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Reply #60 posted 09/25/15 6:47pm

Free2BMe

CharismaDove said:



duccichucka said:




Musicslave said:



-


confused Really? Care to elaborate?




Yeah, it pains me to say this, but MJ stopped growing creatively after Bad and began
his creative descent after Dangerous. His dance routine, stage/live show, music, and
music videos all used a Thriller template; he was so beholden to that album and the
peak he ascended during that era that he never stretched out beyond it. In this way,
I think he was limited as a performer, even though his one trick, Thriller, was enough,
and should have been enough, to keep him peerless up until his death.



I understand what you're saying performance-wise (even before his death, 'This Is It' was intended to be the ultimate 'Michael Jackson' show; this is good in the way that he was basically a worldwide brand and everyone knew and loved his style, but bad in the way that he was never able to evolve from moonwalking and etc without disappointing people).

But music-wise? Nah. I mean, I get that people don't care for 'Dangerous' and 'History' as much as the earlier albums, and that they find them inferior, but that doesn't mean he had stopped growing creatively. If 'Dangerous' had been an 11-track pop/funk record, I'd agree with you. Instead, it's a sprawling sonic new jack swing set that sounds unlike anything he'd done before, and much darker. Lyrically, he was growing leaps and bounds from 'Thriller'. In the '90s, I feel he began singing deeper and his lyrics became weird and darker. And c'mon, do you think songs like "Little Susie" or "D.S." or "Whatever Happens" would have been included on Thriller or Bad? Songs may suck in your opinion, but I definitely do think he evolved.



Of course, Michael's music evolved. Dangerous was completely different from Bad or Thriller? History was different than the aforementioned albums. "Morphine", "is It Scary", " Blood On the Dance Floor" are different from other Michael songs. Michael was no "one trick pony". Most of his hits were written(lyrics AND music) and produced by him. As far as stage shows, I think THIS IS IT would have been really different from Michael's other shows. Of course, the classics would have been there, but presented in a new and fresher way. Lest, people forget, Michael hadn't released a new album I almost a decade when he sold out 50 shows in ONE CITY. Therefore, the THIs IS IT tour would have focused on his classics, instead of new material because he didn't have a new album out.

It was said that he was working on a new album, and you can bet that the new music would have been incorporated into the tour. The bottomline is that Michael's music evolved with every album.



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Reply #61 posted 09/27/15 7:57am

Cinny

avatar

Free2BMe said:

"Morphine", "is It Scary", " Blood On the Dance Floor" are different from other Michael songs.

I was a teen back then and should have loved a "new" album from him, but those sounded like DANGEROUS outtakes (even though his last album was HIStory).

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Reply #62 posted 09/27/15 7:31pm

214

I understand what someone said about Michael, being a fan i have felt the same about his music he stuck to a formula, painfully even more in live shows after Bad, he was not spontaneus. What i think

is that he limited himself artistically because of the success of Thriller, he just got obsessed with it.

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Reply #63 posted 09/28/15 2:37pm

duccichucka

214 said:

What i think is that he limited himself artistically because of the success of Thriller, he just got obsessed with it.


Right.

Thriller loomed so large in his psyche that it stunted his creativity. If he wasn't so goddamn
competitive (with himself, too) then he could have let the success of Thriller "go" and moved
onto the next album without having to feel like he had to top himself all the time.


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Reply #64 posted 09/28/15 2:46pm

duccichucka

Free2BMe said:

Of course, Michael's music evolved. Dangerous was completely different from Bad or Thriller? History was different than the aforementioned albums. "Morphine", "is It Scary", " Blood On the Dance Floor" are different from other Michael songs. Michael was no "one trick pony". Most of his hits were written(lyrics AND music) and produced by him. As far as stage shows, I think THIS IS IT would have been really different from Michael's other shows. Of course, the classics would have been there, but presented in a new and fresher way. Lest, people forget, Michael hadn't released a new album I almost a decade when he sold out 50 shows in ONE CITY. Therefore, the THIs IS IT tour would have focused on his classics, instead of new material because he didn't have a new album out. It was said that he was working on a new album, and you can bet that the new music would have been incorporated into the tour. The bottomline is that Michael's music evolved with every album.


