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Subject: "An Oral History Of Michael Jackson's 'Xscape' (Murph SWIPE)" Previous topic | Next topic
murph71
Member since Sep 15th 2005
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Tue May-13-14 04:35 AM

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"An Oral History Of Michael Jackson's 'Xscape' (Murph SWIPE)"


          





MJ heads....Enjoy.....



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An Oral History Of Michael Jackson's 'Xscape' Album
Keith Murphy

When you get over the novelty of it all, a blissful kind of shock rushes over you. It then sinks in that Michael Jackson's latest posthumous album Xscape is a damn sneaky good testament to an artist that lived to entertain 'til the last days of his headline-dominating life. There's a lot of credit to go around. Let's start with John Branca, the co-executor of Jackson's whirling estate. It was Branca who dusted off a collection of tracks that included the surprise 1983 unreleased gem "Love Never Felt So Good," a post-disco foot stomper written by... Paul Anka??? Yes, that's the same OG lyricist who penned Frank Sinatra's swaggering anthem "My Way."

The task of pulling the entire project together fell at the feet of Epic CEO L.A. Reid, who promptly got on the phone to recruit bombastic music visionary Timbaland to do the heavy lifting. Rounding out the focused production unit: Norwegian production duo Stargate (Tor Hermansen and Mikkel Eriksen) and longtime Jackson collaborator Rodney Jerkins, who at the start balked at the thought of placing his name on what he earlier viewed as sub-par MJ material. But Reid pinned him down. Indeed, Xscape has defied expectations.

VIBE rounded up the major players behind the 8-song release. This is the Oral History of Michael Jackson's Xscape. —Keith Murphy


-------


LET'S MAKE A MICHAEL JACKSON ALBUM (Fall, 2013)

JOHN BRANCA (Co-Executor of the Michael Jackson Estate): L.A. Reid did not let us or the fans down. His passion was evident from the beginning.

L.A. REID (Co-Founder of LaFace Records; Currently the chairman and CEO of Epic Records): It started last year of September. No one asked me to oversee this project. It was the other way around. I asked to do it, because being at Epic Records we call this the House That Thriller Built. "Love Never Felt So Good" was the song that really launched the recording process. When I heard that it was just Paul Anka playing piano and Michael singing I smiled. It was as if the sun came out. That day became a beautiful day because that music was coming through my speakers and into my soul. From there I said, "Okay, if the world hasn't heard this, then there's an album to made."

TIMBALAND (Grammy winning producer who oversaw most of the production on Xscape): I was very apprehensive about getting involved in this project. I did this album because of Michael Jackson. It completes my legacy. But my issue was I didn't want to work with somebody that wasn't here. Michael is someone I grew up on. The whole thing took me back to Aaliyah and Static Major. So I really had to deal with some things working on this Michael project.

L.A. REID: I didn't want to go to anyone else to lead this project... only Timbaland. Timbaland is my number one favorite producer in the business. He's like Muhammad Ali production-wise... he's been the champion at least three times. My son Aaron set up the meeting and I went to Timbaland's studio and he was working on his own album. There was a lot of people in the room so I just asked him to step out of the room for a second and I had a private chat with the man. I just said to him, "I want to do something really, really special. How does this sound? Michael Jackson produced by Timbaland." He said, "I like how that sounds."

TIMBALAND: brought out a lot of emotions. It took me a week to get through it. Every time I would play a song I would be like, "Put on something else...I can't do this right now." But once I started getting into it and was at ease with it and prayed about it, the music started to come to me. And I'm going to be honest with you, listening to those raw tracks of Michael made me cry. He's not here to see this. So to hear him singing... man. I always tell people I don't care who you are and what you aspire to be. You will never be Michael Jackson. Usher is Usher. And Justin *Timberlake* is Justin. Those two guys are amazing. But there's no comparison to Michael Jackson. None.

