Film & TV Michael Jackson's 'This is it'

Casey

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#21
I'm slightly ambivalent about the new song. I'm fairly sure it'll be some epic pop ballad a la "Earth Song" or "We've Had Enough". Not that I don't like those type of MJ songs, but damn, I need another stone cold MJ groove again.

Also, the brothers are on backing vocals on the new song. This is wrong. MJ would not have wanted that. He had more or less vowed to not work with his brothers ever again. Even if he had done in the future, it would probably be occasional J5 reunions. Michael never wanted them involved in his solo career after the fiasco of the 1984 Victory album and tour and them all falling out. None of them had any involvement with Thriller, Bad, Dangerous, HIStory, Blood on the Dancefloor, Invincible, and they wouldn't have anything to do with this project if Michael were still here.

Plus, aside from Jermaine, none of them are even great singers anyway.

Still, I look forward to hearing the song. I have my movie tickets booked for the 30th, I'll be in the States and watching it there.
 

Casey

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#23
I've just heard that the song was originally recorded during the "Dangerous" sessions which makes me feel:

A) more excited since those sessions were funky.

B) more disappointed about the brothers being on the song since they were definately not getting along during that time frame. It was only a short time before this that Jermaine recorded his diss track to Michael - "Word to Tha Badd!".....
 

Kobe

Well-Known Member
#24
Also, the brothers are on backing vocals on the new song. This is wrong. MJ would not have wanted that. He had more or less vowed to not work with his brothers ever again. Even if he had done in the future, it would probably be occasional J5 reunions. Michael never wanted them involved in his solo career after the fiasco of the 1984 Victory album and tour and them all falling out. None of them had any involvement with Thriller, Bad, Dangerous, HIStory, Blood on the Dancefloor, Invincible, and they wouldn't have anything to do with this project if Michael were still here.
How come you took MJ off your avatar? What does the new one represent?

Thanks for that post. It never occurred to me that they were already remixing his music. What do you think happens with his future releases? Will they be remixed or left as they were recorded? Will we have a swarm of guest artists starting to feature on his records? If they're remixed, you think some fans will have access to his originals like 'you know who' music?

By the way, I once heard a solo version of 'scream'. Was Janet added as an afterthought or was it a demo that Michael had recorded for her?

Sorry for the many question, you just seem to know a lot about Michael :D

I just got my tickets :)
Good job :D Not too long to go before the release.

B) more disappointed about the brothers being on the song since they were definately not getting along during that time frame. It was only a short time before this that Jermaine recorded his diss track to Michael - "Word to Tha Badd!".....
Never knew about that. See? Thats why I'm asking you so many questions :D Was that diss track released?
 

Casey

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#25
How come you took MJ off your avatar? What does the new one represent?
MJ will return as my avatar after the event that occurs that the avatar is referring to. I will be making a thread in 'Our Block' about it, but not for a few more days.

Until then.......210910.

Thanks for that post. It never occurred to me that they were already remixing his music. What do you think happens with his future releases? Will they be remixed or left as they were recorded? Will we have a swarm of guest artists starting to feature on his records? If they're remixed, you think some fans will have access to his originals like 'you know who' music?
LOL, they've already released....wait for it.... FIVE DISCS worth of MJ remixes by people like The Neptunes, Stargate, Dallas Austin, Frankie Knuckles, Akon, NO.ID, Sturken & Rogers, Blink 182, Salaam Remi, Polow The Don, and a fuckton of other big name producers. That's all Jackson 5/Motown era stuff though, stuff that's already been released.

It's called "Michael Jackson Remix Suite" if you want to look into it. I've only heard maybe 4-5 tracks from it so far. It doesn't interest me that much really, but I'll check it out at some stage.

Future releases, I would bet they'll release both original recorded versions and remixes too. I'd like to think that they'd only add featured artists to the remixes and not any original songs. But it seems likely that they'll reach out and get people involved.

As for bootlegging, well, Prince is the most bootlegged artist of all time, but Michael isn't that far behind. There is already a huge collectors/bootleg market for rare MJ material, and yes, there is a layer of elitism much like there is in the Tupac scene.

I have a bunch of rare and unreleased material of Michael's myself, but in the grand scheme it's not that rare. By that I mean, average MJ fan doesn't have access to this stuff, but super hardcore elitist collector wouldn't consider what I have to be ultra rare.

It's not an easy thing to assess, but some of the stuff I got recently was new to me, and I've been a big fan my whole life. Demo tapes, DAT tape rips from early sessions for various albums, alternative edits, etc.

The things in my MJ collection that I'm the most proud of though, are not so much bootleg material, but rare collectors items - my neon Moonwalker sign, my original paperback edition of Michael's autobiography, my Japanese CD single of "Smooth Criminal" with hard to find alternate mixes, my original 1969 7" vinyl of "I Want You Back", stuff like that.

By the way, I once heard a solo version of 'scream'. Was Janet added as an afterthought or was it a demo that Michael had recorded for her?
Neither. I've heard the version you talk about, and you can actually hear Janet in the background during the "make me wanna scream" line.

There is no real Michael solo version, but the version you are talking about has Michael singing some of the parts that Janet sings on the released version.

It's a misleading edit. Michael, Janet, Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis all wrote and produced the song together, so it's never existed without Janet being involved. What happened was that, during the recording, many ideas were tried as far as how the vocals would be split up and who would sing what part. An engineer working on the session leaked some of these ideas and that fake "solo edit" was created.

When Michael was looking for producers to work with prior to the HIStory recording sessions beginning, Janet suggested that he work with Jam & Lewis, and so the 4 of them went into the studio together. Here's why he did this:

1. The PR buzz of a true Michael and Janet duet was too good to pass up.

Remember, by this point Michael's image had been tainted by the 1993 child abuse allegations, and Janet was a global superstar at the peak of her career, having signed a $50 million deal with Virgin Records in 1991, and selling 20 million copies of her 1993 album "janet" which had 4 top ten singles and won a grammy. Of course, in 1993 she also starred in "Poetic Justice" and did that iconic cover shoot for Rolling Stone magazine.

Janet had proven herself by this point to where a collaboration would be of mutual benefit, which is something that wouldn't be true of any other Jackson sibling. Michael was always very much aware of his family wanting to ride his coattails, but of course it was obvious that that was not the case with Janet.

2. Michael had wanted to work with Jam & Lewis for a while, but had some reservations (which I'll go into in a minute). If he had began to work with Jam & Lewis without Janet being involved, it would look like he was riding her coattails given that she had been working exclusively with Jam & Lewis since 1986 and it was that musical partnership that made her a superstar. Michael was very impressed with the sound that Janet, Jam, and Lewis created on her albums "Control", "Rhythm Nation" and "janet.". In fact, I personally believe that Janet's song "State Of The World" from the Rhythm Nation album (1989) directly inspired Michael's "Why You Wanna Trip On Me?" from 1991's "Dangerous".

But anyway, I'm digressing a little.

So, the question that immediately springs to mind is, if Michael had been a fan of Jam & Lewis's production since 1986, why did it take him until 1995 to work with them? Well, the first reason is what I stated before - he didn't want to look like he was jumping on Janet's bandwagon. But there is a deeper reason, and it's down to a deep jealousy that was present within Michael from 1978 right up until his death just a few months ago.

So what was this jealousy about? Well, more accurately, the question is who. And the answer, is Prince. Allow me to explain.

There was barely a single artist or musician that was active in the 1980's that was not equally impressed and jealous of Prince. Prince was the single most creative force that drove the music of that decade and continues to dominate the landscape of pop music today (who do you think inspires The Neptunes, Timbaland, et al more than anyone?).

Everyone sang his praises, from the critics, to the public, to every artist you can think, black and white.

Prince's own music, the music he wrote for other artists, and the hundreds of artists attempting to emulate him dominated the charts for the entire decade. and even though Michael was the "Golden Child" so to speak, even he couldn't escape from it. Quincy Jones admitted the synth sounds on "Thriller" were inspired from the sound of Prince's "1999" album.

Even at the Jackson HQ, Prince was the most played artist. Latoya and Janet were in love with him and would listen to "Controversy" and "1999" every day. Latoya even covered Prince's "Private Joy" herself. Both black and white artists, new and established artists were covering Prince's songs and having hits with them, for example Chaka Khan's cover of "I Feel For You", Cyndi Lauper's cover of "When You Were Mine", there's plenty more. And of course, Prince dominated the charts with his own hits and songs he wrote specifically for other artists. There is not a single artist in history that has blitzed the music industry and changed it the way Prince did.