Obviously I disagree with you; you can read my posts in this thread where I provide reasons
why he was a one trick pony.

But I do want to clarify MJ's musicianship. He "wrote" those songs, but I use that word loosely
as his process included singing instrumental parts and vocal melodies into a tape recorder. Then,
he would bring them to the producer who would play the sung melodies on the piano. After,
the producer would bring the melodies to the studio sessionists who would then structure the
song. For example, MJ nicked the bassline from Hall & Oates' "Maneater"*, sang a reconfigured
version into a tape recorder, presented that to Quincy Jones who then had Johnson and Phillin-
ganes work it instrumentally and voila - "Billie Jean" was on its way. So, rarely did MJ actually
sit down and "write" a song at the piano, charting out chord arrangements and etc. I'm not
knocking his process, just clarifying it and trying to present him faithfully.


*the song is actually "I Can't Go For That (No Can Do)"

[Edited 9/28/15 16:56pm]

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Reply #65 posted 09/28/15 2:46pm

Cinny

avatar

MJ definitely had the need to please the fans who bought Thriller, unlike another artist who decided to follow up his landmark album in less than a year with a curveball. lol

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Reply #66 posted 09/28/15 4:37pm

duccichucka

Cinny said:

MJ definitely had the need to please the fans who bought Thriller, unlike another artist who decided to follow up his landmark album in less than a year with a curveball. lol


That is an excellent, excellent point, Cinny.

If MJ had followed up Thriller with his own curveball, as opposed to trying to catch lightening
in a bottle again, his musical evolution could have contained a bit more substance. As a musician,

I respect artists who are more concerned with their own artistic vision than trying to one-up
themselves by selling us re-treads of landmark albums.

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Reply #67 posted 09/28/15 4:50pm

Cinny

avatar

duccichucka said:

Cinny said:

MJ definitely had the need to please the fans who bought Thriller, unlike another artist who decided to follow up his landmark album in less than a year with a curveball. lol


That is an excellent, excellent point, Cinny.

If MJ had followed up Thriller with his own curveball, as opposed to trying to catch lightening
in a bottle again, his musical evolution could have contained a bit more substance. As a musician,

I respect artists who are more concerned with their own artistic vision than trying to one-up
themselves by selling us re-treads of landmark albums.

A lot of people were competing with Michael Jackson with the format-straddling blueprint of Thriller. I don't really mind Michael Jackson continuing with the legacy of his own winning "formula" that he pioneered.

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Reply #68 posted 09/28/15 5:07pm

duccichucka

Cinny said:

I don't really mind Michael Jackson continuing with the legacy of his own winning "formula" that he pioneered.


That's fine and dandy; but can we really say that MJ was growing as a musician/performer/song-
writer and evolving as an artist when we look at what Prince did immediately after Purple Rain?

My answer is "no."

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Reply #69 posted 09/28/15 7:39pm

214

duccichucka said:

Cinny said:

I don't really mind Michael Jackson continuing with the legacy of his own winning "formula" that he pioneered.


That's fine and dandy; but can we really say that MJ was growing as a musician/performer/song-
writer and evolving as an artist when we look at what Prince did immediately after Purple Rain?

My answer is "no."

´Prince didn´t care how big PR was and he did the opposite to Michael, not followin the formula, and that allow him to more creatively freedom without care about sales exprectation. I wish Michael have made the same as Prince.

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Reply #70 posted 09/29/15 7:45am

Cinny

avatar

duccichucka said:

Cinny said:

I don't really mind Michael Jackson continuing with the legacy of his own winning "formula" that he pioneered.


