HIStory

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

HIStory — Past, Present and Future, Book I
HIStory — Past, Present and Future, Book I cover
Compilation album (half studio, half compilation) by Michael Jackson
Released June 20, 1995
Recorded 1978–1995
Genre R&B/Pop
Length Disc one: 71:38
Disc two: 77:12
Label Epic Records
EK-59000
Producer Michael Jackson,
James Harris,
Janet Jackson, Terry Lewis, Dallas Austin, David Foster, Bill Bottrell, R. Kelly,
Teddy Riley
Professional reviews
Michael Jackson chronology
Dangerous
(1991)
History
(1995)
Blood on the Dance Floor: HIStory in the Mix
(1997)

HIStory – Past, Present and Future, Book I is a double album by American singer Michael Jackson released in June 1995. The album featured one disc of greatest hits from the singer's previous fifteen years, while the second disc featured mostly newer songs, with the exception of "Come Together", which he recorded in 1987.

It is the best-selling multiple disc album ever released by a solo artist with worldwide sales of 18 million copies (36 million units).[citation needed] HIStory is Jackson's second best-selling album of the nineties but is actually his top grossing album of the nineties.[1]

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Recording

Recording started in September of 1994 and would carry through the early spring of 1995. Jackson wrote the majority of the songs attacking the press for "scandalizing" him and gave messages to fans to not "feed into the tabloids". Several of those songs included "Scream", which was a duet between Michael and sister Janet, who had agreed to do a duet with her brother after she felt that she "had made it to the top" and she didn't fear that she'd "had to ride Michael's coattails". Other songs that attacked the tabloids included "Tabloid Junkie" and "This Time Around". The Michael and Janet duet was the first of several tunes Jackson produced with Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis ("2 Bad", "HIStory", "Tabloid Junkie") but not without additional help from the likes of Dallas Austin ("This Time Around"), R. Kelly (the lone ballad, "You Are Not Alone") and Jackson himself ("They Don't Care About Us", "Earth Song", "Stranger in Moscow", "D.S.", "Money", "Little Susie", "Smile"). Jackson, in fact, dominated the production of the album though not fully incorporating serious issues into his music including racism, the ecology and his own personal travails ("D.S.", in particular, was an attack on the district attorney of Jackson's case, Thomas Sneddon, in which he is heard singing in the chorus despite the lyrics reading "Dom Sheldon", possibly used to escape a lawsuit). Like on previous albums, Jackson wanted to feature guest stars. Other than his sister Janet, rapper The Notorious B.I.G. put down a rap verse in "This Time Around", soul group Boyz II Men sung background vocals on "HIStory" and basketball star and sometime rapper Shaquille O'Neal put down a verse on "2 Bad". While fourteen of the songs were new recordings, Jackson included an older recording of his cover of The Beatles' "Come Together", which he had recorded during the Bad period. It was altered slightly before being included on the album.

[edit] Promotion

To promote the album, Jackson embarked on the successful HIStory World Tour,[2] which was attended by more than four and a half million people. Jackson also made a promotional "teaser" music video showing him marching with thousands of military personnel as well as shipping statues of himself on boats around Europe[3] and 30 million dollars were spent on its promotion by Sony.[4]

[edit] Controversy

"HIStory" remains Jackson's most controversial album as seen by a number of events.

  • The music video for "You Are Not Alone" was controversial in that it featured an almost nude Jackson and his then-wife Lisa Marie Presley. Additionally, two Belgian songwriters, brothers Eddy and Danny Van Passel claimed to have written the melody in 1993. In September of 2007 a Belgian Judge ruled the song was plagarized from the Van Passel brothers and the song was subsequently banned from airwaves in Belgium.
  • Controversy arose when a verse in "They Don't Care About Us" ("Jew me/sue me/everybody do me/kick me, kike me/don't you black or white me") raised suspicion that the singer was anti-Semitic, charges Jackson denied. To make up for it, he edited the verse on later issues of the album.
  • The original music video for "They Don't Care About Us" showed Jackson singing the song in a prison.[5] MTV took the video off its playlist because it showed scenes of violence.[5] Jackson and video director Spike Lee released another version of the video set in Brazil, which was actually shot before the "prison version".[5]
  • At the BRIT Awards in 1996, Jackson was given a special "Artist of a Generation" award. At the ceremony he performed "Earth Song" with a grandiose stage show, with Jackson portrayed as a Christ-like figure surrounded by adoring children. Pulp frontman Jarvis Cocker mounted the stage in protest at the act. Cocker ran across the stage, lifting his shirt and pointing his (clothed) bottom in Jackson's direction. Cocker was subsequently questioned by the police on suspicion of causing injury towards three of the children in Jackson's performance, although no criminal proceedings followed. The performance saw the song and album rise back up the charts.