L.A. REID: I went to the others after Timberland had done all that he could do and was sort of exhausted . I went to Stargate and Rodney because I love them as well. You have to go to people you trust, and I trust Stargate. And Rodney was the producer that had already worked with Michael.

RODNEY JERKINS (Grammy winning producer who worked on the bulk of Michael Jackson's last studio work, 2000's Invincible): Me and Michael first worked on "Xscape" in 1999. L.A. will tell you I was a jerk through the whole process *laughs*. I care. Michael was a dude that was a friend of mines. I had a good relationship with him. He knew my family and I knew his family. So I would tell L.A., "I'm not doing a song until I hear the rest of the album." Even when he would say, "Well, we have to do this first," I would say, "I don't care. I got to hear the whole album before I finish a song." I wanted to make sure that everything stood up to what Michael would have wanted. That was important to me.

TIMBALAND: L.A. and me involved Stargate because we always felt their production. And by them coming from another country, Michael always stayed in Europe. To me Stargate are the hottest producers across the water. There was one record I felt like it needed their touch. They did a great job and nailed it.

TOR ERIK (One half of the hit-making duo Stargate, who has produced a string of hits for heavyweight headliners including Ne-Yo, Rihanna, Beyonce, and Katy Perry): L.A. came down to the studio and said I want to talk to you about Michael. To be honest with you my first thought was, "Oh no, not another *posthumous* album." Sometimes the material isn't strong enough and that was my initial worries. We met Michael and wanted to work with Michael, and we are huge fans of his. But we didn't want to do anything to tarnish his musical legacy by taking some songs that are just leftovers. So L.A. says, "Okay, I hear you. Let me just play you some music." He played a couple of things, but the song that really impressed us was "Blue Gangster." It was a six minute piece of music and Michael was singing his heart out and the production was really beautiful and really up to date. That song made me see the light where this can really be something. But some of the songs were already done so we asked L.A., "What do you have for us?"

L.A. REID: I've had so many hits with Stargate from Rihanna to Jennifer Lopez. They're the kind of guys you go to when you are very clear about exactly what you want. I call Stargate pinch hitters. You go get those guys when you want them to swing, which inning, and which play. You call Stargate and you are going to get a hit.

TOR ERIK: We basically turned L.A. down after the meeting because some of the earlier tracks they wanted us to work on we didn't find them interesting. So L.A. called us a couple of days later and said, "Whoa, whoa, whoa... I got one more." He sent it to us and all we heard was the a cappella. And I was just floored. It was just a great moment of Michael Jackson vocals. From top to bottom some fantastic harmonies. That was the song that got us on board..."Place With No Name."

L.A. REID: "A Place With No Name" was originally titled "A Horse With No Name," which was a song by a band called America. And so Michael re-wrote the song and re-wrote the lyrics with America's permission and titled it "A Place With No Name." When I took it to Stargate the way they approached it was so creative. They listened to the time signature of the song, which was a 6/8 time signature. So the guys from Stargate asked, "Which songs have had the 6/8 time signature?" There were songs like Stevie Wonder's "Higher Ground," which was an influence. And "Higher Love" by Steve Winwood was also an influence when they approached it. It's a really special record.

TOR ERIK: That time signature came about because of Michael's vocals. I didn't even want to hear the original demo. All I wanted to hear was Michael's vocals. And when I listened to Michael he's in the booth snapping his fingers, clapping his hands and stomping his feet. He's doing all these energetic things that gave us a vibe where this track should go. That's when we started to experiment with the bassline. We didn't even have the drums on it yet, just the bassline and a chord progression that really worked for something more danceable. Then we started working on drums. But all of that stuff really came from Michael Jackson.

----


JUSTIN AND THE KING OF POP (Winter, 2013)

TIMBALAND: Justin proved himself on "Love Never Felt So Good." It was important for him to fit into the song like a duet. He told me, "I don't want to fit in like a feature." So that took some time. Justin was like, "This guy is so good. It's hard to blend in with Michael."

