MJ Insight Aggregator
June 29th, 2009 | 4:55 pm est |
Since Michael Jackson’s passing last week, a great deal of nonsense has hit news programs and the Internet. (Here is a case where Google might not be your friend.) From the disgraceful father of the deceased using every opportunity to promote his whatever, to countless ill-informed speculations, to reductions of Jackson’s life to a mere caricature, there has been enough errant garbage to nauseate the most casual fan. As a supplement to our own tribute from Stephen Thomas Erlewine, here is a modest attempt at shining some light on the more insightful and heartfelt writing that has surfaced during the last few days.
“Thursday night in New York was hot — after weeks of rain, it was one of the first real summer nights of the year. Car windows were open all over the city, and just about every station on the radio dial had switched to an all-Michael Jackson format; for the first (and, for all we know, the last) time, it felt as if absolutely everyone was listening to the same songs.” — Kelefa Sanneh, The New Yorker
“A showstopper in any definition of the word, he transcended generations and racial barriers. From oldies fans who were there from the start of his career in Gary to today’s young teens, whose attention span and too-cool-for-even-last-week’s-number-one-hit musical tastes rarely wander from the MTV playlists, he rocked them all. Even as I talked to a co-worker today, she told me about her 6-year-old son who goes to bed each night playing the Jackson 5’s greatest hits CD. That’s what you call IMPACT.” — Eric Luecking, Soul Sides
“If he did anything wrong in his life, and part of me doesn’t ever want to know if he did, he certainly also did more good than any of us can ever conceive of. He was easily the greatest dancer of the past three decades, probably the greatest singer, and quite possibly the greatest songwriter. Which adds up the greatest entertainer, period. ‘I can guarantee you one thing, we will never agree on anything as we agreed on Elvis,’ Lester Bangs wrote in his obit 32 years ago, only a couple years before Michael Jackson definitively proved him wrong, emerging full-blown into adulthood as the world’s most popular musician by presaging generations of young people who would celebrate their adulthood by refusing to grow up. And he emerged, of course, with some of the most celebratory music anybody from those generations will ever hear. But always, in the middle of that celebration, and not always submerged, there was dread. If anybody deserves to finally rest in peace, it’s him.” — Chuck Eddy
“The way he integrated MTV in 1983 with ‘Billie Jean,’ the ‘We Are the World’ extravaganzas, the face masks, the oxygen tanks, the Neverland Ranch — all that mixes in with everything from ‘Stop the Love You Save’ to ‘Dancing Machine,’ ‘Wanna Be Startin’ Somethin’,’ ‘P.Y.T.,’ ‘Man in the Mirror,’ adding up to the more than 750 million albums sold worldwide… I mean. And this is not the half, the tenth, the thousandth of what he was.” — Danyel Smith, CNN
“He was Blackness and maleness, soul music and pop culture, all forged pre-hip-hop, pre-Reagan, pre-crack, pre the implosion of short-lived Civil Rights-era idealism and hope. That’s an incalculably important point to understand the thick strands of optimism, possibility, aesthetic, and political vision that ran through his work. And that makes the darkness and paranoia that marbled so much of his later work all the more heartbreaking, especially as it roughly paralleled the shifting tenor of the times. He never lost his humanitarian streak or his belief in the overall goodness of humanity, but the evolution of his own relationship to the world and his feelings about how he was treated darkened noticeably.” — Ernest Hardy
“But what is the allure of this narrative that we — fans, consumers, the media, American culture, etc — somehow destroyed Michael? What anxieties do we displace by projecting them onto his troubled face? I always think back to the interrogation scene from Three Kings. ‘What is the problem with Michael Jackson?’ an Iraqi soldier asks a wayward American. ‘Your country make him chop up his face.’ He did it to himself, the American protests, but his interrogator insists: ‘Michael Jackson is pop king of sick fucking country.’ Maybe it is a ’sick fucking country.’ Maybe the idea of pop transcendence is deeply flawed. But we are truly the sick ones if we didn’t already know this, if we needed Michael Jackson to be our martyr. If we think we would trade it all for a world without Off the Wall or Thriller or ‘Butterflies.’” — Hua Hsu, The Atlantic
“I often thought of a veal calf when I saw him — he had been raised to perform under extreme pressure before he had any idea of what life could be beyond performing for others. Then he spent decades trying to build a life without ever having seen one. He had the best ear in the world but he had no apparent idea of how people experienced everyday comfort, or even boredom.” — Sasha Frere-Jones, The New Yorker