That's fine and dandy; but can we really say that MJ was growing as a musician/performer/song-
writer and evolving as an artist when we look at what Prince did immediately after Purple Rain?

My answer is "no."

Furthermore, I would have loved a Purple Rain 2 lol Happy with what we got instead.

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Reply #71 posted 09/29/15 8:14am

purplethunder3
121

avatar

Cinny said:

MJ definitely had the need to please the fans who bought Thriller, unlike another artist who decided to follow up his landmark album in less than a year with a curveball. lol

I still wonder what MJ's career and life might have been like if Thriller hadn't happened... [useless thoughts 101].

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #72 posted 09/29/15 8:59am

alphastreet

purplethunder3121 said:

Cinny said:

MJ definitely had the need to please the fans who bought Thriller, unlike another artist who decided to follow up his landmark album in less than a year with a curveball. lol

I still wonder what MJ's career and life might have been like if Thriller hadn't happened... [useless thoughts 101].

Not just that, but the music industry, cause sales were down as a whole until Thriller came out, then people were buying others albums again when purchasing, that's how we got the fabulous 1983 and 1984 years. And CD's were starting to be sold in that time, so in a way, the timing of that worked for Thriller's timing too, especially with the sales extending to 1984 and throughout the 80's, since most had it on LP already and were probably buying copies for cassette and CD on top of it. I don't think a lot of mj fans will like reading that cause I'm playing devil's advocate saying that, but there is some truth to it, though mj's talent and vision was also everything. It would be naive to not look at the greater context of that time

[Edited 9/29/15 9:02am]

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Reply #73 posted 09/29/15 9:27am

namepeace

Cinny said:

duccichucka said:


That's fine and dandy; but can we really say that MJ was growing as a musician/performer/song-
writer and evolving as an artist when we look at what Prince did immediately after Purple Rain?

My answer is "no."

Furthermore, I would have loved a Purple Rain 2 lol Happy with what we got instead.


David Hill's Prince: A Pop Life very artfully discusses the contrast between MJ's post-Thriller choices and Prince's post-PR choices. In the 5 years between Thriller and Bad, Prince made 5 albums(2 of those double albums), as well a slew of "killer B's," a shelved triple album, and other associated projects under a label he started. He took a critical and commercial hit, but in hindsight, that body of work is legendary.

Hill also makes the case that ATWIAD has more similarities to PR than may meet the eye.


Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016

Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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Reply #74 posted 09/29/15 10:10am

Cinny

avatar

namepeace said:

Cinny said:

Furthermore, I would have loved a Purple Rain 2 lol Happy with what we got instead.


David Hill's Prince: A Pop Life very artfully discusses the contrast between MJ's post-Thriller choices and Prince's post-PR choices. In the 5 years between Thriller and Bad, Prince made 5 albums(2 of those double albums), as well a slew of "killer B's," a shelved triple album, and other associated projects under a label he started. He took a critical and commercial hit, but in hindsight, that body of work is legendary.

Hill also makes the case that ATWIAD has more similarities to PR than may meet the eye.


Ooh! Never read it. Thanks, namepeace! peace

Yo what happened to peace

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Reply #75 posted 09/29/15 10:17am

Musicslave

namepeace said:

Cinny said:

Furthermore, I would have loved a Purple Rain 2 lol Happy with what we got instead.


David Hill's Prince: A Pop Life very artfully discusses the contrast between MJ's post-Thriller choices and Prince's post-PR choices. In the 5 years between Thriller and Bad, Prince made 5 albums(2 of those double albums), as well a slew of "killer B's," a shelved triple album, and other associated projects under a label he started. He took a critical and commercial hit, but in hindsight, that body of work is legendary.

Hill also makes the case that ATWIAD has more similarities to PR than may meet the eye.


-

I'm sure that's an interesting read! Prince's output during that time was special.

