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- MUSIC, Page 86Out Front
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- Michael Jackson's new album bares heart and soul
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- By JAY COCKS
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- Bart Simpson, we trust, is prouder than ever of his pal
- Michael Jackson. When he recently ceded some Fox network airtime
- so that the new Jackson video Black or White could debut in
- style, there was a great outcry. The video was violent! The
- video was dirty! Michael's moves would incite kids to
- unspeakable acts of autoeroticism and social outrage! Perfect.
- Bart and Michael, soul mates forever.
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- Now that the commotion has died down and the album been
- released, one thing must be said: Michael sings better than
- Bart. Dances better too. But Bart has the edge in humor.
- Dangerous lacks only the Simpson sass to make it a dazzler. As
- it is, the album is merely terrific.
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- The Black or White track is driven by an infectious riff
- that sounds like prime Keith Richards. In fact, Slash of Guns
- N' Roses is the guitar man here. Once again Michael proves to
- be the grand master at pulling together all sorts of styles --
- dance, rock, rap -- into a seamless whole. He may be reluctant
- to show his face -- only his eyes, a lock of hair and a tiny
- image of the child star of the Jackson 5 appear in the album art
- -- but he is fearless about his feelings. Every one of these 14
- songs is out front and unashamed, whether in the soulful snap
- of In the Closet or the smoothly streetwise Why You Wanna Trip
- on Me? In his music, the reclusive Michael never gives himself
- a hiding place.
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- This is most clear late in the album, beginning with Will
- You Be There, a song that sounds a little like Paul McCartney's
- Liverpool Oratorio and a lot like a spiritual scored for the
- first cathedral in outer space. Lush, sentimental sounds
- continue through the next two tunes before things settle back
- to the hard rhythm of Black or White. It's a virtuoso
- performance. Michael may wear his heart on his sleeve, but a
- fair portion of his soul, it seems, is still back in church.
- Sorry, Bart.
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