Michael Jackson, Thriller
Featured Album
Buoyed by the mega-success of Off The Wall, Jackson and producer Jones sought to up the stakes in every way with Thriller. The songs stretched on longer, the beats hit harder, and the melodies swung for the rafters.
While all those elements may have aligned in perfect harmony, there's no way Thriller would have had the history-altering impact it had without a host of other factors, chief among them Jackson's groundbreaking videos for “Billie Jean” and “Beat It,” along with Jackson's performance of the moonwalk on the “Motown 25th Anniversary special” — a feat that made him seem not only to defy gravity but to transcend the bounds of humanity.
Just as “Don't Stop” did for Off The Wall, the new disc's “Wanna Be Starting Something” kicked things off decisively, declaring its fortitude and durability right in its title. The bass line's rhythm had both dance-floor resonance and pop panache. But for an album with just ten tracks, there's a bit of filler here as well. “The Girl Is Mine” repeats the trick on “Wall” of bringing Paul McCartney in to contribute to a track (as well as to bolster Jackson's attempt to equate himself with a Beatle). And while the title track may be propulsive, the use of Vincent Price as a narrator smacks of kitsch.
Still, not since the Stones scored a one/two punch with the singles “Bitch” and “Brown Sugar” in 1971 has a pop act had the back-to-back brilliance of “Billie Jean” and “Beat It.” The former boasted rhythms and hooks like nothing else, while “Beat It” brought rock ‘n roll into Jackson's realm with an organic power he has never equaled. Popularity isn't necessarily a measure of excellence (I call to the stand “Frampton Comes Alive”), but in the case of “Thriller,” the disc's commercial dominance equals its role as peerless pop.