By Bruce Britt The year was 1982 and Michael Jackson was feeling

ZZZ
By Bruce Britt
The year was 1982 and Michael Jackson was feeling the pressure. Best known as the
barely pubescent leader of the Jackson Five, the singer had finally forged a mature
image with his Grammy-winning 1979 solo album, Off the Wall. But ever the
perfectionist, Jackson entered Westlake Studios in Los Angeles determined to surpass
Off the Wall and its 7 million copies sold. With the music industry gripped in a sales
slump, producer Quincy Jones warned Jackson against being too hopeful.
“I remember Quincy saying ‘the record business is not what it was a couple of years
ago, and if we get six million [in sales], I'm gonna declare that a success',”
keyboardist Brian Banks recently told the UK’s Daily Telegraph.
The album Quincy Jones reportedly handicapped was Thriller, Michael Jackson’s futurefunk masterpiece that today boasts the distinction of being the best-selling album of all
time. To date, Thriller has sold so many units that its worldwide tally is hard to track,
with estimates ranging from 67 million to 104 million copies sold. In commemoration of
this historic achievement, Sony Music has released Thriller 25, a special anniversary
edition featuring a remastered version of Jackson’s classic CD, plus a music video DVD
and bonus remixes showcasing contemporary artists like Kanye West, will.i.am, Fergie
and Akon.
Just as Off the Wall and Thriller reinvented Jackson, so has the singer’s anniversary
disc signaled a rebirth. Within two weeks of its February 2008 release, Thriller 25 had
shipped well over 1.3 million units internationally. According to Sony Music, the album
was charting Top 10 in virtually every market in the world, with the majority of
countries reporting top 3 rankings.
Though Thriller’s groundbreaking achievements have been well examined, the facts bear
review. Spending 37 weeks at #1, Thriller ranks among only three albums ever to
remain in the top 10 of the Billboard 200 chart for an entire year. Not only did
Thriller help Jackson win a record-breaking eight Grammy Awards in 1984, it was also
the first album ever to yield seven Billboard Hot 100 top 10 singles. Radio staples like
ZZZ
“Billie Jean,” “Beat It,” “Thriller” and “Human Nature” helped bring AfricanAmerican music back into the mainstream for the first time since disco’s 1970s heyday.
Thriller’s music videos set the creative bar so high that many pundits credit the album
for transforming MTV into the global phenomenon it is today.
In all, Thriller altered the pop landscape so dramatically that it seemed to separate
pop history into two epochs: B.T. (“Before Thriller”) and A.T. (“After Thriller”).
The album’s cohesive blend of fizzy pop, hi-tech funk and tart mainstream rock nearly
transformed Jackson into a musical genre unto himself. For the MTV generation,
Thriller’s impact was nothing short of devastating. The album has been cited as a
powerful influence on contemporary artists like Mariah Carey, Usher, Britney Spears,
Justin Timberlake, Beyonce, Missy Elliott, Kanye West and countless more.
“All the brilliance that had been building inside Michael Jackson for 24 years just
erupted,” Quincy Jones told a magazine, and many critics agree that Thriller is
Jackson’s finest hour. Rolling Stone called the disc, “a zesty LP whose up-tempo
workouts don't obscure its harrowing, dark messages.” The New York Times described
Thriller in almost messianic terms, hailing the album as a hopeful sign that “the
destructive barriers that spring up regularly between white and black music — and
between whites and blacks — in this culture may be breached once again.”
In hindsight, almost everything about Thriller seemed to point to the album’s success,
from its exciting title to the name of the Sony Music subsidiary label the disc was
recorded for. With its world-beating sales, innovative songs and groundbreaking videos,
Thriller remains a truly epic recording.
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