Michael Jackson Xscape -deluxe Edition- 2014 Review
This is the heart of the Deluxe Edition for purists and scholars. Here, listeners hear exactly what Michael Jackson left behind—raw, stripped-down demos recorded in his home studios (Hayvenhurst, Neverland) or professional spaces. These versions, such as the soulful Loving You , the haunting Slave to the Rhythm , and the epic Xscape , offer an intimate portrait of a perfectionist at work. Jackson is heard layering harmonies, beatboxing, and creating complete arrangements using only his voice and rudimentary keyboards.
On tracks like "She Was Lovin’ Me" (retitled "Chicago" on the main disc) or "Do You Know Where Your Children Are," we hear Jackson not as the untouchable icon, but as a songwriter working through his craft. The scratch vocals are often guttural and emotive, lacking the final sheen but possessing a tangible soulfulness that sometimes surpasses the polished versions. The demo of "Love Never Felt So Good" is a masterclass in simplicity; a swinging, Quincy Jones-esque piano demo that highlights just how powerful Jackson’s melodic intuition was. The comparative listening experience offered by the Deluxe Edition validates the producers' work on Disc One while simultaneously proving that the "original" magic needed very little embellishment to shine. Michael Jackson Xscape -Deluxe Edition- 2014
Xscape (Deluxe Edition) arrives as both a time capsule and a careful exercise in custodial craftsmanship. Released in 2014, this posthumous collection of Michael Jackson material—reworked, completed, and contemporized—offers a layered listening experience that raises familiar tensions: reverence versus reinterpretation, archival value versus commercial curation. This is the heart of the Deluxe Edition
The release of Michael Jackson's Xscape (Deluxe Edition) in 2014 represented a critical turning point for the artist's posthumous legacy. Following the mixed reception of the 2010 album Michael , Epic Records and the Jackson Estate shifted strategies, prioritizing transparency and creative modernization. This deluxe collection is notable for its "contemporized" versions of unreleased tracks, paired with the original demos, allowing listeners to hear the evolution of Jackson's craft from the 1980s through the early 2000s. The Strategy of Contemporization The demo of "Love Never Felt So Good"
The Deluxe Edition offers a comprehensive look at the production process by including both modern and original recordings: Reworked Tracks: