can kill a friendship. President Ronald Reagan February 7, 1984 “I’ve always wanted to do great things and achieve many things, but for the first time in my entire career, I feel like I have accomplished something because I’m in the Guinness Book of World Records” Michael Jackson The Guinness Book of World Records is the global authority on world-breaking achievements. And, who is more global than Michael Jackson? He is undoubtedly the world’s most famous living human being.” Craig Glenday, Editor-in-Chief Guinness Book of World Records. BILLBOARD MAGAZINE 1983 POP ARTIST OF THE YEAR BLACK ARTIST OF THE YEAR POP ALBUM: THRILLER POP ALBUM ARTIST POP SINGLES ARTIST POP MALE ALBUM ARTIST
POP MALE SINGLES ARTIST BLACK SINGLES ARTIST DANCE/DISCO ARTIST BEST VIDEO: BEAT IT BEST PERFORMANCE BY A MALE ARTIST BEST CHOREOGRAPHY BEST USE OF VIDEO TO ENHANCE A SONG BEST USE OF VIDEO TO ENHANCE AN ARTIST’S IMAGE …a portion of International Honors Best Artist, Best Male Vocalist, Album of the Year…JAPAN Album of the Year, Single of the Year…AUSTRALIA Artist of the Year…ITALY Record of the Year…GREECE Album of the Year…HOLLAND Most Important Foreign Album…SPAIN International Artist of the Year…BRAZIL 11th AMERICAN MUSIC AWARDS Youngest Recipient of the Award of Merit Favorite Pop Album Favorite Soul Album Favorite Pop Single BILLIE JEAN Favorite Pop Video Favorite Soul Video Favorite Pop/Rock Male Artist Favorite Soul Male Vocalist BLACK GOLD AWARDS Top Male Vocalist Best Video Performance BEAT IT Best Single Record of the Year BILLIE JEAN Best Album of the Year CANADIAN BLACK MUSIC AWARDS Top International Album Top International Single BILLIE JEAN Top Male Vocalist Entertainer of the Year …the legend goes on
http://michaeljacksonchosenvoices.com/michael-jacksons-thriller-collection-part-one/ | |
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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. Working up a purple sweat. | |
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He probably used them for his demos but not the final product. The Billie Jean demo sounds like it was from one. | |
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Hear Michael Jackson's 'Thriller' Sung in 20 Different Styles
In order, here are the musicians and personalities Vincent emulates: Michael Jackson, the Misfits (which the video points out is circa 1980, just to spotlight its Glen Danzig-ness), Marilyn Manson, Spice Girls (à la Scary Spice), Stevie Wonder, Ozzy Osbourne, Tom Waits, Oingo Boingo, Cannibal Corpse, "Monster Mash" singer Bobby "Boris" Pickett and the Crypt-Kickers, the City of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra (as on The Omen soundtrack), Rick Astley, Jack Skellington (from the Nightmare Before Christmas soundtrack), Rob Zombie, Harry Belafonte (Beetlejuice soundtrack), Tenacious D and Type O Negative. He then takes a break and interprets Vincent Price's rap first as Price, then as Pennywise the Dancing Clown from Stephen King's It and as Twilight Zone host Rod Serling. The Ten Second Songs vocalist then finishes out the track in the styles of Busta Rhymes, Avenged Sevenfold and Robert Johnson. Vincent also created a behind-the-scenes video to spotlight the making of his "Thriller" recording. The clip shows the singer getting made up for the video and rapping like Busta Rhymes, as well as some of the other impressions. "When I first did [a similar video for Katy...rk Horse,' this was a top suggested song," he said. Vincent's "Sung in 20 Different Styles" series has so far included Ariana Grande's "Problem," Jason Derulo's "Talk Dirty" and Linkin Park's "In the End," in addition to Jackson and Perry. "I came up with the idea last November and wanted to do this with [Miley Cyrus'] 'Wrecking Ball,' but it was too late," Vincent told Rolling Stone in March. "I wanted to pick the most random styles you could imagine. I listened to 'Dark Horse' and after I heard it, I immediately thought, 'This is it. This is the one.' And I got to work." Read more: http://www.rollingstone.c...z3HNIzmIdi Follow us: @rollingstone on Twitter | RollingStone on Facebook | |
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Maximilliam Muhammad: Thriller was Michael Jackson's reward for carrying his family on his back
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Amazonian tribesmen who've never seen images of 9/11, man on moon or war recognize Michael Jackson
starts @ 2:30 | |
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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. | |
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