What's worth keeping in mind is that Prince's signing to Warner Brothers in 1978 was unprecedented. This guy played every instrument you can think of and produced his own material since day 1, which was literally unheard of at that time. What takes your average creative musician a few days plus added engineers and session musicians, Prince will do on his own in a few hours.

Of course, Michael always saw himself as the top dog. But although he was talented, the biggest selling artist and a commercial powerhouse the likes of which the world has never seen, it always ate him up inside that he was not the one pushing the boundaries musically. He was not the one defining the sound. He was not the one that every artist was trying to emulate, musically.

This jealousy and feeling of inadequacy led to Michael trying to get the upper hand on Prince in any way he could, but he very rarely succeeded. The reason for this is that Michael was the instigator of the rivalry, and Prince never cared one bit. He understood the situation and wasn't interested in the PR or Michael trying to "one-up" him all the time, so Michael's efforts on that front were fruitless.

Here's two examples of that:

1. We Are The World:

To me, this is one of the lamest, cheesiest things Michael ever did. I can't stand it. As much as I love MJ, I can't listen to the song. I think I've only ever listened to it a handful of times. Anyway, as you know, every major artist was invited to be a part of this project which was co-ordinated by Quincy, Michael, and Lionel. In my opinion, it was nothing more than an ego boost for Michael. All these legendary artists doing something, with him at the helm.

Prince saw through it and refused to be part of the project. The media began to attack him and call him selfish, so after the session he did offer to play a guitar part on the song but was told it wasn't necessary. Of course, calling him selfish was wrong. Prince had done, and continues to do charity work. Feeling that the cause did deserve his support - he composed and wrote a song "4 The Tears In Your Eyes" for the "USA for Africa" album itself, the album that "We Are The World" was part of. A much better song than "We Are The World", I might add.

To me, Michael used "We Are The World" as an opportunity to show off himself as being "on a higher level" to every other commercially successful artist, by being the one directing the session. Prince was not going to fall for this.

So, having failed to one-up Prince in 1985, he tries again in 1987:

2. Bad

Quincy and MJ wrote "Bad" specifically to try and get Prince to duet with Michael on it. Michael, Quincy and Michael's manager Frank Dileo kept feeding bullshit rivalry stories to the media in the hope that Prince would agree to the duet, and the PR buzz from this happening would just be intense. The two biggest stars of the decade, who people believed had an intense rivalry, working together, would have been the biggest event. But again, this was Michael trying to pull Prince into "his thing" to make him feel like he was the one in control. Again, Prince wouldn't fall for it. Prince has always been about the music, and not the PR. So, after declining the invitation of a duet, Prince (knowing that this really wasn't about music, although Michael and Quincy tried to claim it was), offered a song to Michael to record for the "Bad" album. This was a song that Prince had written called "Wouldn't You Love to Love Me". Of course, Michael's ego wouldn't allow him to sing a song that Prince had written.

So how does this all relate to Jam, Lewis and Janet? Simple.

In 1980, Prince realised that he was simply writing and recording more music than it was possible to release. Also, he was cultivating a crossover image as an artist then blended r&b with pop and rock, but he still wanted to create harder funk music as well. To circumvent this, he began to cultivate "protege" acts, something that has has continued to do for his entire career.

The very first of these acts contained some of the most talented musicians from Prince's home of Minneapolis, people that he had grown up with. This band was called The Time.

Prince envisioned that Alexander O' Neal (who would go on to be a successful singer in his own right) would be the singer, but at the first meeting to discuss the project, it was evident that Alex and Prince would not get along. So, Morris Day, originally envisioned as the drummer of the band, became the lead vocalist.

It was highly ironic that the members of The Time were such incredible musicians - because on their albums, Prince more or less played and sang every note, then Morris copied his vocals to sing the leads.

Of course, they had to be great musicians to be able to play all the material live. The Time would go on to have a whole heap of hits (including Get It Up (later covered by TLC), Cool (later covered by Snoop), 777-9311 (heavily sampled and chorus used by Tupac), Jungle Love, and many more) without Prince being credited for any of it (he wanted to do it anonymously, and denied any involvement, despite his backing vocals being clearly evident lol, and the production style clearly being the "Minneapolis Sound" that Prince had created)

The albums were said to have been produced by "Jamie Starr", and despite media reporting that this was Prince, he went to great lengths to deny it.

Anyway, after the second album by The Time - (What Time Is It?) - the group's very talented keyboard player and bass guitarist were itching for some creative involvement.

They used their growing fame as members of The Time to score their own record deal as producers, and used Prince's "Minneapolis Sound", adding their own styles to produce other acts, the first being a band called The SOS Band, who's first hit with this duo producing them was a song you may know, called "Just Be Good To Me" (pretty sure 'Pac sampled this at some point as well).

On their way back to a Time gig after a recording session with the SOS Band, they were late for the gig due to a snowstorm, and Prince fired them. Guessed who these two are yet?

The keyboardist - James "Jimmy Jam" Harris III.
The bass player - Terry Lewis.

Two years later, their label introduced them to Janet Jackson, and the rest is history. For the record, the first two Janet/Jam&Lewis albums - "Control" and "Rhythm Nation" are PURE Minneapolis sound, so much so that Prince once jammed on the groove to Janet's "What Have Yo u Done For Me Lately" at a gig, then jokingly said to the crowd - "Who wrote that?"

So there you have it.

Michael was so jealous of Prince that he would not even work with Jam & Lewis for years because Prince had given them their shot and they'd shot to success by utilizing Prince's sound.

What I find the most unfortunate is that Michael was never able to let it go.

It's not coincidence that Michael wanted to do an O2 residency after Prince did 21 sold out shows at the O2 in 2007 (which I went to 5 of, and even met him briefly - best day ever)

Here's a story from Kenny Ortega, the director of the "This Is It" concerts.

Supposedly Michael showed up late for a rehearsal one day looking very tired. Kenny asked him what was up, and Michael explained that he was up till 5am working on new music because he had felt inspiration from a "higher power", and when you feel that inspiration you have to act on it.

Kenny then said something along the lines of "Michael, can you make a pact with your higher power to hold all these ideas until after we're done with the shows?"

Michael's reply? "No. Then he might give them to Prince."

I was shocked when I read this. I just can't believe that he was never able to let this go.

Supposedly, they actually got along in person though, somewhat. There's stories that have come out about MJ going to Paisley Park (Prince's home/recording complex in Minneapolis) and shooting hoops there with Prince.

Also word has it that Prince is going to start playing "Don't Stop Til You Get Enough" in his live sets, which would be very cool. I don't have any way of verifying that rumor yet though.

Anyway, class of funk 101 is over! lol


Never knew about that. See? Thats why I'm asking you so many questions :D Was that diss track released?
Yes, "Word To The Badd!" was released, although some of the more inflammatory lyrics from the original version were removed. Jermaine and Michael did not talk for a few years after this.
 

Casey

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#26
Well, I just heard the "This Is It" song. 45 seconds of it, anyway. Ahead of the full premiere at midnight tonight.

Sounds exactly as I thought it would. Still, I'll reserve final judgement for the full version.
 

Kobe

Well-Known Member
#28
^You're some sort of musical God.
Fuck, you know your shit.
I know, this is the stuff you don't read on music magazines.

Casey. That's a lot of interesting information that I'm gonna carry with me for a long time. I've never listened to a full Prince LP before but, now you've made want to know more about his music. Maybe you could list for me the highly rated LP's that I should give a listen. Last time I checked he had a TON of LP's including a 3 disc set. The amount of artists he has inspired is certainly phenomenal. As you mentioned, I had noted 2pac's own inspiration from Prince. From the way he spoke about him, to the sampling of Prince related material

777-9311 = Whats your phone number (heavily sampled is an under-statement)

Just be good to me = Heavy in the game

Amazing how Jam & Lewis came to be, they have certainly set their legacy in the industry. I don't listen to a lot of Alexander O'neal but his song 'criticize' certainly ranks up there as one of my favorite songs of all time. I love the production and the vocal arrangement.

The story behind the jealousy just give rise to so many more questions. I'm surprised Michael was that kind of character. I guess its all part of striving to be the best. Thanks a mil for the information.

I did listen to 'word to the badd!'. That's actually not a bad track. I think Jermaine hit an all time low when he made the reference about the skin color. I guess you need to hit people where it hurts the most just to get to them.
 

