BEIJING, June 26 (Xinhua) -- Michael Jackson, the
American pop icon and a household name in China who died Friday, had no
substantial influence on Chinese pop music, a Chinese music critic said.
"In the early 1980s, Western pop music was far away
from China, and there was no way for singers or music fans to become familiar
with it," said Wang Xiaofeng, a music critic and writer with the Life week
Magazine.
Wang also sports one of the most visited blogs in
China.
"And when rock and roll showed up in China in the
late 1980s, Chinese rock singers learned from the Beatles, the Rolling Stones or
John Lennon, but not from Michael Jackson, because Jackson's style was too hard
for beginners," Wang said.
Several huge fans of Jackson interviewed by Xinhua
also said they loved his incredible singing and dancing, but imitating him was
just a mission impossible.
"His voice is a gift, and his passion is a thing that
no one else can have," said Han Xiaopeng, a manager in the music industry and a
Jackson fan.
The death of Jackson became top news on Chinese
websites, and China's Sina.com devoted a web page to "the most remarkable singer
ever".
Most Chinese people knew more about his multiple
plastic surgeries and skin disease than his music, despite that Jackson's
perfection and excitement on the stage was almost incomparable, said Wang.
Negative reports on Jackson have always been a
hotspot on the entertainment page of Chinese media, and Jackson's image crumbled
in China especially after the news came out that he was accused of sexually
molesting two boys.
"No offence, but some people do think he is both a
genius and a freak," Wang said.
Wang Xiaofeng said he got to know Jackson in the year
1986, and he also admitted that Jackson and his music "was a window for him to
the outside world.
"Now he is dead, and the era of super singer stars in
the world has gone," Wang said.