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Forums > Concerts > Prince Piano and a Microphone at Paisley Park - 21 January - Part III
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Reply #90 posted 01/22/16 7:49am

nyse

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Wow these setlists are amazing!!!!

Dirty mind
do me baby
look at me loo at you
venus de milo
dear mr man

i really hope some footage get put out there
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Reply #91 posted 01/22/16 7:51am

udo

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paulludvig said:

Hope it was filmed. sounds really special.

.

Hope it was recorded by a fan.

Makes a release more probable.

Pills and thrills and daffodils will kill... If you don't believe me or don't get it, I don't have time to try to convince you, sorry.
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Reply #92 posted 01/22/16 7:53am

delirious

CarrieMpls said:

TrevorAyer said:

aside from 'how come u don't call me anymore' .. were the songs played in full? all the lyrics and bridges? just curious .. i would be happy to hear that they were .. I really find the medleys and shortened songs grating at best

Mostly. A few may have lopped off a bridge or ended without an extended outro but others meandered while he told stories before, during and after. None had a "medley" feel to them at all.

I believe How Come You Don't Call Me was the only true tease, other than he teased Dorothy Parker, played something else and came back and played it in full later.

He teased How Come You Don't Call Me in the first show - then ended up playing the whole song in the second show later.

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Reply #93 posted 01/22/16 7:58am

paulludvig

udo said:

paulludvig said:

Hope it was filmed. sounds really special.

.

Hope it was recorded by a fan.

Makes a release more probable.

You are probably right biggrin

There have been a couple of recordings from inside PP.

The wooh is on the one!
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Reply #94 posted 01/22/16 8:02am

jasopig

Wow. Wow, wow, and wow again. I've been to several paisley shows, mostly in the mid 90s. This was the best musical performance I've ever been to. I was only at the 8pm show. The VIP "gifts" were pretty cool - a copy of HNR Phase 2 and Musicology - both were a surprise. And a t-shirt - old ones, like they were just trying to clear shelf space.

The show was so personal, I felt honored to be in on it. It wouldn't do it justice to post a set list, because it wasn't about the collection of songs. It was the trajectory of his entire life, told in equal parts humor and reflection, and 100% music. It was stunning to hear him mention the divorce "Bye dad...".... "and that wasn't so bad" (because he could play piano whenever he wanted).

For the highlight was I Love U, But I don't trust U anymore. It's the only song I listen to from Rave, and it made me tear up when he played it last night. The pain you hear in his voice matches that which many of us have felt when we've been betrayed by a loved one.

He played for 90 minutes, which was nice because it started about 40 minutes late, due to getting all the shuttle buses into the Park.

He also played Paisley Park, a highlight for my non-prince-fan wife. She didn't recognize most of the songs, but thought it was the best concert she's been to and has been asking questions about him since.

If this is a Paisley Park residency, I'll be filing for bankruptcy.

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Reply #95 posted 01/22/16 8:03am

MIRvmn

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udo said:



paulludvig said:


Hope it was filmed. sounds really special.



.


Hope it was recorded by a fan.


Makes a release more probable.


yes it's so easy to record on a smartphone so I believe someone has done it
Welcome 2 The Dawn
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Reply #96 posted 01/22/16 8:04am

jasopig

paulludvig said:

udo said:

.

Hope it was recorded by a fan.

Makes a release more probable.

You are probably right biggrin

There have been a couple of recordings from inside PP.

There was a camera filming it to the right of the stage (facing Prince) on the catwalk. (Catwalk is probably not the right word - it was on walkway near the ceiling).

I don't think something this personal will be released. I'd love to have a copy of it, but my memories will have to suffice.

[Edited 1/22/16 8:05am]

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Reply #97 posted 01/22/16 8:04am

paulludvig

Can we get into the specifics of the performance? Were the songs rearranged? Did the arrangements open up some new colours? Did you leave the show with a new appreciation of some of the songs? In other words - what did it sound like?

The wooh is on the one!
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Reply #98 posted 01/22/16 8:18am

jasopig

I forgot to post this little tidbit: (paraphrasing) "All songwriters, if they're male, do it to get the girl"

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Reply #99 posted 01/22/16 8:26am

paulludvig

jasopig said:

I forgot to post this little tidbit: (paraphrasing) "All songwriters, if they're male, do it to get the girl"

That's silly.

The wooh is on the one!
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Reply #100 posted 01/22/16 8:28am

undergroundFUN
K

How was the Ladder performed? Was it similar to the version we heard at the end of the documentary?
Love41Another 💜
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Reply #101 posted 01/22/16 8:36am

jasopig

I recall a couple months ago a nitwit on here saying Prince doesn't have it anymore, vocally. Thinking back on that now, after hearing what I heard last night, just kinda makes chuckle. It was the same nitwit who said his albums are no longer... what was the word... "sophisticated". Ah, nitwits make the world go round!

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Reply #102 posted 01/22/16 8:41am

Linn4days

Play the piano over the sampler set drum loops... It would be interesting to hear real piano playing the lead synth parts..

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Reply #103 posted 01/22/16 8:45am

BillS

Both when playing Dorothy the first set and
The Ladder the second set
He did a tease of each and then stopped.
Thank God he did both.

As much as he talked about his father
during the first set I thought for certain he
would play The Ladder. But it didn't come
until the 2nd show.

Also, am I mistaken but didn't he do a piece
of Liathach (sp?) the second show?

If he tours doing this material I hope
he does this like the LOL shows in small venues.
Sacred is the prayer that asks 4 nothing
While seeking 2 give thanks 4 every breath we take
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Reply #104 posted 01/22/16 8:45am

tatocorcu

I'm getting goosebumps just from reading the reviews. That's what being a Prince fan in 2016, I guess: accepting that he can go from the ridiculous to the sublime and back again in a few weeks.
Congratulations to those who enjoyed it last night, and let's hope that he takes this show globally: it's about time that he reminds everyone how awesome he is!
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Reply #105 posted 01/22/16 9:03am

BillS

He ended the first show with
Girls and Boys with people singing
along.
Sacred is the prayer that asks 4 nothing
While seeking 2 give thanks 4 every breath we take
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Reply #106 posted 01/22/16 9:04am

murph

Rolling Stone

Prince Stuns at Emotional 'Piano and a Microphone' Solo Show

BY KEITH HARRIS January 22, 2016

Intimate, pajama-clad show at Paisley Park spans career

Prince approached the piano, a purple baby grand. He landed a single chord, resonant and bassy. He stood. He walked away.

As we could have guessed, Prince's first-ever (first ever?) solo show last night at Paisley Park, his home compound in suburban Minnesota, was no simple, straightforward affair. The 57-year-old funk-pop wizard approached the performance as a challenge, an opportunity to prove that he could deliver a full Prince show without much of anything we expect from a full Prince show: No powerhouse band, no impossibly lithe dancing, no masterful guitar fireworks. Just, as the show's official title put it, "Piano & a Microphone." And a lot of Prince. Maybe more Prince than he's ever shared before.

Prince framed the evening as an autobiographical struggle, the story of how he mastered the piano and emerged from the shadow of his father, a jazz pianist. The set moved chronologically (with a few exceptions) through the first decade of Prince's career, including at least one song from each of his first 10 albums. Familiar melodies splintered into virtuosic cascades for a dreamlike effect, as though Prince was remembering the birth of his career in real time.

The night began with some introductory psychodrama. Elegantly casual in his mauve pajamas, that enormous afro dominating his slim frame, Prince took a stage decorated sparsely with candles, befogged by a smoke machine, his personal glyph looming from behind, illuminated by kaleidoscopic patterns. His voice was doused in heavy echo as he expressed the dreams and doubts of a child who sneaks down without permission to play his father's piano. "I can't play piano like my dad. How does dad do that?" he wondered, while attempting improvisations that, at one point, suggested Thelonious Monk teaching himself the theme to Batman.

Then it got sexy. Prince's fingers were everywhere during "Baby," a ballad from his 1978 debut For You that served as foreplay to the full-body workouts "I Wanna Be Your Lover" and "Dirty Mind" before the ecstatic squeals of "Do Me, Baby" provided the climax. Multiple climaxes, even.

Prince moved between songs fluidly. He introduced the moving ballad "Free" by celebrating "the freedom to say no," later interrupting the song to wipe a tear and briefly mourn David Bowie: "I only met him once. He was nice to me. He seemed like he was nice to everybody." Before we knew it, he was in the middle of a gorgeous take on a longtime Prince favorite, Joni Mitchell's "A Case of You," which transformed into a bluesy vamp that Prince used as a lesson in musicology. "The space between the notes — that's the good part," he said. "How long the space is — that's how funky it is or how funky it ain't." And just like that, he was was moaning the spiritual lament "Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child."

The intimate setting was ideal for falsetto-wrenched ballads like "Sometimes It Snows in April" and "The Breakdown," one of a handful of newer songs inserted into the set. But Prince never forgot that the piano is a rhythm instrument. If the old-time boogie-woogie masters didn't need drums to rock a party, well, neither did Prince. He remade "Paisley Park" as a bluesy, gutbucket romp, and his pumping left hand recalled Ray Charles, a debt he made clear when he ripped into the soul legend's "Unchain My Heart," a song he recalled playing with his father.

"I thought I would never be able to play like my dad," he said. "And he never missed an opportunity to remind me of it." But Prince's playing belied his modesty. His florid right-hand runs had a little of the theatricality of Liberace in them, but with more tasteful jazz inflections as well. Paying tribute to his past collaborators Wendy Melvoin and Lisa Coleman, he credited Lisa with introducing him to the complex chording of jazzman Bill Evans then played the harpsichord part she wrote for "Raspberry Beret." "That's the whole song, right?"

The set's final song was the mystical "Anna Stesia," from Prince's 1988 album Lovesexy, that culminated in a sing-along: "Love is God, God is love/Girls and boys, love God above." It offered a spiritual resolution to a performance that highlighted struggle and hard-won knowledge.

"This is what I usually do this time of night," Prince said at one point. "It's better with you all present." A genius, at home, alone at the piano, performing to maybe a little more than a thousand fans — it was unmistakably a once-in-a-lifetime event. Of course, there was a second show an hour later. Because Prince is the kind of guy who makes once-in-a-lifetime events happen twice in the same night.

Set List


"Baby"
"I Wanna Be Your Lover"
"Dirty Mind"
"Do Me, Baby"
"Something in the Water (Does Not Compute)"
"Free"

"A Case of You" (Joni Mitchell)

"Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child" (Traditional)
"The Beautiful Ones"
"U'r Gonna C Me"
"Condition of the Heart"
"Raspberry Beret"
"Paisley Park"
"Sometimes It Snows In April"
"I Love U, But I Don't Trust U Anymore"
"The Ballad of Dorothy Parker"
"Unchain My Heart" (Ray Charles)
"Baltimore"
"Rock and Roll Love Affair"
"Starfish and Coffee"
"The Breakdown"
"Anna Stesia"

Link: http://www.rollingstone.c...w-20160122

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Reply #107 posted 01/22/16 9:07am

CarrieMpls

Ex-Moderator

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BillS said:

He ended the first show with Girls and Boys with people singing along.

To be clear, he ended the first show with Anna Stesia, with the crowd singing the refrain at the end "Love is God, God is Love, Girls and Boys love God above". In fact, that was a pretty amazing highlight - the crowd singing quietly while he continued to play and sing other parts over it.

Girls and Boys is a whole different song.

Unless after the houselights came up and we all were in coat check he came back out and sand Girls and Boys.

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Reply #108 posted 01/22/16 9:11am

NorthC

paulludvig said:



jasopig said:


I forgot to post this little tidbit: (paraphrasing) "All songwriters, if they're male, do it to get the girl"



That's silly.


