Michael Jackson, Not Too Many Words
54Due to his unexpected and much too early
death, many words will be written this week about Michael Jackson. Too
many, some say, but I don't personally buy the notion that such
coverage is a distraction from more important and more pressing
matters. Not to minimize those other matters, but death is important
too. And so is art. These two things, like few others, bring people
together, the former in their shared humanity, the latter in their
appreciation of beauty.
Michael Jackson did that. He brought people together, even those who
otherwise had little in common. And when we sit down to reminisce as
we watch his old videos and listen to his old LPs, we are not so much
distracting ourselves from more important matters as mourning his death
and celebrating his incredible artistic brilliance. And if we can't
find time to do things such as these, then perhaps we ought to
reexamine the whole concept of "important."
To be sure, Jackson was a flawed individual. Even though he was
acquitted of the one serious charge, the accusations of impropriety are
part of his legacy, as are his multiple plastic-surgeries and his
reclusive personality. And it's true, also, that there were reports of
strained relations, both with his siblings and with the larger African
American community. But such things are better left to future
historians and biographers. There will be ample time to speak ill of
the dead. This week is for the ways he made all our lives richer,
particularly those of us who identify as progressives.
Michael Jackson put out hit after hit,
transformed how music videos were used, popularized a variety of dance
moves, and influenced countless hip hop and R&B artists. He also
sang duets with Paul McCartney, cowrote (with Lionel Richie) the 1985
charity hit single "We Are the World" and donated millions of dollars to more than 40 charitable organizations. Throughout, he attracted legions of fans across all demographic lines.
In all honesty, I never considered myself one of them. I never attended
a concert and only owned one album: Thriller, of course. I mention
this to underscore Jackson's appeal, which extended to casual
observers, even I suspect to loyal Prince fans. Today "cross-over"
artists (Black artists who appeal to white audiences) are standard
fare, but though he was hardly the first (there was Chuck Berry and
Sammy Davis Jr, and much of Motown, as well as Bill Cosby and Richard
Pryor), Michael Jackson, along with Michael Jordan, redefined
expectations and rewrote the entire concept back in the mid-1980s.
As I write this, a vocal minority of the progressive community, bemoans
mass media's "non-stop coverage". Apparently, celebrating the artistry
is not sufficient. But Jackson was always more than just an artist to
progressives. In many ways, he was also our champion. Maybe the
lyrics seem outdated by contemporary standards, but in the mid-1980s
when Jackson made his mark, "multiculturalism" and "political
correctness" were not yet part of the cultural Zeitgeist and
interracial romance was still taboo. To that generation, Jackson said
"It Don't Matter If You're Black Or White" and implored it to look in
the mirror, stop pretending to not see others' needs, and make a change
to make the world a better place (see Man in the Mirror video below)
And as the world around him changed, so
did Jackson's progressive message. In the 1995 "They Don't Care About
Us", gone are the feel good music and lyrics. The music is hip hop and
the new message unapologetically militant (see video below).
Jackson's lyrics were so militant in fact that he was forced to defend
them against public charges of anti-Semitism by The New York Times on
June 15, 1996, just days before the album's release" (see Wikipedia entry).
The lyrics in question were "Jew me, sue me, everybody do me/ Kick me,
kike me, don't you black or white me." Jackson denied the charges and
insisted, to the contrary, that
"The song in fact is about the pain of prejudice and hate and is a way
to draw attention to social and political problems. I am the voice of
the accused and the attacked. I am the voice of everyone. I am the
skinhead, I am the Jew, I am the black man, I am the white man. I am
not the one who was attacking. It is about the injustices to young
people and how the system can wrongfully accuse them. I am angry and
outraged that I could be so misinterpreted." (Wikipedia).
We don't really know, I suppose, what Michael Jackson's intentions
were, just as my OpEdNews colleague, Linda Milazzo, suggested, we don't
really know what it was that Jackson saw when he looked in his own
mirror. The lyrics do seem gratuitously anti-Semitic, in part because
no other group is similarly slurred. And yet, Jackson's life work and
history make me inclined to give him the rare benefit of the doubt on
this one. In my book, the progressive community is burying one of its
own today.
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