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9 posts categorized "Michael Jackson"

March 03, 2011

Michael Jackson has Robbie Fulks' respect -- seriously

At one time, Robbie Fulks probably wouldn’t have been on the short list of artists most likely to do a sincere – much less sincerely great --  Michael Jackson tribute. As the songwriter says, “My style is to take things from a contrarian viewpoint,” and Jackson’s career lends itself to all sorts of contrarian sarcasm.

But Fulks says he learned a few things about the King of Pop when he was invited in 1999 to perform a birthday tribute concert to Jackson at the Cultural Center. His respect and appreciation for the singer deepened to the point where last year Fulks released an excellent Jackson tribute album, “Happy: Robbie Fulks Plays the Music of Michael Jackson” (robbiefulks.com), and will perform a Jackson-themed concert March 18 at Lincoln Hall. No doubt there will be a few humorous moments in the show, but Fulks says when removed from all the craziness around Jackson’s life, the singer’s music holds up remarkably well.

 “All that celebrity pop music is so far from me now, but in the ‘60s through 1980, to be young and with my head halfway into radio, his music was part of my world,” Fulks says. “In thinking about it, listening to his music, getting more acquainted with it, it was amazing that he was always there for so long. He not only kept up with the times, he stayed a step ahead of them for 25 years. That in itself is culturally significant.”

Continue reading "Michael Jackson has Robbie Fulks' respect -- seriously" »

December 09, 2010

Album review: Michael Jackson, 'Michael'

Rating 2 stars (out of 4)

Quincy Jones used to talk about the ingredient that distinguished Michael Jackson from his peers as a creative force in the recording studio: He was a workaholic who wouldn’t let any track go until he was absolutely convinced it was finished.

One wonders what the perfectionist in Jackson would’ve thought of the music released in his name on “Michael” (Epic), the first of what is projected to be a series of posthumous full-length releases. The last two decades of his career bedeviled by personal turmoil and image-shattering legal proceedings, Jackson was on a mission to put the focus back on his music when he died in the summer of 2009 on the eve of a major concert tour. Demonstrating once again that death is a great career move, Jackson became something of a pop martyr and sold 35 million albums worldwide in the next 12 months.
   
But those sales came from his beloved catalog, from recordings that Jackson oversaw and approved. “Michael” represents what is essentially a reclamation project, scouring the singer’s archives as far back as the “Thriller” era in the early ‘80s to piece together recordings that Jackson did not see fit to release in his lifetime. They have been spiffed up by a number of producers, including Teddy Riley, John McClain and Lenny Kravitz, and presented as a new Jackson studio album, his first since 2001.

Continue reading "Album review: Michael Jackson, 'Michael'" »

June 25, 2010

Remembering Michael Jackson, courtesy of Rhymefest's 'Man in the Mirror'

    As most everybody on the planet knows, Friday marks the one-year anniversary of Michael Jackson’s death at age 50 on the eve of a major comeback tour.

       What many people may not know is that the best Michael Jackson-related album of the last two decades was released more than a year earlier, though Jackson probably wasn’t even aware of its existence when it first surfaced on the Internet. It’s called “Man in the Mirror (The Michael Jackson Dedication Album),” by South Side native Rhymefest. The download is no longer available – it was released for free on Rhymefest’s Web site – and was later taken down when Jackson’s lawyers became aware of its existence. “Man in the Mirror” inventively uses samples of Jackson’s music and interviews to create a new work that plays as one talented fan’s affectionate, frequently humorous, and clearly heart-felt homage to one of the last century’s greatest entertainers.

       It’s too bad there are so many grumps on Jackson’s legal team. The album’s a great piece of work, and made my top-10 list at the end of 2008. Rhymefest’s tribute is a fine way to remember Jackson the artist (rather than the scandal-ridden celebrity he became) on this sad day.

Continue reading "Remembering Michael Jackson, courtesy of Rhymefest's 'Man in the Mirror'" »

October 28, 2009

'This Is It' proves Jackson still had it

Thisisit2

Rating: 3 stars (out of 4)

He still had it.

The big question preceding the international debut Tuesday of the new Michael Jackson documentary “This Is It” is whether the singer-showman still had the goods at age 50 to pull off a major concert, let alone a 50-night residency, as he was scheduled to perform in London. We’ll never know, of course, because Jackson died June 25 of drug-related causes, but perhaps this movie would provide a glimpse of what might have been.

Jackson’s terse announcement of the comeback tour last spring raised as much skepticism as expectation. The singer had been buffeted by rumors of failing health and had made more headlines because of his troubled personal life than his music in the last decade.
     
