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Michael Jackson: The Unlikely King of Rock

How studio perfectionism and a killer Van Halen solo made the pop icon a hero to a generation of rockers

BRIAN RAFTERYPosted Jul 07, 2009 2:44 PM

Look back at the King of Pop's remarkable career in Rolling Stone's archives. Check out photos, cover stories, album reviews and more at our Michael Jackson hub.

When the members of Fall Out Boy were recording 2007's Infinity On High, they turned to two albums for guidance. One was a late-'90s hardcore record from Sweden. The other was Michael Jackson's Thriller. "It's the best pop record ever," frontman Patrick Stump said at the time. "It's mindless catchiness with the most mind to it."

At first, the lustrous post-disco sound of Thriller seems an unlikely muse for Stump and his bandmates: When Fall Out Boy covered Jackson's "Beat It" a few years ago, their punky homage had more in common with Queens of the Stone Age than it did with the King of Pop. In fact, while numerous rockers have paid homage to Jackson via cover song — including Chris Cornell, Alien Ant Farm, and Death Cab for Cutie's Ben Gibbard — few of them have any discernible musical connections with the Gloved One. After all, Jackson's sound — with its quivering vocals and trademark whooos and hee-hees — made for tricky dittoing. And yet Thriller, despite not technically being a rock & roll album, has had a bigger impact on rock & roll than just about any other album of the past 30 years. It's just not always easy to hear it.

For starters, consider Jackson's nearly cyclopean musical ambitions, which were obvious to anyone who unwrapped Thriller for the first time and heard the six-minute opener, "Wanna Be Startin' Something," which begins with an almost compulsory dance beat and ends with an African chant. It was anthemic, and unapologetically so. The success of Thriller was not some happy accident; it was the result of countless hours of in-studio calculation and calibration, all in the name of maximum appeal. "Thriller was geared exclusively toward making the best singles," Stump noted. "Michael Jackson and Quincy Jones said, 'We have to make pop music better.' "

Of course, if there were ever a DSM-IV diagnosis for pop stars, that sort of stratospheric hubris would be symptom No. 1, and certainly, Jackson wasn't the first musician consumed with dominating the charts. But when Thriller was released in 1982, the over-the-top moxie that had come to define pop music was falling out of favor: Punk had exposed the tacky vanities of Led Zeppelin and Aerosmith, while disco had tipsily staggered back underground. The sort of world-ascension moxie that had ruled the '70s was in temporary decline, which made Thriller all the more jarring. Jackson provided aspiring pop and rock stars everywhere with a sort of mission-statement-slash-permission slip, one that allowed them to be as sleek and audacious and as they wanted, so long as the music was perfect. Pink Floyd's The Wall might get all the credit for being the seminal '80s concept album, but to the millions of teens and pre-teen Jackson fans who grew up listening to Jackson — some of whom went on become musicians — no musical statement could ever be as grand or intimidating as Thriller.


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Eddie Van Halen joins Michael Jackson on stage to perform "Beat It" on July 14, 1984 in Dallas Texas during the Victory Tour.

Photo: Michael Ochs Archive/Getty


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