Fan Guide

The Six Michael Jackson Eras

A long-form, fan-written walk through the six solo studio albums that defined Michael Jackson's adult career — the year, the producer, the songs, the decisions, and what each record meant to the people who grew up inside it. This is a fan publication. We are not affiliated with the Michael Jackson Estate.

Behind the records

Six numbers that prove the era system is real

Each studio album genuinely lived in its own world — the production team changed, the wardrobe changed, the choreography changed. Here are the receipts.

  • Off the Wall (1979) — four top-10 singles from one album

    Michael became the first solo artist in history to score four top-10 singles from a single LP. The record was made with Quincy Jones, who Michael met on the set of The Wiz in 1978, and was recorded at Allen Zentz Recording and Westlake Audio in Los Angeles over roughly six months.

  • Thriller (1982) — still the best-selling album ever

    Certified 34× Platinum by the RIAA in the United States, with more than 70 million units sold worldwide. Seven of its nine tracks reached the top 10 of the Billboard Hot 100 — a feat no other album has matched.

  • Bad (1987) — five #1 singles from one album, a first

    'I Just Can't Stop Loving You,' 'Bad,' 'The Way You Make Me Feel,' 'Man in the Mirror' and 'Dirty Diana' all hit #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 — the first time any album achieved that. The Bad World Tour played to 4.4 million people across 123 concerts.

  • Dangerous (1991) — the new jack swing pivot

    Michael replaced Quincy Jones with Teddy Riley and re-invented his sound around the new jack swing genre Riley had pioneered with Guy and Bobby Brown. The 'Black or White' world premiere on Nov 14, 1991 was watched by an estimated 500 million people across 27 countries.

  • HIStory (1995) — a first in chart history

    'You Are Not Alone' became the first song ever to debut at #1 on the Billboard Hot 100. The HIStory World Tour played 82 dates across 58 cities on five continents to roughly 4.5 million fans.

  • Invincible (2001) — one of the most expensive albums ever made

    Reportedly costing around $30 million to produce, Invincible debuted at #1 in 13 countries. It was Michael's tenth and final studio album and featured production from Rodney Jerkins, who built much of the futuristic R&B backbone the record is known for.

Facts compiled from publicly available sources including Billboard, the RIAA, Guinness World Records and reputable music publications. We are an independent fan publication and are not affiliated with the Estate of Michael Jackson.