Saturday, October 9, 2021

Michael Jackson, The #5 Artist of the Rock Era, Part Three

 

(Continued from Part Two)

While working on a dance routine, Jackson broke his nose, which required rhinoplasty and several subsequent operations because of breathing problems experienced as a result of the rhinoplasty.

In 1979, Jackson recorded the album Off the Wall, which jump-started his solo career.  At that time, the album was the first in the Rock Era to contain four Top 10 songs, and up to this point, MJ's five number one songs (four with the Jackson 5 and his 1972 solo hit "Ben") were all written by others.

Recording took place between December of 1978 and June of 1979.  The album's vocals and rhythm tracks were recorded at Allen Zentz Recording, the horn parts were recorded at Westlake Audio, and string instrumentation was captured at Cherokee Studios, all near Los Angeles.

 

It was legendary producer Quincy Jones who encouraged Michael to start writing his own material, and Jackson proved early on he was a strong songwriter.  Before Jones added the Midas Touch, Michael recorded a demo of this track with 12-year-old sister Janet playing glass bottles.  

The Disco song "Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough" (no doubt inspired by the blockbuster movie Star Wars) sold over two million copies and rolled to #1 in the U.S., Australia, and New Zealand and settled for #2 in the Netherlands and Spain and #3 in the U.K. and Canada.  It was a #1 smash on the R&B chart for five weeks and is The #7 R&B Song of the 70's*.  Listen for the contributions of brother Randy on percussion.

Off the Wall was a solid best-seller for two years, reaching a peak of #1 in Australia, #3 in the U.S. and the U.K. and #4 in Canada.  It has now sold over 20 million copies worldwide.

(Temperton, Jones and Jackson)

 
This combination worked well.  Take a song written by Rod Temperton, keyboardist and the main songwriter for Heatwave ("Boogie Nights" and "Always And Forever").  Those excellent songs got the attention of producer Quincy Jones, who recruited Temperton to write songs for Jackson.  The idea was Temperton would present Michael with three songs and Jackson would choose his favorite.  But he loved all three and used them all on Off The Wall.

The first one Rod wrote for MJ was this one.  "Rock With You" was one of the top songs of 1980, holding on to #1 in the U.S. and Spain and also selling over four million copies.  A #1 R&B killer for six weeks, it is The #19 R&B Song of the 80's*.

Jackson captured the Grammy Award for Best Male R&B Vocal Performance for "Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough".  He won American Music Awards for Favorite Pop (Rock) Album, Favorite Soul/R&B Album, Favorite Soul/R&B Male Artist, and Favorite Soul/R&B Single for "Don't Stop" and was nominated for Favorite Pop (Rock) Album.




Temperton also wrote the title song, which hit #7 in the U.K. and #10 in the United States (#5 R&B) and gave Michael a third consecutive Platinum single.  That's Louis Johnson from the Brothers Johnson ("I'll Be Good To You", "Strawberry Letter 23" and "Stomp!") playing the awesome bass line. 


The album was later inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.  This next song by Tom Bahler was thought to be about Karen Carpenter, whom Bahler dated briefly, but Bahler said it was written before he and Karen hooked up and it is actually more about Rhonda Rivera, his previous girlfriend.

Jones had Frank Sinatra in mind for the song before giving it to Jackson.  Bahler's painful breakup song was difficult for Michael to sing, as Jones wrote in the liner notes to a later edition of the album:



            "She's Out Of My Life", I'd been carrying 

            around for about three years--you can feel

            the pain in it, you know.  And I held on to 

            it and finally something said "this is the 

            right moment to give it to Michael."


            And when we recorded it with Michael, I

            know it was an experience he'd never 

            even thought about to sing in a song, 

            'cause it's a very mature emotion.  And

            he cried at the end of every take, you

            know.  We recorded about--I don't 

            know--8-11 takes, and every one at the

            end, he just cried, and I said, "Hey, 

            that's supposed to be, leave it on

            there."



In Jackson's autobiography, Moonwalk, Michael wrote that the song is about "knowing that barriers separating him from others are seemingly easy to overcome, yet they cause him to miss out on what he really desires."  He said he cried because "I had been letting so much build up inside me."  Michael felt "so rich in some experiences while being poor in moments of true joy."

"She's Out Of My Life" peaked at #3 in the U.K. and #10 in the U.S. and sold one million singles.




