Janet Jackson

She's the youngest of nine children born to Joe and Katherine Jackson- including
Michael, Tito, Marlon, LaToya, and Jermaine. She was always a tomboy as a child
- a little chubby, and given to roughhousing. Janet became aware of the
performance early on. Since the Jackson 5 were already stars by the time Janet
was an adolescent, it may never have occurred to her that it was possible to
fail in show business. She had an experience of life completely different from
what her oldest brothers and sisters may have known as a poor Indiana family.
She was perhaps the most protected child in the family, as the youngest often
is.
As she grew, her interests branched in several directions- dancing, acting,
singing. She was clearly a performer, but of what kind? She first appeared on
stage in her brothers' show in 1973- at the age of seven. In 1977, Norman Lear
offered her a job on the CBS hit as Penny Gordon Woods on "Good Times." After
that, she appeared on a few shows, "Diffrent Strokes" and "A New Kind of Family"
among them. She was doing sitcom acting: not terribly challenging, but highly
paid, with good exposure. And as a Jackson child, how could one not draw
exposure? Brother Michael was already solo and tearing up the charts with Off
the Wall.
In 1982, she released her first album, Janet Jackson. It wasn't bad for a first
effort, especially for a sixteen-year-old, but it played it very safe. Janet had
yet to find a voice, a style, or an audience. She toured the country, performing
in high schools and encouraging the kids there to stay in school. During the
tour, she went with her mother to see The Time perform. Two members of the band-
Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis- would become major figures in her career. In 1983,
she got a role on "Fame." The show, no longer on a network, remained one of the
most critically praised shows on TV- and one which somehow had maintained itself
as a showcase for singing and dancing, as well as acting and writing.
Anachronistic though a musical format may have seemed, the show was much like
the high school it portrayed: encouraging talented performers to stay a while
and learn before moving on. During her time at "Fame," she remained protected
(not surprising, considering she was still a minor at the start of the season)
an
d her parents were often on the set. In 1984, Janet, age 18, eloped with James
DeBarge and married him. Pressures from a number of different directions
intervened- her record company, the demands of her schedule, her youth. By the
following March, she moved back in with her parents and had the marriage
annulled.
Also in 1984, Janet released her second album, Dream Street. Inflected by the
dance-pop of the time (it was produced with help from Giorgio Moroder, of
Flashdance fame), it was little more than a statement of musical presence on
Janet's part: I'm here, I'm making music, heads up. It was not well-received.
The album peaked at #147 on the charts and Janet retreated to think about her
next album. She listened to other songs, worked intensively with songwriters and
producers, and cultivated a coherent sound which had been lacking the previous
effort. This sound is still recognizable in Janet's music: a blending of the
sharp opening phrases and commanding bass lines of funk with the melodic sense
of soul, and the rhythm backing of 80s dance-pop and, later, rap.
The album that pulled these things together was 1986's Control. It was her first
album with Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis. It transformed all of their careers. It
hit number one, putting six singles on various charts. Among the charts that
Janet simultaneously occupied the #1 position on were dance, black and pop-
which describe the meld the album achieved. It took the hard beat background and
laid a funk-riff melody over it, with Janet not always so much singing as
keeping a vocal rhythm.
The album was aggressive, in tone and melody. It was a clear stepping out from
behind her parents'- and brothers'- coattails. "What Have You Done For Me
Lately" is the voice of a woman taking control of her voice and her man,
"Control" (the title track) being what the album is all about. The album was all
about Janet- and who she wanted to be. It was sexier than any past album- enough
to disturb her mother a bit. Janet knew it would, but weighed her need to get
out of the nest against that- and that need won.The singles from the album just
kept coming: five of the tracks from the album became top 5 pop hits. Janet
spent most of 1986 and 1987 supporting the album and remixing the songs into
dance versions. (Many of these versions were released as Control- The Remixes.)
Rolling Stone reviewer Rob Hoerburger called Control "a better album than Diana
Ross has made in five years." Ms. magazine named the album one of the musical
landmarks of the past 20 years. By 1989, Janet released her next album, Rhythm
Nation 1814. What exactly did 1814 mean? Well, R and N are the 18th and 14th
letters of the alphabet, respectively... but that wasn't quite it. If, as People
reviewer Ralph Novak claimed, Janet was "making a strident declaration of
independence" with Control, Rhythm Nation was a few years down the road. 1814
refers to the year that Francis Scott Key wrote the "Star Spangled Banner," and
the album was about some of the troubles of this Rhythm Nation. She said at the
time, "Control was about my life; Rhythm Nation is about what's going on in the
world around us."
Rhythm Nation was accompanied by a long-form video project, encompassing a
number of the songs from the album, in a conceptually coherent form. It's a
morality play featuring two young shoeshine boys, which director Dominic Sena
tried to film in the style of a vintage musical. The tour that followed was as
much of a production: huge, expensive, and theatrical.
If some tracks on Control and Rhythm Nation 1814 were hard for mother Katherine
to take, janet, her 1993 follow-up, should, as Michael Odell put it, "turn her
to the bottle... she really puts the bedsprings through their paces." The album
retains the assertiveness of Control, the political awareness of Rhythm Nation,
and adds a frank sexual tone. The British publication VOX said that "Musically,
she touches all bases; lyrically, she hardly gets out of the sack."
Around the same time janet was released, she starred in John Singleton's Poetic
Justice. The film, about the meaning of poetry in an urban setting, gained Janet
some respect for her acting. Oddly enough, she had attended the same junior high
school as John Singleton- "I remember his as this little kid with 'Coke bottle
glasses,' who had all these books," Janet said. "After [meeting on the set of
Steven Spielberg's] Hook, we got together and it all just happened from there."
Since then, she's spent time building her acting skills, writing songs, and
maintaining relationships. She remains close with Michael still- as kids they'd
play piano together. She still talks to him mornings, supported him in public
during his roughest times. The key she wears on an earring is a gift from him-
it was to the cage of a baby deer they took care of as kids. One day, he
attached it to the earring- and she has left it there. The two siblings joined
forces on Michael's video (currently the most expensive music video ever made)
"Scream."
With the release of her seventh album, Behind The Velvet Rope, Janet joined
longtime collaborators Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis on a project that set out to
tackle social issues like domestic violence and the AIDS crisis. The first
single from the album, "Got "Til It's Gone," features a sample from an artist
accustomed to speaking out through music - Joni Mitchell (trivia: the sample
comes from Mitchell's "Big Yellow Taxi" 1970). According to Janet, "It's kind of
like therapy...In the past, I've always found a way to not have to face the pain
I've experienced growing up; I would brush it aside and keep going," she says.
"But I'm at a point now where self-discovery has become important, and this
album is kind of like a self-examination."
And like "Got 'Til It's Gone's" recurring chorus, "Joni Mitchell never lies,"
Janet assimilates the statement to a new level in her own career, "I've always
had this need, when I discover a truth, to share it musically," Jackson said. "A
lot of times when I've felt alone, music has helped me get through it. Maybe
this album will strike a chord with some people out there when they're going
through difficult times."