Michael Jackson: Singer, Songwriter, American Inventor

Bubs

Proud Member
Joined
Jan 19, 2012
Messages
7,856
Points
0
Michael Jackson: Singer, Songwriter, American Inventor

The King of Pop invented more than just amazing dance moves
By Jimmy Stamp


Here's the scene: Michael Jackson, dressed in white suit and hat like a gangster guardian angel walks into a bar full of thugs, gamblers, and flappers, the music stops and everyone stares at him; he reaches for a gun - no, it's just a quarter, which he flips all the way across room where it slides perfectly into a jukebox coin slot. The song starts with a synthesized crash: As he came into the window / it was the sound of a crescendo....You've been hit by a Smooth Criminal. Dancing, fighting, dramatic pauses, a weird slow-motion interlude, and more dancing and fighting follow. Then it happens, at about the 7:10 mark above, Michael gives a knowing smile, tilts his hat, and leans. He leans an amazing, impossible lean. It seems so simple but it's just. so. cool.

When a 7-year old me saw it for the first time on screen, it was surely the coolest thing I had ever seen (which until that point was a teenage werewolf playing air guitar and surfing on top of a van). Smooth Criminal might still be the coolest thing I've ever seen. It's cooler than Miles Davis giving birth to cool in an igloo cool. It's cool, man. There's no other word for it.

Oh wait, there might be actually - how about "inventive"?

michael-jackson-shoe-patent-1.jpg.800x0_q85_crop.jpg


US Patent 5255452 A: "Method and means for creating anti-gravity illusion"

In the "Smooth Criminal' video, the centerpiece of the wonderfully bizarre film Moonwalker (1988), the impossible lean was accomplished with wires, but to recreate the effect during live performances, Jackson worked with two designers to develop a "method and means for creating [an] anti-gravity illusion." This signature move (among many others) was made possible by a patent for a shoe allowing the “wearer to lean forwardly beyond his center of gravity.” Though it looks like a regular loafer when worn with long pants, the shoe is actually strapped around the ankle to secure it to the dancer's foot - but the real secret is in the heal, which conceals a slot that can lock into a small post raised on stage. Dancers click their heels into place at just the right time and–-boom–-you've been hit by a smooth criminal. It's a brief moment, but its one of the most iconic images of Michael Jackson's career and American pop culture.


michael-jackson-shoe-patent-2.jpg.800x0_q85_crop.jpg


US Patent 5255452 A: "Method and means for creating anti-gravity illusion"

Michael Jackson's patent, and more importantly, his signature is on display as part of a new exhibition at the National Archives in Washington, D.C. "Making Their Mark: Stories Through Signatures," invites visitors to examine the signatures on historic documents and imagine the moment they were signed, moments that have shaped America's history and defined its culture. No one has a signature that is exactly the same every time its written, but a signature's variability is part of what reveals it to be authentic; each signature is a unique product of the time and place it was written. Other notable signatories on display as part of the exhibition include founding fathers such as George Washington, Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, whose documents tell the story of a young nation in rebellion against King George III. But they are in good company with the King of Pop, whose signed patent reveals that his inventiveness extended beyond creating sweet dance moves.




Read more: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-...rican-inventor-180950165/#EfYXfAQcuqQuhymV.99
 
Michael Jackson: Singer, Songwriter, American Inventor
The King of Pop invented more than just amazing dance moves
By Jimmy Stamp

Here's the scene: Michael Jackson, dressed in white suit and hat like a gangster guardian angel walks into a bar full of thugs, gamblers, and flappers, the music stops and everyone stares at him; he reaches for a gun - no, it's just a quarter, which he flips all the way across room where it slides perfectly into a jukebox coin slot. The song starts with a synthesized crash: As he came into the window / it was the sound of a crescendo....You've been hit by a Smooth Criminal. Dancing, fighting, dramatic pauses, a weird slow-motion interlude, and more dancing and fighting follow. Then it happens, at about the 7:10 mark above, Michael gives a knowing smile, tilts his hat, and leans. He leans an amazing, impossible lean. It seems so simple but it's just. so. cool.

When a 7-year old me saw it for the first time on screen, it was surely the coolest thing I had ever seen (which until that point was a teenage werewolf playing air guitar and surfing on top of a van). Smooth Criminal might still be the coolest thing I've ever seen. It's cooler than Miles Davis giving birth to cool in an igloo cool. It's cool, man. There's no other word for it.

Oh wait, there might be actually - how about "inventive"?

michael-jackson-shoe-patent-1.jpg.800x0_q85_crop.jpg



US Patent 5255452 A: "Method and means for creating anti-gravity illusion"

In the "Smooth Criminal' video, the centerpiece of the wonderfully bizarre film Moonwalker (1988), the impossible lean was accomplished with wires, but to recreate the effect during live performances, Jackson worked with two designers to develop a "method and means for creating [an] anti-gravity illusion." This signature move (among many others) was made possible by a patent for a shoe allowing the “wearer to lean forwardly beyond his center of gravity.” Though it looks like a regular loafer when worn with long pants, the shoe is actually strapped around the ankle to secure it to the dancer's foot - but the real secret is in the heal, which conceals a slot that can lock into a small post raised on stage. Dancers click their heels into place at just the right time and–-boom–-you've been hit by a smooth criminal. It's a brief moment, but its one of the most iconic images of Michael Jackson's career and American pop culture.

michael-jackson-shoe-patent-2.jpg.800x0_q85_crop.jpg


US Patent 5255452 A: "Method and means for creating anti-gravity illusion"

Michael Jackson's patent, and more importantly, his signature is on display as part of a new exhibition at the National Archives in Washington, D.C. "Making Their Mark: Stories Through Signatures," invites visitors to examine the signatures on historic documents and imagine the moment they were signed, moments that have shaped America's history and defined its culture. No one has a signature that is exactly the same every time its written, but a signature's variability is part of what reveals it to be authentic; each signature is a unique product of the time and place it was written. Other notable signatories on display as part of the exhibition include founding fathers such as George Washington, Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, whose documents tell the story of a young nation in rebellion against King George III. But they are in good company with the King of Pop, whose signed patent reveals that his inventiveness extended beyond creating sweet dance moves.

http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-...ongwriter-american-inventor-180950165/?no-ist
 
Last edited:
Mind. Blown. :lol: I always wondered how he did that.

On a side note- I don't know how old this is, but I saw it for the first time a couple weeks ago and I definitely "lol"ed.

im-michael-jackson.jpg
 
Re: Michael Now at Smithsonian in New Exhibit

Beautiful, now that is good Michael news. We must really take a trip to Washington.
 
Re: Michael Now at Smithsonian in New Exhibit

This is cool really cool, I'm a "lean" towards saying its awesome :dancin:
 
Re: Michael Now at Smithsonian in New Exhibit

Joe Vogel ?@JoeVogel1 1 h.

The King of Pop invented more than just amazing dance moves http://po.st/hg6zyL via @SmithsonianMag
 
Mind. Blown. :lol: I always wondered how he did that.

On a side note- I don't know how old this is, but I saw it for the first time a couple weeks ago and I definitely "lol"ed.

im-michael-jackson.jpg

Is it just me or is Micheal's lean way more angular then everyone else.
 
Even though Buster Keaton made the lean first in his 1927 movie College, Michael made it more iconic and was able to invent the means to substitute or make less visible the wire. It's well deserved for Michael, it gives him more prestige. Besides being so iconically mind-blowing and genius, it gives funny material. :lol:

H51XR33354.jpg


Michael-Jackson-Anti-Gravity-Lean-Smooth-Criminal.jpg
 
Back
Top