The ongoing saga of Michael
Jackson continues, and this time, Paul Anka has somehow gotten into the mix.
It seems that Jackson’s
posthumous single, “This Is It,” is actually a collaboration from more than a
quarter century ago between the so-called “King of Pop” and the
singer/songwriter who had many, many hits of his own including “Put Your Head
On My Shoulder” and "Diana."
Word leaked out about the
song, and Anka’s lawyers evidently got busy when they heard that the song was
actually recorded in 1983 for a planned Anka duets album. One thing or another
happened, and the song was not released at that time, but was later released
under a different title by a singer known as Sa-Fire.
Anka has publicly stated
that nothing untoward happened between his and Jackson’s camps, it is just that
they needed to be reminded that he collaborated with Jackson on the song, and
should be credited as such.
I guess he can feel
confident in saying that, since Anka will now receive 50 percent of all the
profits made off the song, which is also the centerpiece of the new Michael
Jackson concert film, “This Is It,” which will premier soon.
Some might say that Anka
has more than enough money. He’s been a hitmaker and popular performer for more
than 50 years, and his “Tonight Show” theme was heard for decades on Johnny
Carson’s late night talkfest.
Funny, that song was
originally written for and recorded by--under a different title--Annette
Funicello!
Also funny about this whole
thing is that Anka has been known to (legally) cop other people’s songs
himself. Anka’s “My Way” is the English version of a French song “Comme
D’Habitude.” Anka wrote the English lyrics, but is often mistakenly credited
with writing the entire song.
However, the real story is
that Anka heard the song, thought it was an awful song but liked it enough to
pursue it, flew to Paris to negotiate the rights to it, and the rest is
history—it has been recorded by everyone from Frank Sinatra to Elvis Presley to
Sid Vicious.
So now, I guess everyone is
happy. Anka gets proper credit, the Jackson camp doesn’t have to go through any
legal haggling, and the world can hear this “new” Jackson song.
Now that that is settled, maybe we are one step
closer to finding out if Jackson’s doctor should be arrested for “killing” the
pop singer. I mean, we want to find out the "truth," and we don’t
want activist Dick Gregory to starve himself to death much longer, do we
(Ranting and Raving, July 30, 2009)?
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