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Reply #76 posted 09/29/15 10:19am

Musicslave

Cinny said:

namepeace said:


David Hill's Prince: A Pop Life very artfully discusses the contrast between MJ's post-Thriller choices and Prince's post-PR choices. In the 5 years between Thriller and Bad, Prince made 5 albums(2 of those double albums), as well a slew of "killer B's," a shelved triple album, and other associated projects under a label he started. He took a critical and commercial hit, but in hindsight, that body of work is legendary.

Hill also makes the case that ATWIAD has more similarities to PR than may meet the eye.


Ooh! Never read it. Thanks, namepeace! peace

Yo what happened to peace

-

PEACE! PEACE! Peace! peace. peace

-

Sorry couldn't help it. That line was from one of my favorite albums man!

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Reply #77 posted 09/29/15 12:34pm

214

purplethunder3121 said:

Cinny said:

MJ definitely had the need to please the fans who bought Thriller, unlike another artist who decided to follow up his landmark album in less than a year with a curveball. lol

I still wonder what MJ's career and life might have been like if Thriller hadn't happened... [useless thoughts 101].

God only knows, i'd love to Michael went in the Destiny album musical direction, with songs more personal and sincere.

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Reply #78 posted 09/29/15 4:30pm

Adorecream

God no! Before I read 80 or so replies about this (Most of the 30 I read were anti Taylor), I mean who even makes these comparisons. Taylor Swift is a hick ass country singer who sings poorly about relationship break ups ad nauseaum and silly party girl songs.

.

On the other hand Michael Jackson was a force of nature and the greatest pop artist of all time, all of his albums were Godlike and he had a heavenly voice and was the greatest dancer, okay he did not play all the instruments like Prince, but he wrote most of his own songs and did all the dances and organised the dancers and the rest. Plus MJ was a great humanitarian whereas Taylor is spoilt little bitch singing about how Billy Bob McCraw did not treat her right. Her album sold 5 million copies because 16 year old bimbettes love her and there are a lot of those. Like Prince said, people only digging it because its a hit.

.

She can play the geetar quite well, but so can every other Yamacraw country and western hick musician. The only good thing about her, is that she is not a shit hopper and she is not singing about raping bitches, selling meth and how many bling bling chains and bouncing cars she owns.

Got some kind of love for you, and I don't even know your name
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Reply #79 posted 09/29/15 7:34pm

MotownSubdivis
ion

^Before you posted that and brought things back on topic, I was going to say the direction this thread was going is all the proof one needs when making such a far-reaching comparison. Talking about Mike's faults as an artist is still more interesting than discussing Taylor and her music lol
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Reply #80 posted 09/29/15 7:45pm

MotownSubdivis
ion

214 said:



purplethunder3121 said:




Cinny said:


MJ definitely had the need to please the fans who bought Thriller, unlike another artist who decided to follow up his landmark album in less than a year with a curveball. lol



I still wonder what MJ's career and life might have been like if Thriller hadn't happened... [useless thoughts 101].



God only knows, i'd love to Michael went in the Destiny album musical direction, with songs more personal and sincere.

Can't imagine a world without Thriller and its influence.

As was said already, if anything I wish he threw a curveball with Bad (which he did already but more so like Prince did with ATWIAD). MJ's solo discography even if vaguely formulaic and limited in terms of output is still an exceptional collection music, you include the discography of The Jackson 5/ The Jacksons and it's even better but yeah, in retrospect him not being obsessed with outdoing himself/ Thriller and just making music to make music would have been better. He'd probably still be with us and dropping albums today if it weren't for the stigma of being "the best".
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Reply #81 posted 09/29/15 9:49pm

Free2BMe

duccichucka said:



Free2BMe said:


Of course, Michael's music evolved. Dangerous was completely different from Bad or Thriller? History was different than the aforementioned albums. "Morphine", "is It Scary", " Blood On the Dance Floor" are different from other Michael songs. Michael was no "one trick pony". Most of his hits were written(lyrics AND music) and produced by him. As far as stage shows, I think THIS IS IT would have been really different from Michael's other shows. Of course, the classics would have been there, but presented in a new and fresher way. Lest, people forget, Michael hadn't released a new album I almost a decade when he sold out 50 shows in ONE CITY. Therefore, the THIs IS IT tour would have focused on his classics, instead of new material because he didn't have a new album out. It was said that he was working on a new album, and you can bet that the new music would have been incorporated into the tour. The bottomline is that Michael's music evolved with every album.


