[閒聊] Blood on the dance floor 十五周年
看板KingofPop (麥可傑克森 - Michael Jackson)作者gigaer (小寶)時間11年前 (2013/07/17 13:20)推噓6(6推 0噓 1→)留言7則, 6人參與討論串1/1
這是去年來自The Atlantic上的一篇文章,希望沒op
很喜歡Blood on the dance floor這首歌,加上這故事太有靈氣了
老大啊~~~~(跪拜)
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Michael Jackson's 'Blood on the Dance Floor,' 15 Years Later
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原文 http://goo.gl/KXuo9
(中文大意)
1990年的6月6日,Teddy Riley缺席了朋友的生日會,在為Michael寫歌,稍晚,
他得知舞會上鬧出人命,有人被槍殺,這震撼了Teddy,而同年,他的異母兄弟跟好友也
被槍殺
那天Teddy做出混合著侵略性、不祥且充滿威脅的節奏,但還沒有歌名或是旋律,後來
他到Neverland將作品給Michael聽,Michael很喜歡,但Teddy沒對他說背後的故事跟心情
幾天後,Teddy看到Michael為這首歌起了"Blood on the dance floor",整個嚇傻
『麥可整個就是預言帝,完全感覺到我那時想的啊!(′Д‵)』
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累了嗎?聽首歌吧
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=c3_NntYhzV4
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JOSEPH VOGELMAR 21 2012, 2:02 PM ET
The strange story behind the global hit, which was released a decade and a
half ago today
On June 6, 1990, producer/musician Teddy Riley was supposed to be at his
friend and fellow band member's birthday party. Instead, he spent the night
at a Soundworks Studio on 23rd Avenue in Queens, working on grooves for none
other than the King of Pop, Michael Jackson.
"I told [the group] I had a lot of work to do," Riley recalls. "Michael was
my priority. I was going out to California to meet him soon, and he wanted me
to bring my best work."
It was a fortuitous decision.
Later that evening, Riley learned someone was shot on the dance floor at the
party he had skipped. He was shaken. At just 23 years of age, violence and
death were already becoming a recurring theme in his life. Within that same
year, his half-brother and best friend both had also been murdered.
The rhythm track Riley worked on that night was aggressive, ominous,
menacing. But it had no words, no title, and no melody.
The following Saturday he was on his way to Neverland Ranch to meet Michael
Jackson. Riley was nervous. Jackson had already tried out a handful of people
to replace legendary producer, Quincy Jones, including L.A. Reid, Babyface
and Bryan Loren. None stayed on.
Jackson had high hopes, however, for Teddy Riley, whose street-inflected New
Jack Swing style brilliantly fused jazz, gospel, R&B, and hip hop. Indeed,
perhaps its greatest achievement was in bridging the divide between R&B and
hip hop, a bridge, incidentally, that Jackson had been hoping to find since
working on Bad.
Jackson listened carefully to the tapes Riley brought with him and instantly
loved what he heard. The tracks used different chords than he was accustomed
to. The rhythms were fresh and edgy. The beats swung with velocity and hit
like sledgehammers.
Among several tracks Jackson listened to that day was the groove Riley worked
on the night of the party. Jackson had no idea about the context. "He knew
nothing about it," Riley says. "I never told him anything about it."
A couple of weeks later, however, Riley says he was shocked to learn
Jackson's title for the track: "Blood on the Dance Floor." Riley got goose
bumps. "It was like he prophesied that record. He felt its mood."
Over the subsequent months, Jackson and Riley began working feverishly on a
variety of tracks, sometimes separately, sometimes together at Larabee
Studios in Los Angeles. "I remember he came back with this melody, 'Blood on
the dance floor, blood on the dance floor.' I was like, 'Wow!' He came up
with these lyrics and harmonies. Then we just started building it up, layer
by layer."
teddy riley ap images.jpg Riley used a vintage drum machine (the MPC 3000)
for the beat. The snare was compressed to make it pop ("I want it dry and in
your face," Jackson used to say). It was a sound they used throughout the
Dangerous album. "Listen to 'Remember the Time,'" Riley says. "It's very
similar."
Ultimately, however, "Blood on the Dance Floor" didn't end up making it onto
Dangerous. "It wasn't quite finished," Riley says. "There were still some
vocal parts missing. Michael loved the song, but he would listen to it and
say, 'I like what you did here, but we still need this here.' He was a
perfectionist."
As the Dangerous sessions continued, other tracks began to take priority,
including "Remember the Time" and "In the Closet." Jackson wouldn't resume
work on "Blood" until nearly seven years later. It was now January of 1997.
Jackson was in the midst of his HIStory World Tour, and had decided to visit
Montreux, Switzerland during a break between the first and second leg
(according to news reports, while there he also tried to purchase the home of
his longtime idol, Charlie Chaplin).
Here, at Mountain Studio, Jackson went to work on the old demo. "We took
Teddy's DAT (Digital Audio Tape) and worked it over with a four-man crew,"
recalls musician, Brad Buxer. The completed multi-track, engineered, and
mixed by Mick Guzauski, was modeled very closely on the last version Jackson
and Riley recorded.
"When I heard it finished, I wished I could've been the one to [complete
it]," Riley says. "But Michael knows what he wants, and he was happy with it."
It was, in some ways, an unusual dance song. Like "Billie Jean," its subject
matter was dark and disturbing (in this case, a narrative about being stabbed
in the back in the place he least suspected--the dance floor). Jackson's
clipped, raspy vocals evoke a sense of foreboding, as the electro-industrial
canvas conjures a modern urban setting. Still, the song feels anything but
bleak. The beat cracks out of the speakers like a whip and the hook is
irresistible.
Jackson told Riley he believed the song was going to be a "smash." "He
explained it like this: A hit is a song that stays on the charts for a week
or two. A smash is a song that stays up there for six weeks," Riley says. "He
felt 'Blood on the Dance Floor' was a 'smash.'"
"Blood on the Dance Floor" was released on March 21, 1997. Strangely, the
song wasn't even promoted as a single in the U.S. Riley says Jackson didn't
mind in this case. "He figured people in America would find it if they really
wanted it. He wasn't worried about it." Globally, however, the song thrived,
reaching the Top Ten in 15 countries and hitting No. 1 in three (including
the U.K.). It also proved ripe for remixes and received frequent play in
clubs and dance routines. Left off Jackson's two major studio albums that
decade, "Blood" ironically became one of Jackson's most durable rhythm tracks
of the '90s.
Fifteen years later, what makes the song unique? I ask Riley. "It was just a
direct, aggressive sound for Michael. He always pushed for something
stronger. But what was really amazing was how he pre-meditated the energy of
the song. He knew what it was about even before I told him what happened that
night. I've never witnessed anything or anyone as powerful as Michael."
--
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