 

"One Day In Your Life" was originally released on his final solo album with Motown, Forever, Michael, but re-released in 1981 after the huge success of The Wall.  It became Jackson's first solo #1 in the U.K. when it replaced Smokey Robinson's "Being With You" at the top.


In a 2013 piece by 60 Minutes on CBS-TV, "The Manifesto", as it was called, was found in a storage warehouse among many other personal items.  Looking back and ignoring briefly the benefit all of us have of knowing what we now know about this incredible performer, it is truly remarkable that 21-year old Michael wrote this in 1979:

            MJ will be my new name.  No more 

            Michael Jackson.  I want a whole new

            character, a whole new look.  I should be

            a tottally [sic] different person.  People 

            should never think of me as the kid who

            sang "ABC", "I Want You Back".  I should

            be a new, incredible actor/singer/dancer

            that will shock the world.  I will do no

            interviews.  I will be magic.  I will be a

            perfectionist, a researcher, a trainer, a

            masterer [sic].  I will be better than every

            great actor roped into one.  I "must" have

            the most incredible training system.  To

            dig and dig and dig until I find.


             I will study and look back on the whole

             world of Entertainment and perfect it.  

             Take it steps further from where the

             greats left off.



It is safe to say that Michael Jackson accomplished most of his goals.  This Stevie Wonder song was written for his 1977 masterpiece but wound up on another great album.  "That was supposed to be one of the songs on Songs in the Key of Life," Wonder said.  "My sister Renee had been hearing me play this cassette, she and Michael were friends, and she took it over to let Michael hear it."   Here is that song from one great to another--"I Can't Help It".





 

"Get On The Floor", co-written by Michael with Louis Johnson, is another example of the cutting-edge, ready for the dance floor music of this landmark album.  "Though it wasn't a single, [it] was particularly satisfying," Jackson wrote in his 1988 memoir Moonwalk, "because Louis gave me a smooth enough bottom to ride in the verses and let me come back stronger and stronger with each chorus."  "Bruce Swedien, Quincy Jones' engineer, put the final touches on that mix, and I still get pleasure out of hearing it," Jackson added.  Joseph Vogel, author of the 2011 book Man In The Music:  The Creative Life and Work Of Michael Jackson, calls the song "quite simply, a celebration of life, music and dance."



Despite being the B-side to "Rock With You" in the U.S. and "Off The Wall" in the U.K., "Working Day And Night" has nonetheless become one of Jackson's most popular songs and one he performed often in concert.

As a result of the blockbuster album, Michael renewed his contract with Epic for the highest royalty rate in the business--37% of album profits.  Michael recorded duets with Freddie Mercury of Queen that were meant for an album but the project was shelved.  The recordings were later released in 2014.

What happened next changed music history in multiple ways.  

Michael released the album Thriller in 1982.   In Craig Halstead's 2007 book Michael Jackson:  For the Record, Jackson said that the recording of this song was one of his favorite memories in the studio:



               One of my favorite songs to record, of all

               my recordings as a solo artist, is probably

               "The Girl Is Mine", because working with

                Paul McCartney was pretty exciting and

                we just literally had fun.  It was like lots

                of kibitzing and playing, and throwing 

                stuff at each other, and making jokes.

                We actually recorded the (instrumental)

                track and the vocals pretty much live at

                the same time, and we do have footage

                of it, but it's never been shown."



Footage of the recording was later shown during the McCartney World Tour.  Several members of the great group Toto helped out on this song, including David Paich on piano, drummer Jeff Porcaro, guitarist Steve Lukather and Steve Porcaro, providing synthesizer programming.



Although "The Girl Is Mine" was an overrated #2 (#1 R&B), there was much more to come.




With the verse “She was more like a beauty queen from a movie scene / I said, “Don’t mind, but what do you mean, I am the one / Who will dance on the floor in the round?’”, we learn right away that there is an admiring woman obsessed with the protagonist, and no matter what he does, he cannot shake her.

There has been much speculation as to who the subject of the song is.  Jackson said (in Moonwalk) that "there never was a real Billie Jean."  The girl in the song is a composite of people my brothers have been plagued with over the years," he said.  "I could never understand how these girls could say they were carrying someone's child when it wasn't true."

