Jump to content

Beat It

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 201.230.64.66 (talk) at 02:45, 23 August 2007 (→‎Impact of song and music video). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

"Beat It"
Song

"Beat It" is a 1983 hit single from Michael Jackson's multi-platinum selling album Thriller. One of Jackson's better tracks, it was the third song from the album that was released as a single, following "The Girl Is Mine" (a duet with Paul McCartney) and "Billie Jean".

"Beat It" won Jackson two Grammy Awards for Record of the Year and Best Male Rock Vocal Performance. It was also nominated for Song of the Year along with Jackson's "Billie Jean". Rolling Stone ranked it #337 on their list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.

"Beat It" is also notable for its guitar solo, a guest performance by Eddie Van Halen. He did two takes of the solo for the song, and the better of the two was selected for the final version.[citation needed].

History

In the years directly preceding "Beat It", Jackson had already composed several of his own hit songs. His Off the Wall album, released in 1979 and produced by Quincy Jones, featured two of his compositions – "Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough" and "Working Day and Night" – as well as a third co-written with Louis Johnson, "Get On the Floor". (Similarly, The Jacksons' 1978 album Destiny showcased his hit song "Shake Your Body (Down to the Ground)" and 1980's Triumph had the even more prescient "This Place Hotel"). In many respects the Off the Wall album served as a measure of things to come. Jackson and Jones had laid a foundation for putting songs appealing to different segments of their audience together on one seamless record. Jackson's loyal fan base amongst his R&B audience had spread into mainstream for more than a decade, and his songs displayed an uncanny ability to appeal to a fairly wide-ranging group of listeners: those who liked ballads, or dance tunes, or disco, or slightly funkier grooves, or even lighter fare could all find something to appreciate on Off the Wall.

With Thriller, Jackson and Jones would attempt at once to hone, embellish, and surpass this feat. One of their ambitions was to include a rock song on the new album. They took partial inspiration from another chart-topping rock song by The Knack. According to Jones, "I said at the time, 'I need a song like "My Sharona"... A black version of a strong rock and roll thing, with the power of everything else he [wrote].' And [Jackson] hit it right on the head."

Kicking off with an instantly recognizable gong (from a synclavier) which quickly segues into an equally distinctive rapid fire drumbeat and then the ongoing guitar riff, "Beat It" speaks of urgency from the outset and indeed plays out like the urban cousin of "My Sharona". The lyrics to "Beat It" are an immediate, frightful warning to avoid fighting and violence at all costs, especially when honor seems to be at stake ("It doesn't matter who's wrong or right") and Jackson sings them forcefully, near the top of his register.

Providing a dramatic electric guitar solo during the bridge of the song is Eddie Van Halen from the rock group Van Halen. According to Jones, when he first contacted the guitarist about appearing on the song, Van Halen didn't believe he was who he said he was, or that the offer was authentic. Nevertheless, he went on to provide the defining element that set the song apart from other Jackson tunes to date. Van Halen, famously, did not request payment for his performance.[citation needed]

Van Halen recorded his part while Jackson was in another nearby studio recording overdubs on "Billie Jean". According to one story, a technician who was unaware Van Halen was beginning a take knocked on the studio door, entered and quickly closed it when he realized his error. Afterwards, it was jointly decided to leave this mistake in; the knock on the door is clearly audible just prior to the launch of Van Halen's guitar solo.

According to another story, it was common practice during the time to knock on one's own guitar to signify you were ready to come in for your guitar solo[citation needed].

Another story is that it was actually a musical element to simulate Eddie Van Halen knocking on the door, coming in, playing his solo and leaving. It was supposed to help the "urban" feel of the song.

In 2001, during Michael's 30th Anniversary Special, he and guitarist Slash performed "Beat It" on stage, accompanied by dancers portraying gangsters. He ended the performance by recreating the dance scene from the video.

Impact of song and music video

By all accounts, "Beat It" was an unqualified smash hit and is often heralded as the ultimate crossover hit. Not only did "Beat It" fare well with Jackson's R&B fans, but it also did with rock and heavy metal fans because of Van Halen's contributions. Radio stations still playing the song's album-mate "Billie Jean" added the new one to their playlists, and it also rapidly advanced to the top spot. Jackson and Jones had succeeded in getting R&B radio stations to play a song featuring hard rock elements, and rock stations to play a song delivered from a formidable R&B performer. Van Halen's legendary guitar solo became ubiquitous across radio dials around the world.