Kobe

Well-Known Member
#29
A lot of that footage was from the HIStory tour, which I saw myself, in London. I feel incredibly lucky to have seen Michael live. It was one of the best days of my life.
Please tell me more about this. Give me another 101 class when you get the time :)

The only DVD I have of Michael performing LIVE is the 'live in Bucharest'. I know it had some questionable video editing going on it, including added footage from other locations. Hell, its still so good to watch. Is it true that its the only official live performance ever released?
 

Casey

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#30
Ugh. Turns out, "This Is It" is nothing more than MJ's original demo for the song "I Never Heard" which he wrote for the singer Sa-Fire in 1991. Fuck Sony for misleading everyone. Unreleased, my ass.

Here's Sa-Fire's version.

[youtube]rCV1h40oS0o[/youtube]

With all the actual MJ stuff that nobody has heard, they give us something that's already been released? (albeit by another artist). Lame.
 

Casey

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#31
^You're some sort of musical God.
Fuck, you know your shit.
LOL. Thanks man.

I know, this is the stuff you don't read on music magazines.
Most so called music journalists are lazy motherfuckers who don't do an ounce of research on shit.

Casey. That's a lot of interesting information that I'm gonna carry with me for a long time. I've never listened to a full Prince LP before but, now you've made want to know more about his music. Maybe you could list for me the highly rated LP's that I should give a listen. Last time I checked he had a TON of LP's including a 3 disc set. The amount of artists he has inspired is certainly phenomenal.
Prince is one of the most prolific artists of all time. In his 30 year career he has released over 40 albums, he has thousands and thousands of unreleased songs, and has produced and written lots of songs for other artists - many of whom have had the most success of their career with songs that Prince wrote - for example, Sinead O' Connor had a hit with "Nothing Compares 2 U" which was written by Prince for a protege act of his called The Family, The Bangles had a hit with "Manic Monday", written by Prince, Stevie Nicks from Fleetwood Mac had a hit with "Stand Back" written by Prince, Phil Collins completely ripped off "1999" for his hit "Sussudio", Cyndi Lauper had a hit with her cover of "When You Were Mine"....there's so many examples!

The following Prince and Prince-written albums are absolutely essential.

Dirty Mind (1980)
Controversy (1981)
1999 (1982)
Purple Rain (1984)
Sign O' The Times (1987)
The Gold Experience (1995)

The Time - The Time (1981)
The Time - What Time Is It (1982)
Madhouse - 8
Madhouse - 16


There's a few others that I would consider essential but I don't want to overwhelm you straight away, lol.

As you mentioned, I had noted 2pac's own inspiration from Prince. From the way he spoke about him, to the sampling of Prince related material

777-9311 = Whats your phone number (heavily sampled is an under-statement)

Just be good to me = Heavy in the game
When you start getting into Jam & Lewis, and tracks like "Just Be Good To Me", that's a whole other can of fish that you're opening up. 'Pac was indeed a massive Prince fan, and I actually had a long conversation with Johnny J about it. Off the top of my head, here's what 'Pac sampled....

Thugz Get Lonely Too (original) samples Prince's If I Was Your Girlfriend (live version from Sign O' The Times concert movie)

Pac's Life (original) samples Prince's Pop Life

Is It Cool To Fuck (unreleased) samples The Time's Get It Up

To Live & Die In LA samples/interpolates Melis'a Morgan's cover version of Prince's Do Me Baby

Wussup With The Luv samples Prince's The Ballad of Dorothy Parker

Ghetto Gospel (original) samples Prince's Let's Go Crazy


Heartz Of Men samples Prince's Darling Nikki

I Get Around is credited as having a sample from Prince's The Ladder
. It doesn't contain a musical sample, but Pac raps the lyric "everybody's looking for the ladder" which the main line in the chorus of Prince's song.

and of course, as mentioned, 777-9311 is basically a hip-hop cover of The Time's Whatz Ya Phone #....which is easily one of my favorite songs Prince ever wrote.

Amazing how Jam & Lewis came to be, they have certainly set their legacy in the industry. I don't listen to a lot of Alexander O'neal but his song 'criticize' certainly ranks up there as one of my favorite songs of all time. I love the production and the vocal arrangement.
'Criticize' is a stone cold classic! Check out the Alexander O' Neal song "What Can I Say To Make You Love Me". Both that and "Criticize" come from the album Hearsay, which is one of my favorite soul albums of all time, and was produced by Jam & Lewis.

