Oh I know, because I was very vocal about Q's comments.
It's been said MJ wasn't sure if people wanted to see him again live and was emotional when the o2 shows sold out. That tells you something. "We may deify or demonize them but not ignore them. And we call them genius, because they are the people who change the world." | |
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ya i remmeber you bboy, i was banned twice since mj died. I'm just clarifying for some of the q acolytes. | |
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Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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Equally unforgivable is the outlandish claim that MJ would never have been a superstar without Q? FOH! Exactly what evidence is that effed-up claim even based on? I am sick to death, perturbed and distraught over that BS. Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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Aaand another thing..... Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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there were so many factors aside from q's production that made michael a superstar, he alread was a star since he was a kid, he already had millions of fans before he was even an adult, his songwriting was a huge factor, his looks and his image was another, as well as the advent of the video which he seemed to sense he had a prime oppurtunity to pioneer and he did. Good music is never the whole part of a superstars package, in fact, i can think of a few who don't even have it in their arsenal. | |
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Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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When was the last time anybody talked about MJ's 90s output? It may have sold well but it didn't have THAT impact like his Quincy produced albums. People don't discuss Dangerous like they do Thriller. The point is just pay Quincy what he's owed. Pay the man his money. | |
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ya, do pay the man, i'm sure quincy isn't worried about it and i'm sure he's not being petty, just trying to be treated fairlly. I have no issue with that. As far as post 80's music, I really do think dangerous is just as strong, or rather, in the same neighborhood as any of his previous albums. Even history had some great tunes, but no, that was not his era, that was the grunge/hip hop era. I still think he was doing great work at that point, there is no telling what he could have done without the trials which had to detract from his creativity. | |
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If Q is the only reason Mike is popular, then Patti Austin should have the same amount of success. People are not talking about her albums nor James Ingram, Brothers Johnson or Q's albums under his own name like Thriller either. You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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oh ya, how did i forget his dancing and stage presence? give Q the same songs and put him on a stage or in a video and see what happens.
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PeteSilas said: oh ya, how did i forget his dancing and stage presence? give Q the same songs and put him on a stage or in a video and see what happens.
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I don't know what to say about this case.If Quincy has the right paperwork/signed agreements/contracts,etc,then he may indeed be entitled to some money.The sales of Michael's old albums went through the roof when he died.The question is,does he really deserve $30 million? | |
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Well, both Dangerous and HIStory have been getting a lot more attention since he's passed, as they should
And of course, they don't discuss Dangerous like they do Thriller. Thriller is the biggest selling album of all time. It went 33x platinum this year. That joint is on the Billboard 200 RIGHT NOW But that doesn't mean he didn't continue to put out good music.
And yeah if they stiffed Q, then yes they need to pay up, the same way they had to pay John Landis and others since Branca and McClain took control of the estate. [Edited 7/15/17 2:10am] "We may deify or demonize them but not ignore them. And we call them genius, because they are the people who change the world." | |
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Biiiiinnnngo....
THIS is the real issue, and has been for a very long time w/a many of artists........
and this is why I've been harboring on this the way I do, even when it seems I don't talk about anything else, because of the love of music, because of the love of the amazing message that MJ tried to shared with the world on true merit, and why I won't let this issue go because of the ravaging effects it leaves behind.....this is why I feel so strongly about this issue because this dynamic has destroyed the very essence of what music is supposed to be...it's awesome when all cultures of people embrace your talent, that's a wonderful thing, but when you have to contort your being to appeal to an exclusive audience, that's when the problems start.
and I don't have anything against anyone...that's the God's honest truth......because it's not about black or white, or fans per se as much as it was/is a system of things that's predicated on race where if that prediliction was removed from the equation, we wouldn't keep witnessing these tragic results over and over and over again, and that same destructive wave of influence almost destroyed Prince, or set him on the same path to self destruction until he acted in the very manner in which you mentioned.........