Future Jackson albums would similarly rely on the proven gambit of attempted broad-based appeal, to varying results, and each would include a rock-oriented song of its own. Most of these also featured superstar guest-guitarists providing solo performances in the Van Halen mold. These included:

File:Jacksonbeatit.png
Michael Jackson's iconic Jheri curl, as seen in the "Beat It" video.

Also, as with its predecessor "Billie Jean", "Beat It" enjoyed unprecedented success on the still-growing cable network MTV. In fact, the music video for the new song was even granted an exclusive nighttime "World Premiere" on the channel, establishing a long-running tradition for top artists. Soon after it was also running on other cable networks and video programs including BET's Video Soul and WTBS's Night Tracks. "Beat It" was also the first video shown on NBC's offering in this new market, Friday Night Videos. Coupled with the success of the original song, the two fueled the ever-growing Jackson-mania that captivated millions around the world.

The video was directed by Bob Giraldi (who would go on to direct Jackson and his brothers in two Pepsi commercials) and choreographed by Michael Peters (who would later tackle the same task on Jackson's epic "Thriller" video). Many of the participants in the video's dance sequences were actual street gang members, brought in to authenticate the look and feel of the piece.

The multi-zippered red jacket worn by Jackson throughout the video would become iconic in its own right, and children and teenagers across the country of all races sported copies of the design. The jacket was seen in spot graphics in a TIME magazine article on Jackson that year, and was offered as an alternative outfit for the pop star's action figure. In one of the two Pepsi commercials featuring the Jacksons, a young Alfonso Ribeiro (having recently starred in Broadway's The Tap Dance Kid) wears a "Beat It" jacket as he dances in the street with other youths before literally moonwalking into his hero.

Music video and choreography

The video for "Beat It" follows an uncomplicated narrative: it opens in a diner, where two men walk outside (the music begins when the doors slam shut behind them) and then the members of two warring gangs gather and march to a "rumble" inspired by the film West Side Story, at a warehouse. Throughout, Jackson appears as a lone figure, eventually arriving at the warehouse just as the gang leaders (one of whom is portrayed in a white outfit and sunglasses by choreographer Peters) are engaged in a knife fight. Viewers watching closely can see elements of another early-to-mid 1980's phenomenon being performed by some of the cast - breakdancing. Also, eagle-eyed viewers can catch a couple of the less-experienced dancers (most noticeably one wearing a brown jacket, behind and to the left of Peters - from the viewer's perspective) flubbing steps in the background behind Jackson. In the diner, the girl getting kissed has fake bullet holes complete with blood stains riddling her t-shirt, which adds to the violent atmosphere.

The basic structure of "Beat It" was instantly and endlessly copied, which continues to this day. Pat Benatar's "Love is a Battlefield" – also directed by Giraldi and choreographed by Peters – could be viewed as the ultimate female counterpart to the video, so similar is its content, editing and theme. Other artists including Lionel Richie (who worked with the same director/choreographer team on his "Running with the Night" video), Janet Jackson, the Backstreet Boys, 'N Sync, Britney Spears, Christina Aguilera, Usher Amy Whinehouseand countless others all borrowed from the template of the winning video to craft their own entries into the medium — much to the delight of video stations everywhere. Even "Weird Al" Yankovic used the video—more specifically the entire video for his parody "Eat It", which outperformed the original song in Australia, reaching the #1 spot in 1984.

Such was the strength of Peters' choreographic skills that well over a decade after the release of the video, live Jackson performances of "Beat It" typically included many of the original arrangements and steps. These were however embellished for purposes of live theatricality.

Track listings

Original release

U.S. single

  1. "Beat It" – 4:17
  2. "Burn this Disco Out" – 3:48

UK single

7" single
  1. "Beat It" – 4:17
  2. "Burn this Disco Out" – 3:48
12" single
  1. "Beat It" – 4:17
  2. "Get on the Floor" – 4:57
  3. "Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough" (edit) – 4:22

Visionary single

CD side
  1. "Beat It" - 4:18
  2. "Beat It" (Moby's Sub Mix) - 6:11
DVD side
  1. "Beat It" (Music video)

Credits

  • Written, arranged and composed by Michael Jackson
  • Produced by Quincy Jones and Michael Jackson
  • Lead and background vocals by Michael Jackson
  • Guitar Solo by Eddie Van Halen
  • Guitar by Paul Jackson
  • Electric bass and guitar by Steve Lukather
  • Drums by Jeff Porcaro
  • Drum case beater by Michael Jackson
  • Keyboards by Bill Wolfer
  • Rhodes and synthesizer by Greg Phillinganes
  • Synthesizer and synthesizer programming by Steve Porcaro
  • Vocal arrangement by Michael Jackson
  • Rhythm arrangement by Michael Jackson and Quincy Jones
  • Costumes designed by Gordon Clarke

