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Forums > Associated artists & people > opinion - Prince's protégée albums are as important to a complete Priince collection as his solo albums. Agree/disagree?
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Thread started 06/24/16 5:59am

MattyJam

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opinion - Prince's protégée albums are as important to a complete Priince collection as his solo albums. Agree/disagree?

IMO, albums like The Family, What Time Is It, The Glamorous Life and even Come 2 My House are as essential to any complete Prince collection as any of his solo albums (in some cases more so. Who would argue against "The Family" album being a more important record for Prince artistically than HNR Phase 1 and 2?).

Agree/disagree?
[Edited 6/24/16 6:01am]
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Reply #1 posted 06/24/16 6:18am

BoraBora


I strongly agree, for the most part.

Vanity 6

The Time

Apollonia 6

Jill Jones

The Family

Madhouse

Sheila E. (the first 2 album)

Martika

Carmen Electra

Ingrid Chavez

All these are essential to Prince canon/discography, for different reasons.

The other P contributions are less important, with the obvious exception of "Manic Monday" (The Bangles), "With This Tear" (Celine Dion) and "Open Book" (Jevetta Steel), simply 3 of the best 5 tunes he ever gave to a related artist.

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Reply #2 posted 06/24/16 6:21am

BoraBora


Talkin' strictly of sequence, "The Family" album is an obvious prelude to "Parade" and "Jill Jones" is the bridge between "Parade" and the SOTT/TBA/Lovesexy trilogy.


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Reply #3 posted 06/24/16 6:23am

PurpleBabied

IMO, albums like The Family, What Time Is It, The Glamorous Life and even Come 2 My House are as essential to any complete Prince collection as any of his solo albums (in some cases more so. Who would argue against "The Family" album being a more important record for Prince artistically than HNR Phase 1 and 2?).

Agree/disagree?

I think they're separate entities even if Prince just used them as a backup band with vocal cords. Otherwise where do you draw the line? Every single that blew up under someone else? I feel like if they're important artistically, they're strong enough projects and artists to stand alone in their own right. You could argue Janelle Monae was a Prince protegee, but she's distinct enough artistically that I don't see Electric Lady as an extension of the Prince oeuvre. I've been a Janelle Monae fan for a couple of years and Prince has nothing to do with it. Judith Hill seems real. Mononeon is distinct to me. If you actually buy a Sheila E record, it's because of her and not Prince's fingerprints.

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Reply #4 posted 06/24/16 6:24am

thisisreece

Disagree. The protege albums are never as good, with a few expections it appears that me that proteges mostly got whatever Prince tossed out. None of them are as strong as his best albums.

Hundalasiliah!
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Reply #5 posted 06/24/16 6:27am

gilliaj

The 80s protege albums are very good indeed, particularly Sheila E, The Time, and even Vanity 6. I would also include the Andy Allo and Bria Valente albums. They are all basically his work. The Bria album in particular is a strong piece of work that is criminally underrated. I haven't heard Judith Hill's album all the way through, but some of it sounds like Prince is all over it and sounds really good too.
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Reply #6 posted 06/24/16 6:28am

BoraBora

MattyJam said:

even Come 2 My House


This one I'm not sure of.

Yes, it was part of the trilogy "NPS-C2MH-GSC2000" and there are many P tunes inside, but the whole era sounds a little unfocused and projected as a commercial move to give new success to Chaka and Larry Graham.

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Reply #7 posted 06/24/16 6:30am

BoraBora

thisisreece said:

Disagree. The protege albums are never as good, with a few expections it appears that me that proteges mostly got whatever Prince tossed out. None of them are as strong as his best albums.


I'm strongly convinced that if "The Family" would surface in pristine quality with original P vocals, it would be regarded as a P classic.

The same would apply to "Jill Jones".

