Michael - The Official New Album - Out December 14th - General Discussion Thread

Which tracks are you most looking forward to hearing in full/Want on Album!

  • All I Need

    Votes: 13 14.0%
  • Carry On

    Votes: 16 17.2%
  • Breaking News

    Votes: 11 11.8%
  • Monster

    Votes: 13 14.0%
  • Much Too Soon

    Votes: 66 71.0%
  • Do You Know Where Your Children Are

    Votes: 68 73.1%
  • Another Day

    Votes: 76 81.7%
  • Hold My Hand

    Votes: 54 58.1%
  • A Place With No Name

    Votes: 65 69.9%
  • Love Never Felt So Good

    Votes: 34 36.6%
  • Blue Gangsta

    Votes: 57 61.3%

  • Total voters
    93
Does anyone have the lyrics for BN? - If so please PM me.

I really wanna know the lyrics.

Can't wait for more new MJ. - Or at least I hope there will be nodoubt what so ever about who is singing on the next song released.

I think BN is a great song. I hear it all the time. But since I'm from Denmark and english is not my first language I can't figure of the lyrics - so please help someone. :)
 
wE need positivity in this forum and of course for all MJ fans.Stop negatinity

I'm still excited for the album, but I don't think this discussion about BN has to be viewed as negative. That is why we are all here to discuss things, and I think most people agree that something is weird about the song whether we agree if it is Michael singing or not. With out Michael here with us, we need to get to the bottom of this stuff. We can still do it with L.O.V.E :wub:
 
Hess;3064245 said:
Does anyone have the lyrics for BN? - If so please PM me.

I really wanna know the lyrics.

Can't wait for more new MJ. - Or at least I hope there will be nodoubt what so ever about who is singing on the next song released.

I think BN is a great song. I hear it all the time. But since I'm from Denmark and english is not my first language I can't figure of the lyrics - so please help someone. :)

Du har da skrevet sangteksten inde på Moo?
Men skriver det bare så her.

BREAKING NEWS :

Everybody wanting a piece of Michael Jackson.
Reporters stalking the moves of Michael Jackson.
Just when you thought he was done,
he comes to give it again.”

no matter what, you just wanna read it again
no matter what, you just wanna feel it again

now is that strange that i fall in love
who is the boogie man you thinkin’ of
all went crazy coz im just in love
this is breaking news X2

everybody watching the news of michael jackson
They want to see that I fall,
cause I’m Michael Jackson

You write the words to destroy
like it’s a weapon

you turn your back on the love and you think you can get it again

no matter what, you just wanna read it again
no matter what, you just wanna feel it again

now is that strange that i fall in love
who is the boogie man you thinkin’ of
all went crazy coz im just in love
this is breaking news X2

now is that strange that i fall inlove
who is the boogie man you thinkin’ of
all went crazy coz im just in love
this is breaking news X2

all the news today they say CRAZY time
who is stranger today we want this day baby

now is that strange that i fall in love
who is the boogie man you thinkin’ of
all went crazy coz im just in love
this is breaking news X2

now is that strange that i fall in love
who is the boogie man you thinkin’ of
all went crazy coz im just in love
this is breaking news X2

YOU’RE BREAKING NEWS
_____________________________

Sig hvis der er noget du ikke forstår :)
 
We need positivity?
Okay:
Breaking News is a f........ great song by Michael Joseph Jackson. It's one of the greatest song I have ever heard. This album is going to be the next Thriller.
I don't care if all these songs are fake. I'm going to buy this Epic album :shock:
Michael you ROCK!!!! I LOVE YOUR NEW SONG...

Sony thinks inside: "Damn they are stupid haha."

F... this album. F... BN. This is NOT okay, by what Sony doing. This is scandal. I am not going to buy their shit.
I'm only going to listen to MTS, and DYKWYCA.
I don't care what you think, but this is not song by MJ.
I know the truth.. the truth is from my heart that this is not MJ, and Sony wants money, and they want us to do whatever they want.
Sony wants money.
That's all.
 
Hess;3064245 said:
Does anyone have the lyrics for BN? - If so please PM me.

I really wanna know the lyrics.

Can't wait for more new MJ. - Or at least I hope there will be nodoubt what so ever about who is singing on the next song released.

I think BN is a great song. I hear it all the time. But since I'm from Denmark and english is not my first language I can't figure of the lyrics - so please help someone. :)

Yes please ... POSITIVITY ... :lol: !!!

