Jackson had 13 No. 1 hits — here are the best
From ‘I Want You Back’ to ‘We Are The World,’ few could match dominance
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Few artists could match Michael Jackson's chart dominance. On his own, he had 13 singles that hit No. 1 on the Billboard pop charts; tossing in the Jackson 5 adds another four chart-toppers to his tally, with one more courtesy of USA For Africa.
While a complete picture of Jackson's talent can only be gleaned from a thorough survey of his entire output, it's worth looking at the most notable musical moments from his No. 1 hits, times when nobody was being listened to more than the "King of Pop."
"I Want You Back" by the Jackson 5 (1969)
The Jackson 5's first Motown single was also the group's first chart-topper, a rather auspicious national debut. From that first piano glissando through to the fadeout, it ranks with the best that Hitsville U.S.A. had to offer, with a joyous, bubbling bassline, popping drums and a rhythm guitar so dead-on funky that there was no need to change notes no matter where it was in the chord progression. If there'd been any doubt that an 11-year-old could credibly front a major pop group, it was wiped clear away by the time little Michael finished the first chorus.
“Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough” (1979)
This wasn't Jackson's first solo No. 1 single — that honor went to 1972's ode to man-rat devotion “Ben” — but it was his first to top the charts that he wrote himself. In fact, it was the first single that Jackson wrote himself, period, the importance of which can't really be overstated, since his musical legacy rests just as much, if not more, on his songwriting as on his singing and performance. He tested the waters with a pure disco tune, complete with swirling strings and a thumping rhythm that was as much an injunction to hit the floor and dance as the lyrics themselves. It was essentially a declaration of independence by a 20-year-old who'd just figured out how to stand on his own.
“Billie Jean” (1983)
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“Beat It” (1983)
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“We Are The World” by USA For Africa (1985)
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Bettmann / Corbis Michael Jackson, front center, joins a variety of music and movie stars to sing "We Are The World," a song written to benefit famine victims in Ethiopia. |
“I Just Can't Stop Loving You” (1987)
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“You Are Not Alone” (1995)
Jackson's final No. 1 pop hit came at a time when he'd seemingly been eclipsed by his sister Janet, who was still riding her own incredible hot streak, and he had to turn to an outside songwriter to get there. It would have been a step backwards to his pre-“Off The Wall” days, but R. Kelly's song was the perfect vehicle for Jackson in the mid-1990s. Musically, it was cut from the same inspirational slow-jam mold as “I Believe I Can Fly,” but there's an introspective sadness that's all the more bittersweet for the implication that he was singing the songs to himself and trying desperately to believe.
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