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Part One: This Is It – Michael Jackson, The Musician

November 2, 2009
by musiqology

Michael Jackson

 A Message From Dr. Guy Dr. Guthrie Ramsey Headshot color

With the unbelievable news that nova-star Michael Jackson had died of a cardiac arrest at the untimely age of fifty, a stunning array of issues from American music history exploded across the global media.  As a historian of African American music culture I spend more time than the average listener hashing over past black music cultures.  But like everyone else, my mind scrambled to understand the rambling impact of this sad information, very present, unavoidable.  As many apparently did, I found the whole thing surprisingly visceral.

Of course there were some basic lessons to take away from Michael’s passing. For one, we learned once again that the larger than life, the immensely talented, the rich, the inaccessible were, in fact, just like the rest of us: finite and mortal.  I can’t think of anything that represents the downside of accessibility as the results of one’s autopsy or a postmortem search of private belongings being made public.  And the visual image of Michael Jackson, the charismatic dancing machine, on a gurney transport, unceremoniously covered head to toe with a matter-of-fact white sheet, was in a word, surreal.

A constant stream of intense media coverage amplified the shock of it all with a coterie of informants answering the same questions ad naseum together with the requisite up-to-the-mili-second speculation after speculation. We heard it all, apparently, because news directors and the advertisers that pay them thought we demanded to know it all.  Without Michael able to run interference the public could finally, it seems, explore its curiosities unfettered, indeed, satisfy this intense interest in his mystery that had been hugely orchestrated by he himself.  And it all surfaced with a dizzying force that only a 24/7 news cycle could generate.  Drugs, money, sex, cosmetic surgery, baby-mama-drama, baby-surrogate-drama, stardom, and fandom formed a cocktail of tantalizing issues worthy of a summer Hollywood blockbuster. But this was real life, and all of the alphabets—CNN, NBC, ABC, CBS, BET—worked overtime as diligent publicists for the saddest show on earth.  I suppose Michael Jackson, the King of Pop deserved as much.

Yet in the midst of the mad scramble for all the details of Michael’s demise we heard the music.  Yes, the music.  His music.  Michael’s music framed the commercial breaks of newscasts, it was downloaded and listened to with an unprecedented intensity, it was played constantly in public spaces, and it even poured from the most pre-canned, predictable radio formats (who knew that these “corporations of sound” had an ounce of spontaneity and variety in them? Goes to show you they can do better.)   Hearing all of the various strains and stages of Michael prompted me set aside all of the controversy and to think musically about his artistic output, a task that is always an easier exercise once a musician’s body of work becomes a finite and discreet entity.

Hopefully as the months and years past, they’ll be as much rumination about MJ’s body of creative work as there is about the more prurient aspects of his legacy. Not that the reception history of this music can (or should) be easily divorced from its context, its life as a function of the pop music industry, one in which the creation and dissemination of artistic production involves a well-oiled machine that sells “image” (good and otherwise) as well as the song.   But we can, I think, productively consider what we perceive as his musicianship, his work as a singer, songwriter, entertainer, dancer, and producer.

Michael Jackson – Man In the Mirror from “Moonwalker”

….To Be Continued with Part Two: This Is It – Michael Jackson, From the Beginnings to the End

Dr. Guy Ramsey

 

One Comment leave one →
  1. Darius Witherspoon permalink
    December 31, 2009 3:09 am

    I certainly agree. Michael Jackson, as the musician, is much more than an icon, so to speak. All the publicity and gossip seemed to overshadow the appreciation of the quality of his music. When we get a hold to the latest gossip, we tend to jump on the bandwagon, taking our focus away from the appreciation of his music. A lot of celebrities possess “hidden demons” of some sort, or “skeletons in the closet,” ranging from infidelity to double lifestyles, the part no one sees. Heck, nobody’s perfect! MJ is flesh and blood, like all of us. Despite all the negative publicity, the brotha’s got talent. He was a hardworking musician, and most definitely a tough act to follow. We never miss the water until the well runs dry. We lost a legend much too soon. A lot of questions remained unanswered, but that’s not important to me. Whatever publicists say of his alleged lifestyle has no effect on my appreciation for his music. The signature dance moves, the voice, everything about his music was tight, on point. What sets him apart from most is the level of excellence and perfection in his music. To witness the evolution of his music from Motown to present is awesome! I can’t pass judgment on him – I never walked in his shoes – and I don’t wish to, either. I’m sure he’s been through more emotional turmoil than most people can handle. The real picture is his music, his voice, the choreography, the creativity! You can feel the emotion in his performances. Despite the ongoing controversies in his life, he always manages to deliver in a very big way!!! You gotta love him!!!

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