L.J
Proud Member
G'day kiddies!! :shades:
If you haven't heard it yet... Nothing MJ related occurred at the 50th Grammies held this Sunday night.
You can go and see how the drama unfolded in the Grammies thread :lol:
Thread Link: http://www.mjjcommunity.com/forum/showthread.php?t=46015
Ok so on with the news:
Michael Jackson News:
Michael Jackson Settles Neverland Tax Debt
Los Olivos, Calif. (Feb. 11, 2008)
By WebCPA staff
Michael Jackson has finally settled the outstanding $600,000 property tax debt on his Neverland Ranch.
The pop star paid off a state tax lien on the property, according to Santa Barbara County records.
The settlement amount included penalties and fees, but did not take into account the $23 million the singer owes after defaulting on loans he took out on the ranch. One financial services company, Fortress Investment, is already two weeks past the time it can start foreclosing on the property.
The ranch has been vacant since 2005. Jackson has vowed not to return to Neverland because of the bad memories associated with the property, on which he has been accused of child abuse. The ranch at one time attracted hordes of visitors to its Disney-like environment and hosted both a zoo and fairground.
http://www.webcpa.com/article.cfm?articleid=26726
Anniversary edition takes the thrill out of 'Thriller'
Michael Jackson Mentionings:
'I've finished talking about Michael. I've done it all my career.'
[FONT=arial,helvetica,sans-serif]On the release of her 10th album, Discipline, Janet Jackson talks about her brothers, babies and why she never wants to grow up[/FONT]
[FONT=Geneva,Arial,sans-serif] Elizabeth Day
Sunday February 10, 2008
The Observer
[/FONT] There are few things in this world more embarrassing than being forced to dance in your chair. This realisation comes to me on a drizzly morning in Manhattan when I find myself in a roomful of earnest music journalists and record executives being played seven tracks from the new Janet Jackson album. We are seated in a large corner office at Island Def Jam Records, surrounded by orchids and ornamental cigar boxes. As each new song is pumped out at ear-splitting volume, a strange competitiveness sets in as to who can appear most in tune with the music.
http://music.guardian.co.uk/pop/story/0,,2253427,00.html#article_continue
'Disorderly Conduct: Recent Art in Tumultuous Times'
Artists in the exhibition at the Orange County Museum of Art depict a world in upheaval.
In his video "Untitled (The Michael Jackson Project)," 2004, McMillian dons white clown makeup to evoke the complex cultural influence of Jackson's continually morphing face. "I was questioning his transformation in a certain way," McMillian says, but "it's more about what we project onto faces, or onto personas, and clowns are definitely things that we project onto and that also supposedly provide a mirror."
In Jackson's case, the man in the mirror reflects the highs and lows of a generation. "When we see current-day Michael Jackson almost in his 50s . . . it's a very different look than when he was 8 years old," says McMillian, 39. "So part of our understanding of him is through our memory of having seen him perform and transform before our eyes over the past 30 to 40 years." Jackson, he says, "represents dystopia, the American dream gone south or gone awry," he says.
http://www.calendarlive.com/tv/radio/cl-ca-disorderly10feb10,0,2384579.story
Michael Jackson HIStory:
1992 - Michael Jackson's single "Remember The Time" was released.
1992 - Michael Jackson began a trip of Africa in Gaob. He had planned to visit the Ivory Coast and Tanzania.
MJJC TIP of the day:
MJJF member's be sure to activate your PMs via your User CP :flowers:
If you haven't heard it yet... Nothing MJ related occurred at the 50th Grammies held this Sunday night.
You can go and see how the drama unfolded in the Grammies thread :lol:
Thread Link: http://www.mjjcommunity.com/forum/showthread.php?t=46015
Ok so on with the news:
Michael Jackson News:
Michael Jackson Settles Neverland Tax Debt
Los Olivos, Calif. (Feb. 11, 2008)
By WebCPA staff
Michael Jackson has finally settled the outstanding $600,000 property tax debt on his Neverland Ranch.
The pop star paid off a state tax lien on the property, according to Santa Barbara County records.
The settlement amount included penalties and fees, but did not take into account the $23 million the singer owes after defaulting on loans he took out on the ranch. One financial services company, Fortress Investment, is already two weeks past the time it can start foreclosing on the property.
