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Music > Features > The Love You Save: A Tribute to Michael Jackson
The Love You Save: A Tribute to Michael JacksonThe MJ Top Ten Tribute[9 July 2009] The ultimate list of icons to pay performance tribute to THE icon.
By Diepiriye KukuThe ultimate tribute. A collection of Jackson tracks—ballads and beats—offered by those who would best immortalize his name. M.J. Ballads“Will You Be There” - Whitney Houston. “Maria (You Were the Only One)” - Chaka Khan. “Got To Be There” - Fantasia. “Man in the Mirror” - Jill Scott. “Human Nature” - Maxwell. “Earth Song” - Erykah Badu. “Heal the World” - Lionel Richie. “The Lady in My Life” - Al Green. “Baby Be Mine” - Patti LaBelle. “I Wanna Be Where You Are” - Teena Marie. “Butterflies” - Mariah Carey. “Liberian Girl” - Sade. “Will You Be There” - Aretha Franklin. “Another Part of Me” - George Benson. “The Girl is Mine” - Brandy and Monica. “You Rock My World” - Christina Aguilera. * * * M.J. Beats“Heartbreak Hotel” - Mary J. Blige. “Beat It” - Prince. “Billie Jean” - En Vogue. “Dirty Diana” - Tina Turner. “Remember the Time” - Stevie Wonder. Furthermore, Stevie could break into “You Haven’t Done Nothing” from Fullfillingness First Finale, which polishes off with Stevie saying: “Jackson 5, say it one more ‘gain.” Then, Jackie, Tito, Jermaine, Marlon, and Michael would smoothly sing, “Do-do-wop. Do-do-wop”. “Sing it for your people”, Stevie shouted. “Stand up be counted”, he jived at Nixon. This was 1974. Stevie always does an entire good ole Motown Review whenever he gets on stage. And anyway, fans at the tribute wouldn’t let him leave the stage after just one song. He bursts out into “All I Do”. Jermaine would come out and do Michael’s part (listen closely—that’s M.J. doing the do-wop for Stevie again). True to form, Stevie would change the lyrics: “I’m thinkin’, Michael. ‘Bout you, Michael!” Pausing to extend this interlude, Stevie would chant this line over and over, the crowd joining in. “Thinkin’, Michael. Give it to me Michael. Get on down. Just get on down. All I do is think about you Michael. Can you feel it right back?” By the end, he, Stevie, me, you, the whole crowd would be in tears. But Jermaine would insist that this is a party for his brother, so Stevie responds with the chords for Jermaine’s song “Let’s Get Serious”. Fans wouldn’t remember seeing these two perform the songs they had worked on together and released back in 1980 on their respective albums. Then, the remaining brothers would come on stage with one of Michael’s nephews singing lead on “I Want You Back” and “ABC”. The rest of the Jacksons, Diana Ross, and then a whole bunch of other Motown folks would join on stage and sing “We Are the World”. You-know-who would be the first to grab the mike—no pun intended—and, finger combing her weave, would introduce “this next song,” as she loves to say, before going on and on lamenting over Michael, threatening to break out in sermon. “Bad” - George Michael. “Dancing Machine” - Jennifer Lopez. “Smooth Criminal” - Madonna. “Wanna Be Startin Somethin’” - Paula Abdul and Manu Dibango. “In the Closet” - Justin Timberlake and Naomi Campbell. “Burn This Disco Out” - Jamiroquai. “Thriller” - Janet Jackson (period). “P.Y.T. (Pretty Young Thing)” - New Edition. “Working Day and Night” - Destiny’s Child. “I Can’t Help It” - Alicia Keys. “Get on the Floor” - Femi Kuti. “Rock With You” - Toni Braxton. “Dancing Machine” - Earth, Wind and Fire. “Say, Say, Say” - Rod Stewart and Paul McCartney. “The Way You Make Me Feel” - George Michael. “Don’t Stop Till You Get Enough” - Zap Mama. “Off the Wall” - Janet Jackson. “Can You Feel It” - Janet, Marlon, Tito, Jermaine, Jackie, and Randy Jackson. * * * “The force, it’s got a lotta power / You make me feel, you make me feel like—whoo!” Michael’s kids have never seen him perform, though one imagines the team in a home chock full of music. Moreover, kids these days don’t know about Thriller—the people-passing-out-in-the-crowd type Thriller. They don’t remember babies, kids, and old folks jumping up and down on chairs to see M.J., or the spontaneous dance competitions mimicking Michael at any break! Michael Jackson meant a lot to a whole lot of people, and these relationships were personal. Many have mis-read Black America’s sustained adoration of Michael Jackson as a love for brand-Michael. Yet, few recall that for many blacks growing up alongside Michael, he was their first real crush. As a teen idol, he’s one of the few to have evolved. He was a handsomely brown, button-nosed Negro that knew and loved black music so dearly that even as a child he took the tunes to new heights. Hence, he was never just brand-Michael for those who watched him grow. Rather, he was a figure as tragic as many poor and working class people of color in America making it, taking it day by day. While many of us learn to thrive under the pressures of a society full of denial—denial of civil rights; denial of our torrid past, for example—Michael seems to have given his all so that none of us would falter in our personal lives as he fell. It is this recognition that he was human just like the rest of us. ![]() Human? Indeed, this