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Forever, Michael


FieldValue
nameForever, Michael
typestudio
artistMichael Jackson
coverForever, Michael.png
releasedJanuary 16, 1975
studioMotown Recording Studios (Hollywood, Los Angeles)
genre
length33:36
labelMotown
prev_titleMusic & Me
prev_year1973
next_titleThe Best of Michael Jackson
next_year1975
misc{{Singles
nameForever, Michael
typestudio
single1We're Almost There
single1dateFebruary 6, 1975
single2Just a Little Bit of You
single2dateApril 29, 1975
single3One Day in Your Life
single3date1975 (UK)
  • December 1973 ("I'll Come Home to You")
  • October–December 1974
  • Sam Brown III
  • Hal Davis
  • Brian Holland
  • Fonce Mizell
  • Freddie Perren

Forever, Michael is the fourth studio album by the American singer Michael Jackson, and his final one released by Motown Records, on January 16, 1975. The album is credited as having songs with funk and soul material. Eddie Holland, Brian Holland, Hal Davis, Freddie Perren, and Sam Brown III served as producers on Forever, Michael. It is the final album before Jackson's solo breakthrough with his next album, Off the Wall (1979), and has sold 1 million copies worldwide.

The album charted only in the United States, hitting number 101 on the Billboard Top LPs & Tape chart and number 10 on the Billboard Top Soul Albums chart. Unlike Jackson's previous studio albums, the album was not commercially successful worldwide, and it failed to chart outside of the US. However, it was generally well-received by contemporary music critics. As part of promotion for the album, three singles were released, all of which were moderate commercial successes on the US Billboard Hot 100 and other music charts worldwide.

In 1981, Motown released the compilation album, One Day in Your Life, named after the third track from Forever, Michael. "One Day in Your Life" was released as a single and reached number one in the United Kingdom and several other countries. The album was reissued in 2009 after Jackson's death in June of the same year as part of the 3-disc compilation album Hello World: The Motown Solo Collection.

Background

The album was Jackson's fourth as a solo artist and would end up being his final album released with Motown. (Following the release of their tenth album, Moving Violation, the Jackson 5 left for CBS Records except for Jermaine, who would remain with Motown until 1983.) This album displayed a change in musical style for the then-16-year-old Michael Jackson, who adopted a smoother soul sound that he would continue to develop on his later solo albums for Epic Records, the label he would record on for the rest of his life. The album is also credited as having songs with funk elements.

Although his voice was already showing signs of changing on his previous album Music & Me two years earlier, this was also the first album to feature Jackson as a tenor rather than a boy soprano. Most of the tracks were recorded in 1974, and the album was originally set to be released that year but because of demand from the Jackson 5's huge hit "Dancing Machine", production on Jackson's album was delayed until the hype from that song died down. In 1975, Motown launched a joint promotional campaign with Forever, Michael and Moving Violation.

Promotion

The album helped return Jackson to the top 40, aided by the singles "We're Almost There" and "Just a Little Bit of You", both written by the Holland Brothers (Eddie and Brian) of Holland–Dozier–Holland. In 1981, Motown released the compilation album One Day in Your Life to capitalize on the success of Jackson's Off the Wall on Epic. It included most of the tracks from Forever, Michael and the title track went to number one in the UK and several other countries.{{cite book

In 1984, the song Dear Michael was covered by Kim Fields.

Critical reception

Forever, Michael was generally well-received by music critics. Tom Hull described it as "transitional as you'd expect from the 16-year-old artist" and gave the album a B+ rating, while Robert Christgau from The Village Voice gave it an A−. Christgau found that

at 16, Michael's voice combines autonomy and helpless innocence in effective proportions. He also gets production help from Brian Holland (who begins one side like Barry White and the other like the Ohio Players) and a few romantic ballads (sure hit: "One Day in Your Life") that are as credible on their own terms as the rockers.

In a retrospective review, AllMusic editor William Ruhlmann called Forever, Michael a "more mature effort for the 16-year-old singer but lacked the contemporary dance style that had given Jackson and his brothers a career rebirth with 'Dancing Machine' the year before". While "Jackson sang appealingly, the arrangements were noticeably similar to many older Motown charts, and there was little here to hint that, four years hence, on his next solo album, Off the Wall, Jackson would emerge as a major star." Leah Greenblatt from Entertainment Weekly remarked that the album's "comparatively adult soul sound confirms he was ready to move on from his days as Gordy's bubblegum boy wonder. Still, the fairly standard midtempo grooves do little to foreshadow the sonic revelations that were soon to come."

Track listing

Personnel

Adapted from AllMusic.

  • Michael Jackson – lead and background vocals
  • David Blumberg – arranger
  • Jim Britt – photography
  • Hal Davis – producer
  • L.T. Horn – engineer, mixing
  • Eddy Manson – arranger, producer
  • Freddie Perren – arranger, producer
  • Sam Brown III – arranger, producer
  • Russ Terrana – mixing
  • Arthur G. Wright – arranger

Charts

Chart (1975)Peak
positionUS Cashbox Top Albums
96

Sales

References

References

  1. Bernadette McNulty. (June 26, 2009). "Michael Jackson's music: the solo albums".
  2. Peel, Ian. ""Music and Me (1973) and Forever Michael (1975) sold two million and one million copies respectively" - Classic Pop Presents Michael Jackson 2016". Anthem Publishing.
  3. (July 8, 2009). "Michael Jackson Forever, PopMatters".
  4. (June 14, 1975). "Motown, Jackson 5 Plan Joint Effor For Two Album Projects". Cash Box.
  5. "Michael Jackson".
  6. Ruhlmann, William. "Michael Jackson - Forever, Michael". [[Allmusic]].
  7. Greenblatt, Leah. (July 3, 2009). "Michael Jackson's Albums".
  8. Hull, Tom. (November 2013). "Recycled Goods (#114)". Tom Hull.
  9. Christgau, Robert. (March 17, 1975). "Christgau's Consumer Guide". [[The Village Voice]].
  10. "allmusic ((( Forever, Michael > Credits )))". Rovi Corporation.
  11. "Top 100 Pop Albums". [[Cashbox (magazine).
  12. (2003). "Michael Jackson the Solo Years". Authors On Line.
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