Obviously I disagree with you; you can read my posts in this thread where I provide reasons
why he was a one trick pony.

But I do want to clarify MJ's musicianship. He "wrote" those songs, but I use that word loosely
as his process included singing instrumental parts and vocal melodies into a tape recorder. Then,
he would bring them to the producer who would play the sung melodies on the piano. After,
the producer would bring the melodies to the studio sessionists who would then structure the
song. For example, MJ nicked the bassline from Hall & Oates' "Maneater"*, sang a reconfigured
version into a tape recorder, presented that to Quincy Jones who then had Johnson and Phillin-
ganes work it instrumentally and voila - "Billie Jean" was on its way. So, rarely did MJ actually
sit down and "write" a song at the piano, charting out chord arrangements and etc. I'm not
knocking his process, just clarifying it and trying to present him faithfully.


*the song is actually "I Can't Go For That (No Can Do)"

[Edited 9/28/15 16:56pm]



Allow me to clarify your "clarification" of Michael's songwriting and composing skills. It has been said by People who have worked with Michael that he would dictate his composing into a recorder with Full instrumentation of how he wanted every instrument to sound. A composer doesn't always have to sit at the piano and "write" a song. Michael always said that melodies came to him quicker than lyrics.
Michael didn't, formally read music; however that doesn't diminish his songwriting and composing skills. Let's not equate writing melodies and lyrics with these so-called "songwriters who write a few lyrics and are deemed to be songwriters. Michael composed entire songs-melodies and lyrics. Nothing is going to diminish his songwriting skills. FTR, I don't think that Micharl gets the credit that he deserves as a composer/songwriter. I know people who are ignorant to the fact that Michael wrote and produced some of his biggest and best hits. I find it amazing that the biggest artist that the world has ever known was not only an amazing singer, dancer, performer, humanitarian; he was also an extraordinary songwriter who wrote songs that will be in our consciousness forever.
[Edited 9/29/15 21:50pm]
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Reply #82 posted 09/30/15 6:34am

duccichucka

Free2BMe said:

Allow me to clarify your "clarification" of Michael's songwriting and composing skills. It has been said by People who have worked with Michael that he would dictate his composing into a recorder with Full instrumentation of how he wanted every instrument to sound. A composer doesn't always have to sit at the piano and "write" a song. Michael always said that melodies came to him quicker than lyrics. Michael didn't, formally read music; however that doesn't diminish his songwriting and composing skills. Let's not equate writing melodies and lyrics with these so-called "songwriters who write a few lyrics and are deemed to be songwriters. Michael composed entire songs-melodies and lyrics. Nothing is going to diminish his songwriting skills. FTR, I don't think that Micharl gets the credit that he deserves as a composer/songwriter. I know people who are ignorant to the fact that Michael wrote and produced some of his biggest and best hits. I find it amazing that the biggest artist that the world has ever known was not only an amazing singer, dancer, performer, humanitarian; he was also an extraordinary songwriter who wrote songs that will be in our consciousness forever. [Edited 9/29/15 21:50pm]


And please allow me to correct you, for you obviously missed the part of my post where I clearly
stated, concerning MJ's songwriting practice:

"I'm not knocking his process, just clarifying it and trying to present him faithfully."