Thank God I love the track and my album is pre-ordered!!


Michael Jackson – Breaking News Lyrics

Everybody wanting a piece of Michael Jackson

Reporters stalking the moves of Michael Jackson

Just when you thought he was done,he comes to give it again.

They could put around the World today

he wanna write my obituary

no matter what, you just wanna read it again

no matter what, you just wanna feel it again

why is it strange that I would fall in love

who is the boogie man you’re thinkin’ of

oh am I crazy coz I’m just in love

this is breaking newsthis is breaking news

everybody watching the news of Michael Jackson

They want to see that I fall,cause I’m Michael Jackson

You write the words to destroy, like it’s a weapon

you turn your back on the love and you can’t get it again

no matter what, you just wanna read it again

no matter what, you just wanna feel it again

Why is it strange that I would fall in love

who is the boogie man you thinkin’ of

oh am I crazy coz I’m just in love

this is breaking newsthis is breaking news

why is it strange that I would fall in love

who is the boogie man you thinkin’ of

oh am I crazy coz I’m just in love

this is breaking newsthis is breaking news

all the news today they say CRAZY celebrity

who is stranger today we want this day baby

why is that strange that I would fall in love(why is it strange)

who is the boogie man you thinkin’ of

oh am I crazy coz I’m just in love

this is breaking newsthis is breaking news

Why is that strange that I would fall in love

who is the boogie man you thinkin’ of

oh am I crazy coz I’m just in love

this is breaking newsthis is breaking news

You’re breaking news.

**************

BTW ... anybody know why the THANKS button has been de-activated?
 
I'm really curious as to why all the people that had been posting loads with inside info before have suddenly become so silent?
 
Matti;3064219 said:
Guys, I really think at least 90% of us (the ones who think it is Michael singing and the ones who don´t think so) can agree BN voice sounds at least different and not typical MJ voice. There seems to be more proofs it is MJ and the main problem is, that it was just rough demo and they had to finish it. But I don´t want to point finger on this, everybody has his own opinion, BUT:

I was thinking about this. I am not a Sony fan, but also not hater – we all know it is a record company and it wants to make profit. And the real question is: Would they make profit with fake album after they already paid so much to MJ Estate? I don´t think so. More over can you imagine how much money would they need to pay to every insider (producers, journalists, managers, experts, all the media etc) so they say „it is MJ“ even if it wasn´t? There is no way the album would make profit!

So I really start to believe what we are hearing, the problem is how much they needed to change and finish the demos which were probably very early demos.
The other question is, why they choosed this song to start with? I hope the reason is they want to know public reaction cos they know it doesn´t sound like Michael. I really hope that the reason is not that BN is one of the best tracks on the album, cos that would be the biggest trouble IMO. Lets just hope that the 3 Cascios tracks were very early demos which were finished and the other tracks on the album will be our „normal“ Michael standard.

I am sad cos now I am more and more sure that will.i.am tracks won´t be on the album. If they just replace 3 Cascios tracks with will.i.am tracks, the problem is over. Or just put Escape and We have had enough there. Yeah, we know them, but they are great and 100% our Mike. In worst, use other Invincible sessions songs... But I guess they want to save this kind of songs for future releases and that´s what causes this troubles.


Ah, great post.
I totally agree.
I am so sad and so angry I can't tell for sure a thing.
The first time I heard BN it took me just a few mili seconds to say that was not him. Now I listen to this "updated" version, the acapella, I read the comments of those involved in the project in different sources, in different countries... I just read the article in the Huffington Post and well, I think this summarizes it all for me:

While these are not perfectly realized tracks--as no posthumous material can be--there is certainly much to appreciate. The Cascio tracks represent, after all, some of the last work Jackson ever wrote and recorded. It wasn't ready to be released, but then, Jackson wasn't ready to die.

There's no more to say. I thought I had understood the idea of a posthumous album, but I hadn't. Not a all. My brain and my heart were waiting for the Michael I know for so long, but well baby... he is no more. This is what is left. Take it or leave it, but don't judge anyone else for their personal choices and, most of all, ACCEPT IT: this is not the Michael you loved, but only a piece of him.

I don't know how well I can deal wit this. In a way... in a terrible way, I must say, it's like losing Michael again.

awwww... this really hurts :depressed:
 
I'm really curious as to why all the people that had been posting loads with inside info before have suddenly become so silent?


