Let's end the confusion about MJ's unreleased tracks here

Information and transcription from the MJCast with CJ DeVillar on the real Monster song from 1999:


MJCast: I want to ask a little bit about a song that you worked on that's quite mysterious still in the Michael Jackson fan world, and the song is "Monster".

DeVillar: Yes, yes.

MJCast: There's still a lot of misinformation out there about it, and that kind of thing. I'd love for
you to take us through the journey of "Monster" and what you did on it, and Michael's vision for
it.

DeVillar: When I got to it, it was pretty involved. It was already over a hundred tracks, and I was
at Record One, and we recorded vocals on it. So I made a work reel. So basically, we were in
the room that had--I don't know, it had like 102 input SSL, and we needed that actually. I had
two Sony machines that were full, so that was 96 tracks. So the orchestra--there was an
orchestra laid out, huge amount of percussion, there was flies buzzing, there was--it was very
experimental, it sounded like a very personal Michael Jackson song to me, very personal. And it--I would say, and I use this analogy often, but it's not exactly inaccurate, but it's very much--I kinda took it like--kinda one of his Sgt. Pepper songs. That he went kind of art instead of trying to hit us over the pop noggin, like he's great at doing. He reached down into some kind of a different place for this song. I guess more challenging to listen to would be the best way to put it.
So it was very interesting. So I had to take all those tracks, I did a mix, he was coming into the studio occasionally, but then I had a long two-day period where I didn't see him, and I was at Record One, so I mixed up, for as long as I could, and then made a work reel, which means I took those 96 tracks and I got a third Sony machine, locked all three up, and I put eight tracks down to the work track. So I had two tracks of drums on it, two tracks of effect, two tracks of keyboards, two tracks of percussion. And then that released 40 channels. So then that was our vocal reel. So after I made that, Michael would come into the studio and would sing on "Monster". I guess "Monster"'s the name of it.

MJCast: Yeah, yeah.

DeVillar: The hook I recorded, he sang "You created a monster", was the hook that he sang.

MJCast: That's right, yeah.

DeVillar: So maybe that's the title. Maybe it was just "Monster".

MJCast: On that note, I've heard this song before; I don't know what sort of state of completion I've heard it in, but the accounts are right. It sounds, instrumentally, probably, in my opinion, the most complex Michael instrumental I've ever heard. There is so much going on, it's incredible.
But the vocal I've heard--the version I've heard--there is only the hook you described in the
chorus. There's no other vocal. Did you record any other Michael vocal for that song?

DeVillar:... Now, I definitely recall the hook, 'cause you get a huge stack. We did a lot of stacks.
Then we did--yeah, we--I remember filling a lot of stuff. Now, we did a lot of experimented
vocals, he may have sung some verses. I don't know if they were experimental to him. I don't
know--let me put it this way... I recall almost filling that reel, 40 tracks. Now, was it with verses and a bridge? I don't know. Maybe had some skeletal ideas of that, but I know we practically
filled it... I actually had a problem. He's so fast that he remembers where he is in tracks and
stuff, and he wants to go back and he wants to record an idea, and then he wants to go to this
section of tape and record an idea, and then he wants to go here. Now, we're on tape, so this is
when I made the money. I was paid right, you know? Because what made that difficult is that we weren't in Pro Tools, so you can't see the audio about to come up. You don't get to see audio, it's only tape and needles bouncing. So he would ask me, "Oh, there's a section of tape here, I want to record something". Well, right after that, is the bridge. So I have to be careful to take it out of record when he sings on a section that has something after it. So the vocal session was--after about a week--was getting complicated. There [were] parts flying around all over this reel, including the hook that you mentioned, and I remember he was singing something, and I can see a note I wrote, 'cause I was furiously writing notes, 'cause I couldn't keep up with Michael.
It's like--I also had to keep him from making a mistake... It's part of my job, too, is to help him
not screw up, you know? So he was singing, and we were coming up to a part that I was about
to record over. So I was, like, I was--had a catch-22. I had to drop out. So I had to drop out in
the middle of a vocal. And so I dropped out, and he goes, "What are you doing?" And I'm like,
"Oh my God, Michael Jackson's yelling at me, first of all" [laughs] And I'm going, "Michael,
Michael. The beatbox was right on that--it was right after". He goes, "[sigh of relief] Ohh, thanks for dropping me out". I was like, "Oh my gosh". I was like, "Dude", you know? And so, by that story alone, that meant we were cramming the tape. So, I have to say, there was a lot of stuff. In the rough mix you heard--I mean, maybe the vocal session I had with him--it's hard to say, I did that in '99.

MJCast: Did Michael ever talk to you about the song "Monster" and his vision for it, and where
he wanted it to go?

