This Is It (Michael Jackson song)

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"This Is It"
Promotional single by Michael Jackson
from the album Michael Jackson's This Is It
ReleasedOctober 12, 2009 (2009-10-12)
Recorded
  • 1980 (original)
  • 2009 (reworked)
StudioMarvin's Room (Hollywood)
GenrePop
Length
  • 3:37 (album version)
  • 4:55 (orchestra version)
  • 3:43 (single version)
LabelEpic
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)
Audio sample
"This Is It"

"This Is It" is a song co-written by American singer-songwriter Michael Jackson and Canadian singer-songwriter Paul Anka. The song was recorded by the former and featured as a track on the album of the same name which accompanies the 2009 concert documentary Michael Jackson's This Is It.

It was premiered worldwide on Jackson's official website on October 12, 2009, four months after his death on June 25, 2009. Although

Sony Music Entertainment referred to the song as a "new single" during its promotion, it was later confirmed that the song would only be sent for airplay, and not be available to buy as a single release. According to Anka, the song was recorded in 1980 and intended to be a duet between him and Jackson on Anka's Walk a Fine Line album under the title "I Never Heard", but these plans fell through. Thereafter, Sa-Fire recorded the track for her album, I Wasn't Born Yesterday (1991). The duet version of the song was featured in Anka's 2013 Duets album. While putting together the This Is It album, Jackson's demo version of the song was found. His brothers
' vocals and additional instrumentation were then added to the recording.

A pop

Grammy Award nomination. The song was also accompanied by a music video, directed by Spike Lee
, which consisted of footage of Jackson as a child, clips of him throughout his career, and footage of tributes from Jackson's fans around the world.

Background

Although it shared its name, the song was not intentionally made for the 2009 concert documentary Michael Jackson's This Is It. "This Is It" was written by recording artists Paul Anka and Michael Jackson,[1][2] and a demo version of the song was recorded by Anka and Jackson in 1980 at Anka's California recording studio. The song was intended to be added as an album track on Anka's same year duets album Walk a Fine Line that he was in the process of recording at the time.

Soon after the alleged theft in the '80s, Anka threatened to take legal action if the recordings were not returned.

Puerto Rican R&B recording artist Sa-Fire to record "This Is It",[2] which she did under the original title "I Never Heard" on her second studio album I Wasn't Born Yesterday
in 1991.

Release

On September 13, 2009, it was reported that a "secret Michael Jackson single" was being produced to promote the film Michael Jackson's This Is It, so that the song's release would coincide with the release of the film. It was shelved until producers in Los Angeles, California decided to remix the vocals with an orchestral accompaniment. On September 23,

Sony Music Entertainment announced they were planning on releasing a song entitled, "This Is It" as a single.[5] The song was to feature backing vocals by several of Jackson's brothers and would be included in a two-disc album, This Is It.[5][6] It was also confirmed that the song would be featured during the end credits of the movie production.[3][6] Sony said, in response to the reports, that it was a coincidence that his upcoming concert series was also titled "This Is It", explaining they had no evidence that he had planned to release the song.[7] However, John McClain and John Branca, two representatives of Jackson's estate said, in a prepared statement, that "This Is It" was "picked because the lyrics were appropriate because of the name Michael [Jackson] gave his tour" and that they were "thrilled to present" the song.[2][8]

Although Sony did not release the track as a single, it was confirmed that "This Is It" would be released to radio stations for airplay, but that it would not be downloadable. Sony chose to release the song as an album-only track as part of a strategy to encourage fans to buy the entire album.[9] McClain, also a co-producer of the This Is It album said, "This song only defines, once again, what the world already knows—that Michael [Jackson] is one of God's greatest gifts."[10][5] "This Is It" premiered, as scheduled, on Jackson's official website MichaelJackson.com on October 12 at midnight.[11][12]