Because these people are used to bull**itting and guessing and, in a situation as 'fluid' and everchanging as this, they don't know which way to guess.

'Google is normally their friend for 'breaking news' (excuse the pun) and insider information, but it's not much used to them at the moment, so they have to keep quiet.

They'll be back in good time, to give us insightful information such as;

"An insider I know told me a Michael Jackson single is going to be released...sometime in the future!"
 
I'm also surprised by how little Gaz has had to say as moderator and someone in touch with the estate. It's been hours since he posted as far as i know. What is going on? any news?
 
Thanks sooo very much for the lyrics.

little suzie - mange tak. Nej jeg har ikke postet dem på moo, jeg har ikke set dem før nu. Mange tak.
 
The official estate MJOnlineTeam just posted this on Twitter 18 minutes ago!

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/joe-vo..._b_781364.html

Since Michael Jackson's untimely death in June of 2009, speculation has run rampant about the music he left behind. How much is there? How finished are the songs? What is the quality of the material? And how and when will it be released?

Over the course of writing and researching my forthcoming book, Man in the Music: The Creative Life and Work of Michael Jackson (Sterling 2011), I was fortunate enough to take an in-depth look at Jackson's entire catalog--including the work he was engaged in during his final years. My sources worked closely with the King of Pop throughout his life and have been trustworthy and reliable throughout the five-year process of the book. In the controversy that tends to surround all things Michael Jackson, it can be difficult to ascertain truth from fiction. But I feel confident with what I have learned about the material poised to appear on his first posthumous album, Michael.

A notorious perfectionist, Jackson always over-recorded. There are at least one hundred songs over the course of his solo career that did not make it onto his major albums. Some of those have already appeared on special editions and collections; others have leaked online in various forms; and many others have never been heard.

At midnight on November 8th, MichaelJackson.com streamed the first official song from the archives (excluding the early-Eighties demo, "This Is It," which was included as part of the companion album to the film of the same name). Even before its release, however, controversy surrounded "Breaking News" and the other so-called "Cascio tracks." The conversation has only intensified since then.

Predictably, little of that conversation has been about the content of the new track: the exceptionally ominous strings in the intro, its "Off the Wall"-esque chorus, or its signature Jackson indictment of a media that feeds on "breaking news" (read: scandals) with obsessive compulsion ("No matter what/ You just want to read it again"). Nor has much attention been given to the work of talented producer and longtime-Jackson friend, Teddy Riley, who gives the song a fresh but faithful sheen.

The irony, of course, is this is how Jackson's music has been received for decades, the substance overlooked in favor of sensationalism and distracting controversy. Yet part of it would no doubt bring a knowing smile to the man who once claimed he wanted to make his whole life "the greatest show on earth." Long before Lady Gaga, Michael Jackson was engaging artistically with both the monstrosity and allure of fame.

In "Breaking News," Jackson not only delivers his message, but anticipates the way it will be received. In one verse, he lashes out at those anxious to "write his obituary." In the chorus, he asks his listening audience, as he did throughout his career, who they project him to be: Is he the "boogieman" (a constructed monstrous figure) we're thinking of?

Certainly, by 2007 (the year in which "Breaking News" was recorded), he had learned how vicious and entrapping a lifetime in the spotlight could be. The previous two years he had been living as a vagabond, traveling from the Middle Eastern-island of Bahrain to the countryside of Ireland to a private chateau in Las Vegas. In the fall of 2007, he showed up with his children at the doorstep of his longtime friends, the Cascios, in Franklin Lakes, New Jersey. Jackson had been close to the Cascio family for nearly twenty years. During that time, they never once betrayed him for tabloid money (in spite of many offers), but showed him loyalty and allowed him a sense of normalcy he couldn't often enjoy. In the program at Jackson's funeral they are referred to as "the First Family of Love."

Jackson stayed with the Cascios for nearly four months and, along with Frank Cascio, Eddie (Angel) Cascio, and singer James Porte (aka Bobby Ewing), engaged in some of his most sustained recording since before his 2005 trial. Three songs created during these sessions--"Breaking News," "Keep Your Head Up" and "Monster"--are expected to appear on Jackson's new album, all of which Jackson co-wrote. During his time in New Jersey, Jackson also recorded vocals for Thriller 25, which was released in 2008.

Beyond the Cascios, several people close to Jackson were familiar with his work in New Jersey. He mentioned to these people that he was "excited" about the work he and the Cascios had generated. According to Jackson's longtime friend and manager, Frank Dileo, Jackson planned to have recording equipment brought to London during his 02 concert series so he could finalize some of his latest music.