L.A. REID: The funny thing about that song is although there are overdubs of Michael's vocals, what we found was only a one track demo of Michael and Paul Anka. So se couldn't separate the two, which meant you couldn't turn Michael up or turn the piano down. You had to work with the track. And the tempo fluctuated, which meant that you couldn't simply lock up a drum machine and play along. This required musicianship to really turn it into a record.

TIMBALAND: When I heard Justin's vocals I just said, "Wow." He's going to be the coldest white boy to ever do it. After hearing Justin on "Love Never Felt So Good" I looked at him totally differently. He's a bad man.

L.A. REID: Honestly it was Justin who wanted to be involved. Justin and Timbaland are obviously very close but every time I would run into Justin he would say, "Okay, when are we doing it?" This was more of something that Justin willed. Justin and Timbaland worked on it together, but it was Justin's own idea. I love that he was the guy that chose to be the ambassador to the Xscape project. He certainly measured up as a superstar and as a talent.

TIMBALAND: A lot of the songs on Xscape were songs Michael was going to revamp. So it was up to us to touch them up. We had all the sounds and vocals, but the songs on this album are the ones that L.A. thought were the most exciting. "Chicago" was my music under Michael. I heard some people say, "Oh, Timbaland shouldn't touch these Michael songs." The hardcore fans didn't like me being involved in this project, but once they heard the music they were like, "Wait a minute. How can you make him sound like he did it in 2014?" That's the gift I got from God. And it takes certain projects like Xscape to show the world who you really are."

L.A. REID: John Branca, who manages Michael's estate, told me that there was a song called "Chicago" that was really popular with the fans and that I should pay particular attention to that one. I listened to it and really liked it a lot. I included it on the list and that was as far as it went. When Timbaland got it, he turned it into something that really caught my ear. But no matter who produces a song there has to be an actual song to start with. So the real credit goes to Cory Rooney who wrote that song.

CORY ROONEY (songwriter; former senior executive at Sony): I ran into Michael in L.A. on a Wednesday. This was in 2000. We were talking and he let us hear things that he was working on for Invincible. And Tommy Mottola was with us and he said, "It would be cool if you went home and wrote something for Mike." I was like, "Shit, man. Of course I will!" At this time I was working on every major project at Sony from Mariah Carey and J. Lo to Marc Anthony, but never Michael Jackson. So I came right home and wrote a song and by Friday afternoon I let Tommy hear my demo. He sent it to Michael right away. And by that Monday I got a call from Michael himself! He's like, "Cory, you know what? I know the song, I've lived with it over the weekend and I'm here in New York and I would love to cut it." Forget about it! I was looking at that phone like, "Oh my goodness!" It was crazy.

TIMBALAND: Working on songs like "Chicago" make me wish that Michael was still here. He sings so good that you become so into Michael. You want to hear and watch him do these songs.

CORY ROONEY: I wrote a story about a guy who meets a women on his way to Chicago. Michael would ask me, "Why did you name it Chicago?" And I said, "I don't know...it just sounds better." Michael loved the fact that I had him singing in a lower register. He told me that most people wrote things for him in a higher pitch. He showed up at the studio and I produced Michael's vocals. The crazy part is this is Michael Jackson, but he dealt with me like a regular artist. He was like, "Cory, what time do you want me in the studio? And I'm like, "Man, you are Michael Jackson...you tell me when to be there." *Laughs*

TIMBALAND: "Loving You" just feels like it's part of an era. Like "Love Never Felt So Good" has a feeling of Off The Wall, "Loving You" feels like it could have easily come from that era also. This is Michael in his delicate voice. Michael has many voices. One of them is what I call the angry voice and he has that happy voice -- "Chicago" has both. I happen to be a fan of both. But the song "Loving You" happens to be my personal favorite on the album.

CORY ROONEY: Hearing Timbaland's version of "Chicago" was like getting that gift for Christmas from your parents. I had no idea what it was going to sound like. He took it in another direction that I would have never thought of taking it.