Michael would experience those kind of accusations (some true, most untrue) over the coming years.  Thanks to songs like "Billie Jean", which sold two million and hit #1 in nearly every country, the album stayed in the Top 10 for 80 straight weeks.  The single went Platinum and dominated the R&B chart for nine weeks, garnering the spot as The #3 R&B Song of the '80's*.








Thriller caught the world by storm, rocketing to #1 for an unbelievable 37 weeks in the U.S. and topped charts throughout the globe.  Superstar guitarist Eddie Van Halen helped "Beat It" jump to #1 in the U.S. (as well as #1 R&B), Canada, New Zealand, the Netherlands and Spain and go Top Three throughout the world.  It has now sold over 8 million singles.

Interestingly enough, when Van Halen's 1984 album reached #2, it was Thriller that kept it out of the top spot.





Thriller is now the top-selling album of all-time in both the U.S. and worldwide, with 33 and 66 million copies, respectively.  One of the key elements of this song is the "bathroom stomp board", a 4 x 3-foot piece of plywood that Michael played in the middle of the song.  Jackson released "Wanna' Be Startin' Somethin'" next, a #1 smash in Canada that also hit #5 in the U.S. on both the Popular and R&B charts and sold over two million.  



Thriller spawned a record seven Top 10 songs, including the #7 hit "Human Nature", co-written by Steve Porcaro of Toto and John Bettis.  




Grammy Award-winning engineer Bruce Swedien mixed the album, just as he had done for its predecessor, Off The Wall.  Jackson and Greg Phillinganes wrote the original demo of this song but when Quincy didn't like it but liked the title, he brought in James Ingram to write a completely different song.  "P.Y.T. (Pretty Young Thing)" sold over four million singles and peaked at #10.




 

"The Lady In My Life" is another song written by Temperton.

An album so great that everyone knows its name.  Stay tuned as the Michael Magic continues.

Friday, October 8, 2021

Michael Jackson, The #5 Artist of the Rock Era, Part Two

 

(Continued from Part One)

Motown boss Berry Gordy, Jr. created "The Corporation" (Alphonso Mizell, Freddie Perren, Deke Richards and himself) as a songwriting team for the Jackson 5, and they helped Michael out here as well.  "We've Got A Good Thing Going" was originally issued as the B-side of "I Wanna' Be Where You Are". 







Gordy wrote "You Can Cry On My Shoulders" on his own, and young Michael came through on the high notes of this Brenda Holloway cover.








In 1973, Jackson released his third album, Music & Me.  Although the lead single "With A Child's Heart" stalled at #50, it is a worthy cut.  Written by Stevie Wonder, it was the B-side to "Nothing's Too Good For My Baby" and featured on his album Up-Tight.








Several artists have recorded this 1951 song by Sidney Lippman and Sylvia Dee, most notably Nat King Cole.  Michael does a nice job on "Too Young".








 

"All The Things You Are" was written by Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II for the musical Very Warm for May in 1939.









 

The highlight of this song is the great chorus from Stephen Schwartz, who wrote Godspell--"Morning Glow".









 

This song written by Smokey Robinson was inspired by the melody (written by Michel Legrand) to the movie Lady Sings The Blues, produced by Gordy for Diana Ross.  Smokey said, in an interview for the album Timeless Love:



         I was looking at the movie one day, and I

                  was listening to that melody, and I thought

                  it was just such a beautiful melody, until

                  I wanted to write some words for that

                  melody, and upset because I didn't write

                 them before he finished the movie so

                  they could've been in the movie.



This is "Happy" (Love Theme From 'Lady Sings The Blues'").



In 1975, he released the album Forever, Michael, and thanks to the return of Brian and Eddie Holland to Motown, Jackson had writers that could write songs for a maturing Michael.  "We're Almost There" made it up to #7 on the R&B chart.






During this time, Michael also performed and recorded with the Jackson 5.  The group left Motown Records in 1975, signed with Epic Records, and changed their name to the Jacksons.  Jermaine stayed with Motown and pursued a solo career, with younger brother Randy taking his place.  The Jacksons released six albums between 1976 and 1984, with Michael writing most of their biggest hits.




(L-R Jackson, Nipsey Russell, Diana Ross and Tedd Ross)

Meanwhile, Michael moved to New York City to star with Diana Ross in the movie musical The Wiz.  Although the movie was not received well, Michael made a key connection when he met Quincy Jones, who arranged the score for the movie.  Jones would go on to produce three of Michael's solo albums.