“We have to be sophisticated enough to acknowledge that greatness and a touch of evil dwelled in the man. I’ve always believed that transcendent art emanates from the purest, most evolved parts of our soul. But that highly spiritual achievement doesn’t absolve us of our daily misdeeds. To simply brand him a smooth criminal, as some have, or to overlook his tragic nature, as have others, is to deny his humanity. The meaning of Michael Jackson’s life — as a black man, a sexual being, a abused and abusing adult — will be interpreted to fit the prejudices of the speaker. His music — it speaks volumes.” — Nelson George
“Why would people try to tear down a man who constantly used his power, money, and influence to help others? Why would people express such disgust and contempt for a man who constantly sang of love and peace, and used his talent to entertain, uplift, and inspire millions? Tell em that its human nature, I suppose…” — Phonte Coleman (Little Brother, the Foreign Exchange)
“What we’ve lost, in a word, is monoculture. Michael Jackson is the final pop star of seeming consequence to everyone — not just people who don’t normally care about music, but people who don’t care about culture, period. Obviously, it’s been a quarter-century since that was unequivocally true. But he’s the last pop musician for whom it was even equivocally true. The fact that the business he saved has been crumbling for some time was given a brutal underlining by Jackson’s sudden, unexpected death, the question of what’s-next now punctuated with what-will-never-be-again.” — Michaelangelo Matos, Salon
“Rock with You” singalong outside Harlem’s Apollo Theater (hat tip to Soulbounce):






I can’t believe I’m first to comment here, but I’ll give it a shot.
I use allmusic.com all the time as a music resource, so I’m so pleased to see you guys have done a worthy tributes to Michael Joseph Jackson.
I can literally say I’ve loved him all of my 37 years.
Thank you for these quotes, most of them I haven’t seen and they are so gentle, compassionate and sum up a lot of feelings I have had about this amazing man and entertainer.
Great job!
Rest in peace, Michael
Pitchfork’s tribute to him is excellent, as well.
He was the highwater mark of pop culture. And he created that with all the grandeur in the world
A talented, important pop star. A failure as a private human being. BOTH.
Amen, nice work.
I feel a few things have happened since his death.
It seems like some people have breathed a sigh of relief, either because he won’t do any further harm (if he did it in the first place, not for me to place blame), or because he may now have the peace he never had in life.
I also think many of the people who judged him now feel like it’s ok to love his music again. For all his faults, he did an immense amount of good for the world. I think he deserves a peaceful rest.
Michael Jackson. Yawn. Guy could really sing and dance in his prime. Great entertainer. Not a musician. Sold a lot of records. So did Milli Vanili, Wham, the Backstreet Boys, NKOTB, and countless others including today’s crop of Idol wasteoids. The media tore this guy up mercilessly for years and now they exult him and you all lap it up. Sheep. Most of those quotes above are disgusting beyond words. I wonder how many of those were written by people who even remember when Off the Wall or Thriller came out. I suspect many articles have been written by 20/30-somethings who for some reason look back longingly at the 80s as some sort of golden era. They weren’t. They sucked. And Jackson was a big part of that suckiness. I graduated from HS in ‘85. I know. No one took this guy seriously back then and they sure shouldn’t now that he’s gone. It’s sad when anyone passes on. But let’s keep it in perspective here folks. It’s really embarrassing. A third of the world doesn’t have clean drinking water. Cry for them.
Not really.
very eloquent and interesting takes on michael, thanks for the work.
as for “mark”…michael jackson donated millions and millions of dollars to charity to solve problems such as clean drinking water and more…before you accuse him of being so irrelevant, what have you done?
Ok Mark, so you and your friends didn’t like his music. To make an oblivious claim that no on took him seriously back then makes me question if you were even alive back then, much less the age you say you were. His music was everywhere in the 80’s, and everyone I knew liked it. Is there a lot of derivative crap in it’s wake, sure. Happens in every genre, welcome to music 101. Who’s saying the 80’s were golden? Everyone with a passing glance at history knows there’s was as many problems then as any other decade. But there was great music on the pop level and the underground (see the book bearing my name), or don’t you ever use this site to look up music? My guess is the above quotes were written by people with a wide perspective on music and the surrounding culture, something you seem to lack.
