Dorothy_Marie
Proud Member
Hello everyone! I hope you are having a nice weekend so far. Well with the Grammys and T25 coming up there will be alot of news to report so keep your eye peeled to this thread. For right now there are still alot of news sites reporting that Michael will perform/or not perform. We haven't really got a clue what is going on but with Michael you shall never know what he has in mind. :lol:
Michael Jackson News for February 9, 2008:
http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/ask_bb/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003708948
Experts answer your questions. For February 08, 2008,
Ask Billboard is updated every Friday. Submit your burning music questions to Keith Caulfield at askbb@billboard.com.
'THRILLING' NUMBERS
Keith,
With three versions of Michael Jackson's "Thriller 25" on sale next week (Feb. 12), how will overall sales of the album be calculated?
Checking on Amazon.com's top seller list, it looks like each version of the album is counted separately in their overall sales chart, as they have different SKUs.
How will Nielsen SoundScan do the math? And taking it even one step further, will sales of the anniversary album added to the overall sales of the original album, bringing it a step closer in overtaking the Eagles' greatest hits album (as the best selling album of all time in the U.S.)?
Joseph Yenish
Scotch Plains, N.J.
Hi Joseph,
All of the expanded versions of "Thriller" will have their sales combined with the existing sales of the original 1982 album. At the end of the day, there will only be one number to represent the sales of "Thriller."
This is not unusual. Many albums are reissued with bonus content from a few months after the original album's release to many years later. For the most part, Billboard and Nielsen SoundScan will have the sales of the various permutations of an album merged together.
Michael Jackson Mentionings for February 9, 2008:
http://brokendial.insidepulse.com/a.../08/outloud--putting-the-c-in-manchester.html
Godley and Creme's directorial style proved to be equally as original and innovative as their music. They took their bizarre sense of humor and put it on display on groundbreaking videos such as Herbie Hancock's "Rockit", which like the video for "An Englishman In New York" can really haunt your dreams, and for their own song "Cry", which introduced the technique of analog cross-fading, which was later used to much success in the video for Michael Jackson's "Black or White". They also have done videos for Sting, Duran Duran, Huey Lewis and The News, The Police and others.
http://www.wkyc.com/news/news_article.aspx?storyid=83044
Al Jarreau was one of the supergroup of singers who recorded "We Are the World," the 1985 song written by Michael Jackson and Lionel Richie for USA for Africa.
At Severance Hall Friday, Jarreau sang at a benefit to raise money for "New Life Community," which prepares homeless women for careers.
"We've still got a lot of problems to solve," Jarreau said. "I like being part of the solution, so I love helping. That's why I'm here."
http://in.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idINIndia-31842720080209
Born in Indonesia around 1960, Ah Meng came to the zoo in 1971 after she was confiscated from a family who had kept her as an illegal pet.
She featured in almost 30 travel films and was the subject of more than 270 articles in newspapers and magazines, the statement said. She also became the first and only non-human recipient of the "Special Tourism Ambassador" award in the city-state.
Ah Meng mingled with famous personalities such as Britain's Prince Philip, magician David Copperfield, pop singer Michael Jackson and movie star Elizabeth Taylor.
http://nwitimes.com/articles/2008/0...nment/doc6cb966bf04d8e3eb862573e90069d10a.txt
Pop culture isn't too good at looking back, but to celebrate Grammy's 50th anniversary, the Recording Academy will induct an unusually large slate of "recordings of significance" into the Grammy Hall of Fame this year -- including Billy Joel's classic 1977 album "The Stranger," Michael Jackson's record-setting "Thriller," Prince's landmark "1999," Arturo Toscanini's 1953 recording of "Verdi: Otello" and the John Coltrane Quartet's "Ballads" album. And it will promote a series of CDs designed to collect award-winning songs in a variety of genres.
Recorded works are eligible for the Grammy Hall of Fame 25 years after their release and are seen to have significantly affected musical history.
http://www.thisislancashire.co.uk/n...ds_of_comfort_after_losing_twin_daughters.php
Katy says in her book: "The staff were very kind but looking back it was kind of like the Michael Jackson Thriller video where dead bodies rise up behind gravestones to come out at you.