Music after the Jackson 5's heyday, but before he emerged as a superstar.  Much more from Michael Jackson!

Thursday, October 7, 2021

The Top 100 Artists of the Rock Era Checklist: #11-100

We hope you are enjoying The Top 100 Artists* special!  The best way to listen to it is to listen to each song by each artist, one immediately after the other, the way it was first presented on radio.  Everyone's tastes are different, but it is readily apparent from listening to the great array of songs that each of these artists have had amazing careers.  Here is our handy checklist to make it easy to catch up on superstars you may have missed:


Prelude:

#102-- Dan Fogelberg, Part One

Dan Fogelberg, Part Two

Dan Fogelberg, Part Three

Dan Fogelberg, Part Four

#101--Christina Aguilera


The Top 100 Artists of the Rock Era:

#100--Tom Petty

#99--Platters

#98--Coldplay

#97--Beyonce

#96--Alicia Keys

#95--America

#94--Four Tops

#93--Dionne Warwick

#92--Tina Turner

#91--Kool & the Gang, Part One

Kool & the Gang, Part Two

#90--John Lennon

#89--Commodores

#88--Police

#87--Eric Clapton, Part One

Eric Clapton, Part Two

#86--Metallica, Part One

Metallica, Part Two

#85--Def Leppard

#84--Cars

#83--Jackson Browne, Part One

Jackson Browne, Part Two

Jackson Browne, Part Three

#82--Van Halen, Part One

Van Halen, Part Two

#81--Styx, Part One

Styx, Part Two

#80--Huey Lewis & the News

#79--Diana Ross

#78--Cher

#77--Electric Light Orchestra, Part One

ELO, Part Two

#76--Heart, Part One

Heart, Part Two

#75--Michael Bolton, Part One

Michael Bolton, Part Two

#74--Boyz II Men

#73--AC/DC, Part One

AC/DC, Part Two

#72--Paul Simon, Part One

Paul Simon, Part Two

#71--Usher, Part One

Usher, Part Two

#70.  Hall & Oates, Part One

        Hall & Oates, Part Two

#69.  Jackson Five

#68.  Gloria Estefan, Part One

         Gloria Estefan, Part Two

#67.  Doors, Part One

         Doors, Part Two

#66.  Earth, Wind & Fire, Part One

         Earth, Wind & Fire, Part Two

#65.  Taylor Swift, Part One

         Taylor Swift, Part Two

         Taylor Swift, Part Three

#64.  Everly Brothers, Part One

         Everly Brothers, Part Two

#63.  Moody Blues, Part One

         Moody Blues, Part Two

#62.  Bon Jovi, Part One

         Bon Jovi, Part Two

#61.  Rihanna, Part One

         Rihanna, Part Two

         Rihanna, Part Three

#60.  Genesis, Part One

         Genesis, Part Two

#59.  Doobie Brothers, Part One

         Doobie Brothers, Part Two

#58.  Aerosmith, Part One

         Aerosmith, Part Two

#57.  Four Seasons, Part One

         Four Seasons, Part Two

#56.  Santana, Part One

         Santana, Part Two

#55.  George Michael, Part One

         George Michael, Part Two

         George Michael, Part Three

#54.  Pink Floyd, Part One

         Pink Floyd, Part Two

         Pink Floyd, Part Three

#53.  Garth Brooks, Part One

         Garth Brooks, Part Two

         Garth Brooks, Part Three

#52.  Three Dog Night, Part One

         Three Dog Night, Part Two

#51.  Queen, Part One

         Queen, Part Two

         Queen, Part Three

#50.  Paul McCartney & Wings, Part One

          Paul McCartney & Wings, Part Two

#49.   ABBA, Part One

          ABBA, Part Two

          ABBA, Part Three

#48.  Bryan Adams, Part One

         Bryan Adams, Part Two

#47.  John Mellencamp, Part One

         John Mellencamp, Part Two

         John Mellencamp, Part Three

         John Mellencamp, Part Four

#46.  James Taylor, Part One

         James Taylor, Part Two

         James Taylor, Part Three

#45.  Prince, Part One

         Prince, Part Two

         Prince, Part Three

#44.  Barry Manilow, Part One

         Barry Manilow, Part Two

         Barry Manilow, Part Three

         Barry Manilow, Part Four

#43.  Who, Part One

         Who, Part Two

         Who, Part Three

#42.  Lionel Richie, Part One

         Lionel Richie, Part Two

#41.  Temptations, Part One

         Temptations, Part Two

         Temptations, Part Three

#40.  Donna Summer, Part One

         Donna Summer, Part Two

         Donna Summer, Part Three

#39.  Frank Sinatra, Part One

         Frank Sinatra, Part Two

         Frank Sinatra, Part Three

         Frank Sinatra, Part Four

         Frank Sinatra, Part Five

#38.  Journey, Part One

         Journey, Part Two

         Journey, Part Three

         Journey, Part Four

#37.  Foreigner, Part One

         Foreigner, Part Two

         Foreigner, Part Three

#36.  Olivia Newton-John, Part One

         Olivia Newton-John, Part Two

         Olivia Newton-John, Part Three

#35.  Janet Jackson, Part One

         Janet Jackson, Part Two

         Janet Jackson, Part Three

#34.  Marvin Gaye, Part One

         Marvin Gaye, Part Two

         Marvin Gaye, Part Three

#33.  Phil Collins, Part One

         Phil Collins, Part Two

         Phil Collins, Part Three

#32.  Kenny Rogers, Part One

         Kenny Rogers, Part Two

#31.  John Denver, Part One

         John Denver, Part Two

         John Denver, Part Three

#30.  Bob Seger, Part One

         Bob Seger, Part Two

         Bob Seger, Part Three

         Bob Seger, Part Four

#29.  Bob Dylan, Part One

         Bob Dylan, Part Two

         Bob Dylan, Part Three

         Bob Dylan, Part Four

#28.  Rod Stewart, Part One

         Rod Stewart, Part Two

         Rod Stewart, Part Three

         Rod Stewart, Part Four

#27.  Bruce Springsteen, Part One

         Bruce Springsteen, Part Two

         Bruce Springsteen, Part Three

         Bruce Springsteen, Part Four

#26.  Aretha Franklin, Part One

         Aretha Franklin, Part Two

         Aretha Franklin, Part Three

         Aretha Franklin, Part Four

#25.  Supremes, Part One

         Supremes, Part Two

#24.  Linda Ronstadt, Part One

         Linda Ronstadt, Part Two

         Linda Ronstadt, Part Three

         Linda Ronstadt, Part Four

#23.  Led Zeppelin, Part One

         Led Zeppelin, Part Two

         Led Zeppelin, Part Three

#22.  Simon & Garfunkel, Part One

         Simon & Garfunkel, Part Two

         Simon & Garfunkel, Part Three

#21.  Neil Diamond, Part One

         Neil Diamond, Part Two

         Neil Diamond, Part Three

         Neil Diamond, Part Four

#20.  Barbra Streisand, Part One

         Barbra Streisand, Part Two

         Barbra Streisand, Part Three

         Barbra Streisand, Part Four

#19.  Creedence Clearwater Revival, Part One

         Creedence Clearwater Revival, Part Two

         Creedence Clearwater Revival, Part Three

#18.  Carpenters, Part One

         Carpenters, Part Two

         Carpenters, Part Three

#17.  U2, Part One

         U2, Part Two

         U2, Part Three

         U2, Part Four

         U2, Part Five

         U2, Part Six

#16.  Beach Boys, Part One

         Beach Boys, Part Two

         Beach Boys, Part Three

         Beach Boys, Part Four

         Beach Boys, Part Five

#15.  Celine Dion, Part One

         Celine Dion, Part Two

         Celine Dion, Part Three

         Celine Dion, Part Four

#14.  Mariah Carey, Part One

         Mariah Carey, Part Two

         Mariah Carey, Part Three

         Mariah Carey, Part Four

#13.  Chicago, Part One

         Chicago, Part Two

         Chicago, Part Three

         Chicago, Part Four

#12.   Fleetwood Mac, Part One

          Fleetwood Mac, Part Two

          Fleetwood Mac, Part Three

          Fleetwood Mac, Part Four

          Fleetwood Mac, Part Five

          Fleetwood Mac, Part Six

#11.  Whitney Houston, Part One

         Whitney Houston, Part Two     

         Whitney Houston, Part Three

         Whitney Houston, Part Four