The first of the Cascio tracks to be heard--"Breaking News"--obviously isn't a perfect realization of Jackson's abilities. Receiving the most critical attention are Jackson's vocals, the veracity of which even some family and fans are questioning. There are understandable reasons for this. This certainly isn't a "typical" Jackson recording: there weren't extensive warm ups with longtime vocal coach Seth Riggs, no layering and polishing by Jackson himself, no Bruce Swedien and world-class studio technology to capture the original vocal. This was a guide demo, supplemented by the supporting vocals of James Porte (for which he is credited), and produced nearly four years later by Teddy Riley.

Riley, who first began working with Jackson in the early Nineties, found it emotionally difficult to complete the unfinished work of his late friend. To tap into his inspiration, Riley had photographer Harrison Funk surround him with pictures of the singer. "That was the only thing to keep me sane, and not go crazy while I'm working," said Riley. "Because, you know, it would come out on the music if you hear me banging on the keyboards with tears coming out of my eyes."

Riley said his fundamental motivation was to extend the legacy of a friend. He approached the tracks, therefore, not attempting to overly embellish, but simply to fill in the best he could. His guiding thought was: "What would Michael want?" He even brought sounds Jackson had him record from previous sessions. The final product, of course, is an approximation. But for Riley it was a labor of love.

It wasn't until Riley submitted his work, and three of the songs were accepted by Sony for the album, that the controversy began. Certain individuals--some with noble intentions, some less so--began expressing concerns about the authenticity of the vocals. These concerns were taken seriously by Jackson's Estate. Attorney Howard Weitzman was asked by estate co-executors John Branca and John McClain to conduct a thorough investigation of the authenticity of the Cascio tracks. The Estate, after all, had a lot to lose if the tracks were fraudulent. Since Jackson's death, by all accounts, it had done a masterful job of preserving and enhancing the artist's legacy, including the release of the highest-grossing concert documentary film of all time (This Is It), a new music video collection (Michael Jackson's Vision), a Jackson-themed video game (Michael Jackson: The Experience), a groundbreaking show with Cirque du Soliel ("Michael Jackson: The Immortal World Tour"), and the biggest recording contract in popular music history.

Perhaps just as important, the Estate had passed on numerous deals, selecting only a handful of projects it felt were worthy of Jackson's name. Risking the substantial credibility it had established amongst both fans and critics for a handful of questionable tracks would have been reckless at best (for Sony as well, who had invested over $200 million dollars on the singer's posthumous projects).

In spite of Jackson's close relationship with the Cascios, therefore, the Estate certainly didn't accept them on blind faith. The Estate invited four of Jackson's primary engineers over the past thirty years, three producers who had worked with Jackson (including Teddy Riley), and spoke to one of the musicians that had worked with Michael over the years and who had also contributed to one of the Cascio tracks. Each of them listened to the a cappella version of the vocals on the Cascio tracks without any musical accompaniment so that they could give an opinion as to whether or not the lead vocals on the Cascio tracks were sung by Jackson. To a person they all confirmed that the vocal was definitely Michael Jackson. These engineers, producers and musicians are all people Jackson trusted and whose names would be very familiar to Jackson's fans.

In addition, at the request of John Branca and John McClain, Howard Weitzman retained one of the best known forensic musicologists in the nation to listen to the a cappella vocals and compare them with a cappella vocals from previously known Jackson songs. This expert performed waveform analysis, an objective scientific procedure, and found that all of the vocals were the voice of Michael Jackson.

Sony Music conducted its own investigation by hiring a second well-respected forensic musicologist who also compared the raw vocals from the Cascio tracks against known vocals of Jackson's and found that it was Jackson's voice on both sets of the compared vocals.
The Cascio tracks were also played for two of the most significant people in the music industry who played crucial roles in Jackson's career. Both of these individuals believe that the vocals are those of Michael Jackson.

It was also specifically verified that the vocals did not belong to well-known Jackson impersonator, Jason Malachi.

The results of this exhaustive investigation confirmed Sony's belief that the songs submitted by the Estate all contained authentic Michael Jackson vocals. The decision was therefore made to include three of the Cascio tracks on Michael. Other tracks will likely be included on future albums of unreleased material.