But “This Is It,” a documentary by Jackson’s confidante and collaborator Kenny Ortega shaped from 120 hours of rehearsal footage, shows a Jackson fully in command of his music and art. Jackson sometimes appears frail, but when he starts to move, his lean, lanky frame radiates a feral energy and grace. He knew how to turn even the smallest gesture into theater, and that ability remained undiminished even in the final days of his life.

When Jackson died, he was only weeks away from the residency’s July 13 start. The documentary provides a glimpse of the demanding schedule Jackson was under as he oversaw everything from choreography to video treatments for the concerts. For most of the nearly two-hour movie, Jackson is on stage working with his dancers and singing. He does not appear zonked on medication. Instead, he is in roll-up-the-sleeves mode, his hair pulled back in a pony tail, his garb attention-grabbing but casual (a neat trick for a guy who likes wearing para-military jackets that look like they were once worn by a Russian admiral).

The hectic pace sometimes gets a bit much for him, and though the movie is anything but morbid, there are tiny hints that presage the tragedy to come. At one point in a run-through of “I Just Can’t Stop Loving You,” he pauses to complain, “Why do you do this to me? I shouldn’t be singing right now. … I gotta save my voice.”

Jackson’s personal troubles are never mentioned, let alone cause for reflection. He was arrested in 2003 on child-molestation charges and acquitted in 2005 after a trial in California. Financial struggles followed and last year he surrendered the deed to his 2,500-acre Neverland ranch in California.

Instead, the movie is designed to remind fans of why they fell for Jackson in the first place: a career retrospective of not just greatest hits, but greatest dance moves, topped by eye-popping spectacle. It is the centerpiece of a concerted marketing campaign for all-things Jackson, including the release this week of a “This Is It” greatest-hits compilation.

Experienced on screen rather than in a stadium, most of the special effects planned for the comeback concerts lose whatever impact they might have had. We can guess that certain passages might have been mind-blowing in person --- a 3-D “Thriller” set piece in a cemetery, a gangster skit with the video image of Humphrey Bogart chasing a fedora-wearing Jackson with a machine-gun --- but on-screen they just come off as gimmicky. And when the singer drops into save-the-world mode for “What About Us,” complete with ham-fisted nature footage, it’s doubtful any amount of spectacle could’ve saved it.

No, the movie is best when it catches Jackson at work using only his imagination as a prop. He is portrayed persuasively as a master of timing and detail, whether it’s how a turn of the wrist follows a flip of a hip, or dictating to a keyboardist that a sequence of notes should sound “like you’re dragging yourself outta bed.” With Jackson, it’s all about magnifying drama.

We watch him build a presentation for “Human Nature” from scratch, beginning with an a cappella vocal quietly sung to a handful of collaborators and then becoming increasingly animated with his voice and gestures, until the song bursts into a full-on ensemble piece. He’s rolling on stage during the finale of “Beat It,” imagining a moment when he sets his jacket on fire. “Let it burn!” he commands.

And that’s just what he does when he’s performing “Billie Jean” on stage, in front of his band. The music drops to just a bass line, and even at three-quarter speed he pops off a sequence of dazzling moves. They seem to flow through him, all that muscular coordination, timing and discipline reduced to liquid.

The movie doesn’t exactly bring Jackson closer to the audience, doesn’t make him any easier to figure out. He remains a remote, inscrutable, soft-spoken, somewhat needy presence. But then he begins to dance and his fragility hardens into purpose.

greg@gregkot.com

Related items:

Michael Phillips: 3 stars for 'This Is It'

Photos: 'This Is It'

Tribune to King of Pop may include museum

Jackson skipped sleep to channel divine inspiration 

Watch the 'This Is It' trailer


  Sponsored Link: Amazon's Michael Jackson Store

October 12, 2009

Michael Jackson song 'This is It' debuts

The posthumous career of Michael Jackson began at midnight (Eastern time) Monday with the release of a new single, “This is It.”

The song is now streaming at michaeljackson.com. It’s a voice-and-piano demo culled from an extensive archive of unreleased Jackson music embellished with orchestration and backing vocals by Jackson’s brothers, with whom he burst into prominence in 1969 as the Jackson 5.

