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Thriller spent 37 non-consecutive weeks at No. It has since sold over 60 million copies around the world. Those barriers were overcome by the insatiable drive and genius of two men: Jackson and Quincy Jones. Jones, who died on Sunday night at 91 in Los Angeles, had already been a formidable impresario in music and TV for decades before pairing up with Jackson, a former child prodigy struggling with his pivot into adulthood.
Jones started producing for Jackson on his album, Off the Wall , his fifth solo release outside of his work with the Jackson 5.
Off the Wall was a massive hit. And Jackson complained about Rolling Stone passing him over for a cover story in "I've been told over and over that black people on the cover of magazines doesn't sell copies Jones and Jackson wanted their follow-up to be bigger: for every song on the album to be an undeniable smash.
McCartney himself called it shallow. But while some radio DJs declined to play the song because of its implications of interracial romance, the gambit worked: the song hit No. The rest of Thriller would possess a similar, clearly-defined sonic aura: sleek, glittery, tightly-wound.
To create this specificity, Jones pulled from his voracious and encyclopedic knowledge of music theory and music history.