The Top 500 Songs in Modern History…Song #138: Smooth Criminal by Michael Jackson (RS)

This list of songs is inspired by lists published by radio station KEXP-FM from Seattle in 2010, as well as the latest poll taken in 2021 by Rolling Stone Magazine. For the most part I will faithfully countdown from their lists, starting at Song #500 and going until I reach Song #1. When you see the song title listed as something like: Song #XXX (KEXP)….it means that I am working off of the official KEXP list. Song XXX (RS) means the song is coming from the Rolling Stone list. If I post the song title as being: Song #xxx (KTOM), it means I have gone rogue and am inserting a song choice from my own personal list of tunes I really like. In any case, you are going to get to hear a great song and learn the story behind it. Finally, just so everyone is aware, I am not a music critic nor a musician. I am a music fan and an armchair storyteller. Here is the story behind today’s song. Enjoy.

RS: The Top 500 Songs in Modern Music History.

Song #138: Smooth Criminal by Michael Jackson.

We do like to knock our heroes down to size, don’t we? The song, “Smooth Criminal” comes from an album by Michael Jackson called, “Bad”. “Bad” was the follow-up album to “Thriller” which was, in turn, the follow-up album to “Off the Wall”, which gave Michael Jackson an incredible run of highly successful albums during the 1980s. He was the undisputed “King of Pop”, selling a quarter of a Billion(!) copies of this trilogy during that time. Overall, for his career, Jackson has recorded album sales of over 400 million copies worldwide, making him one of the Top 3 highest selling artists of all-time, along with Elvis and The Beatles.

However, it was the time period between “Thriller” and “Bad” that Michael Jackson the superstar performer began to morph into Michael Jackson, the deeply flawed, tragic and, almost absurd figure that he became more greatly known as. During the writing of “Bad”, Jackson distanced himself from his family, as well as, from The Jehovah Witnesses organization, of which he had been a staunch ally for many years. It was, also, during this time period that he began a series of facial reconstructions and skin lightenings that changed his appearance drastically and caused much discussion in the media. It couldn’t have been easy to have been living his life at that time. For all of the ways that his life began spinning out of control, one of the ways he sought to regain his focus was by creating “Bad”. For this album, Jackson wrote a reported sixty songs which, in the end, were pared down to ten by producer, Quincy Jones. It was, also, a time of technological innovation for Jackson who, like many other creative artists, was discovering the power of digital recording techniques, as well as, digital/electronic instruments such as synthesizers which, in turn, caused the potential range of sounds available to him to expand exponentially.

“Bad” contained several hit songs such as the title track, “Bad”, “Man in the Mirror”, “Dirty Diana”, “Leave Me Alone”, “The Way You Make Me Feel” and “Smooth Criminal”. This album sold over fifteen million copies, making it one of the biggest selling albums of the entire decade of the 1980s. Yet, because it did not match the sales figures for the album that preceded it, “Thriller”, music critics point to “Bad” as the album that officially started Jackson’s descent into disrepute and irrelevancy. With the benefit of hindsight, those same critics laud, “Bad” today; stating that it showed an obvious progression and growth in Jackson’s songwrting and song construction. But, at the time, a media feeding frenzy, of sorts, was on-going and Michael Jackson’s reputation was closer to “freak” than to “phenom”. None-the-less, “Bad” was a good album and, from it, “Smooth Criminal” has emerged as the best song of the bunch.

“Smooth Criminal” was a song that upped the funk factor for a Michael Jackson recording. There is a strong bass line that thumps all the way through this song, which gives it such a forceful, rhythmic quality. The song is built around a scenario in which Jackson’s character comes across a woman named, “Annie” who has been attacked and injured by a “Smooth Criminal”. In the song, he repeatedly asks, “Annie, are you ok? Are you ok, Annie?” The inspiration for that part of the chorus comes from a very benign source….the resuscitation dolls used to teach CPR. Those dolls are nicknamed, “Annie” and those learning to give CPR properly are taught to say the words, “Annie are you ok?” between breaths or between chest compressions, as a way to time their movements. So, anyway, the techniques involved in learning to perform CPR became the chorus for “Smooth Criminal”.