was most evident in his lyrics and symbolism, and clearly imbued in the scripts for redemption that he provided. Few notice that in the vast majority of his music, Michael Jackson spoke of pain and social ills, while his focus was clearly on the redemptive power of love. He celebrated this love. Just sit and consider how many times he used the word “brother”, and then reflect on how much he meant it. Or, mute the sound and watch the full “Black or White” video. Take a close look at the images Jackson relays. All of his music incorporated these radical images—as radical as Michael employing cutting edge technology to morph into a black panther after destroying Nazi, KKK, and other hateful graffiti. Conservatives could only see the crotch-grabbing in its superficial hues. Even still, haters failed to let the words penetrate their souls, so Michael had to hit us over the head with these lyrics like a blunt instrument. Again, “Black or White” is a message the Jacksons have maintained from the beginning. Certainly, the guilt of social privilege enjoyed today as a result of our rigid gender, race, and class hierarchy is exactly why his music was so popular all around the globe: folks could relate. Beyond the pain of romantic love, a great many of Michael’s tunes spoke of the redemptive power of fraternal love, of fellowship and forgiveness, while acknowledging and accepting the pain and sins of the past.
Sound familiar? Indeed, this is the beat that Barack Obama has rocked from day one, and witness the difficult road he faced in relaying this message. Where some saw guilt and shame, Obama saw forgiveness. Yet, so unaccustomed to forgiveness, Americans nearly eschewed the opportunity to elect him as our leader. Similarly, many are unable to separate brand-Michael from the actual sentiments of his words. Hence, beyond “Man in the Mirror”, “Earth Song”, “They Don’t Care About Us”, “Beat It”, “Heal the World,” or even the blatant “Black or White”, Michael has always tried to share with the world the fraternal love he had always known. It was his own brothers who put their brown, button-nosed little brother out front, recognizing his talent. And this was no story of the Supremes, Destiny’s Child, or Dreamgirls, with one group member overtaking the rest. Instead, the Jacksons embodied the cooperation they sang about. Michael, an awesome tenor with franticly awesome feet, was only possible because of his brothers, standing there on stage with him; they had his back, not just his back-ups! As we mourn, try to remember what he said, and focus on the power of those words:
![]() Brothers and sisters, it is our diversity that makes us strong. But don’t take difference for granted, nor fail to recognize the humanity in any other. We all have feelings, and when we start with our commonalities, instead of focusing on our very real cultural differences, we stand to create an atmosphere of love, where the strife of one is not minimized by a fatalistic rationale that says we deserve privilege over another. Listening to anti-Michael fans who cannot understand what the whole fuss is about over Jackson’s death, I am reminded, again, of his own music. These anti-fans would deny what they see before them and refuse to accept another’s perspective. This is exactly the sort of callousness Michael Jackson’s music addressed. “To each their own,” he might have said, affirming that humanity will only advance when we grant each other the sympathy and, importantly, empathy that any of us require despite our own assessment of the situation. They refute the facts before them and reject the reality that fans around the globe are mourning a severe loss. Michael reminds them that the world has enough love for everyone—can you feel it? Remember:
Click the button on the player below to get a free Michael Jackson playlist and enter to win the complete Michael Jackson discoraphy on MP3 The Love You Save: A Tribute to Michael Jackson
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Comments
Let’s hope the album of MJ covers that will inevitably be released will be as great as the list you have. BTW, Billie Jean was covered (acoustically) by Soundgarden’s Chris Cornell brilliantly.
I too grew up with Michael and his brothers, loving their every note and every move. A white girl from NYC, first generation American, they forever broke the barrier for me between black and white. He will be remembered as a pioneer & trailblazer, a musical genius and a voice of unity, if we all do our part to make that happen.
I watched the raw footage of a recent interview with Spike Lee on Michael (w/ K. Couric of CBS) and he put it perfectly: “huge, huge loss.”
Comment by laprofe63 from Chicago — July 22, 2009 @ 12:10 pm
Thanks. Your story is genuinely one of those stories that explains what music was meant to do. Music should touch our hearts, and music should encourage us to see the world differently. It also means that you’re a great listener and very open minded, especially as a newcomer who must have been bombarded with many, many images of America, often contrary. Michael will be sorely missed.
Comment by Diepiriye Kuku from New Delhi, India — August 14, 2009 @ 7:37 am