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Saturday July 4, 11:48 AM
How Jackson's 'Thriller' changed the music business
LOS ANGELES (Billboard) - In early 1984, when Epic Records
executives presented their slate of upcoming releases at the
convention in Hawaii of parent company CBS Records, they
couldn't resist playing up the success they were experiencing.
So between the pitches for new albums, Epic inserted stock
footage of semi trucks and a voice-over that thunderously
announced, "There goes another load of Michael Jackson's
'Thriller' albums!"
Trucks weren't really leaving the warehouse every few
minutes, but "Thriller" was still shattering expectations more
than a year after its Nov. 30, 1982, release. Epic was selling
more than 1 million copies per month in the United States
alone.
Nearly 27 years after its release, "Thriller" still stands
as the best-selling studio album in the United States,
according to the Recording Industry Association of America,
which has certified it 28-times platinum. More than 50 million
copies have been sold internationally, according to estimates.
But the album's success can't be measured by sales alone.
As Jackson moonwalked his way into music history, "Thriller"
set a new benchmark for blockbusters that changed how the music
business promoted and marketed superstar releases. It also
changed MTV, breaking down the cable network's racial barriers
and raising the bar for video quality.
FIRST OF ITS KIND
From the beginning, Epic intended to live up to its name.
The label made "Thriller" the first major release to debut
worldwide simultaneously, the first album to be promoted for
close to two years instead of the usual six or eight months and
the first album to spin off seven singles to radio -- more than
double the normal number.
Along the way, "Thriller" redefined the expectations for
blockbuster releases. Starting in 1984, Columbia released seven
singles from Bruce Springsteen's "Born in the U.S.A.," all of
which landed in the top 10 of the Billboard Hot 100. Around the
same time, Warner Bros. sent to radio five singles from
Prince's "Purple Rain." Mercury found seven singles on Def
Leppard's "Hysteria," all of which went to the pop chart. All
three albums eventually sold more than 10 million copies each
in the United States alone.
Before all that, "Thriller" gave a much-needed boost to the
music business, then suffering from its second slump in three
years. At the time, Billboard reported that record shipments
had declined by 50 million units between 1980 and 1982.
It was a bleak time, and CBS staffers referred to Aug. 13,
1982, as "Black Friday." "We had a major layoff that day,"
remembers Epic/Portrait/CBS Associated Labels vice president of
merchandising Dan Beck. "Half of the marketing department was
let go at Epic. It was very upsetting because nothing like that
had ever happened before."
Then Jackson changed everything. "There is no question that
'Thriller' was the driving force behind what became the hottest
span in Epic's history," Beck says. After that, the label had
major hits with Cyndi Lauper, Culture Club and REO Speedwagon.
The "Flashdance" soundtrack and the Police's "Synchronicity"
also helped lure fans back into stores.
WRITING ON THE 'WALL'
Jackson made a name for himself in the early '70s as the
young frontman of Motown's Jackson 5 and as a solo artist. The
Jacksons had left Motown in 1975 and released three albums on
Epic, the most recent of which, "Destiny," peaked at No. 11 on
the Billboard 200 in 1978. But Jackson became a bona fide
superstar with his first solo album for Epic, "Off the Wall."
As Jackson recorded that album, which came out in 1979, his
team decided to bring it to the broadest audience possible.
"Our whole mind-set was that we were making music for the
masses, and part of the big picture was to get the record
company to turn around and market and promote to a mass
market," says Ron Weisner, who was co-managing Jackson with
Freddy DeMann at the time. "If you were a black artist, you
were put in a black music division, and that meant the
marketing campaign was an ad in Jet and Ebony. Our attitude
was, 'Let the public decide -- don't just present it to a black
market only."'
From the moment Epic's pop and R&B promotion teams heard
"Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough," the album's opening track and
lead single, they knew they had a major hit on their hands,
recalls former West Coast regional urban promotion manager
Maurice Warfield. So they took the unprecedented step of
promoting singles to R&B and pop radio at the same time.
"It wasn't the usual 'Build up the artist at urban radio
first and then go to pop,"' Warfield says. "We knew right off:
We're all going to work the records at the same time."
"Don't Stop" debuted July 28, 1979, and became Jackson's
first No. 1 R&B and pop single as a solo artist since his 1972
hit "Ben." That was followed in November by a second No. 1 R&B
and pop single, "Rock With You," then the album's title track
and "She's Out of My Life."