DeVillar: No. No, he did--he liked my mix a lot. He liked it so much that he made me put it to a
half-inch analog machine, which I thought was kinda funny. He just loved it in his headphones
so much. I had two days to work on it, so I wanted to give him a mix in his headphones to sing against, that he would enjoy, so I really made something that'd be fun to sing against, and, evidently, he responded to it. So he liked it enough to print it, so maybe that's what people are hearing. And I may have done it with just the hook in it, I don't know. 'Cause I did some rough
mix versions for him, so he could take it home and maybe sing in the car, or whatever, so
Michael probably had 30 versions of it.
Considering how much effort was put into creating that song (over 100 tracks? Goddamn!), and how Michael seemed to adore it, I seriously doubt that Michael only took his time to record his vocals for the choruses.
 
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In an interview with inews.co.uk, Don Black said about Michael Jackson that he had recorded other demo songs by Don Black, but that they had never been released. It is not specified when these songs date from.


https://inews.co.uk/culture/music/d...bond-themes-noel-gallagher-coronavirus-559876


Michael Jackson immediately formed a connection with Ben, a song about a sick boy whose best friend is a rat, when Black and composer Walter Scharf played it at the piano for the teenage star.


Jackson recorded demos

Jackson became friends with Black and his family but they drifted apart as Michael became a more reclusive, troubled figure.


Jackson recorded demos of more Black songs which have never been released. “I hope they are unearthed one day,” says Black, who accepts the world may not want to hear more from the disgraced singer.
 
I read before about someone talking on the song going to Rio he heard it
 
Jackson recorded demos

Jackson became friends with Black and his family but they drifted apart as Michael became a more reclusive, troubled figure.


Jackson recorded demos of more Black songs which have never been released. “I hope they are unearthed one day,” says Black, who accepts the world may not want to hear more from the disgraced singer.
Ok. Great info, thanks. Now, if Mr Black is still alive, WHO wants to try to contact him and ask if he has these demos himself ? Because the Estate might just not even now about their existence…
 
Sadly it seems the only way we can get new songs at this point is literally stealing laptops lmao, fucking sad. I am so jealous of Prince fans, his estate actually cares about their fans. Also Adez will prolly never leak Changes lmao
 
Today people will say "Do you remember?"
Most people will say "The 21st day of September"
Nah, I just say When we fell in love, we were young and innocent then
 
With pleasure.
I tried, but it's quite complicated to contact him for me. :)
 
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Do we know if the full tracks of Changes, Water and Adore you are circulating in full?
Seminar recordings of “Water” and “Adore You” are currently in circulation. These (along with “Michael’s Affirmation”) will likely be the next unreleased songs to leak.

While a collector clearly has “Changes”, I highly doubt this one is in circulation right now.
 
That channel is known for posting fake leaks so I'm not sure if this is real or not.
I would say Monster is the most anticipated track to be released now.
It has been highly praised, so I hope it lives up to it if we ever get to hear it.
The most hyped song is definitely Buffalo Bill, and it's also granted to be released at some point unlike Monster due to the state it's in.
 
I was able to gather quite a few comments on Buffalo Bill, including that of John Barnes, Bill Botrell, Matt Forger, Frank Dileo and MJ on video. Which is extremely rare from him. The video is from 1983.




In the video, MJ states that he was working on the upcoming album, Victory, and that he wrote several songs, one of which is called "Buffalo Bill." Something extremely rare for MJ is that he is very enthusiastic about the song and says it will be a success.

He then mentions the song “Liberian Girl”, which was kept for the album Bad and which had the success we know. “Buffalo Bill” is the first collaboration with John Barnes. On Facebook, he says the song is great but not quite finished. And that he would like to finish the demo. (Rumors say the song was reworked until the Dangerous sessions).




In John Barnes' MJCast video above, he indicates that Michael came up with the idea for the song. It begins with an orchestral beginning, then transitions into an R&B dance song. They did most of the work on the same day, 6 hours in the studio. John Barnes also mentions that some of these songs were better than what made the album.


Concerning “Liberian Girl”, the song was already ready for Victory except the intro which was added by Quincy.


Bill Botrell answered a question about the demo on gearspace in 2009. He remembers the demo having a heavy John Barnes influence and a cool chorus: "Who Shot Buffalo Bill?" They said he shot a lot did he never get killed?”


In 1984, Frank Dileo mentioned the song in a Rolling Stones interview. He had heard MJ's latest uptempo dance composition.

https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.ro...chael-jackson-trouble-in-paradise-105691/amp/


In Joe Vogel's book it is stated that Matt Forger described it as an incredible song that was never finalized. "It went through such contortions and changes and green writes and variations" There is a photo of MJ posing in front of William Cody's grave.

https://mjbeats.com.br/michael-jackson-e-buffalo-bill-8e019baa9c40

1*ug4Cq6E2_KHwI4n35HF6xQ.jpeg



There would also be guitarist David Williams who commented on the song in Musicians Magazine released in 1984.


