Unfortunately for diehard Jackson fans, it’s likely Musgrove will be one of the few people to ever hear these tapes. He and the attorney he brought on approached the Jackson Estate with their findings earlier this year. The estate, who Musgrove says did their own research into the tapes, declined to purchase the tapes for an unknown reason, but did provide him with an official letter stating that the estate does not claim ownership. They make it clear in the letter, however, that he and anyone else who might purchase these tapes down the line do not own the copyright on the recordings or the compositions, the estate does. Essentially, these tapes can never be released publicly.
mannnnn
remember when ol boy first died and his estate rushed out to be like "nah, Michael only had like 6 songs in the vault, he didn't really record as much as he said he did"
Yeah there arent many finished songs thats why they faked a bunch of songs with an impersonator
Damn 1989-1991 is a very interesting era for MJ leaks id definitely wanna hear em
@Abyssus
Mike was definitely extra productive in this period Makes sense as he was trying to go with something new.
I wonder why the estate didn't want them... maybe the tapes were a low quality copy of something they already have?
remember when ol boy first died and his estate rushed out to be like "nah, Michael only had like 6 songs in the vault, he didn't really record as much as he said he did"
SUPER
Damn 1989-1991 is a very interesting era for MJ leaks id definitely wanna hear em
Bad to Dangerous
Yeah there arent many finished songs thats why they faked a bunch of songs with an impersonator
I dont buy it. Michael left tapes in a lot of studios around the world with a lot of producers, hunting them down wouldn't have been easy but it also wouldn't have been particularly hard and we know now that he had a lot more music in a semi-finished state then we were originally led to believe. otherwise the Bad and Thriller reissues wouldn't have eventually happened.
That wasn’t a lie. In the 6 months after MJ passed away, they only located two releasable songs.
Those were Blue Gangsta and Xscape. Part of the “Michael” album idea was to release what he was working on up until the point of death, so because they could only find very few recordings, the plan nearly got scrapped. It is what made the 2007 Cascio recordings so worthwhile to them, despite all of the authenticity concerns from day 1.
I'm trying to find the interview, but I remember seeing a Teddy Riley interview, where he said they recorded a s*** ton of songs for Dangerous but Michael narrowed it down to 14?
Can't wait to finally hear them in 2033 when the estate lets them out into the world!
With features from will iam and Justin Timberlakes sons!
Unfortunately for diehard Jackson fans, it’s likely Musgrove will be one of the few people to ever hear these tapes. He and the attorney he brought on approached the Jackson Estate with their findings earlier this year. The estate, who Musgrove says did their own research into the tapes, declined to purchase the tapes for an unknown reason, but did provide him with an official letter stating that the estate does not claim ownership. They make it clear in the letter, however, that he and anyone else who might purchase these tapes down the line do not own the copyright on the recordings or the compositions, the estate does. Essentially, these tapes can never be released publicly.
Somebody call Jai Paul's hacker or whatever the leaker was lol
This is like something @AudioConsulting would dig up and reveal to us