[edit] Critical response

The album received 5 Grammy Award nominations and won one,[6] these were:

HIStory, arguably Jackson's most conflictive album, revealed a "furious" pop icon worn by years of superstardom,[7] with Jon Pareles of the The New York Times writing that "It has been a long time since Michael Jackson was simply a performer. He's the main asset of his own corporation, which is a profitable subsidiary of Sony".[7] The album featured Jackson using profanity and other controversial lyrics, which forced him to modify some of the words to "They Don't Care About Us". Edged onwards by a quasi-messianic flair, he also railed against the media in "Tabloid Junkie", singing, "With your pen you torture me/You'd crucify the Lord" and that "Just because you read it in a magazine/Or see it on a TV screen/Don't make it factual".[7] HIStory mostly encompassed reflective compositions, presenting only one conventional love song, "You Are Not Alone".[7]

[edit] Singles

Sales of HIStory were down on the his previous albums Dangerous and Bad (although unit sales were higher). This has been attributed to the high purchase cost of HIStory and critics believe that the public purchased the singles over the album. The single sales of HIStory were collectively 10.45 million units,[8] which was higher than those of Dangerous at 8.36 million units[9] and Bad at 10.03 million units,[10] even though the latter albums had more singles released from their track lists (eight and nine releases respectively, against the five from HIStory). Only the singles from the Thriller at 19.55 million units [11] sold better than those released from HIStory.

  • "Scream/Childhood" - Released as a double A-side the first single released from HIStory was "Scream", sung and performed with his sister Janet Jackson. The single had the best ever debut at #5 on the Billboard Hot 100 and had a Grammy nomination for "Best Pop Collaboration With Vocals" [12]. The music video for "Scream" is one of his most critically acclaimed winning three MTV awards in 1995 and a Grammy in 1996. [13] "Scream" is currently the most expensive music video ever made.[14] It sold 2 million copies worldwide.[15]
  • "You Are Not Alone" - was the second single released from HIStory and would become the first song ever to debut at #1 on the Billboard Hot 100,[16] (beating his previous single "Scream"). It reached #1 in various international markets, including Britain. It was seen as a major artistic and commercial success and received a Grammy nomination for "Best Pop Vocal Performance".[17] It sold 3 million copies worldwide.[18]
  • "Earth Song" - was the third single released from HIStory, and was accompanied by a well received expensive music video that was nominated for a Grammy Award in 1996 but lost to his earlier video "Scream".[19] The song topped the UK Singles Chart for six weeks over Christmas in 1995 and sold one million copies there, making it his most successful UK single, surpassing the success of "Billie Jean". It sold 3.15 million copies worldwide.[20]

[edit] Album sales

In America, the album sold over 3.5 million copies when counting both albums separately, and the RIAA counted it as a double album, meaning total sales were seven million, a certification of 7x Platinum. In the UK, the BPI certified it at 5x Platinum, denoting 1.5 million shipments there. The album sold better in continental Europe, where it sold more than eleven million more copies, pushing the album to sell a worldwide total of 18 million copies (36 million units) worldwide. It would be six more years before Jackson released his next album.

[edit] Certifications

Country Certification Shipments
United States 7x Platinum 3,500,000
United Kingdom 5x Platinum 1,500,000
Germany 7x Platinum 1,500,000
France 4x Platinum 1,200,000
Canada 5x Platinum[23] 500,000[23]
Japan 3x Platinum 750,000
Australia 7x Platinum 490,000
Netherlands 3x Platinum 240,000
Switzerland 3x Platinum 150,000
Brazil Platinum 350,000
Austria 2x Platinum 80,000
Norway Platinum 40,000
Israel Platinum 40,000
Finland 2x Platinum 60,000

