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Black or White (Michael Jackson song)

"Black or White"
Michael Jackson - Black or White.png
Single by Michael Jackson
from the album Dangerous
B-side "Smooth Criminal"
Released November 11, 1991 (1991-11-11)
Format
Recorded June 25, 1990 – October 29, 1991
Genre
Length 4:16 (album version)
3:19 (single version)
Label Epic
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)
  • Michael Jackson
  • Bill Bottrell
Michael Jackson singles chronology
"Do the Bartman"
(1990)
"Black or White"
(1991)
"Remember the Time"
(1992)
"Do the Bartman"
(1990)
"Black or White"
(1991)
"Remember the Time"
(1992)
Music video
"Black or White" on YouTube
Audio sample

"Black or White" is a single by American singer and songwriter Michael Jackson. The song was released by Epic Records on November 11, 1991 as the first single from Jackson's eighth studio album, Dangerous. It was written, composed and produced by Michael Jackson and Bill Bottrell.

"Black or White" was written, composed and produced by Michael Jackson and Bill Bottrell, and was picked as the first single from the album Dangerous. An alternate version was first heard by Sony executives on a plane trip to Neverland, as the third track of the promotional CD acetate. It began to be promoted on radio stations the first week of November 1991 in New York and Los Angeles. "Black or White" was officially released one week later, on November 5, 1991.

The song has elements of dance, rap and hard rock music such as Bill Bottrell's guitars and Jackson's vocal style. This song is played in the key of E major, with Jackson's vocal spanning from E3 to B4, and its tempo is measured at 115 BPM.

The song's main riff is often incorrectly attributed to Guns N' Roses guitarist Slash. His guitar playing is actually heard in the skit that precedes the album version of the song. Slash also played the main riff in live performances of this song.

The vocal melody of the verses has been compared to that of the Duran Duran song 'Hungry Like The Wolf'.

To prepare the audience for the special occasion of the televised premiere of the "Black or White" video, Epic records released the song (without the accompanying images) to radio stations just two days in advance. In a period of twenty-four hours, "Black or White", described by the record company as "a rock 'n' roll dance song about racial harmony", had been added to the playlists of 96 percent of 237 of the United States of America's top forty radio stations the first day of release.


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