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Reply #8 posted 06/24/16 6:34am

Connected

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Yes they are definitely part of his discography...his dream factory

Prince used alot of the earlier Proteges...upto SOTT, to try out new styles, concepts which he then incorporated into his solo releases



~Shakalaka!~..... ~Mayday!~
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Reply #9 posted 06/24/16 6:35am

renfield

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Not EVERY single one of them. Remember, the Paisley Park imprint ran deep with Dale Bozzio, The 3 O'Clock, Good Question, TC Ellis...those aren't essential albums. But the Time, Vanity/Apollonia 6, Sheila E., Family, Jill Jones, and Madhouse albums absolutely are. I guess they just depend on his level of involvement (and it's probably no coincidence that the most essential are the ones that had the most involvement from Prince).

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Reply #10 posted 06/24/16 6:41am

MattyJam

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thisisreece said:

Disagree. The protege albums are never as good, with a few expections it appears that me that proteges mostly got whatever Prince tossed out. None of them are as strong as his best albums.



The Family is as good as any of Prince's 80s albums. Mutiny, Nothing Compares, Screams of Passion, High Fashion, Desire.... These songs are as good as any songs on his 80s albums.
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Reply #11 posted 06/24/16 6:43am

MattyJam

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BoraBora said:



MattyJam said:


even Come 2 My House


This one I'm not sure of.

Yes, it was part of the trilogy "NPS-C2MH-GSC2000" and there are many P tunes inside, but the whole era sounds a little unfocused and projected as a commercial move to give new success to Chaka and Larry Graham.



I love Come 2 My House. It has a few clunkers, but 3/4 of the album is absolute gold.
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Reply #12 posted 06/24/16 6:48am

BoraBora

MattyJam said:

BoraBora said:


This one I'm not sure of.

Yes, it was part of the trilogy "NPS-C2MH-GSC2000" and there are many P tunes inside, but the whole era sounds a little unfocused and projected as a commercial move to give new success to Chaka and Larry Graham.

I love Come 2 My House. It has a few clunkers, but 3/4 of the album is absolute gold.


I have to say it's a lot of time I didn't listen to it, but I remember it as a little boring and "by numbers" release.

Anyway I was talkin' of an historic context, not of the musical value.

In that way I listed the "Carmen Electra" album that I find weak but it is essential to P musical journey because it is a minor chapter of the D&P/Symbol/Goldnigga saga.

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Reply #13 posted 06/24/16 6:50am

OldFriends4Sal
e

100% agree.

The 80s Proteges are extremely important

stuff from the early 90s are very interesting in connection to what Prince was doing.

Especially the 1990 Graffiti Bridge years (the Uptown Dames anyone?)

but the 80s protege music is a must. It's almost like tell a similar story from a different point of view, of a different happing Uptown where the Time are gigoloes(ie Under the Cherry Moon) or guys thinking trying to live the Glamorous Life. Vanity 6 are like High society women in Erotic City. The Family feels like the images in the album (home life of a group of friends who are showing more the romantic side of Erotic City) Madhouse a more ganstar/hobo element of Uptown

essential:
the Time, What Time Is It? Ice Cream Castles
Vanity 6 (Apollonia 6 not so much the full album)

the Glamorous Life, Romance 1600, Sheila E

the Family

Mazarati

Madhouse 8 Madhouse 16

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Reply #14 posted 06/24/16 6:54am

PurpleBabied

BoraBora said:


I strongly agree, for the most part.

Vanity 6

The Time

Apollonia 6

Jill Jones

The Family

Madhouse

Sheila E. (the first 2 album)

Martika

Carmen Electra

Ingrid Chavez

All these are essential to Prince canon/discography, for different reasons.

The other P contributions are less important, with the obvious exception of "Manic Monday" (The Bangles), "With This Tear" (Celine Dion) and "Open Book" (Jevetta Steel), simply 3 of the best 5 tunes he ever gave to a related artist.

I'm going to have to fight you on some of those.

Vanity 6/Appolonia 6 are historical curiousities. "Sex Shooter" is not an essential part of any record collection; it's not even catchy. Carmen Electra is "that time Prince did A/R with his dick for a really hot mannequin with no musical talent whatsoever." The Time were real musicians who I think suffered musically from Prince's heavy hand, but I can live without "Jungle Love."

We all love Prince, but he wasn't always the best judge of his own work and not everything he touched came away with genius. Some of this stuff is "maybe when I've gotten all of his albums and I've run out of bootlegs and Vault".