To Read Part 3 of the 'Xscape' Oral History go to: http://www.vibe.com/photo-gallery/oral-history-michael-jacksons-xscape-album?page=1

GOAT of his era......long live Prince.....God is alive....

  

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Topic Outline
Subject Author Message Date ID
bookmark
May 13th 2014
1
RE: bookmark
May 13th 2014
2
      dope
May 13th 2014
3
Hate to beat a dead horse...
May 13th 2014
4
RE: Hate to beat a dead horse...
May 13th 2014
5
I'm not so sure about Timbaland, murph
May 14th 2014
6
      RE: I'm not so sure about Timbaland, murph
May 14th 2014
8
whatever the reason is...
May 14th 2014
7
Good read. Thanks.
May 14th 2014
9
RE: Good read. Thanks.
May 14th 2014
10
great work as always murph
May 14th 2014
11
RE: great work as always murph
May 14th 2014
12
Good read Murph, thanks!
May 14th 2014
13
RE: Good read Murph, thanks!
May 15th 2014
16
I like LA's comment about Timbaland...
May 15th 2014
14
Yea that was an insightful comment.
May 15th 2014
15

Joe Corn Mo
Member since Aug 29th 2010
15139 posts
Tue May-13-14 07:57 AM

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1. "bookmark"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

  

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murph71
Member since Sep 15th 2005
23113 posts
Tue May-13-14 01:05 PM

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2. "RE: bookmark"
In response to Reply # 1


          



Yesir....

GOAT of his era......long live Prince.....God is alive....

  

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Joe Corn Mo
Member since Aug 29th 2010
15139 posts
Tue May-13-14 02:47 PM

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3. "dope"
In response to Reply # 2


  

          

  

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LeroyBumpkin
Charter member
36962 posts
Tue May-13-14 09:56 PM

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4. "Hate to beat a dead horse..."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

...but I'm of the belief it was music politics that kept Pharrell Williams working on this project. It was widely known that the tracks he and Chad made for Michael were hits. So why not give them the opportunity? They obviously were huge fans of MJ and wanted to work with him. I'll come back and read this later, but it frustrates me to hear LA Reid say he had to get the "hottest producers" in the game (a phrase I kinda hate).

https://digife.com

  

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murph71
Member since Sep 15th 2005
23113 posts
Tue May-13-14 10:17 PM

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5. "RE: Hate to beat a dead horse..."
In response to Reply # 4
Tue May-13-14 10:18 PM by murph71

          


We all know those tracks were perfect for MJ...And should have been recorded by MJ...And it's a shame it never happened...

But I will cut Reid some slack...He goes further than the "hottest producers" jibber jabber...His frame of mind had more to do with getting producers that either were in the process of working with MJ (Stargate were all set with with sessions with MJ before his death and Timbaland was also on deck)or that actually worked with MJ...

There were no rabbits pulled out of the hat on this project...Every producer/songwriter on Xscape had a working connection with Mike....

GOAT of his era......long live Prince.....God is alive....

  

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jaywonder
Member since Jun 05th 2007
8431 posts
Wed May-14-14 01:15 AM

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6. "I'm not so sure about Timbaland, murph"
In response to Reply # 5


  

          

When MJ passed away, he was either working with or planned to work with
will i am
Akon
RedOne
NeYo

and a couple others but nothing about Timbaland

I think LA chose Tim because he's one of the successful producers and because his productions (especially his work with JT) is heavily influenced by Michael

Still, LA assembled a good team (a way better one than the estate assembled for the Michael album)


http://boundless-expression.tumblr.com/

http://themichaeljacksonarchives.tumblr.com/

  

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murph71
Member since Sep 15th 2005
23113 posts
Wed May-14-14 07:37 AM

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8. "RE: I'm not so sure about Timbaland, murph"
In response to Reply # 6


          



From what I've heard tracks were exchanged...But Timbo got a bit frustrated with MJ's camp....