While these are not perfectly realized tracks--as no posthumous material can be--there is certainly much to appreciate. The Cascio tracks represent, after all, some of the last work Jackson ever wrote and recorded. It wasn't ready to be released, but then, Jackson wasn't ready to die.

"Breaking News," "Monster," "Hold My Hand" and the rest of the tracks that comprise Michael are, similar to the This Is It documentary, fragments of an unfinished vision. They aren't all the polished, perfectionist-Michael Jackson people are accustomed to hearing, but they are him, and what some of his closest friends and collaborators felt his fans deserved to hear.
 
This really breaks my heart,Ok so Breaking news is now being said By our friends at SONY that It's Michael doing Backingvocals. wished they make up their minds and tell the truth.We were lead to believe that Michael did the whole song with both Lead and Background.I hear Mike's snipets(Ow.Hee Hee Hee Hee,Ect...)We fans want an LP that has Unheard MJ songs with him doing all Vocals and if he's not doing all the vocals.It should be Noted,Not for fans to go into a frenzy to buy it on false truths.We fans want to hear what Mike did with Teddy Riley,Rodney Jenkins,WIll.I.Am.AKON and Neyo and other at and during the last couple of years of his life And since SONY is saying it's him,The really need to truly Prove it. Yes they had an voice expert saying it's him but I noticed in some studios,They have a camera running while some session are being recorded.HMMM. SOmeone needs to come clean.True we want to hear the back unheard catalog.But I think SONY could make more money doing that than just throwing just anybody in to fill Mike's part doing a bad imatation of him just to sell LPs. THAT WOULDN"T BE RIGHT FOR FANS ,THE FAMILY, THE INDUSTRY AND DEFINATELY NOT SONY.Remember when SONY got a world of trouble when they released "This Is It" and SONY Thought Mike wrote the whole song himself and Paul Anka Stepped in and said he helped Michael write the song.I thought they had learned that lesson from it.It seems now with this New track Breaking News.We fans were told that This is a New song from Mike with us all thinking Mike did all the Lead and Backing Vocals,Now the lead is done by an imatator.I don't think that's fair to fans. So if I were SONY,I would revamp the whole LP.Get it together for a Christmas, New Years Eve rush and Bring the true Mikey J on the scene so everyone can benefit from hearing our percious Sweet,Rauchy Michael Jackson in the real.The True King of Pop should be heard, not imatating phonies unless it's a tribute LP.
 
There are two options here:

1.) Take out the Cascio songs completely. Include more Will.I.Am, Jerkins, or older material.

2.) Just cancel the album indefinitely. Get everything straightened out and refund people on their preorders. Release the album in 2011.
 
At first I had my doubts about this new song. However, after listening to it for the hundreth time, and listening to 2,000 Watts and Threatened, I now firmly believe that most of the vocals heard on Breaking News are Michael Jackson's.
 
Ah, great post.
I totally agree.
I am so sad and so angry I can't tell for sure a thing.
The first time I heard BN it took me just a few mili seconds to say that was not him. Now I listen to this "updated" version, the acapella, I read the comments of those involved in the project in different sources, in different countries... I just read the article in the Huffington Post and well, I think this summarizes it all for me:



There's no more to say. I thought I had understood the idea of a posthumous album, but I hadn't. Not a all. My brain and my heart were waiting for the Michael I know for so long, but well baby... he is no more. This is what is left. Take it or leave it, but don't judge anyone else for their personal choices and, most of all, ACCEPT IT: this is not the Michael you loved, but only a piece of him.

I don't know how well I can deal wit this. In a way... in a terrible way, I must say, it's like losing Michael again.

awwww... this really hurts :depressed:

Excuse me but this cannot be the best of the tracks because MORE OF MICHAEL makes the best of the tracks not more editing and compressing of his voice or more of some impersonator trying to sound like him.

The family has claimed that the rest of the tracks are in fact Michael and complete songs.

I write songs and when I don't finish them it is because either I got bored with it and decided it is not good enough, or I can't come up with the exact lyrics I want to make it right. If Michael didn't finish it how would it be an honor to him to choose someone elses attemnpts over what he actually did complete?

