"State of Shock" is a 1984 single by the Jacksons, featuring frontman Michael Jackson and Mick Jagger. It was written by Jackson and Randy Hansen. The track was originally sung by Jackson as a duet with Freddie Mercury,[4] and was later slated for the Thriller album in 1982; however, due to differing time schedules, Jackson ended up recording it with his brothers and Jagger instead.
"State of Shock" | ||||
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Single by The Jacksons featuring Mick Jagger | ||||
from the album Victory | ||||
B-side | "Your Ways" | |||
Released | June 18, 1984[1] | |||
Recorded | November 1983–May 1984[2] | |||
Studio |
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Genre | ||||
Length |
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Label | Epic, CBS | |||
Songwriter(s) | Michael Jackson, Randy Hansen | |||
Producer(s) | Michael Jackson | |||
The Jacksons singles chronology | ||||
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Mick Jagger singles chronology | ||||
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"State of Shock" was the biggest hit from the Jacksons' Victory album in 1984, reaching number 3 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and number 14 on the UK Singles Chart. [5][6] It was also their only top 5 American single since leaving Motown. The song was originally recorded with Freddie Mercury, as Michael Jackson and Mercury had been working on several tracks at that time (1981–1983), including the unreleased title track "Victory" and "There Must Be More to Life Than This" from Mercury's Mr. Bad Guy (1985). The final version featured lead vocals by Jackson and Mick Jagger.
In his 1994 book Michael Jackson: Unauthorized, author Christopher Andersen described "State of Shock" as a hard rock song and added that Jagger respected Jackson's work and "eyed the phenomenal success of Thriller with envy." Further, he stated that Arthur Collins, then president of Rolling Stones Records, said that Jagger had become "obsessed" with Jackson and "wanted to know every detail about Jackson's life, his contract with Columbia, how the Thriller singles were selling...".[5] "State of Shock" was the last top ten hit for the Jacksons, as well as their last single to be certified gold. Jagger performed the song with Tina Turner for their 1985 performance at Live Aid.
In 2002, a demo of Mercury and Jackson singing "State of Shock" was leaked online. In 2014, William Orbit remixed the Mercury/Jackson version for release on Queen Forever, but the song was not included.
Guitarist Randy Hansen is often mentioned as co-writer of the song, but the credit refers to a different Randy Hansen. In a leaked interview[7] for his autobiography Moonwalk, Michael Jackson told the lyrics were co-written by a 12 year old kid with the same name. Guitarist Randy Hansen received royalties for the song erroneously, as he explained in a 2021 interview with Eddie Trunk.[8]
An extended dance mix (5:41) of the song is available as a digitally remastered release. An instrumental clip of the song appeared on Michael's posthumous album Immortal in 2011.
Credits adapted from Victory LP liner notes.[9]
"Weird Al" Yankovic used the song multiple times. It was featured in the "Hooked on Polkas" medley on his 1985 album Dare to Be Stupid and was also performed by industry veteran Harvey Leeds that year in the mockumentary The Compleat Al. The style was later used for the song "UHF" from the 1989 film of the same name.
Insane Clown Posse featured a rendition of the song on their 2012 EP of covers Smothered, Covered, And Chunked!, released as a bonus disc alongside their album The Mighty Death Pop!.
Weekly charts edit
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Year-end charts edit
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Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
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Canada (Music Canada)[29] | Gold | 50,000^ |
United States (RIAA)[30] | Gold | 1,000,000^ |
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone. |
The most memorable cut on the Victory album — and its only top five single — was "State of Shock," Michael's hard rock duet with Mick Jagger. ... "Mick became obsessed with Michael Jackson," said Arthur Collins, then president of Rolling Stones Records.
Jackson duets with Freddy Mercury on the album's lead-off single State Of Shock (US No. 3 and UK No. 14).
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