The story behind the jealousy just give rise to so many more questions. I'm surprised Michael was that kind of character. I guess its all part of striving to be the best. Thanks a mil for the information.
It's definately something that ran very deep. But Prince is the kind of artist that only comes along once in a thousand years. He's simply a musical genius up there with the likes of Mozart. contemporary R&B and pop music owes more to Prince than any other single artist. Hip-Hop as well, and the whole genre of music biographies. Eminem's "8 Mile" movie for example was a complete rip of "Purple Rain" but in a hip-hop context. People like The Neptunes and Timbaland have spent their entire careers trying to be Prince with their production sound.

Check this out, this is my favorite and funniest example.

First off, let's listen to The Neptunes produced groove for Britney Spears - "I'm A Slave 4 U".

[YOUTUBE]7usEhCXP5X4[/YOUTUBE]

Now let's listen to "Nasty Girl" by Vanity 6, a Prince protege group from 1982.

Music Video - Vanity - Nasty Girl | Free Music Videos - Watch Music Videos Online | Veoh

LOL, can you say complete rip?


I did listen to 'word to the badd!'. That's actually not a bad track. I think Jermaine hit an all time low when he made the reference about the skin color. I guess you need to hit people where it hurts the most just to get to them.

Yeah, agreed, that was a low blow. The lyrics to the original version were much worse though.
 

Casey

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#33
by the way, the songwriting sessions by Michael Jackson and Paul Anka that led to the creation of "I Never Heard"/"This Is It", also yielded another (superior) song which is one of my favorite unreleased MJ songs - "Love Never Felt So Good". Check it out.

[youtube]8Z6-7NDdvvE[/youtube]
 

Casey

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#35
casey, did michael jackson write all his lyrics? something ive been wonderin for awhile now
No, he didn't. But that doesn't take anything away from him because the songs he did write are amazing. He was a talented songwriter for sure.

As he progressed in his career, he began to write more and more of his songs. For example, on "Thriller" he only wrote 4 of the 9 songs - (Wanna Be Startin' Something, The Girl Is Mine, Beat It, Billie Jean)........but on "Bad" he wrote 9 of the 11 songs (he wrote everything on this album except for 'Just Good Friends' and 'Man In The Mirror').......of the 14 songs on "Dangerous" he has a writing credit on 12 of them.

I tend to prefer the songs he wrote himself. If I put together a top 20 list of my favorite songs, it would mostly be songs he wrote himself, with a couple of exceptions like "Man In The Mirror" and "I Want You Back".
 

Kobe

Well-Known Member
#36
Sinead O' Connor had a hit with "Nothing Compares 2 U" which was written by Prince for a protege act of his called The Family, The Bangles had a hit with "Manic Monday", written by Prince, Stevie Nicks from Fleetwood Mac had a hit with "Stand Back" written by Prince, Phil Collins completely ripped off "1999" for his hit "Sussudio", Cyndi Lauper had a hit with her cover of "When You Were Mine"....there's so many examples!

To Live & Die In LA samples/interpolates Melis'a Morgan's cover version of Prince's Do Me Baby

'Criticize' is a stone cold classic! Check out the Alexander O' Neal song "What Can I Say To Make You Love Me". Both that and "Criticize" come from the album Hearsay, which is one of my favorite soul albums of all time, and was produced by Jam & Lewis.

Now let's listen to "Nasty Girl" by Vanity 6, a Prince protege group from 1982.

LOL, can you say complete rip?
You know Casey, after all the song's you've listed, next time I hear someone say they aren't a fan of Prince, I'll have to laugh to myself about it.

I never knew Prince wrote the song for Sinead O'connor. Wasn't a favorite track of mine but man, that song was a huge hit. I like 'manic monday' as well. The other two songs, I'll hunt for them and give them a listen. As for 'sussudio', it never occured to me until you mentioned it.

'Do me baby' I listened to both version (hers and his) and man........those songs are so freaky!! I don't know man, nowadays songs about sex are so vulgar. 'Do me baby' is down right trashy but down right class at the same time (if that's even possible) I know what to play next time I'm entertaining a female friend. I had a bit of a hard time picking out the interpolation but I finally heard it after concentrating.

