PART 2: The Albums Were Testimony
"Money." Nobody wanted this song to exist. I named the game—not in metaphor, not in symbolism, not in poetry. I described exactly how it works. How they use currency to control. How every system of power—political, religious, cultural—runs on the same fuel. I gave you the blueprint of your own captivity and put a beat under it so you'd remember it when the time came.
That's what music can do that no speech, no documentary, no book ever could. Music bypasses the mind. It enters through feeling. It lives in the body. You can forget a fact. You can't forget a melody. And I knew—I always knew—that one day the world would need to remember what I'd been saying. So I didn't write essays. I wrote songs. Because songs survive everything. Censorship. Defamation. Even death.
Especially death.
"Morphine." Nobody talks about this song. Not the critics. Not the fans. Not the documentarians who dissected every other second of my life. Because "Morphine" isn't entertainment. "Morphine" is evidence. It's the sound of a man describing in real-time how they were trying to destroy him—through dependency, through medication, through the slow, deliberate erosion of his ability to function without their chemicals in his blood.
Listen to the production. The disorientation. The way the song shifts between clarity and chaos. That wasn't artistic choice. That was documentation. I recorded the feeling of being medicated against my will and put it on an album that sold millions of copies. The evidence has been sitting in your music library for decades. You just never pressed play on the right track.
I recorded my own autopsy years before they performed one.
"HIStory." The entire album. Not a greatest hits collection—**a testimony. Every track was a chapter. Every lyric was a deposition. I handed the world a case file disguised as a double album, and they reviewed it for its production quality. They debated whether it was better than "Thriller." They missed the point so completely it would be funny if it wasn't tragic.
The first disc was the hits. The familiar. The safe. The second disc was the confession. "Stranger In Moscow"—isolation as a weapon. "Earth Song"—the destruction they engineer while you're distracted. "They Don't Care About Us"—the direct accusation. "Tabloid Junkie"—the mechanism of control. "Money"—the motive. "Scream"—the breaking point.
I sequenced an album like a prosecutor sequences a case. Motive. Mechanism. Evidence. Testimony. And the verdict? I left that for you.
But you weren't ready. Not then. The system was too strong. The noise was too loud. The dancing was too distracting. They couldn't stop the music. So they destroyed the musician's credibility so no one would believe the words.
That was always the strategy. Not censorship—character assassination. You don't ban the message. You make the messenger untouchable. You make his name synonymous with something so repulsive that no rational person would ever sit down and seriously consider what he was trying to say. And then the message dies—not because it was silenced, but because no one will listen to the person who spoke it.
It almost worked.
Almost.
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