- Diana Ross Presents the Jackson 5 · 1969
- The Ultimate Collection · 1970
- Christmas Album · 1970
- The Ultimate Collection · 1970
- Christmas Album · 1970
- Diana Ross Presents the Jackson 5 · 1969
- ABC · 1970
- The Ultimate Collection · 1960
- Dancing Machine · 1974
- The Ultimate Collection · 1971
- The Ultimate Collection · 1995
- Third Album · 1970
- A Very LoTown Christmas · 2022
Essential Albums
- There's not much else that's more on point for the Christmas season than the powerful voice of 12-year-old Michael Jackson leading his siblings in song. Pop standards like "Santa Claus Is Coming to Town" and "I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus" have rarely been delivered with more spirit, soul or enthusiasm than on this 1970 Motown release. Possibly because some of the band are still at the age when they're hoping St. Nick will be filling their stockings.
- Michael Jackson was only 11 when he and his brothers released this album-length highlight of their Motown years, and it’s still a thrill to hear. “ABC” is a happy frenzy of handclaps, stride piano and popcorn rhythms, and the multi-voice chorus on “2-4-6-8” feels like a warm, soulful breeze. Peppered with Jermaine’s well-timed ad-libs, the album is all filtered through Michael, who recalls James Brown with excited yelps and rough-voiced bellowing on “The Love You Save” and belies his years with smooth, assured crooning on “True Love Can Be Beautiful”.
- 1970
Artist Playlists
- The legend starts here.
- The quintet's dancing and singing legacy lives on.
- Fearlessly testing the boundaries of R&B.
Live Albums
More To Hear
- Celebrate 40 years of Michael Jackson’s iconic album 'Thriller.'
- Jams from Outkast, Stevie Wonder, Jackson 5, and Donna Summer.
- Reminiscing about the Jackson 5.
About Jackson 5
The Jackson 5’s exuberant bubblegum soul was forged in the hardscrabble town of Gary, Indiana, fomented by a father who had sublimated his own musical dreams. One night in the early ’60s, Joe Jackson discovered that his sons Jackie, Tito and Jermaine had been fiddling around with his guitar. Initially furious, he quickly recognised their innate talent, and the three brothers began performing together; younger siblings Marlon and Michael joined a few years later. By mid-decade, the family act was gaining fame locally and winning talent shows—most notably at New York’s Apollo Theater in 1967. They signed to Motown Records in 1968 and moved to Los Angeles, where the songwriting conglomeration The Corporation began feeding them songs. Diana Ross Presents the Jackson 5 dropped in late 1969, and the single “I Want You Back” was a mad burst of joy from its first bass-driven, jangling notes. It was the first in an unprecedented stream of four U.S. No. 1 hits in less than a year. The Jackson 5 attained incredible crossover success, bolstered by an innovative marketing campaign that included Saturday-morning cartoons, colouring books and even a board game. Later albums couldn’t—and didn’t—match that initial flash of brilliance, but the act had become a cornerstone of pop music. Motown never allowed the brothers to write songs or play instruments—a massive mistake in light of the undeniable charm (and success) of their self-made 1978 outing for Epic (as The Jacksons), Destiny. As Michael’s solo fame skyrocketed in the early ’80s, his star power helped turn the 1984 album Victory and its accompanying tour into blockbuster events. The siblings released one more album, 1989’s 2300 Jackson Street, and were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1997.
- GENRE
- R&B/Soul