It’s a prelude to a pre-Christmas campaign that will include the theatrical release Oct. 28 of a documentary, also called "This is It," about Jackson’s preparations for what would’ve been a 50-night concert residency in London. An accompanying soundtrack, containing a mix of hits and unreleased recordings, is slated for Oct. 27 release. Jackson, 50, died June 25 at his Los Angeles home while in the middle of rehearsals for the residency, which was to have begun July 13. His death was later ruled a drug-related homicide by the Los Angeles County coroner’s office. 

Jackson’s voice can be heard counting off “This is It,” the song’s most intimate moment. Then an orchestra sweeps in, and the ballad takes on a lush grandeur, accented with guitar and finger snaps. Still, the song feels half-baked. Jackson cycles through a verse, pre-chorus and chorus several times during the track’s 3:46 duration, but never really develops any of the initial ideas. It could've used a bridge section to introduce some melodic contrast. The narrative keys in on one idea without offering a back story or any sort of payoff. The singer finds himself unexpectedly bowled over by a new partner --- “Falling in love wasn’t my plan” --- and then exults that he’s “the light of your world.” And that’s pretty much it: Some nice ideas with potential for further exploration, but it’s evident why Jackson didn’t see fit to put this song on one of his albums while he was alive.

    

Insiders at the singer’s label believe the demo was made during the recording sessions for his 1991 album, “Dangerous.” It is likely to be the first of what are believed to be at least 100 unreleased Jackson recordings that will filter out in the next few years.

    Update: The Jackson estate acknowledged Monday that Michael Jackson cowrote "This is It"  with Paul Anka, who has been promised 50 percent of the song's profits. When the song was released hours earlier, Jackson was initially credited as the sole songwriter. The song is nearly identical to "I Never Heard," a song released by the singer Safire in 1991 and co-credited to Jackson and Anka.

greg@gregkot.com

Listen to the song below:

Sponsored Link: Amazon's Michael Jackson Store

July 07, 2009

Michael Jackson tribute: The music

Carey Here’s a running commentary on the music Tuesday from the nationally televised Michael Jackson tribute at the Staples Center in Los Angeles:

Mariah Carey took on Jackson’s signature ballad, “I’ll be There.” But the last few years have seen a notable decline in Carey’s range and clarity, and she sounded raspy and strained, perhaps tinged by the emotion of the moment. Give her credit for not lip-synching. She was helped mightily by her longtime backing singer Trey Lorenz, who swooped in and provided a sturdy foundation for her wobbly vocal flights. Nonetheless, Carey's vulnerability was clearly in keeping with the tenor of the event, and moving in an unexpected way.

Lionel Richie brought a conversational ease to the opening bars of “Jesus is Love,” then smartly moved the hymn to a higher ground backed by a gospel choir.

Stevie Wonder, obviously choked up as he spoke about Jackson while seated at a black grand piano, performed the beautifully apt “Never Dreamed You’d Leave in Summer,” from his 1971 “Where I’m Coming From” album (the song was later covered by Jackson). Wonder’s piano-playing alternated between classically inspired melody lines and fierce rhythmic assault, mirroring the ebb and surge in his voice. At times Wonder broke loose from the song’s fragile underpinnings to unleash wails that verged on desperation. A harrowing and powerful performance in every way.   

HudsonJennifer Hudson with choir sang Jackson’s gospel ballad “Will You Be There,” complete with Jackson’s tremulous voiceover and accompanied by the dancers from the singer's aborted London comeback concerts.

Not really sure why John Mayer was invited to this event, other than he’s a pop star. But his connection to Jackson is minimal. Consider the rock guitarists who actually have worked with Jackson who might've performed in his stead, Slash and Eddie Van Halen among them. Mayer inexplicably got the call and he played a jazz-lite version of Jackson’s “Human Nature” on his electric guitar, backed by a breathy vocal quartet. Walking the fine line between respectful and snoozy, Mayer and his twitchy facial gestures should've come supplied with pillows for the audience.

A tearful Jermaine Jackson, wearing a sequined white glove in tribute to his brother, sang Charlie Chaplin’s “Smile.” It was a song Michael Jackson took to heart, and recorded on his 1995 album, “HIStory: Past, Present and Future, Book 1.”


Usher Usher approached Jackson's coffin as he sang a dignified "Gone Too Soon," which Jackson wrote in the early '90s for a young AIDS victim, Ryan White. The singer uttered an audible sigh before completing the performance.

Shaheen Jafargholi, a 12-year-old singer on the "Britain's Got Talent" show, belted out "Who's Loving You," a Smokey Robinson song that the pre-teen Jackson sang with the Jackson 5.