The ranch has been vacant since 2005. Jackson has vowed not to return to Neverland because of the bad memories associated with the property, on which he has been accused of child abuse. The ranch at one time attracted hordes of visitors to its Disney-like environment and hosted both a zoo and fairground.
http://www.webcpa.com/article.cfm?articleid=26726
Anniversary edition takes the thrill out of 'Thriller'
http://www.boston.com/ae/music/arti...ary_edition_takes_the_thrill_out_of_thriller/One hundred and four million albums sold worldwide.
Thirty-seven weeks at No. 1.
Eight Grammys.
Seven Top 10 hits.
And five unnecessary new tracks that nearly undermine that legacy.
Tonight, Michael Jackson is expected to appear at the Grammy Awards to celebrate the induction of his landmark 1982 album, "Thriller," into the Grammy Hall of Fame. On Tuesday he will release a 25th-anniversary edition of it. The expanded CD/DVD package will include the original nine-song album, one unreleased track from the original sessions, and five reworkings with contributions from contemporary artists that range from innocuous to downright damaging.
Associating with will.i.am, Fergie, Akon, and Kanye West is meant to lend Jackson credibility with today's urban music fans, but adding modern flourishes to a record like "Thriller" doesn't do anything to improve it. If anything, it diminishes the one unblemished chapter of Jackson's creative life.
The stats associated with "Thriller" have always been impressive on their own. But facts and figures don't tell the musical tale. Somewhere between the genuflection of fellow musicians such as Mary J. Blige (who has been part of the reissue's promotion campaign) and the undying devotion of Jackson's fans lies the inarguable fact that "Thriller" was, and remains, a splendid specimen of dance pop. Beyond that, it was a watershed moment in pop music history by any standard: a commercial giant, a critical home run, and a cultural gamechanger.
An element of nostalgia is involved in any reissue, yet this anniversary edition doesn't feel or sound like a museum piece. The percolating twitch of tracks like "Billie Jean" and the dreamy charms of "Human Nature" still hold up and, amazingly, haven't been sullied by the sideshow that eventually tarnished Jackson's public persona.
Production techniques from the '80s have sometimes made listening to music from the era a cringe-worthy exercise. And though Jackson and producer Quincy Jones indulged in the synth-mania of the times (notably on the title track's crashing opening notes), the unassailable melodies, sense of urgency, and freedom that saturate these songs still inspire involuntary neck twitches and impromptu re-creations of Jackson's moves at weddings, parties, and clubs.
For further proof of its enduring impact, look no further than YouTube, which is littered with clips that pay homage to the album - everything from homemade videos of Filipino inmates getting down in the jailhouse yard to last week's Super Bowl ad. Or you could just cock an ear toward the diverse array of current hitmakers who have cribbed from Jackson, from the suave, effortless glides and soul-boy pleas of Chris Brown, Ne-Yo, and Usher to the dance-floor confections of Justin Timberlake and Maroon 5.
It seems fitting, then, that the one extra track that is well-executed and worth hearing on the anniversary release is "For All Time." This sweet, earnest ballad - recorded during the original sessions but left off of the album - sounds like the daytime flipside to "Human Nature." It's similar enough to that song in vocal cadence and keyboard atmospherics to justify its exclusion but it's as good, or better, than the two non-hits ("The Lady in My Life" and "Baby Be Mine") that did make the cut.
If Jackson had simply appended this song and included the DVD - consisting of videos for "Billie Jean," "Beat It," "Thriller," and Jackson's electric appearance on "Motown 25: Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow" - this new "Thriller" would have been the perfect reissue. But the bonus tracks slowly deflate the joy of what came before.
Jackson has certainly made some puzzling moves over the years, but his belief that he could improve on perfection with the help of the Black Eyed Peas has to rank almost as high on his list of bad decisions as returning journalist Martin Bashir's call to participate in a British TV documentary.
Will.i.am, in partnership with co-producer Jackson, is the main criminal here, and there's nothing smooth about it. Working with a demo that predated Paul McCartney's duet vocal, will.i.am hacks up "The Girl Is Mine." A roughed-up guitar sound is head-bobbingly funky, but the addition of his own execrable rap - "she mine, she mine, she mine, she like the way I rock" - makes it unlistenable.