[edit] U.S. sales

Period RIAA award U.S. shipments Total
Jun 20, 1995 - Aug 16, 1995 Gold, Platinum and 5x Platinum on Aug 16, 1995 2,500,000 2,500,000
Aug 17, 1995 - Jan 11, 1996 6x Platinum on Jan 11, 1996 500,000 3,000,000
Jan 12, 1996 - Oct 12, 1999 7x Platinum on Oct 12, 1999 500,000 3,500,000

[edit] Track listing

[edit] Disc one: HIStory Begins

  1. "Billie Jean" (Jackson) – 4:54
  2. "The Way You Make Me Feel" (Jackson) – 4:57
  3. "Black or White" (Jackson/Bottrell) – 4:15
  4. "Rock with You" (Temperton) – 3:40
  5. "She's out of My Life" (Bahler) – 3:38
  6. "Bad" (Jackson) – 4:07
  7. "I Just Can't Stop Loving You" (Jackson) – 4:12
  8. "Man in the Mirror" (Ballard/Garrett) – 5:19
  9. "Thriller" (Temperton) – 5:57
  10. "Beat It" (Jackson) – 4:18
  11. "The Girl Is Mine" (Jackson) – 3:41
  12. "Remember the Time" (Riley/Jackson/Belle) – 3:59
  13. "Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough" (Jackson) – 6:05
  14. "Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'" (Jackson) – 6:04
  15. "Heal the World" (Jackson) – 6:24

[edit] Disc two: HIStory Continues

  1. "Scream" (Harris/Lewis/Jackson/Jackson) – 4:38
  2. "They Don't Care About Us" (Jackson) – 4:44
  3. "Stranger in Moscow" (Jackson) – 5:44
  4. "This Time Around" (Moore/Austin/Swedien/Jackson/Wallace) – 4:20
  5. "Earth Song" (Jackson) – 6:46
  6. "D.S." (Jackson) – 4:49
  7. "Money" (Jackson) – 4:41
  8. "Come Together" (Lennon/McCartney) – 4:02
  9. "You Are Not Alone" (Kelly) – 5:45
  10. "Childhood (Theme from Free Willy 2)" (Jackson) – 4:28
  11. "Tabloid Junkie" (Harris/Lewis/Jackson) – 4:32
  12. "2 Bad" (Harris/Lewis/Jackson/O'Neal) – 4:49
  13. "HIStory" (Harris/Lewis/Jackson) – 6:37
  14. "Little Susie" (Jackson) – 6:13
  15. "Smile" (Chaplin) – 4:56

[edit] Credits

[edit] Production credits

  • "Scream" produced by Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis and Michael Jackson and Janet Jackson
  • "They Don't Care About Us", "Stranger in Moscow", "D.S.", "Money" and "Little Susie" produced by Michael Jackson
  • "This Time Around" produced Dallas Austin and Michael Jackson, co-produced by Bruce Swedien and Rene
  • "Earth Song" produced by Michael Jackson and David Foster, co-produced by Bill Bottrell
  • "Come Together" produced by Michael Jackson and Bill Bottrell
  • "You Are Not Alone" produced by R. Kelly and Michael Jackson
  • "Childhood" and "Smile" produced by Michael Jackson and David Foster
  • "Tabloid Junkie" and "History" produced by Michael Jackson and Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis
  • "2 Bad" produced by Michael Jackson, Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis and Bruce Swedien and Rene

