Janet Jackson
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Janet Jackson Biography
Few celebrity siblings can emerge from the shadows of their
already famous relations to become superstars in their own right and
with their own distinct personalities. That's exactly what Janet
Jackson did in becoming one of the biggest female pop and R&B stars
of the '80s and '90s. Since her breakthrough in 1986 with the album
Control, Jackson's career as a hitmaker has been a model of
consistency, rivaling Madonna and Whitney Houston in terms of pop chart
success over the long haul. A big part of the reason was that Jackson
kept her level of quality control very high; her singles were always
expertly crafted, with indelible pop hooks and state-of-the-art
production that kept up with contemporary trends in urban R&B. Once
established, her broad-based appeal never really dipped all that much;
she was able to avoid significant career missteps, musical and
otherwise, and successfully shifted her image from a strong,
independent young woman to a sexy, mature adult. With a string of
multi-platinum albums under her belt, she showed no signs of slowing
down in the new millennium.
Janet Damita Jo Jackson was born May 16, 1966, in Gary, IN. She was the
youngest of nine children in the Jackson family, and her older brothers
had already begun performing together as the Jackson 5 by the time she
was born. Bitten by the performing bug at a young age, she first
appeared on-stage with the Jackson 5 at age seven, and began a sitcom
acting career at the age of ten in 1977, when producer Norman Lear
selected her to join the cast of Good Times. She remained there until
1979, and subsequently appeared on Diff'rent Strokes (1981-1982) and A
New Kind of Family. In 1982, pushed by her father into trying a singing
career, Jackson released her self-titled first album on A&M; a
couple of singles scraped the lower reaches of the charts, but on the
whole, it made very little noise. She was cast in the musical series
Fame in 1983; the following year, she issued her second album, Dream
Street, which sold even more poorly than its predecessor. Upon turning
18, Jackson rebelled against her parents' close supervision, eloping
with a member of another musical family, singer James DeBarge. However,
the relationship quickly hit the rocks and Jackson wound up moving back
into her parents' home and having the marriage annulled.
Jackson took some time to rethink her musical career, and her father
hired her a new manager, John McClain, who isolated his young charge to
train her as a dancer (and make her lose weight). McClain hooked
Jackson up with producers/writers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, whom she'd
seen perform as members of the Minneapolis funk outfit the Time.
Jackson collaborated with Jam and Lewis on most of the tracks for her
next album, Control, which presented her as a confident, tough-minded
young woman (with a soft side and a sense of humor) taking charge of
her life for the first time. In support of Jackson's new persona, Jam
and Lewis crafted a set of polished, computerized backing tracks with
slamming beats that owed more to hard, hip-hop-tinged funk and urban
R&B than Janet's older brother Michael's music. Control became an
out-of-the-box hit, and eventually spun off six singles, the first five
of which -- What Have You Done for Me Lately, the catch
phrase-inspiring Nasty, the number one When I Think of You, the
title track, and the ballad Let's Wait Awhile -- hit the Top Five on
the pop charts. Jackson was hailed as a role model for young women and
Control eventually sold over five million copies, establishing Jackson
as not just a star, but her own woman. It also made Jam and Lewis a
monstrously in-demand production team.
For the hotly anticipated follow-up, McClain wanted to push Jackson
toward more overtly sexual territory, to which she objected
strenuously. Instead, she began collaborating with Jam and Lewis on
more socially conscious material, which formed the backbone of 1989's
Rhythm Nation 1814 (the 1814 purportedly stood for either the letters
R and N or the year The Star-Spangled Banner was written).
Actually, save for the title track, most of the record's singles were
bright and romantically themed; four of them -- Miss You Much,
Escapade, Black Cat, and Love Will Never Do (Without You) -- hit
number one, and three more -- Rhythm Nation, Alright, and Come
Back to Me -- reached the Top Five, making Jackson the first artist
ever to produce seven Top Five hits off of one album (something not
even her brother Michael had accomplished). Aside from a greater use of
outside samples, Rhythm Nation's sound largely resembled that of
Control, but was just as well crafted, and listeners embraced it
enthusiastically, buying over six million copies. Jackson undertook her
first real tour (she'd appeared at high schools around the country in
1982) in support of the album and it was predictably a smashing
success. In 1991, Jackson capitalized on her success by jumping from
A&M to Virgin for a reported $32 million, and also secretly married
choreographer and longtime boyfriend René Elizondo.
Once on Virgin, Jackson set about revamping her sound and image. Her
1992 duet with Luther Vandross from the Mo' Money soundtrack, The Best
Things in Life Are Free, was a major R&B hit, also reaching the
pop Top Ten. The following year, she also resumed her acting career,
co-starring in acclaimed director (and former junior high classmate)
John Singleton's Poetic Justice, along with rapper Tupac Shakur. But
neither really hinted at the sexy, seductive, fully adult persona she
unveiled with 1993's janet., her Virgin debut. Jackson trumpeted her
new image with a notorious Rolling Stone cover photo, in which her
topless form was covered by a pair of hands belonging to an unseen
friend. Musically, Jam and Lewis set aside the synthesized funk of
their first two albums with Jackson in favor of warm, inviting, gently
undulating grooves. The album's lead single, the slinky That's the Way
Love Goes, became Jackson's biggest hit ever, spending eight weeks at
number one. It was followed by a predictably long parade of Top Ten
hits -- If, the number one ballad Again, Because of You, Any
Time, Any Place, You Want This. janet.'s debut showing at number one
made it her third straight chart-topping album, and it went on to sell
nearly seven million copies.
