MJ (55 page)

Read MJ Online

Authors: Steve Knopper

BOOK: MJ
3.72Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Set-up” tray and Elks details
: Crump interview.

One-dollar fried tacos
: Johnnie Gault interview.

Eight dollars per gig
: Katherine Jackson,
The Jacksons
, p. 59.

Five sets per night and “We were playing”
: Michael Jackson,
Moonwalk
, pp. 36–37.

“Skinny Legs and All”
and crawling
: Ibid., p. 37; author interviews with Ben Brown and Jessye Williams.

Deals with the cops
: Williams interview.

Summer 1966, Winslow and Old Arcadia Hall
: Jermaine Jackson,
You Are Not Alone
, p. 66.

Fried chicken and pork and beans
: Earl Gault interview.

“Vigorously rubbing his cheeks” and “Just tired”
: Jermaine Jackson,
You Are Not Alone
, p. 66.

red soil, and “Michael used to like nature-type stuff”
: Earl Gault interview.

Johnny Jackson recommendation
: Shirley E. Cartman,
A Teacher Remembers the Jacksons
(Encino, CA: Gabriel Publishing, 1987), p. 31.

“A bubbly, animated little guy” and “the best drummer around”
: Jermaine Jackson,
You Are Not Alone
, p. 66.

Publicity photo
: Michael Jackson,
Moonwalk
, p. 25.

“We were brothers”
: Michael Sangiacomo,
Gary Post-Tribune,
April 21, 1988, p. B5.

Joe dragged Michael to studios for auditions
: Author interview with William (Billy) McGregor; Jake Austen, “The Jackson Find,”
Chicago Reader,
September 10, 2009, pp. 17–20, 22.

“Tobacco Road”
: Ibid.

One-derful details, George Leaner’s wariness, Jacksons showing up at 5 p.m. daily, “transform a talented teen band,” and “Big Boy”
: McGregor interview; author interviews with Ernie Leaner, Larry Blasingaine, and Otis Clay; Austen, “The Jackson Find,” pp. 17–20, 22.

Keith called 2300 Jackson Street
: Austen, “The Jackson Find,” pp. 17–20, 22.

“It was tough”
and Steeltown
: Rodgers interview.

Cartman invited Keith to her house and “The Scrub” and “Lonely Heart”
: Cartman,
Teacher Remembers the Jacksons
, p. 43.

MJ high-jump
: Austen, “The Jackson Find,” pp. 17–20, 22.

November 1967
: Ibid.; Steve Walsh, “ ‘King of Tort’ faces string of lawsuits,”
Gary Post-Tribune,
April 28, 2002, p. A6.

Morrison Sound Studio,
“Most sessions were done late” and relocation to black neighborhood
: Author interview with Jerry Mundo.

“Very quiet, well-mannered kids”
: Author interview with Delroy Bridgeman.

Session details and 10 or 11
P.M.:
Mundo interview.

Replacement vocals
: Bridgeman interview.

January 31, 1968
: Austen, “The Jackson Find,” pp. 17–20, 22.

WVON, one thousand watts, and first station to cater to black listeners
: Barbara Sherlock, “E. Rodney Jones, 75: Legend of Chicago’s ‘golden era,’ ”
Chicago Tribune,
January 9, 2004, p. 2C.13.

Jesse Jackson called WVON
: Don Terry, “Raising the Voice,”
Chicago Tribune,
March 19, 2006, Magazine Section 10.14.


If you got a hit on WVON”
: Author interview with Lucky Cordell.

Atlantic Records
: Bob Kostanczuk, “Recordings for sale: Selling a slice of history,”
Gary
Post-Tribune,
April 30, 2009, p. C1.

“I honestly heard something”
: Cordell interview.

Rancifer and Jacksons
: Author interview with Roderick “Ronnie” Rancifer.

Regal details
: June Sawyers, “When the Regal was something special,”
Chicago Tribune,
October 4, 1987, p. H10.

Crystal chandeliers, silk drapes, and Italian marble
: Clovis E. Semmes,
The Regal Theater and Black Culture
(New York: Palgrave MacMillan, 2006), p. 3.

“You’d go in there”
: Rancifer interview.

Five Stairsteps and basketball
: Author interview with Clarence Burke.

