Before Michael Jackson died in June 2009, he was set out to get back on level with a sequence of sold-out live shows. He had 50 shows booked for his primary comeback excursion, This Is It. Footage from its rehearsals was changed into a movie of the similar name. It was released 4 months after the King of Pop's loss of life. There, fanatics got to look the singer's backstage preparations. But what wasn't explicitly published there was Jackson's unreleased tune. After the musician's shocking demise, his sister La Toya Jackson mentioned she had discovered two exhausting disks on the Billy Jean hitmaker's home.

She mentioned it had over one hundred unreleased tracks and that the majority of that have been unregistered. Many of these songs were leaked on the web. In 2010, Sony signed a record-breaking deal with the singer's estate for $250 million. Until 2017, that they had distribution rights over Jackson's data and manufacturing of ten posthumous albums. Only two albums came out of the deal. But the Jackson family announced an upcoming third album back in August 2021. Not a lot has been said about it. But in the 13-time Grammy winner's final interview, he raved about a positive artist whom he labored with on any such unreleased tasks.

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Michael Jackson Loved Working With Will.I.Am

Some folks have the idea that the Smooth Criminal singer had taken a complete destroy from tune during his smash in the mid-2000s. But according to the legend himself, he by no means stopped developing new music. "I never stopped [writing music]. "I'm at all times writing, it's how it's," he said in a 2006 interview with Access Hollywood. "I like to take sounds and put 'em on the microscope and just discuss how we need to manipulate the character of it."

He added that he had chosen Will.i.am to work with him on an album because "he's doing glorious, leading edge, certain, great track." He truly admired the Black Eyed Peas frontman. "I thought it will be fascinating to collaborate, or simply, you recognize... see how the chemistry labored," Jackson explained. In 2010, Will.i.am slammed Sony for "profiting off of" MJ's posthumous album.

"He just wasn’t any peculiar artist. He was a hands-on particular person. To me it’s disrespectful. There’s no honoring," the rapper told Access Hollywood. "Michael Jackson songs are completed when Michael says they’re finished. Maybe if I never labored with him I wouldn’t have this perspective. He was very explicit about how he sought after his vocals, the reverb he used…he was that hands-on." He vowed never to release the music they made together.

Michael Jackson Never Stopped Making Music

Before working with Will.i.am, Jackson had gotten into a potentially "history-making" music project with a Bahrain-based team. In early 2005, the Moonwalker star flew to Bahrain amid his trial for allegedly intoxicating and molesting a 13-year-old Gavin Arvizo. Jackson was under a lot of stress and was on the verge of bankruptcy. The pop star hadn't made an album since his poorly received 2001 album Invincible. He was also out of contract for years due to a falling out with Sony. His brother Jermaine Jackson wrote in his memoir You Are Not Alone that he had connected the pop star with the second son of the king of Bahrain, Sheikh Abdulla bin Hamad al-Khalifa. He thought the prince could help Jackson "to be freed from debt’s burden."

In late June that year, two weeks after Jackson's acquittal and after traveling to Europe with Abdullah, the two returned to Bahrain and signed a collaborative album deal. It was a good way for the singer to recover from his financial troubles. He stayed there for 11 months this time. However, the project didn't come to fruition. The partnership ended with a lawsuit instead. "The plan that Abdulla put at the side of Michael and myself was a truly wholesome, long-term, excellent factor," English record executive Guy Holmes told The Irish Times. He was managing Jackson at that time. "I actually consider that he can be alive lately if he had stuck with his word."

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"'How do we get him again? How can I make folks enjoy what this man gave the world?’ That was his thing. He wanted to be a part of rewriting historical past," said Ahmed al-Khan of Abdullah's ambitions for his project with Jackson. al-Khan was the financial adviser hired by the sheikh to help the singer with his financial issues. After multiple costly trips to Bahrain and several expensive recording requests, Jackson ultimately decided to quit because he was apparently "ashamed" of the way he looked post-trial. "Michael was sitting at the back of a material curtain," Holmes recalled. "You couldn’t truly see him. And so I walked out of the assembly... He mainly was pores and skin and bones after the courtroom case, and I believe that’s what it was. He was ashamed of the best way he looked."

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Jackson's then-manager added that the Beat It singer was facing about 47 lawsuits. It's understandable why he would suddenly back out of a major collaboration. The singer was initially excited that he even brought his Bad and Dangerous team to Bahrain at the sheikh's expense. "'Billy, we’re gonna make the best music ever! When the time is right, Billy, we're going to make Mozart track!'" Bill Bottrell remembered Jackson telling him. "He said 'When the time is true,' like, four instances." Abdullah eventually sued the singer in 2008, saying he had spent $7 million on loans and expenses. Promoter AEG Live settled with the sheikh off-court, paying him $5 million to set Jackson free for a 50-show residency at London’s O2 Arena. Seven months later, the King of Pop died.

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