This is very cool.
Showing posts with label Michael Jackson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Jackson. Show all posts
Lego Michael Jackson Rules!
LINK | Posted by Chris on Monday, February 25, 2013
Posted by
Chris
on
Monday, February 25, 2013
Labels: Dropping Knowledge, Lego, Michael Jackson, Music
comments
Labels: Dropping Knowledge, Lego, Michael Jackson, Music
comments
Robotic Thriller
LINK | Posted by Chris on Thursday, May 31, 2012
You know, if they can teach robots to dance to Michael Jackson's "Thriller," at the very least I should have one that can fetch me a beer from the fridge.
Posted by
Chris
on
Thursday, May 31, 2012
Labels: Dropping Knowledge, Etc., Michael Jackson
comments
Labels: Dropping Knowledge, Etc., Michael Jackson
comments
The Jackson 5, "Santa Claus Is Coming To Town"
LINK | Posted by Chris on Wednesday, November 30, 2011
From 1970, here's The Jackson 5 with "Santa Claus Is Coming To Town."
Enjoy!
Enjoy!
Posted by
Chris
on
Wednesday, November 30, 2011
Labels: Holiday Song Of The Day, Jackson 5, Michael Jackson, Music
comments
Labels: Holiday Song Of The Day, Jackson 5, Michael Jackson, Music
comments
Top 20 Michael Jackson Songs (Nos. 1-5)
LINK | Posted by Culture Brats on Tuesday, November 15, 2011
For this week's Ranked!, we decided to take a look at our favorite Michael Jackson songs. But we weren't content in just examining his solo career; the songs he did with the Jackson 5 were game as well.When all was said and done, we picked our twenty favorite career-spanning songs.
Did your favorite make the cut?
Find out below!
Here's the top five:
5. "P.Y.T. (Pretty Young Thing)"
Posted by
Culture Brats
on
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Labels: Michael Jackson, Music, Ranked
comments
Labels: Michael Jackson, Music, Ranked
comments
Top 20 Michael Jackson Songs (Nos. 6-10)
LINK | Posted by Culture Brats on Tuesday, November 15, 2011
For this week's Ranked!, we decided to take a look at our favorite Michael Jackson songs. But we weren't content in just examining his solo career; the songs he did with the Jackson 5 were game as well.When all was said and done, we picked our twenty favorite career-spanning songs.
Did your favorite make the cut?
Find out below!
Here are Numbers 6-10:
10. "ABC"
Posted by
Culture Brats
on
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Labels: Michael Jackson, Music, Ranked
comments
Labels: Michael Jackson, Music, Ranked
comments
Top 20 Michael Jackson Songs (Nos. 11-15)
LINK | Posted by Culture Brats on Tuesday, November 15, 2011
For this week's Ranked!, we decided to take a look at our favorite Michael Jackson songs. But we weren't content in just examining his solo career; the songs he did with the Jackson 5 were game as well.When all was said and done, we picked our twenty favorite career-spanning songs.
Did your favorite make the cut?
Find out below!
Here are Numbers 11-15:
15. "Remember The Time"
Posted by
Culture Brats
on
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Labels: Michael Jackson, Music, Ranked
comments
Labels: Michael Jackson, Music, Ranked
comments
Top 20 Michael Jackson Songs (Nos. 16-20)
LINK | Posted by Culture Brats on Tuesday, November 15, 2011
For this week's Ranked!, we decided to take a look at our favorite Michael Jackson songs. But we weren't content in just examining his solo career; the songs he did with the Jackson 5 were game as well.When all was said and done, we picked our twenty favorite career-spanning songs.
Did your favorite make the cut?
Find out below!
Here are Numbers 16-20:
20. "I'll Be There"
Posted by
Culture Brats
on
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Labels: Michael Jackson, Music, Ranked
comments
Labels: Michael Jackson, Music, Ranked
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The Man Who Defined The Music Video: Our Interview With Steve Barron
LINK | Posted by CroutonBoy on Thursday, August 04, 2011
When you think about the most iconic music videos of all time, what comes to mind? There have been some great videos in the last couple of decades, but invariably the ones that are most often referenced are from the first decade of MTV. There was a freshness to music videos of that period, often wildly experimental and with a lighter touch than the average over-produced Lady Gaga video. And they were everywhere, swirling 24/7 on MTV and finding their way into network programs, shopping malls, and Saturday morning cartoons. There's a reason those videos stick with us after so many years, despite how crude many seem in comparison to what you see today, and it's largely because of the brilliance of some wickedly talented directors who were defining the genre on the fly.What not everyone knows, though, is how much of that iconic list was the inspiration of one man. His name is Steve Barron, and he was the creative force behind some of the most memorable videos of all time. A director could have made his name off any one of these videos—"Don't You Want Me?" "Billie Jean," "Summer of '69," "Money for Nothing," "Rough Boy," "Take On Me"—but Steve Barron did all of them, and many more. His artistic vision practically defined the visual template of my youth, as it did for so many other people of our generation. And on the 30th anniversary of MTV, he was gracious enough to sit down with us at Culture Brats and tell us about his experience, his art, and his role in the birth of a genre.