See, we already know what the real issue is, but it takes a great deal of willingness to acknowledge it, because the moment we do, we know we can't continue to cling on to narratives and points of rationale in order to ease the conscious......
and that need to seek and to gain that exclusive audience mentioned, by all means, is the impetus that set the stage for what we see transpire with MIchael Jackson over time after he reached the very heights of the music industry, if all fans, the older fans and younger fans set aside all those differences about what they want to believe, then 1.) we'll find out we have more in common than we original thought...2.) we can dig down to the heart of the matter in constructive fashion...3.) find out how we've all been manipulated/misled by people behind the scenes who sought to exploit that man's talent after he reached the top and set him up for the all time okie doke......4.) understand how cohorts behind the scenes have destroyed what was once a great music/recording industry....5.) the pieces to the puzzle can be put together to begin the dialogue on how to correct things where something like this doesn't happen again to anyone who has potential to achieve musically what MJ did w/out feeling the need to change themselves
and I believe more than anything, that's why Quincy Jones said what he said because being involved in the music industry for so long, he's seen just about every obstacle there was when it comes to the issue of race where he saw all the barriers, obstacles, and restrictions that kept a distinctive culture of music from being embraced naturally, and when he stood on that stage with MJ during those 84 GRammys after producing/recording the greatest selling album of all time, where both men accomplished history together, for that brief moment, he saw that for the first time, there was an opportunity to break through all of that for good through the sheer will of talent itself, and how that was slowly taken away over time and MJ was pushed towards moving beyond all of that, and how MJ was robbed of his essential goodness, with being so close to him artistically, and considering what they did achieved together, he's probably more bitter about that than anything else
[Edited 7/15/17 6:46am] | |
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The law does not work on deserved. No one put a gun to MJ's head and forced him to cut Quincy in on the copyrigths. Contracts do not end because estate managers do not feel that the holders of copyrights and parties of contracts suddenly do not deserve to receive a certain amount of the revenue.
The attorneys involved with this case and MJ's estate are not idiots. They simply believed they could not pay Q and that he would not pursue the lawsuit and would accept a settlement which to me was foolish. At the tune of 30 million Q had no problem finding a law firm to take his case as this could only be a matter of how much he id due not a question that he is going to get money out of this case.
If you had in punititive damages and court cost and looking at the amount of revenue the MJ estate has generated. The judgement could be substantial. ---------
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Still get giggles from those who say Mike was nothing without Q despite MJ having a successful career for 10 years before Jones entered the picture. Mike really came into his own on Destiny. What did Q have to do with that? If Jones is owed money then fair play, beyond that... get a grip on reality. Mike was massively successful before Q and massively successful long after Q. | |
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On point, Ms. Richardson. | |
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Exactly, and to me Destiny is a little better than Quincy produced albums. | |
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I liked Destiny. It's hard to say where MJ would have ended up musically had he had not hooked up with Quincy. Since he did I can not imagine him being more successful if there were no Off the Wall, Thriller or Bad. | |
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his brothers were also pretty talented, shake your body, can you feel it, this place hotel, they did some great work without the motown handlers. I actually even liked parts of the abysmally reviewed, Victory. | |
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The question I've been wondering is where would we have ended up musically if Thriller hadn't been as big as it was. I saw some interviews from right before he started work on Thriller where he stated "after Quincy and I finish the next album", he wanted to put out a concept album
Then Thriller became what it was...then Victory.... "We may deify or demonize them but not ignore them. And we call them genius, because they are the people who change the world." | |
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Many people have said that the success stifled him. That he got the idea that he could even top that and he tried. I really think all the hoopla made him a little crazy, just like it did to most of the people it's happened to. It's not a healthy way to live. Fame has driven a lot of people over the brink in one way or the other. I don't think he or anyone else knew thriller would be that big, I think he just had the modest (at the time) hope that it would sell better than off the wall. Truth is, most people think off the wall was the better album so it goes to show that quality and sales aren't the same thing. as far as a concept album, maybe Dangerous might fit the bill more than any other album. | |
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I (and other fans) feel at some point, he seemed to make peace that he wasn't going to outsell Thriller, although I do feel he felt he had more to prove afterwards by wanting to break other records (biggest selling remix album, biggest selling double album, most sold out shows, biggest audience). He agreed to do the Superbowl because it was going to be a huge viewership and it would reach people that hadn't seen him in concert.