[edit] Album credits

  • Lead and Background Vocals: Michael Jackson
  • Background Vocals: Zedric Williams, James Ingram, Siedah Garrett, Andrae and Sandra Crouch and the Andrae Crouch Singers; Carol Dennis, Jackie Gouche, Gloria Estefan, and Linda McCrary
  • Child soloists:
    • "HIStory": Leah Frazier
    • "Little Susie": Markita Prescott
  • Rap performances by R. Kelly, Boyz II Men: Nathan Morris, Wayne Morris, Shawn Stockman, Michael McCrary; The Notorious B.I.G. and Shaquille O'Neal
  • Arrangements by Michael Jackson, Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, Dallas Austin, Bruce Swedien, R. Kelly, Rene, Jeremy Lubbock, Brad Buxer and Johnny Mandel
  • Vocal arrangements by Michael Jackson, Janet Jackson, Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis
  • Orchestral arrangements by David Foster, Elmer Bernstein and Bill Ross
  • String arrangements by Michael Jackson
  • Keyboard arrangements by Michael Jackson
  • Orchestras conducted by Jeremy Lubbock
  • Horn arrangement by Michael Jackson and Jerry Hey
  • Pianos: David Paich and John Barnes
  • Keyboards and synthesizers: Randy Kerber, Jimmy Jam, Terry Lewis, David Foster, Steve "Yada" Porcaro, David Paich, Bill Bottrell, Dallas Austin, Glen Ballard, Rene, Brad Buxer, Simon Franglen, Greg Phillinganes, Lafayette Carthon, Michael Boddicker, Chuck Wild, Rob Arbitter, Gary Adante, John Barnes and Randy Waldman
  • Synthesizer programming: Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, Simon Franglen, Steve Porcaro, Brad Buxer, Peter Mokran, Michael Boddicker, Chuck Wild, Andrew Scheps, Rick Sheppard, Rob Hoffman, Bobby Brooks, Jeff Bova, Chris Palmero, Jason Miles, Arnie Schulze and Gregg Mangiafico
  • Drum programming: Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, Peter Mokran and Andrew Scheps
  • Synclavier programming: Andrew Scheps and Simon Franglen
  • Guitars: Eddie Van Halen, Slash, David Williams, Larry Clayton, Dean Parks, Eric Gale, Tim Pierce, Dann Huff, Paul Jackson Jr., Steve Lukather, Bill Bottrell, Jeff Mirinow, Rob Hoffman and Jen Leigh
  • Drums: Ndugu Chancler, Jeff Porcaro, John Robinson and Bryan Loren
  • Percussion: Michael Jackson, Ollie E. Brown, Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, Bill Bottrell, Buddy Williams, Bruce Swedien, Simon Franglen, Rene, Chuck Wild, Paulinho Da Costa, Nannette Fortier and Bobby Brooks
  • Bass: Steve Lukather, Colin Wolfe, Louis Johnson, Nathan East, Terry Jackson, Doug Grigsby and Guy Pratt
  • Synth bass: Bryan Loren
  • Horns: Larry Williams, Jerry Hey, Gary Grant, William Reichenbach and Kim Hutchcroft

[edit] Technical credits

  • Executive producer: Michael Jackson
  • Recorded and mixed by Bruce Swedien
  • Additional Recording and mixing by Eddie De Lena, Steve Hodge and W.J.R.
  • Technical directors: Matt Forger and Brad Sundberg
  • Production coordination: Rachel Smith
  • Mastered by Bernie Grundman
  • Computer programming and technical direction assistance by Craig Johnson
  • Additional synthersizer programming and sound design by Michael Boddicker, Chuck Wild, Scott Pittinsky, Bobby Brooks, Roberta Swedien and Darry Ross

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ 3 Janet albums listed in the World's 150 Biggest Selling Albums Ever [Archive] - LiveDaily Community
  2. ^ Michael Jackson
  3. ^ Michael Jackson HIStory Teaser
  4. ^ Yahoo! Movies biography
  5. ^ a b c Micahel Jackson > Videography. JacksonAction.com. Retrieved on 2007-01-28.
  6. ^ Michael Jackson, The Ultimate Collection booklet.
  7. ^ a b c d POP VIEW; Michael Jackson Is Angry, Understand?. NYTimes.com. Retrieved on 2008-03-24.
  8. ^ Michael
  9. ^ Michael
  10. ^ Michael
  11. ^ Michael
  12. ^ Michael Jackson, The Ultimate Collection booklet.
  13. ^ Michael Jackson
  14. ^ Guinness World Records (2005). Guinness World Records 2006. Guinness. ISBN 1-904994-02-4. 
  15. ^ Michael
  16. ^ Taraborrelli, J. Randy (2004). The Magic and the Madness. Headline. ISBN 0-330-42005-4. 
  17. ^ Michael Jackson, The Ultimate Collection booklet.
  18. ^ Michael
  19. ^ Michael Jackson, The Ultimate Collection booklet.
  20. ^ Michael
  21. ^ Michael
  22. ^ Michael
  23. ^ a b Canadian Recording Industry Association (CRIA): Certification Results

[edit] See also

Preceded by
P*U*L*S*E by Pink Floyd
Billboard 200 number-one album
July 8 - July 21, 1995
Succeeded by
Pocahontas (soundtrack) by Various artists
Preceded by
P*U*L*S*E by Pink Floyd
Australian ARIA Albums Chart number-one album
July 2 - July 25, 1995
December 1 - December 7, 1995
Succeeded by
These Days by Bon Jovi