One of the other factors that helped lift “Smooth Criminal” to near the top of Jackson’s musical canon is the dramatic dance move of his, where he (and his back up dancers) hold their position and then, lean forward at a forty-five degree angle which, for us, regular folk, is physically impossible to do. In the official music video for “Smooth Criminal”, Jackson and his dancers were held into position by cables and wires. On stage, during a live concert, Jackson was able to maintain his lean by way of weighted shoes that lock into clamps that were built into the stage, itself. Regardless of the engineering behind this dance move, seeing it performed in real time was always an impressive feat. An additional bit of trivia: Jackson set his song in the 1930s and dedicated it to legendary dancer, Fred Astaire. No matter how complicated his personal life became, Jackson remained unchallenged when it came to his choreography on stage. The man may have evolved into someone of questionable character but, one thing that never left him was his ability to dance.

Michael Jackson is exhibit #1 when it comes to having to separate the artist from the art, in order to give his career the credit it deserves. For the better part of a decade, the top of the musical mountain belonged to him. His song output during that time is unrivalled in the consistency of its’ creativity and dynamic musicality. “Smooth Criminal” is one of the final songs of his that was truly great. His legacy is undoubtedly complicated. But, for a while, the eyes of the world were upon him and, from a performer’s point of view, he didn’t disappoint. Here is the funked up, gravity-defying song, “Smooth Criminal” from the album, “Bad” by Michael Jackson. Enjoy.

The link to the video for the song, “Smooth Criminal” by Michael Jackson, can be found here.

The link to the official website for Michael Jackson, can be found here.

The link to the official website for Rolling Stone Magazine, can be found here.

The Top 500 Songs in Modern Music History…Song #37: Billie Jean by Michael Jackson (RS)

This list of songs is inspired by lists published by radio station KEXP-FM from Seattle in 2010, as well as the latest poll taken in 2021 by Rolling Stone Magazine. For the most part I will faithfully countdown from their lists, starting at Song #500 and going until I reach Song #1. When you see the song title listed as something like: Song #XXX (KEXP)….it means that I am working off of the official KEXP list. Song XXX (RS) means the song is coming from the Rolling Stone list. If I post the song title as being: Song #xxx (KTOM), it means I have gone rogue and am inserting a song choice from my own personal list of tunes I really like. In any case, you are going to get to hear a great song and learn the story behind it. Finally, just so everyone is aware, I am not a music critic nor a musician. I am a music fan and an armchair storyteller. Here is the story behind today’s song. Enjoy.

RS: The Top 500 Songs in Modern Music History.

Song #37: Billie Jean by Michael Jackson.

“Billie Jean” by Michael Jackson was the second single released from the album, “Thriller”. It raced to the #1 position on the charts and stayed there for several weeks. It was the second song from “Thriller” to hit that coveted #1 ranking and would, in turn, be followed by five more songs to reach the top. “Thriller” stands as one of the biggest selling albums of all-time and the song, “Billie Jean” certainly played a prominent role in helping to make that happen. The song, itself, sold several million copies and was trend-setting in more ways than just sales figures, as we shall all see below.

First of all, the song, “Billie Jean” was based on Jackson’s experience with groupies and fans who morphed into stalkers. When he was younger and a member of The Jackson 5, he made note of how often his older brothers would be served with paternity lawsuits; all claiming that the Jackson Brothers had engaged in sexual relationships that resulted in pregnancy and that financial compensation was required. According to Jackson, none of these lawsuits had any basis in reality and came to be seen as part of life for those in the spotlight, as they were. As Jackson grew older and became a solo artist, he started having his own issues with fans; including one woman who kept trying to show up at his home and who was always claiming that he was the father of her child. That one woman ended up being placed in a psychiatric facility; an experience that left Jackson shaken and, reportedly, was the beginning of his decision to become more reclusive in his own life.