And you actually don't clarify anything! MJ's songwriting process involved humming melodies
into a tape recorder and bringing it to the producers and instrumentalists who worked out the
arrangements and song structures with him - you're basically uttering what I've already said!
I think what is happening here is that you feel some need to protect MJ's honor/legacy as you
think I'm being too critical. Well, MJ's honor/legacy is fully intact in my criticisms of his talents
and abilities and work. If anything, I believe he had all kinds of talent that he didn't nourish
properly. He suffered from thriller-itis, that is, a recording artist's preoccupation with former,
otherworldly success that makes it difficult for him/her to move forward creatively as their art-
istic gaze is forever focused on duplicating, replicating, and recapturing the aforementioned.

As a musician, I absolutely know that composition doesn't have to take place near a piano; in
fact, I had a composition teacher who advised us to compose away from the piano as it could
be a source of distraction. I place no premium on the composer archetype: dude at the piano
with a pencil behind his ear, furiously scribbling notes on staff paper. MJ was just as much
a "composer" that Beethoven was as he authored musical sounds and realized them in some
fashion.

However, you are viewing MJ's songwriting skills through a horribly subjective lens. Michael
Jackson was not an extraordinary songwriter: his songwriting was very much ordinary. He
didn't challenge any songwriting conventions or established new forms of songwriting in a
pop context. He was not a great melodicist like McCartney; not a great lyricist like Lennon; he
wasn't particularly sophisticated harmonically like Stevie Wonder; nor a great instrumentalist
and all-around one man band like Prince. But for what he did possess, he was the greatest
pop entertainer of all time; that doesn't mean, however, that Michael Jackson wasn't limited or,
even sadder, limited himself.

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Reply #83 posted 09/30/15 1:06pm

214

duccichucka said:

Free2BMe said:

Allow me to clarify your "clarification" of Michael's songwriting and composing skills. It has been said by People who have worked with Michael that he would dictate his composing into a recorder with Full instrumentation of how he wanted every instrument to sound. A composer doesn't always have to sit at the piano and "write" a song. Michael always said that melodies came to him quicker than lyrics. Michael didn't, formally read music; however that doesn't diminish his songwriting and composing skills. Let's not equate writing melodies and lyrics with these so-called "songwriters who write a few lyrics and are deemed to be songwriters. Michael composed entire songs-melodies and lyrics. Nothing is going to diminish his songwriting skills. FTR, I don't think that Micharl gets the credit that he deserves as a composer/songwriter. I know people who are ignorant to the fact that Michael wrote and produced some of his biggest and best hits. I find it amazing that the biggest artist that the world has ever known was not only an amazing singer, dancer, performer, humanitarian; he was also an extraordinary songwriter who wrote songs that will be in our consciousness forever. [Edited 9/29/15 21:50pm]


And please allow me to correct you, for you obviously missed the part of my post where I clearly
stated, concerning MJ's songwriting practice:

"I'm not knocking his process, just clarifying it and trying to present him faithfully."

And you actually don't clarify anything! MJ's songwriting process involved humming melodies
into a tape recorder and bringing it to the producers and instrumentalists who worked out the
arrangements and song structures with him - you're basically uttering what I've already said!
I think what is happening here is that you feel some need to protect MJ's honor/legacy as you
think I'm being too critical. Well, MJ's honor/legacy is fully intact in my criticisms of his talents
and abilities and work. If anything, I believe he had all kinds of talent that he didn't nourish
properly. He suffered from thriller-itis, that is, a recording artist's preoccupation with former,
otherworldly success that makes it difficult for him/her to move forward creatively as their art-
istic gaze is forever focused on duplicating, replicating, and recapturing the aforementioned.

As a musician, I absolutely know that composition doesn't have to take place near a piano; in
fact, I had a composition teacher who advised us to compose away from the piano as it could
be a source of distraction. I place no premium on the composer archetype: dude at the piano
with a pencil behind his ear, furiously scribbling notes on staff paper. MJ was just as much
a "composer" that Beethoven was as he authored musical sounds and realized them in some
fashion.