Within the day of the song's release, via

TMZ.com informed Anka of the similarities between the songs.[2] In response, Anka told the New York Times, that "This Is It" was "exactly the same song" as "I Never Heard" and only the titles were different.[15] He also stated that he was planning on taking legal action against Jackson's estate. Soon afterwards, Jackson's estate acknowledged that Anka was a co-writer on the song and agreed that Anka would receive 50 percent of the publishing rights from it.[2][13][15] Anka said the estate "did the right thing", and that he felt that he did not think "that anybody tried to do the wrong thing" and it was "an honest mistake".[2][15] Anka further stated "They realize it's a mistake, they realize it's my song, they realize it's my production of his vocal in my studio and I am getting 50 percent of the whole project, actually, which is fair".[10]

Rob Stringer, the chairman of the Epic Label Group, stated that at the time of the song's release he did not know when Jackson's original tape had been recorded or of its similarity to Sa-Fire's version until it was discussed online over the weekend by Jackson's fans.[14] Prior to the estate and Anka reaching an agreement, Sa-Fire's manager, Sal Abbatiello, stated that he was contemplating filing a lawsuit on behalf of his client, commenting, "This is a terrible mistake [...] I'm pretty sure Paul Anka has a big case. I don't know if Sa-Fire has any legal right as the artist. I'll have to contact my lawyers. But, hopefully. They're advertising this movie everywhere."[15] Abbatiello also criticized Sony for not researching the possibility that the song might have had been previously released before releasing it.[14]

Composition

"This Is It" is a pop

Alfred Music Publishing and the Winnipeg Sun, the song is written in common time.[18][20] The lyrics "toggle between grandiosity" ("This is it, here I stand / I'm the light of the world, I feel grand") and "shy, romantic yearning" ("I never heard a single word about you / Falling in love wasn't my plan").[18] Darrly Sterdan of the Winnipeg Sun felt that Jackson's voice and the background music sounded "like a demo that's been fleshed out with overdubs and doowoppy backup vocals from his brothers."[18] Anthony McCartney, of the Associated Press felt that the finger-snap percussion "echoes" that present in Jackson's 1982 song "The Girl Is Mine" with Paul McCartney.[7]

Critical reception

The track gained average-to-positive reviews and a nomination for

AOL music editor, said, "It's a safe, mid-tempo pop ballad that features what his fans love: his trademark breathy vocals and confident delivery. I don't think it will set the world on fire, because it's missing what fans and critics love most about his songs, which is a strong and powerful groove to carry it."[24]

Many reviewers noted similarities in the song to earlier Jackson songs. Caryn Ganz of

Rolling Stone felt musically, "This Is It" sounded similar to Jackson's 1987 song "I Just Can't Stop Loving You",[16] and Leah Greenbatt, of Entertainment Weekly thought "some listeners may pick up shades" of Jackson's 1993 single "Will You Be There".[17] Cori Murray, an entertainment director at Essence magazine, described the track as "not bad", and felt that it sounded "like something" Jackson "could have put on an album".[24] Dan Aquilante, of the New York Post, described the song as "an optimistic, R&B ballad with an upbeat, percolating rhythm that has all the bombast and power of the New Jack Swing period of the early '90s".[24] James Montgomery, of MTV News, felt that the song was the "perfect MJ tune" and that Jackson "was a hell of a singer".[25] He also stated that he felt that Jackson had a "wonderous voice", and the song "a prime showcase for Jackson's prodigious pipes".[25]
Montgomery went on to say that when he ignored the negative elements surrounding the song and focused, that he felt it was "wonderful":

Ignore the trilling strings, and the soft-jazz/light-funk backing track (which sort of make[s] the song sound like

Off the Wall's "I Can't Help It"). Block out the hype surrounding the song's release and the drama surrounding Jackson's death. Focus on those vocals—the way Jackson counts it in with a boyish "one, two, three, four," the way he glides from verse to verse with breathless, effortless phrasing, the lean-yet-heavy falsetto, the hint of gravel (and gravitas) is the verses, the soaring choruses—it's all there, untarnished by time or tabloids. And it's all wonderful.[25]

Chart performance

A mid-twenties African American man wearing a sequined military jacket and dark sunglasses. He is walking while waving his right hand, which is adorned with a white glove. His left hand is bare.
"This Is It" gave Jackson his first song to chart on Billboard's Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks in over 17 years.