Thank you so much for taking the time out of your schedule to speak with me and all of us at Culture Brats.
No problem
You directed some of the most famous music videos of the early years of MTV. How did you get into that, especially at a time when directing music videos wasn't an obvious career path?
Yeah, it wasn't a clearly defined route, and it wasn't really a premeditated thing either. It just sort of happened by my start as a camera assistant and technician in films in London. I was actually very young getting into the business. By the time I was 20 or 21, I was doing some pretty big movies as the camera assistant, and when I was working on movies in the UK like Superman. I was living the 21-year old social life in London. I was meeting bands and people who were in the music business—as you do, out and about—and the more I met, the more I chatted with them. I was always a big fan of music; I just kind of got pulled into that world.
It was at a phase [when] they weren't called videos. This was like 1976, really, and they were promotional films. They seemed to be being done sporadically by the record companies who were frustrated by not having any outlet for them. But they were still making them just the same. I jumped onto that really by ignorance as much as anything, because the music world didn't understand what the film world did, and the film world didn't really understand what the music world did. The fact that I was a clapper loader and I was on this massive movie...at the time they weren't really distinguishing between the clapper loader and the director. The fact that I was working on the film gave me a certain amount of credibility. I was able to put together, through my knowledge of cameras primarily, little shoots for bands. The first one I really did was for The Jam. That's how it all sort of began: by chance, wanting to work with music but without a clear path.
Posted by
CroutonBoy
on
Thursday, August 04, 2011
Labels: a-ha, Dire Straits, In Your Own Words, Michael Jackson, MTV, MTV30, Music, Steve Barron
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Labels: a-ha, Dire Straits, In Your Own Words, Michael Jackson, MTV, MTV30, Music, Steve Barron
comments
MTV At 30: Better Album: Thriller vs. Purple Rain
LINK | Posted by Culture Brats on Monday, August 01, 2011
This was our very first installment of Criss Cross Counter Punch and was originally published on Culture Brats on March 29, 2010. But since Michael Jackson and Prince played such a big role in the early days of MTV, we dusted it off for this week's festivities.
* * *
Archphoenix: Don't get me wrong, I love me some Prince, especially Purple Rain. His purple funkness is quite a talented musician. But Thriller remains, for me anyway, the best pop album, pretty much ever.
Thriller is the best selling album of all time. Seven of the album's nine songs were released as singles and all seven songs hit Billboard's top ten list. The album won a record-breaking eight Grammy awards. I know, I know, just because it sells doesn't mean it's necessarily good (i.e. Britney Spears, Justin Bieber, Nickleback, etc.). But in this case, the fact that it still sells ridiculously well 25 years later is a testament to the longevity of the album.
* * *
Thriller is the best selling album of all time. Seven of the album's nine songs were released as singles and all seven songs hit Billboard's top ten list. The album won a record-breaking eight Grammy awards. I know, I know, just because it sells doesn't mean it's necessarily good (i.e. Britney Spears, Justin Bieber, Nickleback, etc.). But in this case, the fact that it still sells ridiculously well 25 years later is a testament to the longevity of the album.
Posted by
Culture Brats
on
Monday, August 01, 2011
Labels: Michael Jackson, MTV, MTV30, Prince, Super Duper Freakin Awesome Feature
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Labels: Michael Jackson, MTV, MTV30, Prince, Super Duper Freakin Awesome Feature
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Captain EO
LINK | Posted by archphoenix on Tuesday, March 01, 2011
Speaking of musicians turned actors, in the late 1980s there was a Disney attraction called Captain EO. It was a short film starring Michael Jackson and Anjelica Huston and it was filmed in "4-D." 4-D is 3-d (not the red/blue kind) plus lasers and fog and stuff timed to the film to make it more audience interactive. It was fairly groundbreaking and was the most expensive film made if you figured out the cost per minute of the short film (Wikipedia says it was $1.7 million per minute).
I remember seeing it at Epcot with my family as a kid and was blown away - I was a Michael fan but the technology was pretty slick for the time.
But did you know that George Lucas produced it? And that Francis Ford Coppola directed it? And that James Horner wrote the orchestral score for it? That's some serious pedigree for a short Disney parks film.
It was resurrected last year at the Disney parks (without the laser show I hear) because of the passing of Michael so if you missed it in the '80s you can still catch it.
Here's a brief clip of one of the two music numbers for your enjoyment. That borg looking babe is Anjelica Huston.
Anyone else catch this show back in the day?
Posted by
archphoenix
on
Tuesday, March 01, 2011
Labels: Francis Ford Coppola, Michael Jackson, No Way
comments
Labels: Francis Ford Coppola, Michael Jackson, No Way
comments
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