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Reply #15 posted 06/24/16 7:01am

Connected

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MattyJam said:

thisisreece said:

Disagree. The protege albums are never as good, with a few expections it appears that me that proteges mostly got whatever Prince tossed out. None of them are as strong as his best albums.

The Family is as good as any of Prince's 80s albums. Mutiny, Nothing Compares, Screams of Passion, High Fashion, Desire.... These songs are as good as any songs on his 80s albums.

Yeah that! nod

And if you cull the 6 project, you get a pretty tight MPLS funk album:

Side 1 Vanity - Drive Me Wild, Nasty Girl, If a girl answers

Side 2 Appollonia - Blue Limousine, Sex Shooter, Million Miles

~Shakalaka!~..... ~Mayday!~
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Reply #16 posted 06/24/16 7:02am

MattyJam

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PurpleBabied said:

Some of this stuff is "maybe when I've gotten all of his albums and I've run out of bootlegs and Vault".


True, but then some of it (like The Family and What Time Is It?) is far more worthy of fans time than most of his 00s albums.
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Reply #17 posted 06/24/16 7:05am

CAL3

'Child of the Sun' has its moments. Definitely essential, even if it's not a perfect record.

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Reply #18 posted 06/24/16 7:08am

SPYZFAN1

"The protege albums are never as good, with a few exceptions".........I think I may have to agree with this. The only protege albums I revisit are the first two Time albums and recently Madhouse. For me that material still holds up.

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Reply #19 posted 06/24/16 7:14am

BoraBora

PurpleBabied said:

I'm going to have to fight you on some of those.

Vanity 6/Appolonia 6 are historical curiousities. "Sex Shooter" is not an essential part of any record collection; it's not even catchy. Carmen Electra is "that time Prince did A/R with his dick for a really hot mannequin with no musical talent whatsoever." The Time were real musicians who I think suffered musically from Prince's heavy hand, but I can live without "Jungle Love."

We all love Prince, but he wasn't always the best judge of his own work and not everything he touched came away with genius. Some of this stuff is "maybe when I've gotten all of his albums and I've run out of bootlegs and Vault".


I see your point, to some extent.

Anyway the historical importance of V6, A6 and The Time is more prominent than their musical quality. So they deserves to be included in a Prince selected discography.

If we have to look only to musical quality, there are also some proper Prince album tracks that didn't deserve to be included.

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Reply #20 posted 06/24/16 7:15am

BoraBora

CAL3 said:

'Child of the Sun' has its moments. Definitely essential, even if it's not a perfect record.


Here I agree.

I forgot it.

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Reply #21 posted 06/24/16 7:17am

BoraBora

MattyJam said:


True, but then some of it (like The Family and What Time Is It?) is far more worthy of fans time than most of his 00s albums.



The only 2000 release I wouldn't change with "The Family" are "The Rainbow Children" and AOA.

And in that case I would also have to think well about it.

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Reply #22 posted 06/24/16 7:20am

NouveauDance

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Always have been, always will.

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Reply #23 posted 06/24/16 7:40am

PurpleBabied

BoraBora said:

PurpleBabied said:

I'm going to have to fight you on some of those.

Vanity 6/Appolonia 6 are historical curiousities. "Sex Shooter" is not an essential part of any record collection; it's not even catchy. Carmen Electra is "that time Prince did A/R with his dick for a really hot mannequin with no musical talent whatsoever." The Time were real musicians who I think suffered musically from Prince's heavy hand, but I can live without "Jungle Love."

We all love Prince, but he wasn't always the best judge of his own work and not everything he touched came away with genius. Some of this stuff is "maybe when I've gotten all of his albums and I've run out of bootlegs and Vault".


I see your point, to some extent.

Anyway the historical importance of V6, A6 and The Time is more prominent than their musical quality. So they deserves to be included in a Prince selected discography.

If we have to look only to musical quality, there are also some proper Prince album tracks that didn't deserve to be included.

