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Death of THE Legend: Michael Jackson

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To truly fathom the loss of today, you have to be one of three things:

40 years or older.

A dancer or aspire to be one

A singer/songwriter or aspire to be one

Michael Jackson wasn't "another" cross over, hip hop, R&B, Pop, or bubble gum artist......he was all of that, yet he was none of it. He was the originator of most of it.

Michael along with his brothers virtually invented "bubble gum" pop. With all other acts to follow, from New Edition to NSync, they were ALL fashioned after the Jackson 5.

Michael broke the mold for "Black" entertainers. Entertainers whose music had to be marred in the sound of the Temptations and Smokey Robinson, or they had to be HUGE like the production of Kool & The Gang or the Commodores. Stevie Wonder, Al Green, Teddy Pendergrass, even Marvin Gay as great as they were and are could never grab the audience as Michael did because he made it OK for Whites, Blacks, Hispanics, Asians to all feel good about listening to the same music.

Michael took the sage advise of his mentor Quincy Jones, and grabbed onto the world of theater, dance, and held the hand of video as they walked together into MTV's infancy, and pushed it beyond the walls of metal and punk video. Before Michael Jackson there were no "Black" videos on MTV, there was no BET, or VH1. Michael forced MTV to change their perception of what music video was. He led the way for other artist and the need for video outside of MTV. Hip Hop, Popping, Locking, break dancing, were all thrust into the spotlight because Michael included them in his videos, and his stage shows.

Michael Jackson and his music brought my generation into and out of our adolescent years. His music wasn't "Black" and it wasn't "White", it was plaid, full of color and life. Those of us who grew up in the military, traveling all over the world his music was everywhere. It was a common bond we all shared and related to, and as such we didn't feel as alone. At the same time many of us lived in larger cities, myself in San Diego again due to being a military bratt. But ANYONE who lived in a larger city anywhere felt the same thing. People from all areas were able to come together for no other reason than the Music and dancing of Michael Jackson. Michael made it OK for kids, teenagers, tweeners, and even young adults to like one another regardless of your color or where you were from. We emulated his clothes, his dance moves and our parents didn't have a problem with it either, because they liked it too.

As an artist grows so does their music, and Michael was no different. He left behind the American idea of what "Pop" music was and made sure he included the world in his music. His music and remixes of it play right now in every club you go to.

Once in a generation a figure comes along that holds that kind of spell over an audience....Hank Williams, Sr., Buddy Holly, Elvis Presley, Frank Sinatra. They grew beyond entertainment, and created culture around themselves. Michael Jackson was one of these, ICON does not begin to describe his impact.

This isn't about the eccentricity or the tragedy his life spiraled into. This is about remembering a great entertainer, artist, and a man who brought so many people in the world together through his music.

I saw my mother crying on the day Elvis died, and was perplexed to the reason.

I don't have that problem anymore, I understand today.....

Rest In Peace.

Semper Fi






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47.
    Posted by more_cowbell . June 29, 2009
Recon-

Did you aspire to be a dancer?

Just curious...

46.
    Posted by cattailky June 29, 2009
He was a musical genuis. I will give you that. However, he turned into a complete freak. I, for one, am sooooo tired of all the coverage.

45.
    Posted by FrankfortresidentKY June 29, 2009
No, Piano Man, why would i move because of your statements, stupid....I am just saying, you don't know what his situation with God was. Let the negative stuff go, a human is gone, period. He was a very good person. I know the Bible and we don't know the whole story about MJ, just what the papers say...that is not fair. We don't know that MJ did not accept God. He was involved in several aspects of religion. Let the child molesting go, it gets old...Get your act together buddy

44.
    Posted by Tamed-Shrew June 28, 2009
"If you two are girls, are you going to kiss now?

If not.......nevermind."

Watch out, Recon. You might get louie excited. ;)

43.
    Posted by pianoman1 June 28, 2009
I think it's time you move out of Frankfort, tanyar.stevens. You're already turning my statement out of context. I was not judging Michael Jackson. All I was stating was IF he was not "right with God", he will certainly not be in Heaven. The Bible clearly states that you must ask forgiveness and accept Jesus Christ as your personal Savior (spiritually born again) to come and be with Him. ONLY God knows where Michael is right now. And, only God knows if he repented or not. Get your act together, friend.

42.
    Posted by Tamed-Shrew June 28, 2009
yiya - that wasn't a "knock to your race"; it was a poorly-worded response, that's all.
I can see how my statement, which perhaps wasn't clear and was based upon a quote I heard on TV from a black entertainer, is racially-charged. It wasn't meant to mean that MJ was only for the African-American community - I meant that the advances MJ made to both the music industry and the black community were special by providing inspiration to underprivileged minorities from suburban areas: they CAN make a an impact - a global impact - upon history.

You are right: we are one race, the human race. And it's great that we are in an age, now, where talent does take precedence over petty prejudices.

41.
    Posted by FrankfortresidentKY June 28, 2009
Wanted to say that I am impressed that Recon actually stated what I was thinking, death of a legend, an icon and history. Childhood would not have been the same without MJ's music....

40.
    Posted by FrankfortresidentKY June 28, 2009
Criminy - is this what we've come to - finding racism in every statement? The "black man's Elvis" statement was made as a retort to those who didn't understand why so many in the African-American community were so proud of him, even though he had personal problems.
YEP, cause if a white person has said something like that people would have gone off.

Watch a MJ video, his message is that everyone is the same. Saying something like, "he is a black man's Elvis" is stupid! He was Michael Jackson, that is all. You are right, he bridged a gap. unfortunately, the gap still exists with statements like this one. He had a rough time period to grow up in. We have all strived for equality; women, hispanics, blacks, whomever. Yet, it is not about a black man bridging a gap, it is about a kid from Gary IN, that believed he could "change the world" and he did. Color had nothing to do with it.

Piano Man-go somewhere else to defame the dead. Hope no one says bad things about you when you are gone. Why is it people are only remembered for the negative? By the way, he was acquitted of those charges and those "charges" do not make him any less of a human being. He was a gifted and talented artist and dancer. Let him rest in peace. We do not decide who goes to heaven or hell, God makes that determination. How do you know he was not at peace with God?

Louie, comments like that make me think you are a backwood redneck that has a problem with ANYTHING that is different. Elvis and MJ were totally different performers and that last comment you made, just completely stupid, childish and uneducated. Period.

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