I've been told 'hearsay' is a good LP but, I've never got down to getting my own copy. I'll make sure I do so some time soon. By the way, I once remember a radio dj saying he was gonna play 'every married man's anthem' next. Guess what track he then played? Alexander Oneal's 'criticize'. That was straight up funny. I then found out later that it was a running joke across the borders :D

I actually liked Britney's I'm a 'slave for you', the beat is groovy. That's a straight up rip by 'the Neptunes' for sure. Thanks again for the info.
 

Casey

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#37
You know Casey, after all the song's you've listed, next time I hear someone say they aren't a fan of Prince, I'll have to laugh to myself about it.

I never knew Prince wrote the song for Sinead O'connor. Wasn't a favorite track of mine but man, that song was a huge hit. I like 'manic monday' as well. The other two songs, I'll hunt for them and give them a listen. As for 'sussudio', it never occured to me until you mentioned it.

'Do me baby' I listened to both version (hers and his) and man........those songs are so freaky!! I don't know man, nowadays songs about sex are so vulgar. 'Do me baby' is down right trashy but down right class at the same time (if that's even possible) I know what to play next time I'm entertaining a female friend. I had a bit of a hard time picking out the interpolation but I finally heard it after concentrating.

I've been told 'hearsay' is a good LP but, I've never got down to getting my own copy. I'll make sure I do so some time soon. By the way, I once remember a radio dj saying he was gonna play 'every married man's anthem' next. Guess what track he then played? Alexander Oneal's 'criticize'. That was straight up funny. I then found out later that it was a running joke across the borders :D

I actually liked Britney's I'm a 'slave for you', the beat is groovy. That's a straight up rip by 'the Neptunes' for sure. Thanks again for the info.
First off Kobe, let me direct your attention to this thread:
http://www.streethop.com/forum/dont-stop-music/222561-yall-want-real-music.html

Post your thoughts in there, after watching the whole video.

Regarding "Nothing Compares 2 U", he didn't write the song for Sinead. He wrote it for a protege band he had called "The Family". It wasn't even a single, just an album track. The single from The Family's album was an incredibly sick song called "The Screams Of Passion" which is worth tracking down.

Anyway, the song went relatively unnoticed. It was pretty lowkey so it's surprising Sinead even ever heard the song, but she did, she recorded her cover of it and the rest is history.

I don't care much for her version either. After she hit it big with the song, Prince would sometimes play it in his sets as a duet with a singer called Rosie Gaines who was part of Prince' band the New Power Generation in the early 90's. Theirs is the best version.

Another Prince album track that someone else made into a huge hit single with a cover version was the song "I Feel For You". This was an album track on Prince's second album in 1979. Chaka Khan went on to cover it a few years later and it became her biggest hit. She even had Stevie Wonder playing harmonica on it and Melle Mel rapping on it...

There was an insanely sick moment at the BET Awards either last year or the year before where Prince, Stevie and Chaka all performed the song live. It was so dope.

LOL at Do, Me Baby. If you can't get down with some female company with that jam, then you might as well give up. haha.

'Hearsay' is an incredibly sick album and worth tracking down for sure. One of my favorite 80's soul albums.

I like the Britney song too. I know Pharrell studies Prince's work in depth. When Prince was inducted to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, his introductory video had a bunch of famous artists singing his praises and Pharrell was one of them. He was absolutely gushing with his love for Prince and how much he's been inspired by him. I'd be the same way :)
 

Kobe

Well-Known Member
#39
This is it, muthafuckers!
It sure is :D

I'll be going to the cinema on Thursday to watch the movie. I wasn't able to go today because of school. Looking so forward to it.

Meanwhile I got my hands on the LP. To me, the song 'this is it' is as boring as a song can be. Was it meant to be part of his concert performances or was it just thrown in there?

We've heard all the songs before and, every M.J fan already has them but, here is what I noticed. The remastered music sounds so damn good! Its probably the only reason that makes you feel good about purchasing another hits compilation. I don't know what the process behind remastering is but man, when you bump the songs, they are the ultimate sound test for your stereo.

These are the songs that don't indicate that they were remastered.

- Wanna be starting something
- Human nature
- Thriller
- Beat it
- Billie Jean


There is notations about some songs being single versions and radio edits, I can't tell the difference when I listen to the LP versions. I hope Casey will come in here when time allows him to explain the differences.

As for the bonus disc, nothing too mind blowing on there for me but, it makes an interesting listen.
 

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