The 10 artists most influenced by Michael Jackson

*Mike Doherty, Weekend Post *Published: Friday, June 26, 2009

[image: You can count Whitney Houston among the King of Pop most-influenced
artists — and she, like M.J. was doing, is planning a comeback, including a
new album, this fall.]Mario Anzuoni / ReutersYou can count Whitney Houston
among the King of Pop most-influenced artists — and she, like M.J. was
doing, is planning a comeback, including a new album, this fall.

While Michael Jackson thrilled fans with his videos, revolutionized pop
dancing, and tantalized us with his darkly bizarre behaviour, his most
important legacy is as the ultimate crossover artist: He married rock, pop,
R & B, and dance music in order to smash radio formats and racial barriers
in the media. Here are 10 of his closest acolytes, some of whom have
followed his star to mass popularity, and some of whom may have flown too
close to his supernova.

*1. Janet Jackson*

This one's obvious - the only other of Jackson's eight siblings to become a
pop superstar (sorry, LaToya), Janet, eight years Michael's junior, signed a
major-label deal in the year Thriller came out. Her twee first recordings
flopped, but she became a star by emulating her brother on *Control* (1986),
combining R & B with slinky pop and incorporating funkily jerky dance moves
in her videos. On the follow-up, *Rhythm Nation*, she also followed her
brother's penchant for military chic. But as she got steamily sexual in
later years, M.J.'s occasional efforts to do the same came across as, well
... creepy. Thankfully, he never had a wardrobe malfunction.

*2. El DeBarge*

Eldra DeBarge was essentially a Michael Jackson mini-me: He was the lead
singer of a group of five siblings (imaginatively dubbed "DeBarge") who
struck out on his own (he had a hit with his 1986 debut, uh, *El Debarge*)
and worked with M.J. producer Quincy Jones (on 1990's *The Secret Garden*)
and then Stevie Wonder (on 1994's *Where You Are*); where M.J. sang in *E.T.
*, he crooned in *Short Circuit*. Alas, like M.J., he also developed a
fondness for illicit substances - he's currently doing time in California
for possession of crack.

*3. Terence Trent D'Arby*

False modesty wasn't one of Jackson's character traits - he once floated a
30-foot statue of himself down the Thames. D'Arby, walking in M.J.'s
oversized footsteps, said that his genre-mashing 1987 pop-soul debut,
*Introducing
the Hardline According to Terence Trent D'Arby*, was better than *Sgt.
Pepper*. Unfortunately, although he talked the talk, he couldn't quite walk
the moonwalk. Where Jackson's production team kept supplying him with hit
singles, D'Arby was given free rein to express his increasing eccentricities
in his music, which found him narrowing his audience. He now releases music
as "Maitreya" - a name he shares with the prophesied future Buddha.

*4. Whitney Houston*

In the pre-*Thriller* era, Houston was a model and actress who sang on
Material's experimental NYC downtown funk album *One Down*. When Jackson
opened doors for black pop stars, she was snapped up by Arista's Clive
Davis; despite her viscously sweet ballads, she was, like M.J., a dab hand
with acrobatically soulful dance tracks - consider *How Will I Know* and *I
Wanna Dance with Somebody Who Loves Me*. And like M.J., she has suffered a
debilitating decade and looks to make a comeback - a new album is scheduled
for September.

*5. Weird Al Yankovic*

Imitation remains the sincerest form of flattery, and while Yankovic is
technically a parodist, his versions of *Beat It *and *Bad* (*Eat It* and *
Fat*) were affectionate send-ups authorized by M.J. himself; they made
Yankovic's career, and the latter garnered him a Grammy Award. Indeed,
M.J.'s sense of humour remains underrated - who else but an inveterate
prankster would call his child Blanket? Alas, there were limits: The third
in Yankovic's proposed Al-grows-obese-while-M.J.-wastes-away trilogy, *Snack
All Night*, was nixed when Jackson felt that his original, *Black and White*,
expressed sentiments that were too important to trifle with.

*6. Justin Timberlake*

The first of two Mouseketeers on this list, we can imagine J.T. may have
spent time at M.J.'s Captain EO attraction at Disney World before following
his idol's career path: He joined a successful boy band (N'Sync), branched
into acting (he debuted on the Disney Channel, natch), and started a solo
career in which he sang soulful dance tunes in a multi-tracked,
multi-orgasmic falsetto. At the apex of J.T.'s M.J. fixation, the two were
employing the same choreographer and Timberlake was sporting a fedora.
Should Jessica Biel be revealed as M.J.'s love child, the circle will be
complete.

*7. Britney Spears*

If M.J. was the model for the child star whose life turned sour due to abuse
and overwork, Spears was groomed to be the opposite - a God-fearing
Mouseketeer and virgin doted on by her caring mother ... and we all know how
that turned out. The all-singing, all-dancing prematurely sexualized pop
tart has certainly given Jackson a run for his money in the celebrity
eccentricity sweepstakes, although by hitting the bottom harder than he ever
did, she's been able to bounce back up. Now, her elaborately choreographed
shows and massive stage sets are the apotheosis of Jackson's grandiose stage
dreams, from M.J.'s beloved fairgrounds to her own big top.

*8. Black-Eyed Peas*

The Peas had a modicum of success in the late '90s and early '00s as an
alternative hip-hop trio, but they truly broke through only when they
invited Fergie into the fold and embraced pop hooks. Their music, as with
Jackson's, exhibits a curious mix of overt abandon and tight sonic control,
along with an awkwardly expressed sexuality (Fergie squeakily bigs up her
"lovely lady lumps" just as M.J. squeals when he grabs his crotch). In 2006,
M.J. was said to be recording with Peas producer will.i.am for a comeback
album that, like most of the late King's late projects, has yet to
materialize.

*9. R. Kelly*

When the smooove-soul singer wrote the song *You Are Not Alone* for
Jackson's 1995*HIStory* compilation, he sent M.J. a demo imitating his vocal
style, saying that in the studio, "I think I am him. I become him. I want
him to feel that, too." In later years, he may have regretted this statement
- as with Jackson, he had multiple court appearances for alleged sex with
minors (for which he was subsequently exonerated). He then released the
popular "hip-hopera" song cycle *Trapped in the Closet*, whose lyrics have
nothing to do with Jackson whatsoever.

*10. Chris Brown*

At only 20, the dance-soul singer is too young to remember Jackson's heyday,
but he cites him as one of his biggest influences, especially in his ability
to cross over. Like M.J., he has blurred boundaries between art and
commerce: where the King of Pop altered the lyrics to *Billie Jean* to sing
"You're the Pepsi Generation," Brown crafted a full-length single out of a
Doublemint jingle with *Forever*. Also like M.J., he has so far managed to
avoid doing jail time, thus avoiding a barrier he'd be unlikely to break
down.

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