It sounds like what you're saying is that his musical peak/prime was that Purple Rain era and nothing else even comes close. Because "inclusion into a musical walking tour of the Prince museum" and "worth listening to" are two different things. The eighties were rife with beautiful mannequins, and I think the fact he threw so many resources behind him is a testament to his own sexism at the time. The Time is an example of his control issues. But musically? Meh.

My theory: as he got older and got control of his masters, songs and concepts he would have otherwise put behind puppet acts he just stuck in the Vault instead. He also stopped doing A&R with "she's got the look" and "she's my type" so that's also a factor.

I guess for me separating out "musical worth" from "historical value" is difficult with Prince. If you wanted to show "influence beyond dude's official discography", "Manic Monday", that cover of "When You Were Mine", and "Nothing Compares 2 U" get there well before "Sex Shooter" or any of Mayte's stuff either.

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Reply #24 posted 06/24/16 8:08am

WhisperingDand
elions

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I can see if you're just a huge fan of Prince as a vocalist or whatever not caring about them. But for the protege records he contributed 90%-100% of the content as a musician and as a songwriter.... And that's no knock against enjoying him as a vocalist, if he sung "101" or "The Screams of Passion" I think those would be on more Top 10 lists.

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Reply #25 posted 06/24/16 8:10am

PurpleColossus

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Disagree. Whether they are good or bad albums is irellevant. I think they are important from a historical perspective because they were all part of Prince's vision, but they'll never be as important as a Prince solo album. I'll take Prince's own versions of all the songs he gave to the protegee's anyday.

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Reply #26 posted 06/24/16 8:19am

BobGeorge909

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Sometimes important...usually not. Your collection will remain very representative sans Elixer and Child Of The Sun and whatever Carmen's album is called. I truly hope that these projects had motivations behind them other than catching some cootchie...but I unno...I seriously doubt it. It's a miracle for the recipient but something apparently so easy for P to whip out...a disc of beats...simple.

I gotta say though...a couple, well..maybe one of trax off of Child of the sun I actually dig...ain't no place like you. Seeming not for anything Mayte brought to the table though. Sowee cutie pie. I adore her...but a musician she is not.
[Edited 6/24/16 8:20am]
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Reply #27 posted 06/24/16 8:24am

MattyJam

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SPYZFAN1 said:

"The protege albums are never as good, with a few exceptions".....I think I may have to agree with this. The only protege albums I revisit are the first two Time albums and recently Madhouse. For me that material still holds up.



And you don't think songs like Nothing Compares 2 U, Mutiny and Screams of Passion hold up? Hell, I would put all three of those songs amongst Prince's 20 greatest compositions of all time (even if I prefer Paul Peterson and Susannah Melvoin's versions to Prince's).
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Reply #28 posted 06/24/16 8:52am

Revolution

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i don't care what you say, I am not buying GSC2000

Thanks for the laughs, arguments and overall enjoyment for the last umpteen years. It's time for me to retire from Prince.org and engage in the real world...lol. Above all, I appreciated the talent Prince. You were one of a kind.
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Reply #29 posted 06/24/16 8:58am

PurpleBabied

BobGeorge909 said:

Sometimes important...usually not. Your collection will remain very representative sans Elixer and Child Of The Sun and whatever Carmen's album is called. I truly hope that these projects had motivations behind them other than catching some cootchie...but I unno...I seriously doubt it. It's a miracle for the recipient but something apparently so easy for P to whip out...a disc of beats...simple. I gotta say though...a couple, well..maybe one of trax off of Child of the sun I actually dig...ain't no place like you. Seeming not for anything Mayte brought to the table though. Sowee cutie pie. I adore her...but a musician she is not. [Edited 6/24/16 8:20am]

yeahthat

Not going to say more but elevating some of these talentless women as some kind of historical importance makes me salty. LMAO. Prince was very influential on a whole bunch of musicians and to me that should be addressed first.

"Baby, I'm saving 'poom poom, poom, poom' for myself. I think your first video should be about you pining after discount Spike from Buffy who's not calling you back after a hookup!"

++++++

[Edited 6/24/16 9:10am]

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Forums > Associated artists & people > opinion - Prince's protégée albums are as important to a complete Priince collection as his solo albums. Agree/disagree?