Knowing some of the dodgy aspects of Jackson’s personal life, his defence against his own paternity suit is not the hill I wish to die on. For me, there was another, far more interesting and impactful aspect to the story behind this song and that is, how Jackson used the music video for “Billie Jean” to help break down the colour barrier on video channel, MTV. It seems hard for me to believe it but, when “Billie Jean” went into “heavy rotation” on MTV, it was the first time a black artist or band had ever been accorded that attention. But, the story doesn’t end there. It actually goes back a few months when Jackson had completed the famous music video of him dancing on a walkway where each stone would light up as he touched it with his feet. With the video in hand, MTV was approached and asked to play it in concert with the release of “Billie Jean” on the radio. MTV refused. At the time, MTV was programmed more like a radio station and was rock-oriented. With music videos being a relatively new phenomenon, MTV programmers were more focussed on acquiring rock videos which, at the time, were predominantly made by white performers. So, MTV told Jackson that his video wasn’t a “fit” for their playlists. Enraged, Michael Jackson and producer, Quincey Jones, threatened to launch their own lawsuits and, as well, to launch a boycott of MTV by Jackson and all other clients of Quincey Jones. So, “Billie Jean” was released to radio, without MTV support. The music channel did not air “Billie Jean” until had already reached #1 and had become such a sensation. Even then, they put Jackson of “medium rotation”, meaning that his video only got played, once and awhile, instead of frequently, like those in “heavy rotation”, which also meant more favourable time slots during prime viewing times. Eventually, the voices of the people were heard as MTV’s phone lines because jammed with requests for all things, Michael Jackson.

*There is a famous clip of MTV interviewing white singer, David Bowie who, to his credit, turns the tables on his interviewer and starts grilling him over why MTV was so reluctant to play the music of black performers. I will include that clip below.

The final noteworthy aspect of this song is when it was performed live on TV at the Motown 25th Anniversary TV special. This was the world famous moment when Michael Jackson donned his one glittery glove for the first time, wore his fedora and then, moonwalked across the stage. I remember watching this live on tv when it was first aired. As TV moments go, it was as thrilling and captivating as any entertainment moment I have ever seen. Obviously, based upon the reaction of millions of others from around the world, that moment when Michael Jackson moonwalked for the first time remains one of TV’s most iconic live images ever.

So, a song like “Billie Jean”….which Michael Jackson stated he knew was a hit from the first moment he wrote it…..ended up becoming much more than merely a song about contested paternity. It was a song that was boosted by being from the biggest album of them all and, in return, helped “Thriller” reach the lofty heights that it did. But, in addition, “Billie Jean” helped break down the colour barrier on the influential music channel, MTV. And as if that wasn’t enough, his live performance on the Motown tv special helped create an iconic, lasting image of himself that he was able to carry with him throughout the remainder of his career. Not bad for a song about a girl that was not his lover!

So, without further delay, here is the iconic live television reveal of “Billie Jean” by Michael Jackson. Enjoy.

The link to the video for the song, “Billie Jean” by Michael Jackson, as performed live on TV, can be found here.

The link to the video for the song, “Billie Jean” by Michael Jackson, as seen in the official video, can be found here.

The link to the official website for Michael Jackson, can be found here.

The link to the video for the David Bowie/MTV interview about the lack of black artists on their channel, can be found here.

The link to the official website for Rolling Stone Magazine, can be found here.

The Top 500 Songs in Modern Music History…Song #226: Thriller by Michael Jackson (KEXP)

This list of songs is inspired by lists published by radio station KEXP-FM from Seattle in 2010, as well as the latest poll taken in 2021 by Rolling Stone Magazine. For the most part I will faithfully countdown from their lists, starting at Song #500 and going until I reach Song #1. When you see the song title listed as something like: Song #XXX (KEXP)….it means that I am working off of the official KEXP list. Song XXX (RS) means the song is coming from the Rolling Stone list. If I post the song title as being: Song #xxx (KTOM), it means I have gone rogue and am inserting a song choice from my own personal list of tunes I really like. In any case, you are going to get to hear a great song and learn the story behind it. Finally, just so everyone is aware, I am not a music critic nor a musician. I am a music fan and an armchair storyteller. Here is the story behind today’s song. Enjoy.

KEXP: The Top 500 Songs in Modern Music History.

Song #226: Thriller by Michael Jackson.