GOAT of his era......long live Prince.....God is alive....

  

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xangeluvr
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Wed May-14-14 01:34 AM

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7. "whatever the reason is..."
In response to Reply # 4


  

          

i'm definitely disappointed that pharrell didn't have a hand in the project. it would have been a perfect fit.

maybe the next one.

>...but I'm of the belief it was music politics that kept
>Pharrell Williams working on this project. It was widely
>known that the tracks he and Chad made for Michael were hits.
>So why not give them the opportunity? They obviously were
>huge fans of MJ and wanted to work with him. I'll come back
>and read this later, but it frustrates me to hear LA Reid say
>he had to get the "hottest producers" in the game (a phrase I
>kinda hate).
>
>

GamerTag and PSN: PokeEmAll

  

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Boogie Stimuli
Member since Sep 24th 2010
14014 posts
Wed May-14-14 09:25 AM

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9. "Good read. Thanks."
In response to Reply # 0


          

~
~
~
~
~
Days like this I miss Sha Mecca

  

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murph71
Member since Sep 15th 2005
23113 posts
Wed May-14-14 10:11 AM

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10. "RE: Good read. Thanks."
In response to Reply # 9


          




*Nods head*....

GOAT of his era......long live Prince.....God is alive....

  

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SsenepoD
Member since Nov 13th 2007
4331 posts
Wed May-14-14 11:02 AM

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11. "great work as always murph"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

___________________________
He has the confidence of Vernon Maxwell on a yayo binge.

http://www.2amDonuts.bandcamp.com

  

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murph71
Member since Sep 15th 2005
23113 posts
Wed May-14-14 10:14 PM

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12. "RE: great work as always murph"
In response to Reply # 11


          




thanks...yep yep...

GOAT of his era......long live Prince.....God is alive....

  

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stankpalmer
Member since Dec 16th 2003
6840 posts
Wed May-14-14 11:58 PM

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13. "Good read Murph, thanks!"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

------
so...if you're into DJing or nightlife...
or DJing AND nightlife...
peep Opening Set Podcast
https://soundcloud.com/openingset

also remixes: http://jonreyes.bandcamp.com

@stankpalmer

  

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murph71
Member since Sep 15th 2005
23113 posts
Thu May-15-14 07:34 AM

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16. "RE: Good read Murph, thanks!"
In response to Reply # 13


          



STANK....I see u....

GOAT of his era......long live Prince.....God is alive....

  

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Af-1
Member since Apr 22nd 2008
3461 posts
Thu May-15-14 04:02 AM

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14. "I like LA's comment about Timbaland..."
In response to Reply # 0
Thu May-15-14 04:21 AM by Af-1

  

          

"He's like Muhammad Ali production-wise... he's been the champion at least three times"

It's kinda true though and he probably doesn't get enough credit for his longevity: following his initial run he came back with 'Loose' and 'FS/LS', then when it seemed like the Guetta style was his way forward, he bounces back with 'MCHG' and '20/20's.

Although my first pick for this record would have been Pharrell (and Chad), Tim is still a dream pairing for MJ.

-----
Check me out, say hi...
Visit our soul/jazz/funk internet radio station, Blue-in-Green:RADIO: http://www.blueingreenradio.com/
https://www.mixcloud.com/Blue_in_Green_Sessions/
http://soundcloud.com/user305437292

  

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Boogie Stimuli
Member since Sep 24th 2010
14014 posts
Thu May-15-14 04:23 AM

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15. "Yea that was an insightful comment."
In response to Reply # 14


          

When I read that, I was like "damn... that's actually kinda true".

I agree that I'd have liked to see Pharrell and Chad involved, but the way MJ
often chose the people who were doing numbers on he boards, it's almost
safer to say he would be working with Timbaland leading up to a 2014 release.






~
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~
~
~
Days like this I miss Sha Mecca

  

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