And yes, Captain Planet, there’s deprived countries in the world. For whatever odd behavior he may have showed in his life, you might try clicking this link:
http://www.healtheworldfoundation.net/mission.htm
the fact is there is a lot of truth in marks words, but i don’t want to focus on that b/c he did just die, lets not rip the dead so soon. however, it is fair to say that for all his genius, and the jackson 5, off the wall, and thriller were genius, he was also a freak, the whole sleeping with kids thing, sexual or not, is just wrong, not to mention the changing from black to white bit.
musically, from my POV, almost everything after thriller sucked, and sucked really badly. and while i do think OTW and Thriller were genius, they were POP records afterall, and pop is disposable garbage most of the time. nothing he did, imo, equals the beatles or elvis or sinatra or pink floyd or nirvana. going as mainstream as possible even when done to perfection as he did it for a while, is not a lofty goal imo, unless making the most money possible is the ultimate goal.
MJ was an undeniable pop icon, and i think it is the dance moves [moonwalk, etc] and the style, as well as a handful of songs, for which he will be remembered, as well as the jackson 5, but i do think there was more hype than substance.
ps. what he did to paul mccartney over the beatles publishing rights was so wrong on so many levels, i wouldn’t blame paul if he were glad he was dead.
I, like just about everyone else here, lived through 1980s in the USA and, yes, it was a pretty awful time. Particularly if you were looking for a job in rural America.
During this time, Thriller played endlessly on crappy top 40 radio stations. It was so ubiquitous that I can barely hear it now without feeling suffocated by the repetition. And I make it my personal quest to challenge all of my musical tastes and preconceptions whenever possible. But I can’t enjoy this record, even though I eventually learned to enjoy Country & Western and Free Jazz.
However, Off The Wall is pretty excellent. Loosen up, Mark. It has none of the cheap plastic production that characterized his 80s hits. It’s a pop album that deserved its popularity.
The final word: No matter how freaky the music you listen to may be (and you may like Nurse With Wound or listen exclusively to True Nordic Black Metal or Mrs. Miller’s Greatest Hits), Michael Jackson’s True Fans are the freakiest pop star fans there are. These people are far more extreme than you. All due respect for a man who brought these people out in the open.
He is as important as Sinatra. Or Elvis who pilfered black music like no tomorrow. His impact is felt all through music today, whether anyone wants to admit it or not. He practically invented the video medium, and put black music on a pedestal for idiots likeJustin Timberfake to pilfer a la Elvis, if ever not so gracefully.
Personally, I’d rather hear the soulful sounds of “Off the Wall” than anything by Nirvana, just because it sounds better, & it isn’t nearly as pretentious. Muah Michael. You will be missed.
P.S.-His later output had some stand outs, “Butterflies,” “Scream,” “You Are Not Alone,” etc.-QH
A cautionary tale as great as that of Elvis. Sad that Jackson had so much talent, made so much money, yet apparently had no happiness, and lived his life as a viechele for other peoples ambitions.
An amazing singer when he was a kid, you can hear the joy in his work (probably the only joy he had). I don’t think his voice aged particularly well, but he used what he had to great effect. No doubt a guy with creative vision.
I think his real legacy will be as an electrifying performer. Many of todays biggest stars need elaborate stage shows to disguise the fact that they really don’t have a lot of talent. With Jackson you could stick a band in the corner, hand him a mike, and it was game over. Was he “the best”? Who really cares? I don’t understand the impulse to have to place that crown upon anyone.
I am old enough to have seen the Jackson 5 on the Andy Williams show, never owned any of the records, but still smile when it comes on the radio. If a singer can make people smile consistantly many years after a song is recorded, they have done their job.
BTW… How could anyone NOT have fun in the 80s??
If you’ve seen Citizen Kane, and really understood it, you’ll know that one will never have a full understanding of another person’s life, no matter how simple this person may be, let alone a complex being like Michael Jackson. This lack of understanding is something we have to live with. Otherwise we may risk being unfair to him. And if there was a time for Michael to live in peace, well that is definetely gone!! Now he lives only in our hearts and minds.