We don't need to trust Sony, We don't need to trust Michael's friends, We don't need to trust Teddy Riley or anyone who claims to have worked on anything, nor do we even need to trust Michael's family in this because any of those people I just listed could have hidden agendas! What we need is for Michael's fans who truly loved him and his music to select a group of fans to go in and listen to those tracks for us and see what's going BEFORE Sony releases this CD.

http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/sonyultimatum/
 
At first I had my doubts about this new song. However, after listening to it for the hundreth time, and listening to 2,000 Watts and Threatened, I now firmly believe that most of the vocals heard on Breaking News are Michael Jackson's.

brainwashed .. nice
 
theres really no need to insult eash other is there everyone has a different opinion on the vocals. its not like they are calling mj a u know what
 
There are two options here:

1.) Take out the Cascio songs completely. Include more Will.I.Am, Jerkins, or older material.

2.) Just cancel the album indefinitely. Get everything straightened out and refund people on their preorders. Release the album in 2011.

You forgot to add in the event of cancelling of the album to go forward in a full scale Boycott and campaign against all things Sony.

They need to go back over the tracks they have and see what is best and discernably Michael, get in agreement with Michael's family and the estate and let fans listen to the tracks they are wanting to release before they proceed. We are the gatekeepers- Mattolla was fired!

http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/sonyultimatum/

SonyUltimatum.com will be up on Nov. 14th
 
At first I had my doubts about this new song. However, after listening to it for the hundreth time, and listening to 2,000 Watts and Threatened, I now firmly believe that most of the vocals heard on Breaking News are Michael Jackson's.

Even though on 2,000 Watts and Threatened MJ's voice sounds different from usual you can still hear the passion in his voice when he sings them. Breaking News as no passion to it what so ever
 
A moderator please stop this! It's been going on for 3 days!
Arguing, insulting, doubting, hating, poisoning that's all that we have here!
 
The official estate MJOnlineTeam just posted this on Twitter 18 minutes ago!

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/joe-vo..._b_781364.html

Since Michael Jackson's untimely death in June of 2009, speculation has run rampant about the music he left behind. How much is there? How finished are the songs? What is the quality of the material? And how and when will it be released?

Over the course of writing and researching my forthcoming book, Man in the Music: The Creative Life and Work of Michael Jackson (Sterling 2011), I was fortunate enough to take an in-depth look at Jackson's entire catalog--including the work he was engaged in during his final years. My sources worked closely with the King of Pop throughout his life and have been trustworthy and reliable throughout the five-year process of the book. In the controversy that tends to surround all things Michael Jackson, it can be difficult to ascertain truth from fiction. But I feel confident with what I have learned about the material poised to appear on his first posthumous album, Michael.

A notorious perfectionist, Jackson always over-recorded. There are at least one hundred songs over the course of his solo career that did not make it onto his major albums. Some of those have already appeared on special editions and collections; others have leaked online in various forms; and many others have never been heard.

At midnight on November 8th, MichaelJackson.com streamed the first official song from the archives (excluding the early-Eighties demo, "This Is It," which was included as part of the companion album to the film of the same name). Even before its release, however, controversy surrounded "Breaking News" and the other so-called "Cascio tracks." The conversation has only intensified since then.

Predictably, little of that conversation has been about the content of the new track: the exceptionally ominous strings in the intro, its "Off the Wall"-esque chorus, or its signature Jackson indictment of a media that feeds on "breaking news" (read: scandals) with obsessive compulsion ("No matter what/ You just want to read it again"). Nor has much attention been given to the work of talented producer and longtime-Jackson friend, Teddy Riley, who gives the song a fresh but faithful sheen.

The irony, of course, is this is how Jackson's music has been received for decades, the substance overlooked in favor of sensationalism and distracting controversy. Yet part of it would no doubt bring a knowing smile to the man who once claimed he wanted to make his whole life "the greatest show on earth." Long before Lady Gaga, Michael Jackson was engaging artistically with both the monstrosity and allure of fame.

In "Breaking News," Jackson not only delivers his message, but anticipates the way it will be received. In one verse, he lashes out at those anxious to "write his obituary." In the chorus, he asks his listening audience, as he did throughout his career, who they project him to be: Is he the "boogieman" (a constructed monstrous figure) we're thinking of?

Certainly, by 2007 (the year in which "Breaking News" was recorded), he had learned how vicious and entrapping a lifetime in the spotlight could be. The previous two years he had been living as a vagabond, traveling from the Middle Eastern-island of Bahrain to the countryside of Ireland to a private chateau in Las Vegas. In the fall of 2007, he showed up with his children at the doorstep of his longtime friends, the Cascios, in Franklin Lakes, New Jersey. Jackson had been close to the Cascio family for nearly twenty years. During that time, they never once betrayed him for tabloid money (in spite of many offers), but showed him loyalty and allowed him a sense of normalcy he couldn't often enjoy. In the program at Jackson's funeral they are referred to as "the First Family of Love."

