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Charts


“Night Time Lover” is the second single by American singer La Toya Jackson, from her self-titled debut. The track was produced by her brother Michael, who provides background vocals on the chorus.

Despite her brother’s help, the song peaked at #59 on the Billboard R&B charts. In La Toya’s 1991 autobiography, La Toya: Growing up in the Jackson Family, she claims that Michael purposely changed production at the last minute to make sure that it wouldn’t be a big hit and overshadow the success of his album Off the Wall. Source

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Ben is a number-one hit song written by Don Black and Walter Scharf and recorded by Michael Jackson for the Motown label in 1972.

Originally written for Donny Osmond, “Ben” was offered to Jackson as Osmond was on tour at the time and unavailable for recording.

The single, theme of a 1972 film of the same name (the sequel to the 1971 killer rat movie Willard), spent one week at the top of the U.S. pop chart. It also reached number-one on the Australian pop chart, spending eight weeks at the top spot. The song also later reached a peak of number seven on the British pop chart.

The song became the first of 13 number-one pop hits for Jackson in the United States and his first number-one as a solo artist; it was later included on Jackson’s album of the same name.

“Ben” won a Golden Globe for Best Song. It was also nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Song in 1973; Jackson performed the song in front of a live audience at the ceremony.

Although Jackson had already become the youngest artist to ever record a number-one (“I Want You Back” with The Jackson 5, in 1970), “Ben” made him the third-youngest solo artist, at fourteen, to score a number-one hit single.

Only Stevie Wonder, who was thirteen when “Fingertips, Pt. 2″ went to number one, and Donny Osmond, who was months shy of his fourteenth birthday when “Go Away Little Girl” hit number one in 1971 were younger.

Click Here to see all the SONGS recorded with MOTOWN

Source: Wiki

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It wouldn’t be that strange to see Chuck Berry’s “Johnnie B. Goode,” Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believin,’” and Michael Jackson’s “Black or White” on someone’s iPod. Each of these tracks was the top downloaded for its respective decade, according to Nielsen SoundScan data tear-to-date ending July 26, 2009.

The top downloaded track of the past year was Flo Rida’s “Right Round.” It has been downloaded 3.69 million times trailed closely by the Black Eyed Peas “Boom Boom Pow” at 3.67 million. Predictably, the tracks recorded in the last decade have been purchased at far greater volumes than those of the decades before.

The most downloaded track from any other decade is Journey’s eighties classic “Don’t Stop Believin’” which was downloaded 711,000 times.

Ironically, the artist that owned the decade, Michael Jackson, didn’t get the top slot. He did however rack up 10 of the top-15 downloads overall. The only non-Jackson songs in the top-10 were Bon Jovi’s “Livin’ on a Prayer” (No. 5) and Survivor’s “Eye of the Tiger” (No. 10).

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Digital Downloads
King of pop (and the blogosphere) Michael Jackson along with pop-country star Taylor Swift were among the top-selling artists of the year. Remastered versions of The Beatles catalog secured the fab four a third place spot some 40 years after their heyday, as polar opposites Susan Boyle and Lady Gaga rounded out the top five.
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“State of Shock” is a 1984 hit single by The Jacksons featuring frontman Michael Jackson and Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger.

“State of Shock” was the biggest hit from The Jacksons’ Victory album, reaching number 3 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and number 4 on the Billboard R&B Singles chart. The song is written by Jackson and guitarist Randy Hansen.

The final version featured lead vocals by Michael Jackson and Jagger. “State of Shock” was the last top ten hit for The Jacksons, as well as their last single to be certified gold.

The song was later revised by Jagger when he performed it with Tina Turner during their legendary 1985 performance at Live Aid.

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Album Cover You_Are_Not_Alone
Chart performance

Commercially, “You Are Not Alone“, remains one of Jackson’s best selling singles. It holds the Guinness World Record for the first song ever to debut at number one on the Billboard Hot 100 chart.

First week sales were 120,000 copies, it was certified platinum by the RIAA for shipments of at least one million units within the US.

It broke the record set by his previous single “Scream/Childhood”, which was the first song in the 37 year history of Billboard to debut at number five—where it peaked.

It peaked at number one in the UK after a debut at number three in the prior week.

The song also reached number one in Wallonia, France, New Zealand, Spain and Switzerland. With the exception of Italy, it became a top ten hit in every major market.

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