To pretentious a-holes like Mark, maybe you should do a little research before passing judgment. Michael Jackson WAS a “musician”. Every single bit as much as John Lennon or Paul McCartney or Kurt Cobain or anyone that you might consider a “musician”. Did Michael play an instrument? Not really, but playing an instrument doesn’t make one a musician. The man was a songwriter (he wrote “Billie Jean”, “Don’t Stop ’til You Get Enough”, “Beat It”, and co-wrote “We Are the World”–just to mention a few), and he did some vocal and percussion arrangements on several of his albums from “Off the Wall” on. Additionally, he produced or co-produced a number of projects.
But you just keep on going showing your ignorance. Just because YOU don’t like certain music doesn’t make it “sucky” (in fact, your dislike of 80s music may just prove you have no musical taste at all).
MJ was a horrible car wreck that everyone had to look at to believe. I have great sympathy for MJ. He is the best example of how the media can ruin someones life. As music goes he had only a few great songs (i.e., rock with you, billie jean, beat it, human nature). I was 15 when ‘thriller’ was released and those songs were everywhere. I still enjoy that album and also some songs from ‘off the wall’.
Words can’t explain what he meant to me. He was a great entertainer; singer, dancer, writer.. His physical condition was symbolic for his struggle against discrimination and racism. He always tried to unite people with his music. He spread the word that no matter where you are from, what you believe in, how much you suffer, you are never alone, always beautiful somehow. He saw the world through the eyes of a child, simple and beautiful, knowing that with the sun, love, pride and hope we can all be happy united people. When I was 3 years old and was barely able to walk I stood on the balcony watching with a oversized headphone listening to Ben while watching the clouds role by. I remember feeling estatic and energized when beat it came on, and absolutely free when he opened his heart on black or white. Free and righteous, creative, a force for the better. He gave more then he took as a human being. I never thought of him as a star, I came to see him as a childhood friend, a dear friend I grew up with. I can honoustly say he has introduced me to music and inspired me to be strong, give and create. He made me a better person, I am sure of this. Thanks for all of your gifts and your timeless music that will inspire artists and people around the world for decades to come! I will miss you.
It’s amazing to read all these tributes and/or diatribes about MJ that are passionate. MJ represented on a more significant level what was an icon superstar to begin with. He is the last of this current society that was able elevate himself to place on the popular musical landscape in music. His talent and his music legacy will survive beyond the horrific and sadness that he had to live with. Was he perfect? No! He was an easy person to get to know? No! Was he without suspicion and controversy? NO! but, MJ was and firstmost a first rate performer and sang all his music with the conviction of his heart. THis fan here will always remember the music he gave to the world and how we took it all in and celebrated with him! Michael Jackson represents what all of the world desires, connection to one another through music (popular) and his passing will bring us all together again to celebrate his life, his music and his talent. There will never be another MJ, I don’t believe in my lifetime (yes I am a person of the 80’s, I had a wonderful time contrary to what Mark shared) and it still turned out some of the best music ever and alot of that was due to Michael Jackson’s creative spirit that rejuvenated the entire music industry when it was in the dumps. Bravo to MJ for his creative vision, his sense of perfect timing and for his ability to bring the whole world to his unique stage, that only he could give. I have been to countless concerts throughout my years, and til this day, when anyone ever asks me what was the best concert you ever experienced? and without hesitation I say MICHAEL JACKSON (via the Bad tour in 1988). I still can’t forget that experience and I will miss his presence here on earth. I pray for his family to be strong and to keep on the true spirit of who he was and could be. Thank you Mr. Jackson for all you shared with us through your musical legacy and your supreme talented energy. It will be sorely missed. There is no other MJ to fill you’re shoes. RIP :)
Those very, very few of us who felt another (and to us more important) death in music that occurred on this day as well are not ever going to get our AMG Sky Saxon tribute, are we?
JAMES, maybe when you say “his ability to bring the whole world to his unique stage” you mistake the whole world with the USA !!
I can’t believe him being died. I don’t wonna believe it. That was too fast, too unexpected. Realizing him being died gonna take ages for all of us. But instead of grieving for such a loss of talent of the world, people start making profit with his died. On eBay seller auction T-Shirts, CDs off him and even on Tamundo.de I’ve seen that they auction a Platinum Award of “Thriller”. Isn’t it disgusting that people try to make profit of a person’s died? But nevertheless, to me Michael will always stay in my heart.
