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Say what you want about Michael Jackson, but "Thriller" was a great album. |
| By Andy Tarnoff Publisher E-mail author | Author bio More articles by Andy Tarnoff |
| Published June 25, 2009 at 8:38 p.m. |
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When I heard about Michael Jackson's death this afternoon, I must admit I was neither particularly surprised nor especially sad. Honestly, I haven't cared much about Jackson in 25 years, and acquitted in court or not, he was a weird guy at the very least, and at the worst, he was a reprehensible pedophile.
Others can and will speculate about how Jackson devolved from the "King of Pop" into a ghostly recluse. Montages will show a cute and chubby prodigy morph into a plastic pale skeleton wearing a surgical mask. The way he was treated as a child will be the focus of his decline, and it's truly a sad story.
And, until just a short time ago, that was the odd vision I had in my mind's eye, too.
Then I took just a moment to remember when I thought Michael Jackson was the greatest singer in the world. "Thriller," after all, was the very first album I bought -- at Sears in Bayshore, as I recall. I was 9 years old, and it was in 1983.
I must've played "Thriller" until I wore out that album. Until I bought records from Duran Duran, Madness and tapes by 'Weird' Al and Devo, "Thriller" was all I had. I listened to and memorized every song, and when it was time to do a book report in fourth grade, I selected a Michael Jackson biography.
I still remember standing up in front of Mrs. Chase's class at Donges Bay Elementary School in Mequon, wearing an afro wig, my grandma's red jacket and the sequined glove she sewed for me, as I did the entire report channeling the essence of Jacko, himself.
I also remember being pretty upset that my parents wouldn't buy me the official Jackson red leather jacket that was sold at Merry Go Round in Northridge. (By the way, Mom, I forgive you now; that must've been hideous.)
I remember that American Music Awards in 1984 and trying so hard to learn how to moonwalk. And then I remember gradually losing interest in Jackson as I got older and began to realize how weird he was. By the time all of the child molestation charges had surfaced, I'd long since stopped caring about him - but mostly because the music he created since he was in the Jackson 5 -- all the way to "Thriller" -- ceased to be so magical.
I'm sure there are a ton of reasons to explain what happened to Michael Jackson, but on the day of his death, I'm thinking again about "Thriller." Some of those nine tracks were pretty cheesy, but others were amazing. "Billie Jean," "P.Y.T." and "Wanna Be Startin' Something" still hold up today. "Beat It" and "Thriller" sound pretty '80s, but you're lying if you don't admit that the first five chords of the latter still don't give you goosebumps.
Of course, go back an album to "Off The Wall" and it's even more of the same brilliant dance music. Jackson was indisputably great back then before the overproduced, megalomaniacal junk like "Bad" started spewing forth.
It's a shame, on so many levels, that Jackson became a victim of his own success, that he allegedly perpetrated some awful deeds, and that he ultimately died today.
Whatever you think of the man behind the myth, the world of music lost a true icon today. Let's not whitewash the rest of this stuff, but let's remember that along with all the weirdness, Jackson gave the world some really great music.
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12 comments about this article. Post a comment / write a review. |
Posted by CoolerKing on June 30, 2009 at 8:14 a.m. (report)
I agree with DowntownRed. After Thriller, the other albums were pretty forgettable. To say he was an eccentric is an understatement. He did funnel cash into about a dozen charities like the American Cancer Society and Make-A-Wish. Unfortunately that will take very low profile due to his legal hassles and general weirdness.
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Posted by DowntownRed on June 27, 2009 at 3:10 p.m. (report)
Yeah, I pretty much stopped caring about him after Thriller. I think I was in 3rd grade when it came out. Every album after that was just junk. But I have to think what he would have been like if he stayed "normal". What if he still was grounded in reality and was well adjusted and didn't let his personal demons and outside influences take over? He could have kept making some good music.
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Posted by brewerfan13 on June 26, 2009 at 12:39 p.m. (report)
That's funny, I also thought that it would be some kind of stunt. Something ala Elvis or Andy Kaufman...did he really die? Anyway, I have mixed emotions because he was such a weirdo but such a talented artist, and I still love and listen to his hits. But I also stopped caring about him in the news many years ago. Andy I love that you dressed up in an afro to give a report on him in grade school. That is hilarious. I remember making up a cheerleading routine to "Beat It" in grade school, and I wore a tape out watching the "Black or White" video because I thought the morphing faces were so cool. Say what you will about his molestation charges and his general oddness as a human, he had an impact on most of our young musical lives.
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Posted by angieisstellar on June 26, 2009 at 12:09 p.m. (report)
Great article. I personally will miss the media circus and oddball antics of Michael. But honestly, we lost a cultural icon any way you spin it.
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Posted by devidia on June 26, 2009 at 11:46 a.m. (report)
I'm 45 and I've always felt that Michael Jackson was a bit of a cartoon character and never cared for him. And I wasn't "shocked" to hear of his death when one considers all the weird stuff he's been doing to himself lo these many years. Sorry if I'm harsh but I guess I was never that impressed with him. But it is sad that it ended this way for him, I'll grant you that.
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