The musical portion of the two-hour tribute ended with the cast from Jackson's comeback tour joining the singers and speakers to perform "We are the World," the 1985 charity single cowritten by Jackson and Richie, and "Heal the World." The latter was an apt choice, in that it was one of the few Jackson videos not to feature the singer. Instead the lyrics in the video were sung by a mix of young voices from around the world. In the same way, the concert ended not by focusing on the person or the personality, but on his music, which undoubtedly has a long life ahead of it.

greg@gregkot.com

Photo credits: Mariah Carey (Kevork Djansezian/AP), Jennifer Hudson (LA Times), Usher (Mark Terrill-Pool/Getty Images)

           

Sponsored Link: Amazon's Michael Jackson Store

July 01, 2009

Blockbuster era made Michael Jackson and consumed him

    The record will show that Michael Jackson died on June 25, but in many ways he was dead creatively long before that. The beginning of the end can be traced to Nov. 30, 1982, the day “Thriller” was released.

       What George Lucas and Steven Spielberg did for the Hollywood movie,  Jackson did for the pop album. These icons of spectacle ushered in the blockbuster era for film and music, and the mega-billion-dollar industries that grew up around them. Celebrity careers were created and lots of money was made, but in the end the art took a beating. And in Jackson’s case, the need to top himself became all-consuming, until he literally stopped making music, unable to live up to his outsized expectations.

     It all started innocently enough. Lucas’ “Star Wars,” Spielberg’s “E.T.” and Jackson’s “Thriller” were popular masterpieces, the kind of mass entertainment on which your grandmother and 8-year-old nephew could agree.

    “Thriller,” of course, ended up selling more than 100 million copies worldwide, and helped shape what would become a $15 billion a year music industry by the end of 1999. That industry was built on “Thriller”-like blockbusters from bands and artists such as U2, Metallica, Shania Twain and Mariah Carey.

    Jackson showed them all how to do it. He didn’t teach the world to sing, but he may have taught it how to dance. He created a pastiche of funk, soul, disco, rock, B-movie shlock and ballads embodied by his long-limbed power and grace in white socks and loafers. He was a multimedia star, and everyone wanted a piece of him. When he cowrote the charity single “We are the World,” the superstars lined up around the block to be a part of the 1985 recording session.

       His timing was perfect: Jackson was the first major artist to break big at the dawn of the compact-disc era, the video pioneer who broke down racial barriers at the still relatively young MTV, and the self-conscious marketing maven who tailored his songs for a series of commercial-radio formats. There was the song for rockers (“Beat It” with Eddie Van Halen’s guitar), the scary cartoon-like movie for the kids (“Thriller” with a Vincent Price cameo), the duet with a classic-rock icon (“Say Say Say” with Paul McCartney), the bedroom ballad (“The Lady in My Life”), the world-music nod (the Swahili chant in “Wanna Be Startin’ Somethin’ ”), hard funk (“Billie Jean”) and straight-up disco (“P.Y.T.”).

           The calculation was masked by the artistry. In collaboration with producer Quincy Jones, Jackson created enduring art that also happened to be extremely popular. But Jackson would in many ways destroy his own career by attempting –-- with increasing futility --- to emulate that formula in subsequent years. Jones described the malady as “paralysis by analysis” and soon after stopped working with the singer, who turned his every public gesture into a grandiose, and eventually grotestque, spectacle. There were videos that cost more than an entire album to make, the monstrous statues depicting Jackson in military garb, the long lead times between albums requiring years to make and promote. As the music slowed to a trickle, Jackson’s private life became a series of scandals and outrages, reducing a once gifted entertainer to a punch line.

           The music industry, in the midst of a huge, two-decade growth spurt, was happy to ride the wave started by “Thriller.” Artist development had been the cornerstone of the music industry, the idea that talent should be nurtured over a number of albums in order for artists to find their voice and establish their sound. But after “Thriller,” the industry became addicted to blockbusters. One mega-selling album could make up for a lot of mistakes, and the industry thrived in the ‘90s on the back of 10 million-sellers by Garth Brooks, Alanis Morissette and the Backstreet Boys, among dozens of others.

    But as the albums got bigger, did the music actually get better? “Thriller” was a once-in-a-generation success and it led to years of music powered by marketing demands. Idiosyncrasy and personality were subsumed by the need to sell as much product to as many consumers as possible, a trend exacerbated by the increasing consolidation of the industry into multinational corporations in the ‘90s, beholden to stockholders and quarterly profit statements.