I would be willing to go out on a limb and predict that “Thriller” by Michael Jackson is one song that everyone who reads this post, will know. “Thriller” was the seventh consecutive Top Ten release from the album of the same name. It saw Michael Jackson at the very top of his popularity. The album, “Thriller” still ranks as the biggest selling album the world has ever seen, with album sales of between 75-100 million worldwide. But, I think, if we were all being honest, it is not the song, “Thriller” that is so memorable but, instead, it is the video that accompanies the song that is what “Thriller” has become famous for. So, let’s spend a few minutes talking about the song, for sure but, in reality, we will be focussing on the ground-breaking video that has come to define “Thriller” in our minds.

If you examine any lists that rank Michael Jackson’s greatest hits, the song, “Thriller” usually struggles to make his own Top Ten of all time. It was a song that came into existence only after Jackson and his songwriting team had spent countless hours struggling to come up with a name for his upcoming album. Titles such as “Starlight” and “Midnight Man” were bandied about but, eventually, when the word, “Thriller” was uttered aloud, everyone agreed that it would be the title. With the title nailed down, it was always the plan that there would be a title track of the same name so, work began on the song, “Thriller”. At first, there was some debate as to what the subject matter of the song, “Thriller” would be. This was because, outside of “Werewolves of London” by Warren Zevon, there aren’t a lot of Pop songs that have monsters as their subject matter. But Jackson, having seen the movie, “Werewolves of London”, directed by John Landis, was determined to have his own werewolf song and thus, the howls of wolves and the spoken word ending by veteran Hollywood Horror legend, Vincent Price, came to be. The song is built upon a funkified bass track that gives the song a solid foundation. Michael supplies the rest of the song’s ingredients with his vocal inflections and soulful singing style. The song, “Thriller” was the seventh, and final, single to come from the album, “Thriller”. It was released almost a full calendar year after the first single dropped.

But, any discussion of the song, “Thriller” really begins and ends with the video. As mentioned earlier, Michael Jackson was at the height of his fame as the hits poured out of that album. To have observed Michael Jackson during the mid-1980s was to watch one of the world’s richest men indulge his fantasies; everything from the creation of the theme park at his “Neverland Ranch”, to how he came to make of one the most memorable music videos of all time. What Michael wanted, Michael tended to get so, when the song, “Thriller” was first written, it was always Jackson’s intention to shoot a short-form movie to go with the song. Michael Jackson was heavily influenced by the movie, “Werewolves of London” and was particularly impressed with the scenes in which the main character transformed from a human into a werewolf on screen. So, without allowing any expense to be spared, Jackson hired John Landis to direct his video for “Thriller”. In addition, he hired special effects master, Rick Baker (who won an Academy Award for Best Make-up and Visual Effects” for “Werewolves of London”) to do the work of turning Jackson into a werewolf on screen, too. It was Jackson who came up with the idea that there would be a dancing zombie scene. It was, also, the first time that he donned his now, iconic, red leather jacket on screen, too. When the video was completed, it ran at almost 14 minutes so, in order to make it playable on stations such as MTV, a shorter, five-minute version was created out of the longer form film. In order to finance such an endeavour, Jackson was clever enough of a business person to have thought ahead and had arranged for a “Behind the scenes”-style documentary to have been shot as the actual video was being made. This documentary was then, packaged as a made-for-tv event that saw the long-form film make its world wide debut. As a piece of Art, the “Thriller” video stands alone, in terms of the depth of the story that it tells and in how it uses the song to augment the action on screen. The video for “Thriller” is the top-selling music video of all-time (at a time when consumers had to actually go to a store and purchase their new VHS tape of the song in order to watch it at home). The woman in the video, Ola Ray, was a Playboy Playmate of the month, at the time of the film’s release. Her specific background was an intentional marketing ploy aimed at making Jackson appear more manly in terms of his public image. Not too sure if her inclusion helped Jackson, in that regard but, what do I know?

Well, I do know this……”Thriller”, the song, will be played and the video will be shown in, literally, tens of thousands of schools all over the world whenever Halloween approaches. “Thriller”, the song and the video, will live on forever because of their association to Halloween and the way Michael Jackson was able to stylize monsters and zombies. He made it cool to be a ghoul, I guess one could say.

So, get your popcorn ready because here is one of the most well-recognized songs/videos ever made. Ladies and gentlemen, I present Michael Jackson and a cast of thousands with, “Thriller”. Enjoy.

The link to the video for the song, “Thriller” by Michael Jackson, can be seen here.