Jackson stayed with the Cascios for nearly four months and, along with Frank Cascio, Eddie (Angel) Cascio, and singer James Porte (aka Bobby Ewing), engaged in some of his most sustained recording since before his 2005 trial. Three songs created during these sessions--"Breaking News," "Keep Your Head Up" and "Monster"--are expected to appear on Jackson's new album, all of which Jackson co-wrote. During his time in New Jersey, Jackson also recorded vocals for Thriller 25, which was released in 2008.

Beyond the Cascios, several people close to Jackson were familiar with his work in New Jersey. He mentioned to these people that he was "excited" about the work he and the Cascios had generated. According to Jackson's longtime friend and manager, Frank Dileo, Jackson planned to have recording equipment brought to London during his 02 concert series so he could finalize some of his latest music.

The first of the Cascio tracks to be heard--"Breaking News"--obviously isn't a perfect realization of Jackson's abilities. Receiving the most critical attention are Jackson's vocals, the veracity of which even some family and fans are questioning. There are understandable reasons for this. This certainly isn't a "typical" Jackson recording: there weren't extensive warm ups with longtime vocal coach Seth Riggs, no layering and polishing by Jackson himself, no Bruce Swedien and world-class studio technology to capture the original vocal. This was a guide demo, supplemented by the supporting vocals of James Porte (for which he is credited), and produced nearly four years later by Teddy Riley.

Riley, who first began working with Jackson in the early Nineties, found it emotionally difficult to complete the unfinished work of his late friend. To tap into his inspiration, Riley had photographer Harrison Funk surround him with pictures of the singer. "That was the only thing to keep me sane, and not go crazy while I'm working," said Riley. "Because, you know, it would come out on the music if you hear me banging on the keyboards with tears coming out of my eyes."

Riley said his fundamental motivation was to extend the legacy of a friend. He approached the tracks, therefore, not attempting to overly embellish, but simply to fill in the best he could. His guiding thought was: "What would Michael want?" He even brought sounds Jackson had him record from previous sessions. The final product, of course, is an approximation. But for Riley it was a labor of love.

It wasn't until Riley submitted his work, and three of the songs were accepted by Sony for the album, that the controversy began. Certain individuals--some with noble intentions, some less so--began expressing concerns about the authenticity of the vocals. These concerns were taken seriously by Jackson's Estate. Attorney Howard Weitzman was asked by estate co-executors John Branca and John McClain to conduct a thorough investigation of the authenticity of the Cascio tracks. The Estate, after all, had a lot to lose if the tracks were fraudulent. Since Jackson's death, by all accounts, it had done a masterful job of preserving and enhancing the artist's legacy, including the release of the highest-grossing concert documentary film of all time (This Is It), a new music video collection (Michael Jackson's Vision), a Jackson-themed video game (Michael Jackson: The Experience), a groundbreaking show with Cirque du Soliel ("Michael Jackson: The Immortal World Tour"), and the biggest recording contract in popular music history.

Perhaps just as important, the Estate had passed on numerous deals, selecting only a handful of projects it felt were worthy of Jackson's name. Risking the substantial credibility it had established amongst both fans and critics for a handful of questionable tracks would have been reckless at best (for Sony as well, who had invested over $200 million dollars on the singer's posthumous projects).

In spite of Jackson's close relationship with the Cascios, therefore, the Estate certainly didn't accept them on blind faith. The Estate invited four of Jackson's primary engineers over the past thirty years, three producers who had worked with Jackson (including Teddy Riley), and spoke to one of the musicians that had worked with Michael over the years and who had also contributed to one of the Cascio tracks. Each of them listened to the a cappella version of the vocals on the Cascio tracks without any musical accompaniment so that they could give an opinion as to whether or not the lead vocals on the Cascio tracks were sung by Jackson. To a person they all confirmed that the vocal was definitely Michael Jackson. These engineers, producers and musicians are all people Jackson trusted and whose names would be very familiar to Jackson's fans.

In addition, at the request of John Branca and John McClain, Howard Weitzman retained one of the best known forensic musicologists in the nation to listen to the a cappella vocals and compare them with a cappella vocals from previously known Jackson songs. This expert performed waveform analysis, an objective scientific procedure, and found that all of the vocals were the voice of Michael Jackson.