Let me start by saying I loved Michael’s music, I loved his voice and the fun he brought to the art. But , Quincy Jones is the one we should be thanking. WIthout Quincy “OTW”, and “Thriller” are just more nice pop songs. Michael only wrote about 1/3 of the songs on his albums, which in itself is not bad, Elvis wrote nothing. Michael was a great performer, singer and promoter, but musical genius , I don’t know. HIs personal life is not my business, but you can’t be naive, he was a predator, even thoug he was a nice , sweet predator, doesn’t make it rightn
Whether people do want to accept it or not, Michael Jackson made a huge impact on many positive counts during his lifetime. We should all just let him Rest in Peace as anyone deserves. He was not able to live a peaceful life, we could at least let him Rest in Peace.
For those of you who payed a well deserved tribute to Michael Jackson and acknowledged his positive influence, I Thank You.
Mark is pretty much right even if a little too brash. Jackson was a huge, mega-selling pop star. He influenced major pop trends of his time and made lots of people very rich. However, I think if you really are honest, it’s true that it was the production and spectacle that made this guy’s career - not the songs. As for the 80’s, the first half of the decade flowing from late 70’s new wave and punk was somewhat interesting. At that time the ‘industry’ tried to figure out what to do with MTV, getting artists to embrace video, try new sounds, etc. (maybe up to 83 or 84). Then this guy came along with Thriller and suddenly everything was formulaic, plastic, and oh so lame - including all of Jackson’s own follow up music into the 90’s. Rock and hard rock even became infested with simple beats, crappy synths, drum machines, and poppy sounds. Liking pop music is no crime and it can be fun. But let’s not confuse Jackson with a serious artist and let’s definitely NOT overlook the freak show of his life and the possible damage he inflicted on innocent others. A person’s reputation is forged in life and should be carried to the grave. No clemency should be granted because he is dead. I personally haven’t been able to stomach this guy since Thriller became such a sensation and he got weirder and weirder. His passing, though possibly tragic, is pointing out lots of things about our society and the meaning of celebrity in it for me at least. Anyway, thanks to Mark (a-hole that he may be) because before he posted, this message board had no life in it.
(Ho ho, Mark. Did your widdle X-Box break?)
I don’t quite know why I didn’t react with as much shock as I probably should have when my wife told me he died. Maybe it was that his number had already been up for so many years; the countless accusations, the obvious paranoid reflections in many of his own songs, the fact his father essentially treated him like a slave in a cult, the list goes on. Death almost seemed to have taken mercy on him. It was as though–and this is probably going to sound completely bizarre–he was given a second chance.
Why his life had to have gone like it did is the saddest part. I hope the life after will bring Michael Joseph Jackson the happiness life in this realm took away from him.
If you don’t get it that Michael Jackson was a musical genius, what do you get? Try to think of someone who could dance better than Michael Jackson, sing better than him, or write more perfect pop songs, and I think you’ll find there isn’t anyone that even comes close. The fact that all 3 of these qualities resided in one human being, and that he fronted a hugely successfuly pop group at the age of 10, and sang soul music better than most professional adult singers at the time, and even old pros in the business knew that with a kid like that, either help him or get out of his way! His boy/man personality served him well in the Jackson 5/Jacksons era, but doomed him in his later years. However, he was found not guilty on all those charges folks! The world not only owes him a debt of thanks for the great music and the joyous brilliance with which he performed, they also owe him an apology.
The only way I can describe Michael Jackson that will help any and everyone even come close to understanding him is empirically, I guess. I know that if you were a full grown adult at any point in his career, you might have though some of his music was corny, becuase some of it was. That corniness IMO was what killed everything he made after bad. To kids (which I was in the 80’s-Thriller came out the year of my birth.)he was what Bugs Bunny and Mickey Mouse are. Something completely unreal, but at the same time uttery believable and familiar- that brough uncalcuable joy.