"Nurses and staff came from every corridor as we struggled to put one foot in front of the other and reach the end. It seemed to go on for miles. We'd been asked to sit in a side room, a nice delicate shade of peach with lots of baby leaflets in."
Michael Jackson News for February 9, 2008:
http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/ask_bb/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003708948
Experts answer your questions. For February 08, 2008,
Ask Billboard is updated every Friday. Submit your burning music questions to Keith Caulfield at askbb@billboard.com.
Keith,
With three versions of Michael Jackson's "Thriller 25" on sale next week (Feb. 12), how will overall sales of the album be calculated?
Checking on Amazon.com's top seller list, it looks like each version of the album is counted separately in their overall sales chart, as they have different SKUs.
How will Nielsen SoundScan do the math? And taking it even one step further, will sales of the anniversary album added to the overall sales of the original album, bringing it a step closer in overtaking the Eagles' greatest hits album (as the best selling album of all time in the U.S.)?
Joseph Yenish
Scotch Plains, N.J.
Hi Joseph,
All of the expanded versions of "Thriller" will have their sales combined with the existing sales of the original 1982 album. At the end of the day, there will only be one number to represent the sales of "Thriller."
This is not unusual. Many albums are reissued with bonus content from a few months after the original album's release to many years later. For the most part, Billboard and Nielsen SoundScan will have the sales of the various permutations of an album merged together.
Michael Jackson Mentionings for February 9, 2008:
http://brokendial.insidepulse.com/a.../08/outloud--putting-the-c-in-manchester.html
Godley and Creme's directorial style proved to be equally as original and innovative as their music. They took their bizarre sense of humor and put it on display on groundbreaking videos such as Herbie Hancock's "Rockit", which like the video for "An Englishman In New York" can really haunt your dreams, and for their own song "Cry", which introduced the technique of analog cross-fading, which was later used to much success in the video for Michael Jackson's "Black or White". They also have done videos for Sting, Duran Duran, Huey Lewis and The News, The Police and others.
http://www.wkyc.com/news/news_article.aspx?storyid=83044
Al Jarreau was one of the supergroup of singers who recorded "We Are the World," the 1985 song written by Michael Jackson and Lionel Richie for USA for Africa.
At Severance Hall Friday, Jarreau sang at a benefit to raise money for "New Life Community," which prepares homeless women for careers.
"We've still got a lot of problems to solve," Jarreau said. "I like being part of the solution, so I love helping. That's why I'm here."
http://in.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idINIndia-31842720080209
Born in Indonesia around 1960, Ah Meng came to the zoo in 1971 after she was confiscated from a family who had kept her as an illegal pet.
She featured in almost 30 travel films and was the subject of more than 270 articles in newspapers and magazines, the statement said. She also became the first and only non-human recipient of the "Special Tourism Ambassador" award in the city-state.
Ah Meng mingled with famous personalities such as Britain's Prince Philip, magician David Copperfield, pop singer Michael Jackson and movie star Elizabeth Taylor.
http://nwitimes.com/articles/2008/0...nment/doc6cb966bf04d8e3eb862573e90069d10a.txt
Pop culture isn't too good at looking back, but to celebrate Grammy's 50th anniversary, the Recording Academy will induct an unusually large slate of "recordings of significance" into the Grammy Hall of Fame this year -- including Billy Joel's classic 1977 album "The Stranger," Michael Jackson's record-setting "Thriller," Prince's landmark "1999," Arturo Toscanini's 1953 recording of "Verdi: Otello" and the John Coltrane Quartet's "Ballads" album. And it will promote a series of CDs designed to collect award-winning songs in a variety of genres.
Recorded works are eligible for the Grammy Hall of Fame 25 years after their release and are seen to have significantly affected musical history.
http://www.thisislancashire.co.uk/n...ds_of_comfort_after_losing_twin_daughters.php
Katy says in her book: "The staff were very kind but looking back it was kind of like the Michael Jackson Thriller video where dead bodies rise up behind gravestones to come out at you.
"Nurses and staff came from every corridor as we struggled to put one foot in front of the other and reach the end. It seemed to go on for miles. We'd been asked to sit in a side room, a nice delicate shade of peach with lots of baby leaflets in."
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