Michael Jackson’s concert at Moscow’s Luzhniki Open Arena made him the first international pop star to play in the post-Soviet Russian Federation. Only two years earlier, his music would have been banned. The Moscow Case tells two stories. The first is that of a city and culture adjusting itself to post-Communist liberalisation; the second is of a vulnerable man, childlike and introverted. It’s 1993, and Yeltsin’s Russia has an unlikely visitor. ‘Mud and dirt… permanent bandit clashes, several contract killings a day… This background did not go well with the image of an extra-terrestrial, of a man from a completely different dimension who was to come with the best show in the world.’ In a series of highly confessional interviews, those involved in the concert — both the businessmen who organised it and the fans who attended — lay bare the sheer chaos that surrounded the King of Pop’s visit. They were so ill-equipped that paratroopers were drafted in as members of the technical team, paid only in food and cigarettes; Jackson’s own tour managers were reduced to wiping a flooded stage. And that’s even before we get to the ticketing process. ‘A star was coming: something had to be done, but what exactly nobody knew. The film is revealing not only of the fledgling Russian state but also of Jackson himself. Jackson’s Russian foray came at the height of the debilitating child abuse accusations that took such a toll on him; it was the experience of being in the Russian …
Tag Archives: Disco
Michael Jackson – I’ll Be There – Live in Yokohama – Bad Japan Tour (1987) – HQ
“Bad World Tour” Start Date: September 12, 1987. End Date: January 27, 1989. Recorded: Yokohama, Yokohama Stadium, Japan (September 27, 1987) Produced & Sponsored by: Pepsi-Cola. Record Labels: MJJ Productions Inc./Epic Records & CBS Inc. Niceties by: www.youtube.com Synopsis! “The Bad World Tour” was the first world concert tour by Michael Jackson as a solo artist, covering Japan, Australia, United States and Europe from September 12, 1987 to January 27, 1989. The tour, sponsored by PepsiCo and spanning 16 months, included 123 concerts to 4.4 million fans across 15 countries. When the tour concluded it grossed a total of 5 million, adding two new entries in the Guinness Book of World Records for the largest grossing tour in history and the tour with the largest attended audience. In the United States alone, where just 54 concerts were held, the tour came in as the 6th largest grossing tour from 1988-89, grossing a total of .3 million. In April 1989, the tour was nominated for “Tour of the Year 1988″ at the inaugural International Rock Awards. The tour lost to Amnesty International, but nothing could detract from the fact that Jackson’s first solo tour was the largest and most successful in history. At every concert (at least in the United States) Jackson made sure that 400 tickets were reserved for underprivileged children. These tickets were distributed across hospitals, orphanages and charities. Jackson also donated concert takings to multiple causes …
Michael Jackson – Wanna Be Startin’ Somethin’ – Live in Munich – HIStory Germany Tour (1997) – HQ
“HIStory World Tour” Start Date: September 7, 1996. End Date: October 15, 1997. “Live in Munich: HIStory Germany Tour” Recorded: “Olympic Stadium” Munich, Germany (July 4 & 6, 1997) Produced & Sponsored by: MJJ & “HRH” Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal. Record Labels: MJJ Productions Inc. & Epic Records. Niceties by: www.youtube.com Synopsis! The HIStory World Tour was the third and final world concert tour by Michael Jackson as a solo artist, covering Europe, Africa, Asia, Australia and Hawaii from September 7, 1996 to October 15, 1997. The tour, which grossed a total of 3.5 million, included a total of 82 concerts with a record-breaking attendance of 4500000 fans. “Live in Munich: HIStory Germany Tour” Jackson planned upon filming this concert for a DVD release by Christmas time, so more camera angles (including individual crowd shots) were used, and the audio was later remastered heavily to emphasize the percussion and audience sounds. This concert was also an early experiment by Jackson with High Definition cameras. The release was ultimately cancelled; due to Jackson’s dissatisfaction of the behind-the-scenes filming . However, the performance was televised extensively in many different countries, making it one of the most readily available concerts. The most common version is the one aired by Sat.1 and most other channels, but other versions, such as the one that aired in South Africa (with a small segment from a concert at Johannesburg), and a Japanese version also …