![]() and the Australian ARIA charts, giving Jackson his first number 1 single on the Billboard Hot 100 as a solo artist. The album's title track was a commercial success on the music charts, topping both the U.S. In the same year, he released another album, Ben, which peaked at number five on the Billboard Pop Albums Chart and was certified silver by the British Phonographic Industry. It peaked at number 14 on the Billboard Pop Albums Chart and was certified Gold by the RIAA. In 1972, Jackson released his debut studio album Got to Be There through Motown Records, while still part of The Jackson 5. According to the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), Jackson has sold 89 million certified albums in the United States, making him the sixth top-selling album artist in the country. ![]() Jackson is globally recognized as one of the biggest selling music artists in history with over 400 million records sold. Jackson made his debut at the age of five with the Jackson 5 (later known as The Jacksons), who were prominent performers during the 1970s. MICHAEL JACKSON BAD ALBUM 25TH ANNIVERSARY FULLBut luckily he quickly brings it all back on course again and take the film into an emotional and uplifting climax as there is full analysis of how song The Man In The Mirror was created leading to an enthralling live performance by Michael Jackson while on tour in London.American singer Michael Jackson released 10 studio albums, three soundtrack albums, one live album, 39 compilation albums, two posthumous albums, 10 video albums and eight remix albums. If Lee makes one mis-step, it is a brief section of ‘where were you when he died’ interviews, leading – naturally – to tears and sadness, which brings the film to a momentary halt and slightly punctures the sheer warmth that permeates Bad 25. ![]() Cheryl Crow talks about her time as back-up singing on the Bad world tour Stevie Wonder admits his duet with Jackson, Just Good Friends, was the worst track on the album, and Nelson George offers intelligent analysis of how Jackson was perceived at the time the album was being made, and what Jackson was trying to achieve. The filming process was exhaustively filmed which offers a great insight to the style of the film and the choreography, with a contemporary interview with Scorsese allowing him to look again and reminisce about his work with Jackson.īad 25 is brimming with facts that fans will love, and on the whole the interviews are illuminating. MICHAEL JACKSON BAD ALBUM 25TH ANNIVERSARY PLUSPlus the format has to allow for plenty of musical footage and behind-the-scenes material.Īfter dwelling on Michael Jackson’s determination to create an album that would be a rival to his earlier hit Thriller, Spike Lee arranges the film in a fairly linear order and uses the running order of the tracks to allow examination of the creative process involved in composition, recording, presentation and filmed accompaniment.įirst up is Bad itself, with special attention paid to the short film directed by Martin Scorsese from a script by Richard Price (and which features a memorable early role for Wesley Snipes). And while there is a niggling early concern that there might be just too many talking heads offering insight, in fact the running time allows the audience to get to know and appreciate the various characters. Running more than two hours – and set to screen in the US on ABC television later this year – it is certainly a film that packs in a lot of material. Lee gets some great access to those who knew Michael Jackson well and who worked closely with him – though noticeably there is no new interview with music producer Quincy Jones, who produced Bad with Jackson, instead the film relies on archival material – and given that this is a Spike Lee film, it its especially appropriate that there is special focus on the ‘short films’ (don’t call them pop videos) that were made to accompany several of the tracks. Spike Lee’s Bad 25, which received a special screening at the Venice Film Festival where Lee received the Jaeger-LeCoultre Glory to the Filmmaker Award, is certainly one for fans – especially those who embrace Kenny Ortega’s 2009 documentary This Is It in vast numbers, but it is more than a tribute film – it is a gripping examination of a great (and perhaps vastly misunderstood) talent. As a snapshot of a time, a talent and an album, Spike Lee’s absorbing, moving and resolutely toe-tapping documentary about the music and impact of Michael Jackson’s album Bad, which celebrates its 25 th anniversary this year, is a wonderfully complex look into the creative genius of Jackson, and as importantly brings into focus the supremely talented individuals who worked with him to bring his music to life.īad 25 is brimming with facts that fans will love, and on the whole the interviews are illuminating.
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