However, you are viewing MJ's songwriting skills through a horribly subjective lens. Michael
Jackson was not an extraordinary songwriter: his songwriting was very much ordinary. He
didn't challenge any songwriting conventions or established new forms of songwriting in a
pop context. He was not a great melodicist like McCartney; not a great lyricist like Lennon; he
wasn't particularly sophisticated harmonically like Stevie Wonder; nor a great instrumentalist
and all-around one man band like Prince. But for what he did possess, he was the greatest
pop entertainer of all time; that doesn't mean, however, that Michael Jackson wasn't limited or,
even sadder, limited himself.

Thoroughly agree, except for Lennon, great lyricist? come on, that goes to Dylan Lennon is overrated as lyricist. Michael made great songs with memorable melodies, i don't know about musically i am not a musician and don't understand even the basics about composition in music.

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Reply #84 posted 09/30/15 8:14pm

DonRants

duccichucka said:


And I'm one of the few posters here who thinks MJ was a one trick pony (it was the greatest
trick of all time, but he was a limited performer).

Please elaborate on that? How exactly was MJ a one trick pony? Honestly not starting any ish, I am just curious about your opinion. I have heard MJ called many things..but never a one trick pony.

To All the Haters on the Internet
No more Candy 4 U
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Reply #85 posted 10/01/15 12:10pm

duccichucka

DonRants said:

duccichucka said:


And I'm one of the few posters here who thinks MJ was a one trick pony (it was the greatest
trick of all time, but he was a limited performer).

Please elaborate on that? How exactly was MJ a one trick pony? Honestly not starting any ish, I am just curious about your opinion. I have heard MJ called many things..but never a one trick pony.


I defend this in several posts throughout this thread.

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Reply #86 posted 10/01/15 12:28pm

214

duccichucka said:

DonRants said:

Please elaborate on that? How exactly was MJ a one trick pony? Honestly not starting any ish, I am just curious about your opinion. I have heard MJ called many things..but never a one trick pony.


I defend this in several posts throughout this thread.

Callling him a one trick pony is just too much, even when i understand your whole point throughout the thread

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Reply #87 posted 10/01/15 12:58pm

MotownSubdivis
ion

214 said:



duccichucka said:




DonRants said:





Please elaborate on that? How exactly was MJ a one trick pony? Honestly not starting any ish, I am just curious about your opinion. I have heard MJ called many things..but never a one trick pony.




I defend this in several posts throughout this thread.



Callling him a one trick pony is just too much, even when i understand your whole point throughout the thread

Exactly. MJ did too much to be considered a "one trick pony".

Even if he used the same formula for every album since Thriller, they are distinct enough to where you can't call Bad Thriller 2, Dangerous Thriller 3, etc., etc..
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Reply #88 posted 10/01/15 1:42pm

namepeace

Cinny said:

namepeace said:


David Hill's Prince: A Pop Life very artfully discusses the contrast between MJ's post-Thriller choices and Prince's post-PR choices. In the 5 years between Thriller and Bad, Prince made 5 albums(2 of those double albums), as well a slew of "killer B's," a shelved triple album, and other associated projects under a label he started. He took a critical and commercial hit, but in hindsight, that body of work is legendary.

Hill also makes the case that ATWIAD has more similarities to PR than may meet the eye.


Ooh! Never read it. Thanks, namepeace! peace

Yo what happened to peace


lol

Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016

Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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Reply #89 posted 10/01/15 1:47pm

namepeace

Musicslave said:

namepeace said:


David Hill's Prince: A Pop Life very artfully discusses the contrast between MJ's post-Thriller choices and Prince's post-PR choices. In the 5 years between Thriller and Bad, Prince made 5 albums(2 of those double albums), as well a slew of "killer B's," a shelved triple album, and other associated projects under a label he started. He took a critical and commercial hit, but in hindsight, that body of work is legendary.

Hill also makes the case that ATWIAD has more similarities to PR than may meet the eye.


-

I'm sure that's an interesting read! Prince's output during that time was special.


It's still the best of the handful of books I've read about Prince.

Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016

Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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