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Mark Ronson
Mark Ronson
British-American musician, DJ, songwriter and record producer
1
Big Fun
Big Fun
British band
2
JLS
JLS
English pop/R&B group
3
Jamelia
Jamelia
British singer-songwriter
4
Lemar
Lemar
English R&B singer–songwriter
5
Eternal
Eternal
English R&B girl group
6
Lauren Laverne
Lauren Laverne
English radio and television presenter
7
Matt Cardle
Matt Cardle
singer
8
Wolf Alice
Wolf Alice
British rock band
9
Judie Tzuke
Judie Tzuke
British singer-songwriter
10
A Boogie wit da Hoodie
A Boogie wit da Hoodie
American rapper, singer, and songwriter
11
N-Dubz
N-Dubz
British hip-hop group
12
Melanie C
Melanie C
British singer-songwriter, actress and businesswoman
13
Dannii Minogue
Dannii Minogue
Australian pop singer, songwriter, actress
14
Dexys Midnight Runners
Dexys Midnight Runners
band
15
Breakfast Club
Breakfast Club
American pop group
16
The Saturdays
The Saturdays
British-Irish girl group
17
Baccara
Baccara
Spanish female vocal duo
18
Sniff 'n' the Tears
Sniff 'n' the Tears
British band
19
Sean Paul
Sean Paul
Jamaican singer, rapper, and record producer
20
The Style Council
The Style Council
English band active 1983–1989
21
Nile Rodgers
Nile Rodgers
American guitarist, singer-songwriter, record producer, arranger and composer
22
David Guetta
David Guetta
French record producer and DJ from Paris
23
Bee Gees
Bee Gees
British-Australian pop group; sibling trio
24
The Dave Clark Five
The Dave Clark Five
English pop rock group
25
Chuck Jackson
Chuck Jackson
American recording artist; R&B singer
26
Belle and Sebastian
Belle and Sebastian
Scottish band
27
Tinie Tempah
Tinie Tempah
English rapper
28
Aled Jones
Aled Jones
Welsh singer and TV presenter
29
Melanie Brown
Melanie Brown
British singer, actress and television personality
30
Sarah Cracknell
Sarah Cracknell
English singer-songwriter
31
The Jackson 5
The Jackson 5
American pop music family group
Mick Jackson
British recording artist; singer, songwriter

Mick Jackson

Intro
British recording artist; singer, songwriter
Record Labels
News
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Michael George Jackson (born 2 November 1947) is an English singer-songwriter and the co-writer of the song, "Blame It on the Boogie". The song was co-authored by Mick's brother David Jackson and Elmar Krohn, and produced by Sylvester Levay.

Jackson recorded his version first and The Jacksons' management team picked up the song at Midem, the music industry trade fair in Cannes, where it was offered to them by Mick Jackson's publisher without Jackson's knowledge. Due to a delay at the pressing plant which was producing Mick Jackson's single, in the UK the two versions were released within weeks of each other.

The press at the time enjoyed the similarity in the names and release coincidence, calling the situation 'The Battle of the Boogie' as the two records jockeyed for chart positions. Radio stations got on the battle bandwagon. BBC Radio One only played The Jacksons' version, Capital Radio only played Mick's single. The music press was equally split. Melody Maker did not review Mick Jackson's version, but praised the Jacksons and wrongly referred to their single as a "self-penned song" (16 September 1978), whereas NME hailed Mick Jackson as the winner of the battle, calling his version "far superior" (7 October 1978).

Mick Jackson's original peaked at No. 15 and The Jacksons peaked at No. 8 in the UK Singles Chart. Mick Jackson's subsequent 1979 release, "Weekend" was released in the same week as The Jacksons' second single "Destiny". The songs entered the charts on the same day, peaking at 38 and 39 in the UK Singles Chart respectively, and both 'Michael Jacksons' appearing on the same edition of Top of The Pops. "Weekend" spent eight weeks on the chart; thus equalling his earlier single's tenure, and also avoiding the one-hit wonder tag.

Jackson released three albums – Weekend (1978 – Atlantic Records), Step Inside My Rainbow (1980 – CBS Records), and "Square Deal" (1982).

He has worked with many artists such as David Knopfler, Eric Burdon, Lisa Stansfield, and Barry Manilow.

In 2010, filmmaker Patrick Nation made a Channel 4 documentary about Jackson, entitled The Other Michael Jackson: Battle of the Boogie. The documentary was co-written and presented by Mick's son Sam Peter Jackson, and it led to Mick Jackson's 1978 album, Weekend, (which featured the original version of "Blame it on the Boogie") being re-released (for download on iTunes) for the first time in thirty years by Demon Music. To promote the documentary, Jackson gave a rare television interview to BBC Breakfast.