    Similarly, the pipeline to MTV and commercial radio narrowed until it was open only to the best-financed performers. By the end of the ‘90s, the big labels were spending tens of millions on marketing, publicity and promotion to break acts such Jennifer Lopez and Alicia Keys. Whereas Jackson had worked with one producer, Jones, to create his multi-faceted music, artists began hiring studio specialists to produce individual tracks on each album, ratcheting up recording costs to multimillion-dollar levels and putting a premium on breaking these expensive tracks on radio and MTV.

        Blockbuster albums came and went: M.C. Hammer, Vanilla Ice, Michael Bolton, Creed, Britney Spears and dozens more. The industry’s thirst for superstars caused it to ignore almost everything else that didn’t sell in massive quantities, and a lot of worthy artists who simply didn’t sell in big enough quantities were kicked to the curb.

        As for Jackson, he was barely heard from in the last two decades of his life. His records came fewer and farther between, and each sounded more strained and formulaic. In the last 18 years, he managed to release only one album of entirely original music, “Invincible,” in 2001. He left his label soon after, upset by a perceived lack of promotion. In an era of mega-marketing budgets, the self-proclaimed King of Pop went out like a pauper.

        greg@gregkot.com

Sponsored Link: Amazon's Michael Jackson Store

June 25, 2009

Michael Jackson, the essential albums

The Jackson 5, “The Ultimate Collection” (1995): An overview of the early years, when Michael sang and danced like a miniature version of James Brown and Jackie Wilson. The impossibly exuberant hits, from “I Want You Back” to “The Love you Save,” will still jump-start any party.

“Off the Wall” (1979): Jackson turns 21 and releases a landmark that transcends the disco era with its bumping mix of funk and soul, sweetened just enough with strings but always guided by the beat. You can bet Justin Timberlake spent a few months listening to this music before launching his own solo career.

“Off the Wall” (1979): Jackson turns 21 and releases a landmark that transcends the disco era with its bumping mix of funk and soul, sweetened just enough with strings but always guided by the beat. You can bet Justin Timberlake spent a few months listening to this music before launching his own solo career.

“Thriller” (1982): Again working with producer Quincy Jones, Jackson makes the ultimate MTV-era blockbuster, designed to appeal to everyone: Van Halen fans, Beatlemaniacs, disco strutters, show-tune lovers, cartoon addicts, your grandma. It worked, and it’s still selling: 100-million-plus and counting.

“Number Ones” (2003): A handy overview to a solo career that has produced few beginning-to-end solid albums, but had plenty of hits. In a career that became more about commerce than art, this 18-track compilation of his biggest commercial successes is the most fitting way to acknowledge his final 25 years.

greg@gregkot.com

Sponsored link: Amazon's Michael Jackson Store

“Off the Wall” (1979): Jackson turns 21 and releases a landmark that transcends the disco era with its bumping mix of funk and soul, sweetened just enough with strings but always guided by the beat. You can bet Justin Timberlake spent a few months listening to this music before launching his own solo career.


Michael Jackson dies, leaves behind rich musical legacy

When Michael Jackson collapsed and died Thursday in his Los Angeles home, the 50-year-old singer was preparing to do the one thing that sustained him through a lifetime of travail: Perform on stage as one of the most singular dancers and singers pop music has ever produced.

Mjpeace Jackson was readying a major series of comeback concerts, beginning July 13, in London. All 50 shows, extending into 2010, had sold out in advance. Though his musical contributions were immense, and in many ways changed the pop landscape, he was in the news far more often in the last decade because of his increasingly controversial private life, including allegations of child molestation. The London shows were designed to redress the balance, to put the focus back on his immense skills as a dancer, singer and showman --- perhaps the greatest of his generation.

As a pre-teen from Gary, Ind., he was the lead singer of the Jackson 5, with his older brothers Jackie, Tito, Jermaine and Marlon. The group scored eight top-10 singles that bridged exuberant bubblegum pop and Motown soul. His 1982 solo album, "Thriller," sold more than 100 million copies worldwide, and he moon-walked his way into the public consciousness with a spectacular performance on the nationally televised "25 Years of Motown" special in 1983.

At about the same time, he turned the music video into an art form with choreography, story lines and special effects that suggested mini-movies in the likes of “Beat It,” “Billie Jean” and “Thriller.” Their impact was cultural and political as much as musical; their undeniable power broke down doors for artists of color to rock radio and MTV. His single glove, his white socks beaming out from tapered pants, and most of all his combination of style and physicality as a dancer took his profile beyond music and into the realm of cultural celebrity, one of the most famous and recognizable names and faces in the world.