The link to the official website for Michael Jackson, can be seen here.

Thanks, as always, to KEXP, for playing the most memorable music of all-time. The link to their wonderful website can be found here.

The Top 500 Songs in Modern Music History: Song #439…Beat It by Michael Jackson (RS)

This list of songs is inspired by lists published by radio station KEXP-FM from Seattle in 2010, as well as the latest poll taken in 2021 by Rolling Stone Magazine. For the most part I will faithfully countdown from their lists, starting at Song #500 and going until I reach Song #1. When you see the song title listed as something like: Song #XXX (KEXP)….it means that I am working off of the official KEXP list. Song XXX (RS) means the song is coming from the Rolling Stone list. If I post the song title as being: Song #xxx (KTOM), it means I have gone rogue and am inserting a song choice from my own personal list of tunes I really like. In any case, you are going to get to hear a great song and learn the story behind it. Finally, just so everyone is aware, I am not a music critic nor a musician. I am a music fan and an armchair storyteller. Here is the story behind today’s song. Enjoy.

RS: The Top 500 Songs in Modern Music History.

Song #439: Beat it by Michael Jackson.

He was known as The King of Pop. He had over 350 million album sales over the course of his career. His album Thriller is the biggest selling album of all time in any genre. His 13 #1-ranked singles place him first of all time. He is rightly credited with helping to legitimize music videos as performance tools and helped solidify MTV as an entity when it was first launched. Michael Jackson transcended all racial boundaries when it came to the universal appeal of his music. It is fair to say that, for awhile in the 1980s, he was the single-most electrifying performer on the planet!

“Beat it” was one of those 13 #1-ranked hits for Michael Jackson. It came from his album Thriller which also included the title track, “Billie Jean”, “Wanna Be Startin’ Something”, “Human Nature” and “The Girl is Mine”. Prior to the release of “Beat It”, Michael Jackson was more known for songs that lay in the Pop, Funk or R&B genres. His producer, Quincy Jones thought it would be prudent for Jackson to expand his repertoire and try something with a little more of a Rock edge to it. Therefore, he requested the help of another child musical prodigy, Eddie Van Halen. Van Halen performed the solo free of charge for Jackson. Legend has it that Van Halen’s initial attempt at the solo was so fierce that one of the studio speakers caught fire! Over time, Van Halen’s guitar solo was edited down so as not to overpower Jackson’s vocals nor his personality. Whatever the studio magic was that they used, it worked! “Beat It” was a #1 hit for three consecutive weeks and was awarded the 1984 Grammy for Song of the Year.

“Beat it” happened at a time when Michael Jackson was at the height of his fame. As we all know, his career and his life did not hold up under the pressure that comes from living in the fish-eye lens, as RUSH would say. One can only imagine how unreal an existence it must have been to have been Michael Jackson at that time. But, whatever the case, his descent into the bizarro world of endless facial reconstruction surgeries, the fairyland world of The Neverland Ranch and, of course, the criminal charges of child molestation levelled against Jackson, effectively sullied his legacy. We are definitely at the point where, in order to appreciate the Art, we must separate it from the artist. As it turns out, a music stage was Jackson’s safest place. His songs, his showmanship and his ability to create magical moments on stage were second to none. I was actually watching TV the night he moonwalked for the first time. That remains one of the most amazing TV experiences I have ever had…..and I was just a skinny, pimply-faced white boy, at the time! But, I knew I was witnessing history. It seemed almost miraculous. It was dancing of a breathtaking kind. For that, I am able to appreciate Jackson, the performer. He was an innovator, a showman of unprecedented skill and a dancer with magnificent flair and daring. In his heyday, he was simply as good as they came. So, without further delay, here is, “Beat It” from the best selling album of all time Thriller. Enjoy.

The link for the music video to Beat It by Michael Jackson can be found here. ***The lyrics version can be found here.

There is an official Michael Jackson website that can be accessed by clicking on the link here.

Thanks for Rolling Stone Magazine for helping to inspire the writing of this post. A link to their website can be found here.

***As always, all original content contained within this post remains the sole property of the author. No portion of this post shall be reblogged, copied or shared in any manner without the express written consent of the author. ©2021 http://www.tommacinneswriter.com