Despite being a non-downloadable album track, the song appeared on many charts due to radio play alone.

I'll Be There", which went on to peak on the chart at number 24.[27] Its charting ended a 13-year, seven-month absence Jackson had from the chart; his prior entry was "You Are Not Alone", which wrapped a 26-week run on the list dated March 16, 1996.[27] This song is also Jackson's 26th charted Adult Contemporary title, making him the seventh male artist to score a top 20 Adult Contemporary single in each decade since the 1970s.[27] Eventually, the track peaked at number 18 on the Adult Contemporary chart.[28] Also in "This Is It"'s first week of release, the song debuted on Billboard's Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs Chart at number 43.[26] "This Is It" went on to peak at number 18 on the R&B/Hip-Hop Song-genre chart.[28]
"This Is It" also charted on the Adult R&B Songs chart, peaking at number 9.

"This Is It"'s most successful charting country was Japan, where the song placed within the top ten, peaking at number five on

Beyoncé Knowles's "Broken-Hearted Girl" superseded it on November 21.[35] However, the track bounced back to the top position of the chart on November 28.[36]

Music video

On December 27, 2009, the song's official music video was released.

40 Acres & A Mule Filmworks.[38] The video, almost five-minutes long, features various scenes of Jackson's hometown and former residence in Gary, Indiana, along with photos and videos of him and tributes from his fans around the world.[37]

In the photo, a red stop sign can be seen. On the stop sing, the word "Stop" is in the center, and written above it are the words "This Is It" and at the bottom of the sign, the word "Hatin'" is written in capital letters; all the words on the sign are written in yellow. In the background, a blue sky, that is mainly full of white clouds, is shown and a metal poll is shown behind the sign.
This sign (pictured) was shown several times throughout the video, a reference to the public's negativity towards Jackson because of the controversies during his life.

The video opens with a clip of a poster in Gary pointing fans toward Jackson's childhood home, at the corner of 2300 Jackson Street and Jackson Family Boulevard and the sound of a vintage recording of one of Jackson's siblings yelling "Michael" repeatedly.[37] An image, that is shown several times during the video, shows a one-way traffic sign near Jackson's old house that is covered in graffiti honoring Jackson, including "we luv yuh Michael".[37] Images, shown as a slide-show, of Jackson performing as a child are mixed in with shots of play sets, baseball bats and Gary's gritty industrial skyline.[37] A central image captured by Lee is a 'plea' for tolerance etched onto a stop sign in Gary, where someone had written the message "This Is It" above the word "Stop" under which they've added "hatin'".[37] Interspersed is archival footage of Jackson throughout his career and of him greeting his fans in various parts of the world. There are also shots of the musician's fans paying tribute in their own Jackson memorabilia to him following his death. At one point in the video, one of the lyrics from the song, "I never heard a single word about you," floats up out of the concrete, fading into two more shots of fan tributes from around the world and multiple flowers and messages laid at the gates of Jackson's Neverland Ranch. The video, several times, shows a single red balloon floating in the air and empty swings swaying in the breeze.[37] Towards the end of the video, there is footage of Jackson doing one of his signature dance moves, the moonwalk. It ends with footage of a black stool with Jackson's trademark black fedora and silver glove on top of it under a spotlight in front of his family's Gary residence at night.[37][40]

George Merchan of

New York Daily News. He felt the video was a "mini retrospective" of Jackson's life and criticized the "Stop Hatin'" stop sign, feeling that it was promoting press censorship and discussion about the darker aspects of Jackson's life.[42]

Personnel

Charts

See also

References

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  3. ^ a b Michaels, Sean (October 13, 2009). "Michael Jackson's 'new' song has already been released ... by someone else". The Guardian. Guardian News and Media Limited. Retrieved July 3, 2011.
  4. ^ Anka, Paul (August 8, 1983). "I never heard / Anka, Jackson". cocatalog.loc.gov. United States Copyright Office. Retrieved June 22, 2022.
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External links