![]() The aggressive yet fluid dance grooves Riley helped construct - and his emphasis is on writing grooves, not traditional songs - prove a perfect match for Jackson’s clipped, breathy uptempo voice. Instead of the cocksure strut of a New Jack classic like Bobby Brown’s “My Prerogative,” the stacked layers of keyboards on Dangerous shift and percolate, varying textures over insistent, thumping rhythm tracks. Riley’s tracks don’t offer the revolutionary genre-busting of Thriller, but they dramatically illustrate the versatility of his style. Riley’s work on Dangerous is reminiscent of Jackson’s solo album Off the Wall (1979) and that record’s distillation of disco to its perfect pop essence. ![]() This choice clearly represents Jackson’s pursuit of a more contemporary sound, an attempt to come to grips with the changes that have swept pop music since Bad - most significantly, rap’s successful attack on the mainstream. Riley - the producer of groundbreaking tracks by Bobby Brown, Keith Sweat and his own combo, Guy - is the godfather of New Jack Swing, which merges hip-hop beats with soul crooning and has dominated the R&B charts in recent years. ![]() Quincy Jones as Jackson’s primary collaborator on Dangerous, an inspired selection that is the key to the album’s finest moments. ![]()
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