Michael, unfortunately, seemed to equate success with being loved which is NOT a good thing.
and speaking of feeling he had to prove something, it was said in a recent book that he was wanting more control with Bad onwards because he felt he had to prove himself away from Q.
https://www.makingmichael.co.uk/single-post/2016/04/19/EXTRACT-Inside-the-Bad-sessions-and-the-split-with-Quincy-Jones
It's understandable IMO. By '89 when he started on Dangerous, Michael had written and produced songs for Diana Ross, his two older sisters, Johnny Mathis, Jennifer Holliday, The Brothers Johnson, Carole Bayer Sager, and USA For Africa. Most of his biggest hits as an adult were written by him, but people still considered him "just a singer and dancer". He wanted to show people he was more than that. "We may deify or demonize them but not ignore them. And we call them genius, because they are the people who change the world." | |
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he was a great songwriter, he would hav e been huge without Q, fact is, we're all socialized to look to an outside figure for permission to do anything, it's how we're raised and there are many people who abuse and exploit that need for themselves. Of course a good ally is nice to have but the strings that are attached often make it not work in the long run. As far as his success, i still have the article from RS in 87 where he wanted to sell a hundred million albums. I think it really hurt him artistically to do that. His albums were strong albums, I never did listen to Invincible but everything else was pretty damned good but how much more would we have gotten had he not 1. been worried about topping thriller 2. not had to deal with being hunted in his own country.
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If Thriller hadn't become the monster it came to be, i'm sure Michael would have made more music and i have to say better and more honest music, in the vein of the Destiny album, specially the ballads. Thriller, although a good album was for Michael more of a curse than a blessing. I for one believe that Thriller limited Jackson artistically. [Edited 7/19/17 14:45pm] | |
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Quincy Jones I Suffered Financial Elder Abuse ... Judge in MJ Case Rejects Claim http://www.tmz.com/2017/0...oductions/
Update The judge denied Quincy's motion to add financial elder abuse to the lawsuit.
Quincy Jones says he's the victim of elder abuse in his legal war over Michael Jackson royalties. According to new docs filed in the case -- which went to trial this week in L.A. -- Quincy says Sony Music and MJJ Productions took advantage of his advanced age. He's 84 now, and in the docs, says he was clearly over 65 at the time he sat down with the music execs to talk dough. Quincy says Sony and MJJ pulled an accounting trick on him -- labeling a pot of money from MJ's music as profits, instead of royalties ... to which he would have been entitled a cut. In short ... he's accusing them of bamboozling an old man. Of course, Q produced MJ's 3 biggest albums -- "Off the Wall," "Thriller" and "Bad" -- and says the defendants have screwed him out of money earned off that amazing string of hits. He's suing for at least $10 million, and is expected to testify in court this week [Edited 7/19/17 20:26pm] Keep Calm & Listen To Prince | |
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http://www.billboard.com/articles/business/7872998/quincy-jones-earned-18-million-in-royalties-since-michael-jacksons-death
On Day 6 of trial over missing royalties, Sony exec's testimony reveals producer's payout Since the death of pop star Michael Jackson in 2009, Quincy Jones has received nearly $18 million in royalties for his work on some of the King of Pop’s most iconic music, according to court testimony given by a high-ranking music executive on the sixth day of the trial between Jones and the Jackson estate. "We may deify or demonize them but not ignore them. And we call them genius, because they are the people who change the world." | |
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