It is disappointing indeed. There are so many incredible pictures from the 2ng leg of the BAD Tour, I would really love to see a concert from that tour. And like you said, he was at his peak in terms of live performance.
wembley
It is disappointing indeed. There are so many incredible pictures from the 2ng leg of the BAD Tour, I would really love to see a concert from that tour. And like you said, he was at his peak in terms of live performance.
^APOM on Vision is divine quality. You can see every drop of sweat on Michael. Really lovely. It made me hope for the entire concert in the same amazing quality.
I'm finding it hard to believe that there aren't many unreleased songs left. I would have thought there would have been loads left.
absolutely gutting about the Bad Tour DVD , it will never get released
It's actually quite nice to hear about the control Michael still has on his music.
I am with you on that one. I wonder if the estate is saving some of the songs for when the kids take control? I wonder if Michael stipulated what could be released before the kids took control?
Sony would not pay $250 million for 10 songs and re-releases.
To be honest I will be disappointed with anything else than Bad Tour!
That was when he was on his peak as far as live performances concerned! He sang live, he was great!
So they paid $250 million for "not much material"??
What did they pay all that money for, didn't they get a lot
of unreleased songs from that deal?
^ It's coming to DVD. I can assure you that.
And contrary to what was said here, there are literally dozens of songs in the vault that will trickle out over the coming years.
I want to know how Sony and the Estate will deal with Howard Mann and his so-called possessions of MJs songs (demos and unreleased tracks) and other stuff of private collection of the jacksons...
I understand it is 10 projects, not 10 albums. TII album being one of those, for instance, right?2. Permission to release 10 albums over the next 7 years
I hope so.I want to know how Sony and the Estate will deal with Howard Mann and his so-called possessions of MJs songs (demos and unreleased tracks) and other stuff of private collection of the jacksons...
"This is effectively a satellite estate. Its value is unfathomable," Mann said.
[...]
Asked to explain, the estate's lawyer, Howard Weitzman, said of Mann: "His day is coming. The estate will be taking appropriate legal action."
After buying Vintage Pop, Mann approached Katherine Jackson to seek the family approval he felt was necessary before trying to sell merchandise to fans. He said he told her that he could provide regular cash payments with more ease than the estate, which was encumbered by her son's debt. He also told her that a British tabloid was offering him "seven figures" for a "particular item" from the memorabilia locker. Mann declined to identify the item or the publication but said it was clear the paper's goal was to smear Jackson's memory.
At the family's request, he destroyed the item and returned a box of other personal items to the family.
"He was nice enough to come to me with those things and I really appreciated what he did," Katherine Jackson recalled.