"'Off the Wall' opened up something at radio that was never
closed again," Weisner says. "The wall was down by the time we
got to 'Thriller."'
'THRILLER' TIME
When Jackson first suggested working with Quincy Jones on
"Off the Wall," Epic executives worried that the producer was
too jazzy. But Jackson, who had met Jones when he played the
Scarecrow in the movie version of "The Wiz" and Jones produced
the soundtrack, persisted. At the time, Jones was struck by
Jackson's "profound discipline and focus"; he knew that "he
could still be bigger than everyone else was saying."
Jones began laying the foundation for "Thriller" in
December 1981, when he took Jackson to Tucson, Ariz., to spend
three days recording the Paul McCartney duet "The Girl Is
Mine." "Michael and I just wanted to work with Paul, who I'd
known for years," Jones remembers.
Work began in earnest in August 1982. Jackson wrote several
of the songs: "The Girl Is Mine," "Beat It," "Billie Jean" and
"Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'." Among the other writers was
former Heatwave keyboardist Rod Temperton, who wrote "Rock With
You" on "Off the Wall." He brought them an "amazing" song he
had, titled "Starlight Love," Jones says, which eventually
became the song "Thriller."
Despite the success of "Off the Wall," Jones says, their
working relationship was very much about creativity for
creativity's sake. "You don't make records to say how many
you're going to sell," he says. "You can't control that. You
make something that touches you and will hopefully touch
someone else."
One priority was to balance "Thriller" between R&B and pop,
disco and rock, funk and ballads. "We thought at one point we
were done," recalls Greg Phillinganes, a keyboardist on the
"Off the Wall" and "Thriller" albums. "And Quincy was like,
'No, not so fast. We need certain missing elements.' Michael
was pretty disappointed, but then that's how we got ('The Lady
in My Life') and 'Beat It."'
At the time, disco still dominated the charts, and Jones
and Jackson wanted to transcend it. "'Beat It' came about with
Eddie Van Halen because we wanted to do a black rock 'n' roll
song," Jones says. "The Knack's 'My Sharona' was No. 1 at the
time, plus we had to crawl over disco, which was still so big.
We wanted to find a way to transcend all that. By God's
blessing, we got out of the box."
WORLDWIDE APPEAL
Jackson and Jones continued tinkering through the fall of
1982, which meant that Epic had to move back the album's
release date a number of times. The day before Jones finally
turned in "Thriller," after he and Jackson had spent all night
working, he realized that there was too much music on each
side. "You need big, fat grooves to make it happen on vinyl,"
he says. "We had 24-27 minutes, which makes the sound smaller.
We had to get it down to 19-20 minutes."
So Jones and Jackson pared down the intro to "Billie Jean,"
removed a verse from "The Lady in My Life" and finished the
project. Or so Epic thought. At the very last minute, still
unhappy with some aspects of the album's sound, they remixed
the entire album over a marathon weekend, says Ron McCarrell,
VP of marketing for Epic/Portrait/CBS Associated Labels.
Epic executives were eager to release "Thriller" in time
for Christmas 1982. As Jones and Jackson fiddled, they decided
to wait until January 1983. Then the label's hand was forced
when the album leaked to radio and stations began playing
multiple cuts. Once stations put songs in heavy rotation, Epic
senior VP/general manager Don Dempsey decided to rush-release
it on Nov. 30, 1982.
"Thriller" entered the Billboard 200 at No. 11 during the
week ending Dec. 25, 1982. After 10 weeks on the chart, it
knocked Men at Work's "Business as Usual" out of the top spot
and stayed at No. 1 for 37 nonconsecutive weeks. The first
single, "The Girl Is Mine," reached No. 2 on the Billboard Hot
100, but didn't even hint at the hit Epic had on its hands.
Then the fun began.
Epic's head of promotion, Frank Dileo (who grew so close to
Jackson during "Thriller" that he later became his manager),
decided to release two singles concurrently in order to broaden
the album's audience. As the second single, "Billie Jean,"
climbed the pop chart, Epic released "Beat It," a driving rock
track anchored by a searing Eddie Van Halen guitar solo.
"Frank said, 'Let's release another single; we'll blow
their minds,"' McCarrell says. It did. During the week of Dec.
18, 1982, "Beat It" was one of Billboard's top three adds on
rock radio alongside cuts by Sammy Hagar and Bob Seger. The
song peaked at No. 14 on Billboard's nascent rock tracks
chart.
Former rock radio consultant Lee Abrams -- now chief
innovation officer at Tribune Co. -- describes the period as
"kind of a confusing time" for album-oriented rock. The format
was at a crossroads, caught between AOR stalwarts like Led
Zeppelin and new groups like the Police and U2.
"AOR had to start thinking more," Abrams says, in order to
remain relevant. "A few stations tried 'Beat It,' and the
reaction was fantastic. It generated requests and opened a lot
of programmers' eyes. AOR was accepting someone not in the
traditional club, but the timeless, universal quality of the
song couldn't be avoided."
JACKSON GETS HIS MTV
From the start, Jackson's vision for "Thriller" was to
"take it to the next giant level," Weisner says. "It was about
how we were going to marry the album with the visual
extension."
So it was with high hopes that Weisner walked into the
office of a 16-month-old network called MTV with the Steve
Barron-directed clip for "Billie Jean." While MTV had played
videos by a few black artists, including Garland Jeffries and
Joan Armatrading, it had notoriously declined to play the video
for Rick James' "Super Freak," leading the R&B singer to brand
the channel as racist.
"I remember taking a red-eye to New York and going to MTV
(with) a rough cut of 'Billie Jean' and MTV declining the
video," Weisner recalls. He walked from there to Epic
headquarters. "I sat down with (CBS Records head) Walter
Yetnikoff," he says. "We then went to (CBS head) Bill Paley,
and he and Walter (told MTV), 'This video is on by the end of
the day or (CBS Records) isn't doing business with MTV
anymore.' The record company played hardball, and that was the
day that changed history. That was the video that broke the
color barrier."
That's not the version of events remembered by Les Garland,
then-senior executive/VP of programming at MTV Networks.
"'Billie Jean' set the standard that day for what excellence in
music video stood for," he says. "There was never a question
that we were putting it on." The only delay, he says, was that
he wanted to show the clip to his boss, Bob Pittman. "There was
never a threat from Walter Yetnikoff -- it's folklore," he
says. "He got more upset because we didn't play Willie Nelson
or Barbra Streisand." (Yetnikoff didn't respond to interview
requests for this story.)
Either way, "Billie Jean" immediately went into heavy
rotation with eight plays per day, catapulting Jackson and MTV
to another level of success. And Jackson's triumph broke down
the barrier for Prince, Billy Ocean and Eddy Grant.
"'Billie Jean' opened (the door) to more R&B videos being
made, and that led us to making more space for a wider variety
of music that went beyond this initial AOR format," Garland
says.
MTV wasn't the only TV exposure that changed the course of
Jackson's career. On May 16, 1983, NBC broadcast "Motown 25:
Yesterday, Today, Forever," and Jackson performed an instantly
iconic rendition of "Billie Jean" and unveiled his sequined
glove and the James Brown-inspired moonwalk. The next day, Fred
Astaire called Jackson to congratulate him.
"That was staggering," Weisner recalls. "Everyone forgets
that all those Motown giants and legends were on the show. The
next day all anyone was talking about was Michael."
And that was before the video for "Thriller" itself.
Although the videos for "Billie Jean" and "Beat It" increased
Jackson's star power, the 14-minute clip for "Thriller" became
a pop culture sensation.
Made at a cost of $1 million -- in 1983 dollars --
"Thriller" was the first video shot by a film director, John
Landis. "We were making most videos for $30,000-$40,000,"
McCarrell says. "I remember falling off my chair when I saw the
budget."
Fascination with the video grew so intense that Epic
created an hourlong documentary called "Making Michael
Jackson's Thriller," which aired on MTV and was eventually sent
to retail. It was the first time such a package had been
created around a single video, and "it started a commercial
market for videos," says former Recording Industry Association
of America CEO/chairman Hilary Rosen, now a CNN commentator and
managing director of the Brunswick Group.
Jackson and MTV's fortunes were so intricately linked that
Garland, who is now a consultant, says he can't even think
about how MTV would have evolved without Jackson. "All I can
tell you is the path would have been very different. I don't
think it would have been good."
Ultimately, "Thriller" spent 122 weeks on the Billboard
200, leading Epic to one of its greatest periods of prosperity.
Given the decline in album sales, the rise of digital downloads
and the lack of an heir apparent to Jackson, it's unlikely
another album will ever dominate radio, video or the collective
consciousness the way "Thriller" did.
As Garland puts it, "We saw the top of the mountain with
'Thriller."'
(Editing by Sheri Linden at Reuters)
(please visit our entertainment blog via www.reuters.com or on
http://blogs.reuters.com/fanfare/)
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