Both born to religious, musical families; both talented beyond belief; both destined for greatness; both undeniably great.
And now both gone before their time, proving all too human and vulnerable to forces that don't discriminate among the famous, the rich or the legendary. As it turns out today, after the release of autopsy findings following Prince's shocking death on April 21, he and Jackson both died of prescription drug overdoses.
Because their trajectories altered so drastically about 15 years ago, when Jackson's changing appearance, odd personal life, and legal allegations against him started to dominate the conversation, it was easy to forget until Prince died at 57—almost seven years after Jackson passed at 50—that they had so many similarities as artists when Jackson was in his prime.
They didn't sound the same or approach their craft in the same way, but both bridged pop, R&B, funk, soul and more, resulting in smash-hit creations, the best of which sound just as fresh today as they did 30 years ago. Each one had an instantly identifiable style and was a fashion icon, and both unleashed their presence on film, Jackson's 1980s-era videos ranking among the best of all time and Prince winning an Oscar for Purple Rain's titular original song. While being adored by millions they both maintained fiercely insular worlds, Jackson at his Neverland Ranch in California and Prince at his Paisley Park compound in his native Minneapolis. They were even both ripe for parody thanks to their singular quirks and affectations.
Their paths could've easily crossed countless times, being the visionary contemporaries that they were, but they did not. And by numerous accounts, it's Prince who kept Jackson at arm's length while his fellow pop icon tried to reach out to him.
"Nobody really quite knows the full extent of their rivalry, and I think both of those guys had an interest in keeping it somewhat mysterious because they are both mysterious dudes," Rolling Stone editor and Jackson biographer Steve Knopper told Esquire last October while discussing his book MJ: The Genius of Michael Jackson.
"The first line in that song is, 'your butt is mine', now who gonna sing that to whom?" Prince recalled later to Chris Rock in a 1997 interview for MTV. "Because you sure ain't singing that to me. And I sure ain't singing that to you."
And while that didn't turn Jackson off for good, he was reportedly pretty pissed off when, in 2006 when they were supposed to have a handshake and bury the hatchet, Prince seemed to be trying to make some sort of point during one of his Las Vegas shows that Jackson had been invited to.
"The next morning, Will went over to Michael's house for breakfast, and they're talking about Prince and the show. And then Michael goes, 'Will, why do you think Prince was playing bass in my face?'"
"Will" being Will.i.am, who arranged the meeting.
Jackson left, he recalled, and asked Will.i.am to come to his house for breakfast the next day.
"So I go to his house for breakfast, knock on the door, first words he says: 'Why was Prince playing the bass in my face?'"
"'Prince, he's always been a meanie,'" the Black Eyed Peas artist remembered Jackson saying.
After Prince died, cultural critic and Prince biographer Touré said that the rivalry was indeed very real.
"I know from people who were friends with Prince that he cared very deeply about the competition with Michael Jackson, the rivalry with Michael Jackson," he told Salon in April, recalling that Prince's 1999 may have been huge in 1982, but Jackson's Thriller came along a few months later and blew it out of the water commercially.
"And at one point, Michael sent Prince a song called 'I'm Bad,' with hopes that Prince would jump in it and they could collaborate on the song together. Prince was so offended at the notion of Michael Jackson doing a song called 'I'm Bad'—in a world where Prince existed as an actually bad person— Prince re-recorded the song, and sent it back to Michael, like 'Here's how you should have done it.' It was kind of a superstar way of saying, 'F--k you.'"
Already an entertainment veteran when Off the Wall came out, Jackson, meanwhile, "didn't want to get replaced by some newcomer," Hip-Hop Weekly writer Cynthia Horner explained to Vibe in 2011.
The doctor, Conrad Murray, was later convicted of involuntary manslaughter.
Jackson was rumored for years, however, to be abusing prescription drugs—his 1997 song "Morphine," which was about the opioid painkiller Demerol, serving almost as a confessional.
"Everybody around him knew about it," former Jackson friend and colleague Marc Schaffel (who had successfully sued Jackson for $3 million over unpaid productions fees) told ABC News after the artist's death, saying Jackson was given "daily doses" of Oxycontin. "He didn't advertise it to the world, but anybody in his inner circle knew."
"This family has been trying for months and months and months to take care of Michael Jackson," Jackson family attorney Brian Oxman also told ABC News in 2009. "The people who have surrounded him have been enabling him."
A source confirms to E! News that Prince's plane had to make an emergency landing a couple weeks before his death because he needed treatment for a Percocet overdose. Those closest to him were indeed worried but Prince was determined to show that he was fine, throwing a party at his Paisley Park compound upon his return to Minneapolis.
A source told us that Prince was receiving weekly cortisone shots but that one of the reasons Prince's Piano and a Microphone tour featured a piano was so that he could sit down.
Autopsy results released today state that Prince, who was found unresponsive in an elevator at Paisley Park on the morning of April 21, died of an overdose of fentanyl, a potent opioid pain reliever.
While neither man might have thanked the other in life for his influence, be it creative or purely competitive, when at their best either one would have been safe in taking a teeny slice of the credit for making the other better.
But while both enjoyed global success and larger-than-life status, it turns out that within the enigmatic, isolated worlds that Prince and Michael Jackson had created for themselves, despite being two of the most recognizable people on the planet, they each suffered in private.
And for whatever reason, despite common sense suggesting that countless people would've come to their aid in a heartbeat, neither could be helped in the end and, reminiscent of what happened to Elvis Presley almost 40 years ago, no one in the circle wanted to cross the King. Or the Prince.
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