By Kyle J. Hayes
Long live the King.
I could try to keep this short, but the truth is, I could write an entire book on why Thriller deserves its place—not just on this list, but in the DNA of music itself.
There are albums, and then there are events. Thriller was an event—a moment in time that did not just shake the industry—it reshaped it, changing what music could be, what it could do, and how far it could reach.
There is no overstating its impact.
The music is impeccable—a seamless fusion of pop, R&B, funk, and rock so well-crafted that it still sounds fresh, commands movement, and makes crowds lose themselves the moment those first few beats drop. The production? Flawless. Quincy Jones and Michael Jackson created something more than an album—they built an experience, one that still ripples through the culture decades later.
The visuals? Revolutionary.
“Billie Jean”—the video that shattered the glass ceiling—was the first by a Black artist to grace MTV. “Thriller” is not just a music video but a cinematic event, proof that pop music could be high art and that visuals could be just as iconic as sound. The red jacket, the single white glove, the penny loafers on their toes—he didn’t just sell records—he built iconography.
And the cultural significance? Untouchable.
Michael Jackson didn’t just break records—he broke barriers. Thriller was not just Black music. It was music. Period. It crossed over, took over, and made it impossible for the industry to ignore the fact that Black artists were not just supporting acts but the main event. It wasn’t just about a sound—it was about a shift. A Black artist dominates the charts, screens, and airwaves without compromise.
And then there’s the movement.
Play a beat—just a snippet—from Beat It, Wanna Be Startin’ Somethin’, Billie Jean, or Thriller, and watch what happens. Shoulders roll, feet tap, and bodies move before the brain realizes it’s responding. That is not just a great album. That is something greater, something primal, something stitched into us whether we know it or not.
The greatness of Thriller is not up for debate.
It was, and still is, a force of nature. An album that didn’t just live in its time but transcended it. The standard by which every pop album since has been measured and still falls short.
Long live the King.