Sony Music conducted its own investigation by hiring a second well-respected forensic musicologist who also compared the raw vocals from the Cascio tracks against known vocals of Jackson's and found that it was Jackson's voice on both sets of the compared vocals.
The Cascio tracks were also played for two of the most significant people in the music industry who played crucial roles in Jackson's career. Both of these individuals believe that the vocals are those of Michael Jackson.

It was also specifically verified that the vocals did not belong to well-known Jackson impersonator, Jason Malachi.

The results of this exhaustive investigation confirmed Sony's belief that the songs submitted by the Estate all contained authentic Michael Jackson vocals. The decision was therefore made to include three of the Cascio tracks on Michael. Other tracks will likely be included on future albums of unreleased material.

While these are not perfectly realized tracks--as no posthumous material can be--there is certainly much to appreciate. The Cascio tracks represent, after all, some of the last work Jackson ever wrote and recorded. It wasn't ready to be released, but then, Jackson wasn't ready to die.

"Breaking News," "Monster," "Hold My Hand" and the rest of the tracks that comprise Michael are, similar to the This Is It documentary, fragments of an unfinished vision. They aren't all the polished, perfectionist-Michael Jackson people are accustomed to hearing, but they are him, and what some of his closest friends and collaborators felt his fans deserved to hear.

Oh THANK GOD .... at last I read something that makes sense to me!

Thanks for this article electrickeyez.

Michael Sweet Angel ... Thank you ... I knew it was you & I love you more!!
 
So if this is posted on an official estate website it means they back up the content? Well it's completely contradictory and this is where i got the info about Bobby Ewing singing on the track from so i don't see why anyone would see this as any consolation.
 
Quote.."The first of the Cascio tracks to be heard--"Breaking News"--obviously isn't a perfect realization of Jackson's abilities. Receiving the most critical attention are Jackson's vocals, the veracity of which even some family and fans are questioning. There are understandable reasons for this. This certainly isn't a "typical" Jackson recording: there weren't extensive warm ups with longtime vocal coach Seth Riggs, no layering and polishing by Jackson himself, no Bruce Swedien and world-class studio technology to capture the original vocal. This was a guide demo, supplemented by the supporting vocals of James Porte (for which he is credited), and produced nearly four years later by Teddy Riley"
Supplemented.....more like almost entirely made up of....
 
How can people be honestly positive and looking forward to something that's basically not even what it says? I don't get that.

As for that amazingly doctored article the online MJ team had linked to - it's the greatest spin I've ever read.

A moderator please stop this! It's been going on for 3 days!
Arguing, insulting, doubting, hating, poisoning that's all that we have here!
So it's all good to have a false product? In Australia we have these things called consumer protection laws. Companies like Sony have been done in for it once. So...I'd say they wanna be careful. And oddly enough, it was their music department that was at fault.
 
Excuse me but this cannot be the best of the tracks because MORE OF MICHAEL makes the best of the tracks not more editing and compressing of his voice or more of some impersonator trying to sound like him.

The family has claimed that the rest of the tracks are in fact Michael and complete songs.

I write songs and when I don't finish them it is because either I got bored with it and decided it is not good enough, or I can't come up with the exact lyrics I want to make it right. If Michael didn't finish it how would it be an honor to him to choose someone elses attemnpts over what he actually did complete?

We don't need to trust Sony, We don't need to trust Michael's friends, We don't need to trust Teddy Riley or anyone who claims to have worked on anything, nor do we even need to trust Michael's family in this because any of those people I just listed could have hidden agendas! What we need is for Michael's fans who truly loved him and his music to select a group of fans to go in and listen to those tracks for us and see what's going BEFORE Sony releases this CD.

http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/sonyultimatum/

sorry, if I implied BN is the best song, I was wrong. However, I think I didn't do that, nor does the author. We know BN is not the best, in fact, it is not even the leading single, so no doubts there's gotta be more and way better. We all agree on that, imo, and after listening to the snippets leaked yesterday, I know we can expect better songs to come, but most of all, we can expect to hear them and hear Michael there without any single doubt.

We know there's MJ in BN, but there's also someone else. Some say this might all be part of a stategy to get attention... if that is the case, what a cruel and stupid way to get attention, abusing Michael and his fans :doh:
 
GAZ do you have any news from the estate or Sony?

Are they holding meetings to decide what they should do?

when is the first single being released??

When is the album tracklist being announced??
 
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