Its subject concerns the assassination of William Cody (shot in the back by Jack McCall) at a poker game in Deadwood, Dakota in 1876.
 
I was able to gather quite a few comments on Buffalo Bill, including that of John Barnes, Bill Botrell, Matt Forger, Frank Dileo and MJ on video. Which is extremely rare from him. The video is from 1983.




In the video, MJ states that he was working on the upcoming album, Victory, and that he wrote several songs, one of which is called "Buffalo Bill." Something extremely rare for MJ is that he is very enthusiastic about the song and says it will be a success.

He then mentions the song “Liberian Girl”, which was kept for the album Bad and which had the success we know. “Buffalo Bill” is the first collaboration with John Barnes. On Facebook, he says the song is great but not quite finished. And that he would like to finish the demo. (Rumors say the song was reworked until the Dangerous sessions).




In John Barnes' MJCast video above, he indicates that Michael came up with the idea for the song. It begins with an orchestral beginning, then transitions into an R&B dance song. They did most of the work on the same day, 6 hours in the studio. John Barnes also mentions that some of these songs were better than what made the album.


Concerning “Liberian Girl”, the song was already ready for Victory except the intro which was added by Quincy.


Bill Botrell answered a question about the demo on gearspace in 2009. He remembers the demo having a heavy John Barnes influence and a cool chorus: "Who Shot Buffalo Bill?" They said he shot a lot did he never get killed?”


In 1984, Frank Dileo mentioned the song in a Rolling Stones interview. He had heard MJ's latest uptempo dance composition.

https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.ro...chael-jackson-trouble-in-paradise-105691/amp/


In Joe Vogel's book it is stated that Matt Forger described it as an incredible song that was never finalized. "It went through such contortions and changes and green writes and variations" There is a photo of MJ posing in front of William Cody's grave.

https://mjbeats.com.br/michael-jackson-e-buffalo-bill-8e019baa9c40

1*ug4Cq6E2_KHwI4n35HF6xQ.jpeg



There would also be guitarist David Williams who commented on the song in Musicians Magazine released in 1984.


Its subject concerns the assassination of William Cody (shot in the back by Jack McCall) at a poker game in Deadwood, Dakota in 1876.
Been loving your posts recently!
 
I was able to gather quite a few comments on Buffalo Bill, including that of John Barnes, Bill Botrell, Matt Forger, Frank Dileo and MJ on video. Which is extremely rare from him. The video is from 1983.




In the video, MJ states that he was working on the upcoming album, Victory, and that he wrote several songs, one of which is called "Buffalo Bill." Something extremely rare for MJ is that he is very enthusiastic about the song and says it will be a success.

He then mentions the song “Liberian Girl”, which was kept for the album Bad and which had the success we know. “Buffalo Bill” is the first collaboration with John Barnes. On Facebook, he says the song is great but not quite finished. And that he would like to finish the demo. (Rumors say the song was reworked until the Dangerous sessions).




In John Barnes' MJCast video above, he indicates that Michael came up with the idea for the song. It begins with an orchestral beginning, then transitions into an R&B dance song. They did most of the work on the same day, 6 hours in the studio. John Barnes also mentions that some of these songs were better than what made the album.


Concerning “Liberian Girl”, the song was already ready for Victory except the intro which was added by Quincy.


Bill Botrell answered a question about the demo on gearspace in 2009. He remembers the demo having a heavy John Barnes influence and a cool chorus: "Who Shot Buffalo Bill?" They said he shot a lot did he never get killed?”


In 1984, Frank Dileo mentioned the song in a Rolling Stones interview. He had heard MJ's latest uptempo dance composition.

https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.ro...chael-jackson-trouble-in-paradise-105691/amp/


In Joe Vogel's book it is stated that Matt Forger described it as an incredible song that was never finalized. "It went through such contortions and changes and green writes and variations" There is a photo of MJ posing in front of William Cody's grave.

https://mjbeats.com.br/michael-jackson-e-buffalo-bill-8e019baa9c40

1*ug4Cq6E2_KHwI4n35HF6xQ.jpeg



There would also be guitarist David Williams who commented on the song in Musicians Magazine released in 1984.


Its subject concerns the assassination of William Cody (shot in the back by Jack McCall) at a poker game in Deadwood, Dakota in 1876.
But there is information that buffalo bill. Finished because his brothers sung more on it than the old version
 
I would say Monster is the most anticipated track to be released now.
It has been highly praised, so I hope it lives up to it if we ever get to hear it.
I know a trader that has the song, he told me that the song sounds decent.
 
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