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"Will You Be There" [a] is a song by American singer and songwriter Michael Jackson which was released on June 28, 1993, by Epic Records as the eighth single from his eighth studio album, Dangerous (1991).
"I'll Be There" was the Jackson 5's final number-one Hot 100 hit as a group. For the rest of their career as a major-label act, Jackson 5 singles would climb no higher than number 2. Michael Jackson scored numerous number-one hits as a solo artist, beginning with "Ben" in 1972.
The music video for the remix included clips of Jackson performing on the Dangerous World Tour, including a hologram of the pop singer intercut with wildlife footage from Free Willy, which the song was featured in and on its soundtrack. "It Ain't Hard to Tell" (1994) by Nas. Nas has performed "It Ain't Hard to Tell" as a mashup with "Human ...
The official music video was released simultaneously with the single on January 20, 2022. [11] In the video, at the beginning, we can see Cris MJ sitting near a pool looking at his phone and listening to reggaeton music with automatic headphones. Then, we see a sexy woman arrive near MJ which shocks Cris MJ and she takes off her automatic ...
Got to Be There is the debut solo studio album by the American singer Michael Jackson, released by Motown on January 24, 1972, [4] four weeks after the Jackson 5's Greatest Hits (1971). It includes the song of the same name , which was released on October 7, 1971, as Jackson's debut solo single .
"Childhood" is a 1995 song composed and recorded by American singer Michael Jackson. [2] It was released as a track on Jackson's 1995 studio album HIStory: Past, Present and Future, Book I, and was released as a double A-side with Jackson's single "Scream". "Childhood" is an autobiographical song written and composed by Michael Jackson.
Xscape is the second posthumous album by the American singer-songwriter Michael Jackson. [3] It was released on May 9, 2014, by Epic Records, MJJ Music and Sony Music Entertainment, four years after the release of Michael (2010).
The song became an internet meme after the nightcore version was posted to YouTube by a user known as Andrea, who was known as an osu! player. [13] [better source needed] From there, the music rose in popularity with more people applying the nightcore treatment to more non-dance genres such as pop music and hip hop.