No it isn't. I once saw a documentary about guitar players where smoeone (might have been Eric Clapton) said the same thing: "If you're really good at it, you can get the girls."
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Reply #109 posted 01/22/16 9:12am

BillS

You are correct - Carrie
[Edited 1/22/16 9:13am]
Sacred is the prayer that asks 4 nothing
While seeking 2 give thanks 4 every breath we take
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Reply #110 posted 01/22/16 9:14am

NorthC

tatocorcu said:

I'm getting goosebumps just from reading the reviews. That's what being a Prince fan in 2016, I guess: accepting that he can go from the ridiculous to the sublime and back again in a few weeks.
Congratulations to those who enjoyed it last night, and let's hope that he takes this show globally: it's about time that he reminds everyone how awesome he is!

"From the ridiculous to the sublime is only a small step." That's a quote from Napoleon.
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Reply #111 posted 01/22/16 9:23am

CarrieMpls

Ex-Moderator

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murph said:


Nice write-up! Setlist looks good, other than they left out Venus de Milo. It was another highlight for me.

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Reply #112 posted 01/22/16 9:23am

rafael

just curious...how was black sweat performed? Was it sampler set style??

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Reply #113 posted 01/22/16 9:48am

KingSausage

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NorthC said:

paulludvig said:



jasopig said:


I forgot to post this little tidbit: (paraphrasing) "All songwriters, if they're male, do it to get the girl"



That's silly.


No it isn't. I once saw a documentary about guitar players where smoeone (might have been Eric Clapton) said the same thing: "If you're really good at it, you can get the girls."



I think it's silly. David Bowie, for one, didn't start performing to get girls. (For a couple of reasons!) Some people already have a partner. Others do it for art and expression. And some don't like women. It's a silly phrase that isn't meant to apply to everyone, I know. But still...
"Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry
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Reply #114 posted 01/22/16 9:59am

langebleu

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moderator

^ Call me Sherlock, but I suspect it's more likely a comment made as light-hearted, generalised audience banter, rather than a conclusion derived from peer-approved academic research. smile

ALT+PLS+RTN: Pure as a pane of ice. It's a gift.
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Reply #115 posted 01/22/16 10:06am

Angelsoncrack

Oh my god I can't believe he played Anna Stesia. I would kill to hear that live.

Did he keep in the original 'Save me Jesus' part or change it like I believe he did in 2002 to something else?

But my god, either way, that must have been something to witness.

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Reply #116 posted 01/22/16 10:10am

paulludvig

langebleu said:

^ Call me Sherlock, but I suspect it's more likely a comment made as light-hearted, generalised audience banter, rather than a conclusion derived from peer-approved academic research. smile

Right on biggrin Prince is an entertainer, after all.

The wooh is on the one!
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Reply #117 posted 01/22/16 10:13am

KingSausage

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langebleu said:

^ Call me Sherlock, but I suspect it's more likely a comment made as light-hearted, generalised audience banter, rather than a conclusion derived from peer-approved academic research. smile




No shit, Sherlock. wink
"Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry
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Reply #118 posted 01/22/16 10:14am

paulludvig

Angelsoncrack said:

Oh my god I can't believe he played Anna Stesia. I would kill to hear that live.

Did he keep in the original 'Save me Jesus' part or change it like I believe he did in 2002 to something else?

But my god, either way, that must have been something to witness.

The "save me Jesus" part is real. even though you don't agree with the theology, it's from the heart.

[Edited 1/22/16 10:18am]

The wooh is on the one!
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Reply #119 posted 01/22/16 10:16am

NorthC

KingSausage said:

NorthC said:


No it isn't. I once saw a documentary about guitar players where smoeone (might have been Eric Clapton) said the same thing: "If you're really good at it, you can get the girls."



I think it's silly. David Bowie, for one, didn't start performing to get girls. (For a couple of reasons!) Some people already have a partner. Others do it for art and expression. And some don't like women. It's a silly phrase that isn't meant to apply to everyone, I know. But still...

Alright, then you do it to get the boys! wink Everybody who gets on a stage where people look at and listen to him or her wants to get attention. Most rockers started when they were in their teens. And what do you are you after at that age? Sex, drugs and rock & roll. Let's not fool ourselves here. That's what those rockers want. It goes for Elvis, Bob Dylan, Madonna... And it makes for great music.
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