In recent years, even as his sales flattened and his public profile was stained by a mounting series of scandals, his soul-seasoned, danceable brand of pop provided a template for the careers of Justin Timberlake, Usher, Chris Brown and countless others. His songs were covered by artists as diverse as Soundgarden’s Chris Cornell, Fall Out Boy, and James Chance and the Contortions.

The album title that suited him best was "Off the Wall," his brilliant 1979 release, and that is not intended as a slight. With "Off the Wall" and large portions of the more calculated but still thrilling "Thriller" (1982), Jackson took artistic risks that paid off handsomely in commercial success. His music felt daring, provocative and exuberant, crossing lines of gender and genre.

Under the guiding hand of producer Quincy Jones, Jackson poured his personality quirks into music that bridged hard rock and disco, funk and pop, fantasy and reality.  He made the personal, no matter how eccentric, seem endearing and universal. In his hands (and feet), a paranoid nightmare about a paternity suit, "Billie Jean," was transformed into an edgy, irresistible call to dance.

After “Thriller,” however, Jackson seemed trapped by his outsized fame, and consumed by his desire to do whatever it took to maintain his self-proclaimed “King of Pop” status. “Thriller” was recorded in two months, but subsequent records took years, and sounded labored in comparison.

In 1995, Jackson released a bloated, much-hyped career overview called “HIStory,” and Jones told the Tribune that his old protégé had become too enamored with serving the marketplace.
 
“Paralysis through analysis,” Jones said of Jackson. “You make up your mind on the tunes you're going to do and you do it. Everybody wants to sell millions of records, but the idea of trying to pick out what people are going to like and buy is garbage."

Jackson’s output slowed to a crawl in the last two decades as his private life spun out of control. After 1991, he released only one album of entirely original music, “Invincible,” in 2001.

In the `90s, Jackson was briefly married to Lisa Marie Presley, the daughter of Elvis Presley, and fathered three children by two other women from whom he later separated. He dangled one of the children from a Berlin hotel balcony in 2002, to the horror of the crowd below. In 1993, he settled out of court with the parents of a 13-year-old boy who claimed that Jackson had sexually molested their son.

In a TV special on his private life in 2003, the singer discussed sharing a bed at his mansion with underage boys, although he denied any impropriety. Two years later, he went on trial in California in connection with molesting a 13-year-old boy. A jury acquitted him, but his career never recovered.

The notoriety reduced Jackson’s considerable accomplishments as an entertainer to an afterthought.

Henry Diltz, who photographed a pre-teen Michael Jackson in the early ‘70s as his career was just beginning with the Jackson 5, remembered a quiet, thoughtful boy. Jackson wore an expression of vulnerability and seriousness in one of Diltz’s portrait that suggested he was far older.

Jackson’s brothers “were more easygoing, laughing and talking,” Diltz said in a 2004 interview. “Michael wasn’t hiding, he was just quiet, thoughtful. He came alive on stage. I remember being up front at an auditorium show they did for blind kids who were sitting cross-legged on the floor, and Michael did one song and tears started rolling down my face. I was in awe of him as a singer.”

During this era, each Jackson 5 show would include a little monologue from Michael: “I’d like to talk to you all tonight about the blues. Yeah, the blues. Don’t nobody have the blues like I do. I may be young, but I know what it’s all about.” His brothers would crack up on stage because they knew later on that their blues-loving brother would be leading a pillow fight back in the hotel room. But given the legal and personal controversies that would dog Jackson in his later life, the words now sound strangely, sadly prescient.

“Did I have any sense of where it would all lead? Heck, no!” Diltz said. “He was just this young, quiet kid who sang like an angel.”

greg@gregkot.com

Photo: Jackson in March (AP / Joel Ryan)


  

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•  Michael Jackson has Robbie Fulks' respect -- seriously
•  Album review: Michael Jackson, 'Michael'
•  Remembering Michael Jackson, courtesy of Rhymefest's 'Man in the Mirror'
•  'This Is It' proves Jackson still had it
•  Michael Jackson song 'This is It' debuts
•  Michael Jackson tribute: The music
•  Blockbuster era made Michael Jackson and consumed him
•  Michael Jackson, the essential albums
•  Michael Jackson dies, leaves behind rich musical legacy

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• Lollapalooza 2010
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• Super Bowl 2011
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• Television
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• Tom Jones
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• Top albums 2009
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• Winter preview 2011
• Wire
• Wolf Parade
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• Yakuza
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• Yo La Tengo
• Zooey Deschanel


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