References

  • Richard Cheese covered this as a lounge style version on his 2004 album I'd Like a Virgin.
  • In a 1983 episode of Alvin and The Chipmunks, where the Chipmunks and Chipettes face off against some bullies at a local skating rink, "Beat It" is performed by the Chipmunks.
  • In an issue of The New Teen Titans from 1984, the character Cyborg crushes a boom-box blaring "Beat It" that belongs to a street-gang member.
  • Heavy metal band Metallica covered this song, along with many others, at the 2003 MTV Video Music Awards.
  • The song and its video were both parodied by "Weird Al" Yankovic as "Eat It". Yankovic, as a thing he does, asks permission from recording artists before parodying their works, and years later would again get the nod from Jackson for his second culinary jab at the singer, "Fat" (based on the pop star's title song from the album Bad).
  • Actors Stoney Jackson (no relation) and Michael DeLorenzo are two of the faux "gang-members" in the dance sequence.
  • In Back to the Future Part II, the song was featured in the Cafe 80s where the character Marty McFly was to meet Griff Tannen in the year 2015. The song plays through the fight between Marty and Griff, possibly as a nod to the original video clip.
  • In 2001, r&b singer Toya wore a beat it jacket in her music video for I Do
  • In an episode of The Jamie Foxx Show', Braxton and Jamie face off and emulate several of the moves from the video. Braxton also dresses in the jacket from the video.
  • In a season six episode of Married... with Children, the song plays when Al forms a posse with some friends to take on some street punks.
  • In a Homestar Runner cartoon, the piano shirt Jackson sported in the video appears as Homestar's nightshirt.
  • In the 2006 video for his song "What I Need", R&B singer Ray J appears in a "Beat It" jacket during brief nightclub scenes.
  • UK death metal band Ten Masked Men covered "Beat It" on their self-titled debut album Ten Masked Men.
  • In the movie Zoolander, "Beat It" is played during the big "walk off" scene between Derek and Hansel.
  • In the movie Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle (2003), Drew Barrymore tries (badly) to moonwalk off camera to the groove of "Beat It" after fighting off some bad guys while tied to a chair.
  • In a June 2000 episode of Sunday Night Heat, Hardcore Holly said to Triple H before their match, "I'm gonna kick you and beat you and tell you it's fair" which is a personalised recount of a line from the song.
  • In the 2002 film Undercover Brother, starring Eddie Griffin, the song "Beat It" was played in a fight scene between the lead character Undercover Brother and a villain named 'Mr. Feather'.
  • Comedian Gallagher once took a jab at Michael Jackson for "wearin' one white glove and singin' Beat It!", a joke working on the double slang meaning, referencing masturbation.
  • The 2004 video for "Giri Giri Surfrider" by Japanese rap duo Halcali is heavily influenced by the video for "Beat It", with its similar theme of opposing gangs meeting each other for a dance-off, the climax of which is interrupted by Halcali, themselves wearing versions of Michael Jackson's leather jacket from the "Beat It" video.
  • In the popular MMO Guild Wars, male Paragons dance like Michael Jackson does in the video for "Beat It".
  • Fall Out Boy are currently covering the song on the Honda Civic tour.
  • On the The Simpsons episode "Stark Raving Dad", Bart Simpson, excited after talking to his idol Michael Jackson on the phone, hums the tune of "Beat It" while moonwalking across the kitchen.
  • In October 2006, Charlotte Church and Amy Winehouse covered the song as the finale to the first series of The Charlotte Church Show.

References

  • Moonwalk — by Michael Jackson, edited by Jackie Onassis (Doubleday 1988, ISBN 0-385-24712-5)
  • The Michael Jackson Story — by Nelson George (Dell 1983, ISBN 0-440-15592-4)
  • Trapped: Michael Jackson and the Crossover Dream — by Dave Marsh (Bantam 1985, ISBN 0-553-34241-X)
  • Thriller – Special Edition (Epic Records, 2001 — selected interviews)
  • Michael Jackson: The Ultimate Collection (Epic Records, 2004 — liner notes)
Preceded by Billboard Hot 100 number one single
April 30, 1983May 14, 1983
Succeeded by
Preceded by Billboard's Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs number one single
May 21, 1983
Succeeded by