I was 4 in 1987 and everytime I saw 3 videos- “Bad”, “Smooth Criminal”, and The Way You Make Me Feel” I felt like i was seeing an imaginary figure. His face changed-that cannot be denied, but whether it was calcualted or not, it was part of what made him a genius of POP. That indellible image of him from 87-89 was a record companies dream. He was neither male nor female, black nor white, gay nor straight, young nor old, human nor alien. He was just a character. Bugs bunny isn’t real. Daffy Duck isn’t real. Michael Jackson was real. He was as known, as entertaining, and as immortalin image and capacity for entertainment as any made up icon, but he breathed, lived, and felt. For ANYONE human to accomplish what he did in terms of bringing people together is impossible to fathom. In the digital age of full disclosure (which if you think about it, he ironically helped create with his tabloid exploits- he regrettably made up and released alot of that garbage the news initially ripped him apart for early on)we will never again have another monocultural icon.
It was ok to like Michael Jackson no matter who you were, and that my friends-all scandal aside, is what should be celebrated endlessly.
Peace Michael.
And if you want visual proof for my statements, look up the cover for the single, “Liberian Girl” or even the picture that pops up first for his Allmusic entry. Truly mystifying.
Michael was the best music product ever. He had a great voice and he could really dance. He was a very musical person, but not a musical genius or evena musician. The OTW album for instance , MJ wrote only 3 out 10 songs, Thriller he wrote 4 out of 9. Those are his two best albums in my opinion. On BAD he wrote 9 out of 11 songs, but by far the best song MAn In The Mirror was written by someone else. Pop music is a product, and the producer is more important than the artist in many cases. When MJ had Quincy producing he couldn’t miss. Michael should be celebrated as a Pop Icon, fashion icon, and great performer, but he was not a musical genius. If he was such a genius why did he create so little music in so much time, the guy started when he was 10. The answer is, he made so much money he didn’t need to. If he was a genius musician , he would have been chomping at the bit to create. Instead he sat on his bony ass and cashed fat checks, just like all the great Pop stars do.
Daryl, do you actually think the world owes MJ an apology ?, even after the kid picked him out of a “private parts” lineup. Are you serious? It’s one thing to talk about his musical attributes, which were considerable. But to sympathize with the guy, just because he has passed away is wrong. This man might have had a tough childhood, but so do a lot of us ,that is no excuse for his actions
OK FOLKS…DARYL says”Try to think of someone who could dance better than Michael Jackson, sing better than him, or write more perfect pop songs, and I think you’ll find there isn’t anyone …etc.”..the first name passing trough my mind..PRINCE (truly an ARTIST)…and thousend others !!
Definitely..fans apart…i think that only MrSINATRA focused the question.
MJ sold millions of copy of his albums..but it doesn’t mean a thing!!!
‘Cause you had to understand that what he sold was (or is ) commercial music, decided by a team of business men that know wery well the art of Hype (how to screw guys without musical culture…and you all were bw cheatin’ !!!, and had nothing to do with ART or MUSIC ( that doesn’t means commercial stuff but food for soul !!)
If you use word like GENIUS, GREAT MUSICIAN, GREAT SONGWRITER, A LOSS FOR THE WHOLE WORLD….
…i’m sorry …but you understand NOTHING !!
If you use these adjectives for a grub-street man that work in musical business (i can’t use the word MUSICIAN or ARTIST), what adjectives would you use profiling men like Brian ENO, Frank ZAPPA, the BEATLES, BECK, Bob DYLAN, Lou REED, David SILVYAN, Bob MARLEY, Miles DAVIS, PINK FLOYD, SYD BARRETT, TALKING HEADS, J.HENDRIX, the WHO, RADIOHEAD, TORTOISE,IRON MAIDEN, DEEP PURPLE, BLACK SABBATH, Robert FRIPP, Robert WYATT, JAMES BROWN….. proportionately you should use adjectives that overreach the words you can use for GOD or LOVE or LIFE…
…and i think it’s extreme !!!
MJ was only a mediatic phenomenon, fruit of the Era we’re living…
…and if you don’t understand this…for sure you don’t have a MUSICAL CULTURE !!!
But don’t worry, there will always be good grub-street men for You… enjoy with J.Timberlake, Eminem, 50Cent, JLo..and all these stuff…and your life should finally be complete!!!
Poor Folks…. happy foxed by the men that moves all you puppets…all you Sheeps!!! “Harmlessly passing your time in the grassland away,…..The Lord is my shepherd. I shall not want He makes me down to lie.