Not satisfied with victimizing one woman, he guts "P.Y.T. (Pretty Young Thing) 2008" - another original demo remix - of its easy, silly charm by the inclusion of such thoughtful Will updates as "You're looking really cute in them jeans/ I'll peel 'em off like a tangerine." BEP bandmate Fergie does no irreparable harm on a remix duet of "Beat It" but adds nothing of value, either.
Akon goes out on a limb with "Wanna Be Startin' Something," with light-fingered faux-vibraphone runs and the addition of a new vocal track from Jackson. Akon's lyrics take the song to the club and then back to the bedroom. It's not a complete success but retains the fidgety essence of the original while feeling fresher than the approach of his peers.
Only Kanye West's chop-shop reworking of "Billie Jean" - he begins with the pre-chorus, ever-so-slightly slows the tempo, beefs up the drum echo - builds on an original without desecrating it. He also wisely limits his vocal contribution to a couple of wordless exclamations and a triumphant shout of "number one!"
You could argue it's a waste of Grammy airtime tonight to celebrate something that has already been endlessly praised. The show is supposed to shine a light on the previous year's best work, and if Jackson, who turns 50 this year, still holds out the slimmest hope of commercial relevance, this trip back to 1982 does him no favors. But considering its incredibly long legs, "Thriller" certainly deserves its place in the pop pantheon.
For those millions who remember the initial rush of "Thriller" and the subsequent generations who received it secondhand but undiluted, anniversaries are meaningless as long as the songs remain the same. Instead of relying on today's whiz kids to help him reminisce, Jackson the musician should summon that fearless 25-year-old and get back to the future.
Michael Jackson Mentionings:
'I've finished talking about Michael. I've done it all my career.'
[FONT=arial,helvetica,sans-serif]On the release of her 10th album, Discipline, Janet Jackson talks about her brothers, babies and why she never wants to grow up[/FONT]
[FONT=Geneva,Arial,sans-serif] Elizabeth Day
Sunday February 10, 2008
The Observer
[/FONT] There are few things in this world more embarrassing than being forced to dance in your chair. This realisation comes to me on a drizzly morning in Manhattan when I find myself in a roomful of earnest music journalists and record executives being played seven tracks from the new Janet Jackson album. We are seated in a large corner office at Island Def Jam Records, surrounded by orchids and ornamental cigar boxes. As each new song is pumped out at ear-splitting volume, a strange competitiveness sets in as to who can appear most in tune with the music.
Article in full here:She is now more commonly referred to as Michael Jackson's sister, the younger sibling who wore a T-shirt emblazoned with the words 'I'm a pervert too' during his trial on 10 counts of child molestation in 2005.
http://music.guardian.co.uk/pop/story/0,,2253427,00.html#article_continue
'Disorderly Conduct: Recent Art in Tumultuous Times'
Artists in the exhibition at the Orange County Museum of Art depict a world in upheaval.
In his video "Untitled (The Michael Jackson Project)," 2004, McMillian dons white clown makeup to evoke the complex cultural influence of Jackson's continually morphing face. "I was questioning his transformation in a certain way," McMillian says, but "it's more about what we project onto faces, or onto personas, and clowns are definitely things that we project onto and that also supposedly provide a mirror."
In Jackson's case, the man in the mirror reflects the highs and lows of a generation. "When we see current-day Michael Jackson almost in his 50s . . . it's a very different look than when he was 8 years old," says McMillian, 39. "So part of our understanding of him is through our memory of having seen him perform and transform before our eyes over the past 30 to 40 years." Jackson, he says, "represents dystopia, the American dream gone south or gone awry," he says.
http://www.calendarlive.com/tv/radio/cl-ca-disorderly10feb10,0,2384579.story
Michael Jackson HIStory:
1992 - Michael Jackson's single "Remember The Time" was released.
1992 - Michael Jackson began a trip of Africa in Gaob. He had planned to visit the Ivory Coast and Tanzania.
MJJC TIP of the day:
MJJF member's be sure to activate your PMs via your User CP :flowers:
Last edited: