The six studio albums recorded by The Jacksons for Epic Records trace the group’s spectacular leap from their Jackson 5 boy band roots to their role as avatars of an R&B/pop revolution (1976-1989). The expanded digital releases of Triumph, Victory and 2300 Jackson Streetare available alongside The Jacksons (1976), Goin’ Places (1977) and Destiny (1978), released February 12. The production is capped with King’s words, “Free at last, Free at last Thank God Almighty, Free at last.” Listen here. Expanded digital editions (featuring bonus tracks) of the group’s last three Epic studio albums– Triumph (1980), Victory (1984) and 2300 Jackson Street (1989) –will be released Friday, April 30 and available for pre-order starting today. Each album comes with three ‘instant grat’ tracks when preordered.Īs part of the project, an exciting new remix of “Can You Feel It” was created by producer/composer Greg Curtis (engineered by Jon Nettlesbey) and executive produced by John McClain:Ĭan You Feel It: The Jacksons X MLK Remix: Greg Curtis kicks off his production with a roaring drum line and bookends the mix with recordings from the late Martin Luther King’s acclaimed 1968 The Drum Major Instinct speech at the Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta. Midway, excerpts from the great Barack Obama’s first inauguration speech inspire. PRNewswire/ - Epic Records and Legacy Recordings, the catalog division of Sony Music Entertainment, announce the second wave of titles in The Jacksons definitive album project. Martin Luther King & Barack Obama’s Speeches Featured on the “Can You Feel It” Remix Released TodayĢLP Vinyl Reissue of “The Jacksons Live!” Coming Friday, March 26
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