“Michael was a very watchful guy”
: Rancifer interview.

Apollo Theater
: Ted Fox,
Showtime at the Apollo
(New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1983), pp. 286, 288; Jack Schiffman,
Uptown: The Story of Harlem’s Apollo Theater
(New York: Cowles Book, 1971), pp. 8–18, 21–22.

“I carefully watched” and dusty curtains
: Michael Jackson,
Moonwalk
, p. 47.

May 1968
: Advertisement and story in
Amsterdam News,
May 18, 1968, n.p. Posted at
j5collector.blogspot.com/2010/05/jackson-5-at-apollo-may-24-30-1968.html
.

“I don’t remember what I told him”
: J. Randy Taraborrelli,
Michael Jackson: The Magic, The Madness, The Whole Story 1958–2009
(New York: Grand Central Publishing, 2009), p. 38.

Vibrations stealing dance steps
: Author interview with Carl Fisher.

“Everybody was ranting and raving” and “Right there, at the Apollo”
: Author interview with Teddy Young.

July 1968 at Regal
: Adrian Grant,
Michael Jackson: A Visual Documentary 1958–2009: The Tribute Edition
(London: Omnibus Press, 1994/2009), p. 9. I confirmed many dates with this source.

Eddie Patterson recollections and “Michael was like a little magic kid”
: Author interview with Eddie Patterson.

CHAPTER 2

Snakepit description
: Nelson George,
Where Did Our Love Go?
(New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1985), p. 112.

Worn spot
: From Motown Museum tour, Detroit, Michigan.

“He wouldn’t let himself get away,”
“Michael, this is advanced,” and Joe hitting MJ
: Author interview with Ed Wolfrum. Bobby Taylor says the hitting incident
never happened; Motown arranger Paul Riser, who was there, doesn’t recall but vouches for Wolfrum; Joe Jackson and all Jackson 5 members refused interview requests.

“If you’re going to deal with it” and “I certainly morally couldn’t leave it alone”
: Ibid.

“I once pulled a gun”
: David Ritz, liner notes, Jackson 5,
Soulsation!: 25th Anniversary Collection
(Motown, 1995), p. 35.

Taylor’s first call was to Seltzer
: Declaration of Ralph Seltzer,
Toriano Jackson, et al., vs. Motown Record Corp., et al.,
Superior Court of the State of California, March 5, 1976.

“I had a reluctance” and “terrific”
: Author interview with Ralph Seltzer.

“Oh, no you don’t,” Dick Scott, video camera, and eighth floor
: Berry Gordy Jr.,
To Be Loved: The Music, the Magic, the Memories of Motown
(New York: Warner Books, 1994), p. 279.

“Uh, Mr. Gordy”
: Ibid., p. 281; Jermaine tells a variation in his book.

July 26, 1968, and one and a half or two hours
:
Toriano Jackson vs. Motown
, March 5, 1976.

Joe’s argument and Seltzer made a show
: J. Randy Taraborrelli,
Michael Jackson: The Magic, The Madness, The Whole Story 1958–2009
(New York: Grand Central Publishing, 2009), pp. 44–45.

“Most of our artists” and “I didn’t have gigantic respect”
: Seltzer interview.

Gordy let Taylor take over the Jacksons’ career and MJ singing like an adult
: Ritz, Jackson 5,
Soulsation!
, pp. 29–33.

Four-hour drive, mattress and sleeping bags and “projecting”
: Jermaine Jackson,
You Are Not Alone: Michael Through a Brother’s Eyes
(New York: Touchstone/Simon & Schuster, 2011), pp. 97–98.

“He got it”
: Ritz, Jackson 5,
Soulsation!
, p. 36.

Steeltown contractual issues
: Seltzer declaration,
Toriano Jackson vs. Motown
, March 5, 1976.

They continued performing and club names
: Jermaine Jackson,
You Are Not Alone
, p. 98.

“How in the world”
: Brenda Holloway interview,
Michael Jackson: The Life of an Icon
(David Gest Productions, 2011).

“DIANA ROSS!”
: Jermaine Jackson,
You Are Not Alone
, p. 95.

“We was quite nervous”
: Tito Jackson interview,
Michael Jackson: The Life of an Icon.

Gordy and boxing
: Gordy,
To Be Loved
, p. 49.

Supremes, Temptations, Holland-Dozier-Holland, Motown problems, Gordy’s first LA home, group Gordy could control
: Gerald Posner,
Motown: Music, Money, Sex, and Power
(New York: Random House, 2002), pp. 182–85, 205–7, 227, 234, 242–43.

“Their music was not the R&B”
: Author interview with Martha Reeves.

“They thought the West Coast”
: Author interview with Clay McMurray.

“Berry was very, very direct”
: Author interview with Paul Riser.

Sound Factory
: Author interview with Deke Richards.

$105 per session
: Author interview with Gene Pello.

Freedom to improvise
: Author interviews with Louie Shelton and David T. Walker.

“The Funk Brothers were all jazz musicians”
: Author interview with Don Peake.

“All we needed was a hit”
: Nelson George,
The Michael Jackson Story
(New York: Dell, 1984), p. 54.

Jacksons moved to LA in August 1969
: Katherine Jackson with Richard Wiseman,
The Jacksons: My Family
(New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1990), p. 67;
Toriano Jackson vs. Motown
, March 5, 1976; Michael Sangiacomo, “Reflected Glory: Jacksons’ fame, fortune, attract those who knew them when Gary was home,”
Gary Post-Tribune,
April 21, 1988, p. B5.

Gladys Knight,
“I Wanna Be Free,” Joe Sample glissando, and “Don’t get on the plane,”
: Author interview with Suzee Ikeda.

“Direct it towards kids”
: Freddie Perren quoted in George,
The Michael Jackson Story
, p. 61.

Make the Jackson 5 sound like themselves
: Nelson George,
Thriller: The Musical Life of Michael Jackson
(New York: Da Capo Press, 2010), p. 33.

“The writers were different”
: Riser interview.

Richards recognized the Jackson 5’s versatility, $10,000 session, and “I had to stop it”
: Richards interview.

“More than a tutor”
: Rabbi Shmuley Boteach,
The Michael Jackson Tapes: A Tragic Icon Reveals His Soul in Intimate Conversation
(New York: Vanguard Press, 2009), p. 96.

3:02
P.M.
: Richards interview.

CALL PAPA JOE
: Deke Richards, liner notes, Jackson 5,
Come and Get It: The Rare Pearls
(Motown/Hip-O Select, 2012), p. 19.

He never called, Jackie’s stern hand, Three Stooges hijinks, and “When you’ve got one [song]”
: Richards interview.

Studio and park
: Author visit to 4317 Romaine Street, former Motown studio that is now the West Hollywood Maintenance Building.

“They just felt comfortable”
: Author interview with Russ Terrana.

Jackson 5 royalty rates
:
Toriano Jackson vs. Motown
, March 5, 1976.

“Just about everyone got ripped off”
: Posner,
Motown
, p. 212.

Operation Crime Alert and 11 percent crime increase
: James B. Lane,
City of the Century: A History of Gary, Indiana
(Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1978), p. 295.

Tito held at gunpoint
: Katherine Jackson,
The Jacksons
, p. 65.

“Everyone down!”
: Jermaine Jackson,
You Are Not Alone
, p. 85.

“Joseph did rule”
:
The Jacksons: A Family Dynasty
(A&E, 2009).

Dodge Maxivan, drive to LA, Santa Monica Boulevard, and Hollywood Motel
: Katherine Jackson,
The Jacksons
, p. 68.

“Which was nothing special either”
: Joseph Jackson,
Die Jacksons
(Munich: Random House Germany, 2004), p. 110.

1601 Queens Road
:
Toriano Jackson vs. Motown
, March 5, 1976.

Fairfax High School and Susan and Sherry
: Author interview with Susan Jackson and Sherry Danchik.

Gardner Street Elementary
: Ian Lovett, “Elementary School Reclaims Link to King of Pop,”
New York Times,
October 31, 2010, p. A21.

Other books

Doctor's New Patient by Rene Pierce
Long Hard Ride by James, Lorelei
Scimitar SL-2 by Patrick Robinson
The Baby Track by Barbara Boswell
A Charm of Powerful Trouble by Joanne Horniman
The Unwilling Bride by Jennifer Greene
A Promise of Tomorrow by Rowan McAllister
A Brief History of the Celts by Peter Berresford Ellis