In 1995, Janet and Michael teamed up for the single Scream, which was
supported by an elaborate, award-winning, space-age video that, upon
completion, ranked as the most expensive music video ever made. The
single debuted at number five on the pop charts, but gradually slid
down from there. In 1996, A&M issued a retrospective of her years
at the label, Design of a Decade 1986-1996; it featured the Virgin hit
That's the Way Love Goes and a few new tracks, one of which,
Runaway, became a Top Five hit. Jackson also signed a new contract
with Virgin for a reported $80 million. Yet while working on her next
album, Jackson reportedly suffered an emotional breakdown, or at least
a severe bout with depression; she later raised eyebrows when she
talked in several interviews about the cleansing value of coffee enemas
as part of her treatment. Her next album, The Velvet Rope, appeared in
1997 and was touted as her most personal and intimate work to date. The
Velvet Rope sought to combine the sensuality of janet. with the more
socially conscious parts of Rhythm Nation, mixing songs about issues
like domestic abuse, AIDS, and homophobia with her most sexually
explicit songs ever. Critical opinion on the album was divided; some
applauded her ambition, while others found the record too bloated. The
lead American single Together Again, an elegy for AIDS victims, was a
number one hit; also popular on the radio was Got 'til It's Gone,
which featured rapper Q-Tip and a sample of Joni Mitchell over a reggae
beat. I Get Lonely, featuring Blackstreet, was another big hit; but
on the whole, The Velvet Rope didn't prove to be the blockbuster
singles bonanza that its predecessors were, which was probably why its
sales stalled at around three million copies.
Jackson toured the world again, and stayed on the charts in 1999 with
the Top Five Busta Rhymes duet What's It Gonna Be?! ; her appearance
in the video remade her as a glitzy, artificially costumed, single-name
diva. In 2000, she appeared in the Eddie Murphy comedy Nutty Professor
II: The Klumps, and her soundtrack contribution, Doesn't Really
Matter, became a number one single. Unfortunately, Jackson's marriage
to Elizondo had become strained and the couple divorced in 2000,
sparking a court battle over her musical income. Jackson returned with
a new album, All for You, in 2001, which largely continued the sensual
tone of janet. and The Velvet Rope; it debuted at number one, selling
over 600,000 copies in its first week alone. The title track was issued
as the album's first single and quickly topped the charts, followed by
another sizable hit in Someone to Call My Lover.
While Jackson spent much of 2001 and 2002 on the road supporting All
for You, she also found time for some guest appearances, most notably
with Beenie Man on his Tropical Storm LP and Justin Timberlake on
Justified. By 2003 she was back in the studio, working once again with
Jam and Lewis on tracks for a new album; additional producers included
Dallas Austin and Kanye West. Later that year, it was revealed Jackson
would take part in an MTV-produced extravaganza during halftime at the
Super Bowl. 2004 began with an Internet leak of the upbeat Austin
production Just a Little While. The singer's camp rolled with the
punches, offering the track to radio as an authorized digital download,
but the buzz this business caused was minuscule in comparison to the
nightmare union of free exposure and bad publicity that Jackson's next
adventure caused. Appearing at halftime of Super Bowl XXXVIII as
scheduled, Jackson performed All for You and Rhythm Nation before
bringing out surprise guest Timberlake for a duet on his hit Rock Your
Body. But the real surprise came at song's end, when a gesture from
Timberlake caused Jackson's costume to tear, exposing her right,
pierced breast on live television to hundreds of millions of viewers.
The incident caused furious backpedaling and apologizing from
Timberlake, Jackson, the NFL, CBS, and MTV, which swore no previous
knowledge of the so-called wardrobe malfunction, and led to
speculation over how Damita Jo -- Jackson's upcoming album and her
first in three years -- would be received. But while the controversy
gave Jackson both grief and a bit of free advertising, it was also the
impetus for a national debate on public indecency. A federal commission
was set up to investigate prurience, the FCC enacted tougher crackdowns
on TV and radio programs broadcasting questionable content, and
suddenly everyone from pundits to politicians to the man in the street
had an opinion on Janet Jackson's chest. Later that March, the singer
quietly started making the talk show rounds. She was still apologizing
for the incident, but she was also promoting Damita Jo, which Virgin
issued at the end of the month. Largely considered a disappointment,
the album nonetheless sold over two million copies worldwide and earned
three Grammy nominations. 20 Y.O. followed two years later, and though
it was reviewed more favorably than Damita Jo, it was off the Billboard
200 album chart after 15 weeks. Jermaine Dupri, Jackson's love interest
and the executive producer of the album, was so upset over Virgin's
lack of support that he left his post as president of Virgin's urban
division. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide
Written by Steve Huey