Through pastures green He leadeth me the silent waters by.
With bright knives He releaseth my soul.
He maketh me to hang on hooks in high places.
He converteth me to lamb cutlets” (taken by SHEEP, Pink Floyd)
My comment is awaiting moderation…. i’m sorry if i’ve offended someone…it’s just what i think!!
SORRY AGAIN.
CICCIO
Mike, did you ever find out what the circumstances were around this “private parts” line-up? how do you know all the people in this line up weren’t shorter than 6′ tall? how do you know if there was hair involved, tattoos? what if out of this line-up everybody was dark skinned, not suffering for vitiligo, lupous, or any of these other diseases that he was diagnosed with? how do you know the appeal of these appearances for this child, who was proven to have been provoked to this by his father, wasn’t set up to make MJ stand out? The bottom line is, nobody will ever know what happened. And it is the constant public scrutany and critisism that even after a JURY said not guilty, continued to be the end result of jokes. He had to die to still get the credit he truly deserved and for this nation to understand that what we had, REGARDLESS OF HIS PERSONAL LIFE, was a treasure. We have a dynasty hurting, a community of true fans so hurt, they are reportely killing themselves, and all people can STILL focus on is what was allegedly said.
You ain’t gotta be a fan, but at least have common sense to not believe everything you hear and only half of what you see.
It feels great to read those insights.
“His music — it speaks volumes.”
so true
Yes Mike, I do think Michael Jackson is owed an apology by all those who wrongly condemned him on the child molestation charges. And hey, I’m saying that as a guy that has found Michael Jackson to be a reprehensible, vain, gluttonous human being for the last 15 years! He has been, in turns, the most beloved entertainer in the world, and the most reviled self-indulgent egotist who has ever moonwalked the Earth. He’ll be remembered as a brilliant singer and performer (OK, so he wasn’t Paul McCartney too), but he also led a life that requires understanding from a psychological perspective. If you were also shoved onstage at age 10 to head up a hugely successful live band and have hundreds of people depending on you for your livelihood, and millions of fans expecting to top your last monumental achievement, then maybe you can talk to me about what it was like to be Michael Jackson. His bio reads like The Curious Case of Benjamin Button! The casual fan never took the time to understand Michael’s complex boy/man persona, and they never will. We’d need somebody like Deepak Choprah on TV to explain all this to us. What’s that? Deepak Choprah IS on TV explaining all this to us……oh….well fine then. ;)
This all reminds me of Elvis’ death. Had a fascination with pre-teen girls, didn’t write songs, barely played an instrument, didn’t stay current with musical trends, went totally crazy and shot televisions, ate only peanut butter & banana sandwiches in a room with grass on the walls…
Yet in 2008, 30 years after he died, he made $52 million. That would put him third on the list of highest paid musicians if he were still alive, after the Police (a one shot reunion tour) and Beyonce.
Didn’t like Elvis in 1978, don’t like him now. Don’t like any of the top ten highest paid musicians in 2008. I liked ‘Off the Wall’ but none of the solo stuff before or since. But the world is not just about me.
It doesn’t matter if you don’t think he is an icon, many others in the world do. They will continue to hold him in high regard for the rest of your life, so you may as well get adjusted to it.
I’m glad that Michael Jackson is dead. That’s the only way he could have escaped the news-hungry paparazzi and pain that hounded him. It’s a shame. In recent years, no one, including me, acknowledged his presence — most making fun of his eccentricities, failed last album, and lawsuits — but now that he’s gone, I’m glad that he’s getting the kind of attention he deserves. He is, after all, the only pop star to have been loved by all races in all countries, and he undoubtedly is the greatest dancer in pop history. The fact that everyone — including people who don’t even listen to western music — knows him tells so much about his impact. Long live the king of pop!
Some very solid tributes to a pop icon, Allmusic. You can read my own personal take here:
http://richpicks.blogspot.com/2009/06/michael-jackson-1958-2009.html
Vineet, very good comment. You got it right. He’ll definitely be missed…
I read all his question, but don’t know what to put on it - just try it later!
cheers,
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pahWooda
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Hello,
i’m pretty confused, but is this a good place to say “Hi”?
(I’m new here ;) )
cheers,
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Logeurom
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