Michael Jackson's songwriting accolades are long overdue. For many, his extant death prompted scores of self-professed music connoisseurs to disinter a body of work that exhibited a ''mean pen game''βa contemporary colloquialism suggesting a profound writing ability.
This skill is not readily associated with Jackson for several reasons. For the most part, his records were up-tempo productions driven by an insanely stylized beat. His lyricism, however ingenious, could never withstand the verve of the instrumentation that routinely propelled listeners to the dance floor in a mindless recitation of profoundly unique and insightful lyrics.
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Hip-hop fanatics, captivated by the genre's multifaceted, multisyllabic free-styling antics, would be remiss if they didn't take note of Jackson's lyrical skills. He,Β too, recordedΒ songs completely off the cuff during impromptu recording sessions. Unbeknownst to many, he often hummed elaborateΒ melodies for producer-extraordinaire Quincy Jones to reference when creating the musical arrangements. (And, it should be noted, Jackson often felt that he deserved co-producing credits for such arrangements.)
Jackson did away with the conventional in R&B music: the crooning, the countless romantic sentiments the genre rendered trite. Instead, he penned songs in a film noir cinematic fashion, an unprecedented fusion of writing styles. Like Quentin Tarantino and gore screenwriters alike, heΒ scripted one of the most paranoiac crime scenesΒ in his 1988 hit, ''Smooth Criminal,'' detailing the untimely doom ofΒ a woman namedΒ Annie. InΒ ''Billie Jean'' and ''Dirty Diana,'' heΒ told the story of two femme fatalesΒ with ulterior motivesβone claiming Jackson fathered her son and the latter a shrewd and seductive groupie that ensnarls Jackson in an extramarital affair. He managed to take courting to new heights in ''The Way You Make Me Feel,'' making the perennial male pick-up lines seem sweet and endearing.
Jackson often channeled his altruistic side as ''Man in the Mirror'' and ''We Are the World'' asked listeners to give of themselves in a manner that deeply compelled and resonated with so many.
It is unclear what inspired his kinetic prose and lyrical savvy. Jackson's childhood was a period filled with much creative expression. It was also fraught with seclusion and melancholy; perhaps his unhappy childhood compelled him to channel his inner turmoil in verse form. As a result, Jackson's imagination emerged unparalleled in its depth and nerve. His lyrics were at once surreal, fantastical and true. And for that, writers everywhere are provoked, challenged and better for it.
Diana Ozemebhoya is a multimedia journalist living and working in Washington, D.C. Follow her on Twitter.
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