Xscape

Michael Jackson

Sale - Sale price $12.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $12.99 CAD
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Sale - Sale price $20.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $20.99 CAD
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Description

Xscape is a 2014 posthumous Michael Jackson album built from eight previously unreleased tracks recorded between the early 1980s and early 2000s, then updated by contemporary producers including L.A. Reid and Timbaland. It was issued in a standard edition containing only these new productions and a deluxe edition that also presents Jackson’s original versions, emphasizing both its archival basis and its bid to function as a cohesive, modern pop-R&B project. The songs—such as “Love Never Felt So Good,” “Chicago,” “A Place with No Name,” “Slave to the Rhythm,” and the title track—span themes of romance, escape, entrapment, and social concern, with arrangements that fuse funk, dance-pop, and sleek electronic textures while keeping Jackson’s vocals central.

Critically, Xscape was often received as a more coherent and respectful posthumous release than its predecessor Michael, in part because the updated productions generally aim to complement rather than radically overwrite the source material. The album was commercially successful, charting near the top in multiple countries and reinforcing Jackson’s enduring status in global pop culture. At the same time, it generated debate about authorship and authenticity in posthumous releases: while many listeners heard it as a polished, engaging tribute that reintroduces strong late- and mid-period material, others questioned the ethics and aesthetics of reworking outtakes without the artist’s direct oversight.

Xscape is a 2014 posthumous Michael Jackson album built from eight previously unreleased tracks recorded between the early 1980s and early 2000s, then updated by contemporary producers including L.A. Reid and Timbaland. It was issued in a standard edition containing only these new productions and a deluxe edition that also presents Jackson’s original versions, emphasizing both its archival basis and its bid to function as a cohesive, modern pop-R&B project. The songs—such as “Love Never Felt So Good,” “Chicago,” “A Place with No Name,” “Slave to the Rhythm,” and the title track—span themes of romance, escape, entrapment, and social concern, with arrangements that fuse funk, dance-pop, and sleek electronic textures while keeping Jackson’s vocals central.

Critically, Xscape was often received as a more coherent and respectful posthumous release than its predecessor Michael, in part because the updated productions generally aim to complement rather than radically overwrite the source material. The album was commercially successful, charting near the top in multiple countries and reinforcing Jackson’s enduring status in global pop culture. At the same time, it generated debate about authorship and authenticity in posthumous releases: while many listeners heard it as a polished, engaging tribute that reintroduces strong late- and mid-period material, others questioned the ethics and aesthetics of reworking outtakes without the artist’s direct oversight.

Details
detail icon barcode
Barcode :
0888430536623 0888430667624
detail icon publisher
Publisher :
SI / Epic / MJJ SI / Epic / MJJ
detail icon genre
Genre :
R&B/Soul
Product Dimensions
detail icon width
Length x Width x Height :
6 x 5.2 x 0.5 in 6 x 5.2 x 0.5 in
detail icon weight
Weight :
90 g 180 g

Xscape

Michael Jackson

Sale - Sale price $12.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $12.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Sale - Sale price $20.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $20.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Description

Xscape is a 2014 posthumous Michael Jackson album built from eight previously unreleased tracks recorded between the early 1980s and early 2000s, then updated by contemporary producers including L.A. Reid and Timbaland. It was issued in a standard edition containing only these new productions and a deluxe edition that also presents Jackson’s original versions, emphasizing both its archival basis and its bid to function as a cohesive, modern pop-R&B project. The songs—such as “Love Never Felt So Good,” “Chicago,” “A Place with No Name,” “Slave to the Rhythm,” and the title track—span themes of romance, escape, entrapment, and social concern, with arrangements that fuse funk, dance-pop, and sleek electronic textures while keeping Jackson’s vocals central.

Critically, Xscape was often received as a more coherent and respectful posthumous release than its predecessor Michael, in part because the updated productions generally aim to complement rather than radically overwrite the source material. The album was commercially successful, charting near the top in multiple countries and reinforcing Jackson’s enduring status in global pop culture. At the same time, it generated debate about authorship and authenticity in posthumous releases: while many listeners heard it as a polished, engaging tribute that reintroduces strong late- and mid-period material, others questioned the ethics and aesthetics of reworking outtakes without the artist’s direct oversight.

Xscape is a 2014 posthumous Michael Jackson album built from eight previously unreleased tracks recorded between the early 1980s and early 2000s, then updated by contemporary producers including L.A. Reid and Timbaland. It was issued in a standard edition containing only these new productions and a deluxe edition that also presents Jackson’s original versions, emphasizing both its archival basis and its bid to function as a cohesive, modern pop-R&B project. The songs—such as “Love Never Felt So Good,” “Chicago,” “A Place with No Name,” “Slave to the Rhythm,” and the title track—span themes of romance, escape, entrapment, and social concern, with arrangements that fuse funk, dance-pop, and sleek electronic textures while keeping Jackson’s vocals central.

Critically, Xscape was often received as a more coherent and respectful posthumous release than its predecessor Michael, in part because the updated productions generally aim to complement rather than radically overwrite the source material. The album was commercially successful, charting near the top in multiple countries and reinforcing Jackson’s enduring status in global pop culture. At the same time, it generated debate about authorship and authenticity in posthumous releases: while many listeners heard it as a polished, engaging tribute that reintroduces strong late- and mid-period material, others questioned the ethics and aesthetics of reworking outtakes without the artist’s direct oversight.

  • CD