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The lone Jackson family member to stay with Motown while the other brothers split for CBS/Epic (he was then married to <a href="spotify:artist:4xRLKAf96K6YdGDWjY6ra8">Berry Gordy</a>'s daughter Hazel), Jermaine enjoyed a artistically diffident career during the '70s at Motown, surfacing with an occasional hit like a remake of "Daddy's Home" (1972) and "Let's Be Young Tonight" (1975). Jermaine got a badly needed shot in the arm from <a href="spotify:artist:7guDJrEfX3qb6FEbdPA5qi">Stevie Wonder</a>, who wrote and produced "Let's Get Serious," a Top Ten pop and soul dance hit that came around the time of brother <a href="spotify:artist:3fMbdgg4jU18AjLCKBhRSm">Michael</a>'s pop ascendancy. After scoring a Top 20 pop hit in 1982 with the infectious "Let Me Tickle Your Fancy," Jermaine left Motown in 1983 for Arista Records, where he scored a pair of hits in 1984 with "Do What You Do" and the scintillating dance number "Dynamite." Subsequently, he re-joined <a href="spotify:artist:2iE18Oxc8YSumAU232n4rW">the Jacksons</a> in time for their ill-fated Victory tour in 1984. Jackson has recorded sporadically since, though he generated controversy in 1991 when "Word to the Badd," a thinly veiled attack on his brother <a href="spotify:artist:3fMbdgg4jU18AjLCKBhRSm">Michael</a>, was leaked out to urban music stations. ~ John Lowe, Rovi
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