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Thread started 08/03/10 10:43pm

poetcorner61

Why is the sound quality not so great on Controversy and Lovesexy CDs?

I just noticed the difference in quality between the official releases of these albums because I have heard several versions of "Do Me Baby" from Controversy and "Anastesia" form Lovesexy, which are two of my favorite Prince songs. Why is the quality of sound better on some bootleg versions than the official CD releases? Initially, I didn't notice it. Then, I thought it was my stereo receiver or CD player. But, quite frankly, these two songs, as well as others, sound like they are being played on a cassette tape that is ready to give out! What is up with that! Just listened to Jack U Off--Same wowsy-underwater-wobbly sound. Just to make sure--I'm playing it again! Why does it sound better on bootlegs?!!There is nothing wrong with the official CDs--other than the inferior sound quality! Somebody edu-ma-cate me on this! No wonder I play the "other" ones, rather than the official ones! Would remastering help?! "Do Me Baby" doesn't make my toes curl like other versions... What's up with that? eek

[Edited 8/3/10 22:57pm]

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Reply #1 posted 08/03/10 11:13pm

Spinlight

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Because they are in dire need of a remastering.

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Reply #2 posted 08/03/10 11:16pm

poetcorner61

Spinlight said:

Because they are in dire need of a remastering.

So, were the original vinyl albums and/or cassettes of better sound quality? If you know? Although I owned Prince vinyl in the past--I didn't have these two albums. If you could add to my knowledge--that would be helpful. Thanx.

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Reply #3 posted 08/03/10 11:35pm

ufoclub

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If you played the vinyl on a good turntable and recorded right to a digital recorder and then burned a CD, it should sound much better! the vinyl is mastered correctly.

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Reply #4 posted 08/03/10 11:50pm

Spinlight

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poetcorner61 said:

Spinlight said:

Because they are in dire need of a remastering.

So, were the original vinyl albums and/or cassettes of better sound quality? If you know? Although I owned Prince vinyl in the past--I didn't have these two albums. If you could add to my knowledge--that would be helpful. Thanx.

From what I remember of my cassettes back in the day, they had a similarly low-volume master. A lot of tape decks back in the day had sound/volume booster dials* on them, though, so you could bump the sound way up.

You could do what ufoclub says by transferring from vinyl to computer OR you could just rip your CD to iTunes and adjust the volume level accordingly before burning it to a disc.

*Edit: This was not me being sarcastic. Decks really did have this EQ boosting knob on them that, beyond the normal volume control, would typically enhance the sound to much better quality. YMMV.

[Edited 8/3/10 23:53pm]

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Reply #5 posted 08/04/10 12:19am

squirrelgrease

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ufoclub said:

If you played the vinyl on a good turntable and recorded right to a digital recorder and then burned a CD, it should sound much better! the vinyl is mastered correctly.

Yep. And some folks are doing this for that very reason.

Prince's 1980s CDs were mastered in the pioneering days of analog to digital mastering. The mastering of vinyl was already a science with tried and true methodology and there were experts at doing the transfers. This really can't be said about CD mastering back then. Prince's early digital catalog is really flat sounding and way out of date. Prince knows it and has spoken about it. Warners knows it too.

If prince.org were to be made idiot proof, someone would just invent a better idiot.
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Reply #6 posted 08/04/10 1:22am

JudasLChrist

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squirrelgrease said:

ufoclub said:

If you played the vinyl on a good turntable and recorded right to a digital recorder and then burned a CD, it should sound much better! the vinyl is mastered correctly.

Yep. And some folks are doing this for that very reason.

Prince's 1980s CDs were mastered in the pioneering days of analog to digital mastering. The mastering of vinyl was already a science with tried and true methodology and there were experts at doing the transfers. This really can't be said about CD mastering back then. Prince's early digital catalog is really flat sounding and way out of date. Prince knows it and has spoken about it. Warners knows it too.

Relatedly, did anyone get that remastered Purple Rain vinyl that came out on Rhino? I really wanted a review of the sound quality of that.

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Reply #7 posted 08/04/10 2:15am

blackbob

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have you heard the foefur versions of prince's 80s albums ?....they are a definate improvement on the original cds from the 80s..... wink

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Reply #8 posted 08/04/10 3:01am

squirrelgrease

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JudasLChrist said:

squirrelgrease said:

Yep. And some folks are doing this for that very reason.

Prince's 1980s CDs were mastered in the pioneering days of analog to digital mastering. The mastering of vinyl was already a science with tried and true methodology and there were experts at doing the transfers. This really can't be said about CD mastering back then. Prince's early digital catalog is really flat sounding and way out of date. Prince knows it and has spoken about it. Warners knows it too.

Relatedly, did anyone get that remastered Purple Rain vinyl that came out on Rhino? I really wanted a review of the sound quality of that.

It wasn't remastered. It was just re-released on 180 gram vinyl. I don't have it, but a couple of folks said it wasn't any better or worse sounding than the original vinyl pressings.

If prince.org were to be made idiot proof, someone would just invent a better idiot.
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Reply #9 posted 08/04/10 3:47am

JudasLChrist

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blackbob said:

have you heard the foefur versions of prince's 80s albums ?....they are a definate improvement on the original cds from the 80s..... wink

Foefur's brickwall remasters is more like it. I listened to When Doves Cry and it was so squished and compressed that toms warbled. Not impressed at all.

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Reply #10 posted 08/04/10 6:23am

eyewishuheaven

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squirrelgrease said:Prince knows it and has spoken about it. Warners knows it too.

Do you recall exactly what Prince said on the subject? I mean apart from the "I'm not interested in the past, blah blah... banished ones, blah blah... scriptures, blah blah..."

Did he say anything intelligent?

PRINCE: the only man who could wear high heels and makeup and STILL steal your woman!
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Reply #11 posted 08/04/10 7:01am

paisleypark4

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poetcorner61 said:

I just noticed the difference in quality between the official releases of these albums because I have heard several versions of "Do Me Baby" from Controversy and "Anastesia" form Lovesexy, which are two of my favorite Prince songs. Why is the quality of sound better on some bootleg versions than the official CD releases? Initially, I didn't notice it. Then, I thought it was my stereo receiver or CD player. But, quite frankly, these two songs, as well as others, sound like they are being played on a cassette tape that is ready to give out! What is up with that! Just listened to Jack U Off--Same wowsy-underwater-wobbly sound. Just to make sure--I'm playing it again! Why does it sound better on bootlegs?!!There is nothing wrong with the official CDs--other than the inferior sound quality! Somebody edu-ma-cate me on this! No wonder I play the "other" ones, rather than the official ones! Would remastering help?! "Do Me Baby" doesn't make my toes curl like other versions... What's up with that? eek

[Edited 8/3/10 22:57pm]

vinyl!!!!

Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records.
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Reply #12 posted 08/04/10 1:00pm

squirrelgrease

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eyewishuheaven said:

squirrelgrease said:Prince knows it and has spoken about it. Warners knows it too.

Do you recall exactly what Prince said on the subject? I mean apart from the "I'm not interested in the past, blah blah... banished ones, blah blah... scriptures, blah blah..."

Did he say anything intelligent?

http://blogs.rockymountai...y_pri.html

Vault interview of the day: Prince

Digging in the vaults again, here's a sit-down with Prince during the Musicology tour. Hard to believe he hasn't been back here in five years.

PRINCE'S NEW POWER PARTY OVER? ROCK STAR SHOWS INDUSTRY HOW IT'S DONE

Date: Saturday, August 21, 2004

Source: By Mark Brown, Rocky Mountain News

MILWAUKEE

The lazy take on Prince in recent years was that his best days were behind him.

His sales were down, the media said. His music wasn't as good as it used to be. His behavior was erratic - the name changes, the record company wars. Game over.

He turned his back on opportunities other performers would sell their souls for. The term "difficult" got slapped on him. Still more jeers from the sidelines.

But the truth is more interesting than the fiction. The man who once was one of the biggest rock stars in the world saw years ago that the music industry couldn't keep doing business the way it had, so he went directly to his fans online.

And halfway through the most successful tour of 2004, in a summer when almost every other tour is tanking, Prince's concerts are a virtual coast-to-coast sellout, breaking records in major cities. One Pepsi Center show next week is sold out, and the other is close to it.

His new Musicology album is great and near the top of the charts. All the hot young artists in 2004, from Alicia Keyes to Outkast, bow to him. And it has finally dawned on the record industry that selling music online is the future.

It turns out Prince made the moves everyone else wishes they'd made. While the music industry flounders, Prince flourishes. Does he ever just want to say "I told you so?"

"No!" Prince says, shaking his head firmly, but smiling slightly during a rare interview before a recent concert here. To hear him tell it, no vision was needed, anyway.

"It's almost like hearing a weather report and knowing it's going to rain. You can tell people and they either believe you or not."

Rather, Prince says, he's disappointed the industry didn't come along for the ride sooner. His label, Warner Bros. Records, had put great faith in him early in his career, but wavered as the years went on. "It just means they weren't enlightened enough or had the same faith that I had. If you love somebody, you should always love them."

The multitalented performer knew when he started this fight - when he went after Warner to gain control of the music that had made hundreds of millions of dollars - that it would be a long road.

"You're just worried how you're going to get out of this and not look like exactly what I eventually ended up looking like - this spoiled, pampered baby," Prince says.

But the need to keep his music pure - and Warner's refusal to release it - left him with no choice. "Before I left Warner Bros., I had a big and successful career in all areas. If they wanna run (a single) up the chart, they'll do it."

He couldn't play that game anymore. "I grew up when albums came out every three or four months. I wanted to make a lot of music."

And he wanted ownership of the copyrights, but the label balked. "Whoever created it is the owner. Is that even a question?" he says incredulously.

But now, backstage in Milwaukee, he smiles and chats happily about his life and music. "I'm not bitter or mad. You've gotta tip your hat" to the music industry, he says, sarcastically, for making so much money off artists' sweat for so many years. "It worked great for them."

The man behind the myth

Prince talks in passionate italics and exclamation points, enthused with music and society, far removed from the man of few words you often see in TV interviews, but every bit as intense.

Before the interview he ran an hourlong sound check, personally tweaking the sound on every microphone onstage, including those deep in the saxes of Maceo Parker and Candy Dulfer.

They worked through I Feel For You, Controversy and more Prince classics as he directed sound changes via wireless mike from all over the venue, calling out the changes in precise decibel levels. Much is made of Prince's perfectionism, but it has its purpose. The sound at the beginning of the check was as good as any concert; by the time he finished, it was like sitting in front of an upscale stereo system.

Fans know that 2004 is anything but a comeback. For years Prince has been productive, more musically accessible than ever, and making more money than ever. He tours regularly and records constantly. He divides his music between pressed CDs (the jazzy NEWS and the latest return to form, Musicology) and online-only discs (The Slaughterhouse and a new classic, Chocolate Invasion). Much of that music is as strong as his best-known work, such as Purple Rain and 1999.

So while it's not a comeback, Prince has chosen 2004 to be more visible. He has undertaken his most extensive tour in years and grabbed high-profile opportunities he has shunned in the past, including agreeing to open the Grammy Awards after years of requests. He is also sitting for more interviews, including this one. He insists, though, that much of it is out of his control.

"You can't take anything away from the media. They pick and choose what they want to focus on," he says. "We're given pre-packaged pop stars every day. They control who's on heavy rotation."

Yet, he notes with satisfaction, "the album's in the top 10."

Yes it is, in part because of the controversial way Prince is getting it out - every concert-goer gets a copy of Musicology added to the price of their ticket. That has pushed sales to 1.3 million so far, and Prince makes no apology for it. It gets the music out there without the usual record-company nonsense, and concert-goers for the most part have been thrilled with getting something tangible to take home. It also has stirred debate in the record industry and media.

Billboard and Soundscan have revised their policies to disallow such a tactic, but Musicology is "grandfathered" in and each copy still counts. The album returned to the top 10 again this week.

Prince likes the controversy.

"There's something a little different now that they have to pay attention to - this bundling situation," says Prince, who remains indifferent to criticism that it's artificially inflating his figures. To him, all that matters is getting heard.

"I know it's getting to people."

Battling for musical freedom

Prince has been a prolific songwriter, with more than 30 albums in his 26-year career. Does he ever just put down the guitar for days or weeks on end?

"I hear music still, but I spend long periods when I don't actually play it." Inspiration comes, but he just retains it. "I was hearing a song today in my head. I'll be messing with that later."

It's not just his own music that entrances him. For years he has sung Joni Mitchell's A Case of You; last year, he finally released a version on a limited edition of his live album One Night Alone - Live!

People ask: "How did Prince get like this? What's his history?" he says. Besides his obvious funk, soul and rock influences, he figures they should know the more subtle stuff.

"I love all Joni's music," he says, adding that he does her songs "just to keep her name out there. Joni's music should be taught in school, if just from a literature standpoint."

The same goes for James Brown, Earth Wind & Fire, and Sly Stone. "Take Sly out of time! Bring him back like he's brand new."

He laughs a lot these days, but knows he has a serious image when it comes to his music.

"My life got real serious there for a second - getting out of the record industry. You have to realize that I was told I couldn't leave. Excuse me? What did you say? With the mergers and revolving door of executives, it was like musical chairs or something."

The fight with Warner (which eventually allowed Prince to leave the label, but he had to leave his classic albums behind) took on guerrilla tactics. Prince famously wrote "slave" on his face and changed his name to a symbol as a protest. He took other tacks as well.

When Warner balked at releasing The Gold Experience in 1995, Prince had his independent publicity firm send the video for the first single, Dolphin, to the press, ensuring that the song would be written about and that the music would leak. Warner caved and the album was released as Prince intended.

Musicology is being distributed by Sony Music, but under a vastly different agreement than he had with Warner. It's a one-off deal with Prince's NPG Records; Sony only distributes it. And Prince pockets $7 for every $10 disc sold.

"I'm the content provider, I don't feel any pressure from them. They don't have any power over me," says Prince, who has learned a lot from his contract battles.

"Going through 10 years of struggle makes my meetings now with the executives a breeze. They know straight in they're not owning anything. That's not even a question," he says gleefully.

Do other artists come to him for advice? Yes, Prince allows, "but what's more interesting is when the executives come to me for advice."

So what does he tell them? "You get the artist you deserve," he says.

To fix things? "Start from scratch. You like music, right? Me too. Remember when there were these hippies running the business?"

It's time, he tells executives, to get back to that. "You're gonna have more fun. You're gonna make a lot more money."

"We have more record companies and look at their (failure) rates. They're trying to make more and more money. We gotta maybe get back to making some good music."

What infuriates him is watching the industry prey on rappers, bleeding them dry the way they bled bluesmen decades ago, then discarding them. New artists are encouraged to be more outrageous than what came before, to shock for the purpose of making a quick money score.

"They're taking our kids out of our community and doing it to them. You disenfranchise part of the nation," he says. "That's the sad part. What can you say other than arrogance and greed? That's what you school people on."

The issues of Prince

Prince always has commented on social issues. On Musicology, the song Dear Mr. Man doesn't mention anyone by name, but pointedly lays out problems in our nation. On July Fourth, he released The United States of Division via his Web site. It opens: "2004 / still at war / and everybody hates Americans."

"Look at the reality and the truth," Prince says. "They're our supposed 'elected' officials who are supposed to take care of us. Some people are benefiting, and some aren't."

The top 10 percent of the population controls most of the wealth in this country, Prince notes, "and it's not a rainbow coalition. Don't get me started on that."

But start he does. "What is democracy? What does that word mean?" he says with exasperation. He's also dismissive of those who won't speak up for fear of retribution. "Don't dare say anything about it or you're going to get your CDs smashed. What's so scary about that?"

Likewise, a thread of spirituality has always run through his work, be it subtle (Let's Go Crazy, Same December) or more overt (God, The Holy River).

"As you get older, you start to look at it. It's not even the age-old cliche of 'Why are we here?' There's right and wrong. And then there's the lie, an illusion so powerful people literally live in a collective hallucination. They see walls that aren't there," he says. "Sooner or later we have to . . . say 'When did we fall off track here? How are we going to fix this thing?"

His much-discussed path as a Jehovah's Witness has gotten too much sensationalized coverage, he says; he's interested in spirituality and answers, not strange ceremonies or theories. "I'm very practical. You go Trekkie on me, I gotta go."

Prince has made a tentative peace with Warner Bros.; there are rumors of a special edition of Purple Rainin the works. That may be merely wishful thinking; the new DVD of Purple Rain comes out Tuesday with no Prince involvement and thus no substantial upgrade.

An overhaul of his catalog is needed. Warner slapped substandard copies of his music onto CD years ago and has never upgraded them. Prince's best album, 1987's Sign O' the Times, sounds absolutely awful, with fluctuating volume levels and passable but muddy sound. Prince leaps to his feet in agreement when these issues are mentioned.

"Tell them that! We need to bring it up to the industry standard!"

He'd love to see remastered and expanded versions of his work and surround-sound versions of his classics, but with the master tapes in Warner's hands, he can't make that happen. "I can go re-record it and put it out - but should I have to?"*

As well as looking forward, Prince has spent time looking back. The live show features his hits. Scattered through gigs this year - live and on TV - have been appearances with Prince alumni: Morris Day of the Time, drummer Sheila E, and most strikingly, an acoustic performance on TV with Wendy Melvoin of his most revered backing band, The Revolution.

When asked about that reunion with Melvoin, Prince grows wistful.

"She plays acoustic guitar with me better than almost anyone," he says quietly. "The opportunity came up and her name was the first to come to mind. I'm looking for things to juice me, too."

By the numbers

* 666,666: The number of CDs Prince had to sell under his old record deal to make $1 million.

* 142,857: The number of CDs Prince has to sell now, on his own, to make $1 million

* 13 million: The number of Purple Rain CDs sold since 1984

* $19.5 million: The money Prince made off those Purple Rain sales

* 1.3 million: The number of Musicology CDs sold this year

* $9.1 million: The money Prince made off those Musicology sales

* 30: Roughly, the number of studio albums Prince has released in 26 years.

* 24,800: The average number of people who see Prince in each city

* $1.5 million: The average concert gross in each city

* $63.26: Prince's average ticket price

* $143.60: Madonna's average ticket price

* $79.5 million: Madonna's tour gross

* $45.7 million: Prince's tour gross through June 30

* $100 million: Prince's expected gross at tour's end

Sources: Pollstar, Www.Riaa.Com, Sony Music, Www.Npgmusicclub.Com

Lack of airplay means a generation misses great music

Prince's newer music hasn't gotten the airplay it deserves.

Even though he took control of his musical life when he parted ways with his major record label deal, and even though he has done work as good as his biggest hits, much of it gets passed over by the mainstream.

Is being overlooked the downside of independence?

"Who overlooked it? You gotta sit in the creator's seat," Prince says defiantly, suggesting nothing is overlooked there.

Despite that, radio, video and the general public have, unfortunately, not had easy access to what easily ranks among Prince's best work. He may not much care, but we do. From the past decade, here are the 10 best Prince songs you may have never heard.

* THE HOLY RIVER

From 1996's Emancipation, it's one of Prince's most personal songs. The Holy River builds from a piano ballad to a rock rave-up, chronicling his disillusionment with fame and wealth ("putting your faith in things that only make you cry . . . the more they say they love you, the more you just wanna die").

But it's hardly rock-star moping. It has a gorgeous melody, self-deprecating lyrics, and a confessional story of spiritual redemption ("lookin' back, y'all, I don't miss nothin' except the time"). Just to prove his point, Prince finishes it off with a joyous guitar solo. One of his top five songs.

* DON'T TALK TO STRANGERS

From the 1996 soundtrack to the ill-fated Spike Lee movie Girl 6, this is an aching piano ballad as Prince says a forced goodbye to a child and urges them to have faith that somehow it's all going to be OK someday. A low-key tear-jerker.

* JUDAS SMILE

From the recent download-only album Chocolate Invasion, this funk-fueled morality tale was also reportedly intended for a Spike Lee movie, Bamboozled. It's a warning to not lose yourself and look for truth, warning "for every soul, there's a buyer."

* CALHOUN SQUARE

The 1998 Crystal Ball track has a loose tone set by the studio chatter that introduces the track, as Prince advises a musician: "You're listening to the drummer, but you still wanna have fun. It shouldn't be work." Languid, funky bass and guitar lines turn into a roaring guitar rock chorus, a melange of everything Prince does best.

* WHAT'S MY NAME

Another gem on the four-CD Crystal Ball set, this is three angry minutes of muttered vocals and despair. "Take my fame / I can't use it / My girlfriend calls me lame / The game was over yesterday." The popping bass funk disintegrates into swirling, scratching chaos, sounding unlike anything else Prince has ever done.

* DOLPHIN

The rarely seen, filmed-in-one-take video from the 1995 album The Gold Experience is a revelation in itself, perhaps the most fun visual Prince has ever presented. Spurred by his business dispute with Warner Brothers, Dolphin is a song about standing your ground, laced with a soaring melody and stinging guitar solo. A tad overwrought, but fun.

* GOLD

Another classic from The Gold Experience finds Prince explaining to fans why he's fighting so hard for his art in a sweeping anthem reminiscent of his Purple Rain heyday. He also decries culture's obsession with money and youth: "What's the use of money if you ain't gonna break the mold? . . . What's the use in being young if you ain't gonna get old?"

* SAME DECEMBER

The best song off the overlooked 1996 Chaos and Disorder album, it's a mini-suite of styles with surging dynamics and the feel of an epic.

* A MILLION DAYS

A solemn ballad off the new Musicology album, it's full of loss and ache, underscored by a menacing electric guitar: "It has only been an hour since you left me / but it feels like a million days." It treads much the same ground as Prince's classic '84 B-side, 17 Days, but filled with more humility: "I didn't have the heart to say I'm sorry / Now I haven't got a heart at all."

* DEAR MR. MAN

Another Musicology track, one of the most political Prince has attempted since Sign O' the Times. "Ain't no sense in voting / Same soul with a different name / Might not be in the back of the bus / But it sure feels just the same."

* http://princetext.tripod....per99.html

From 1999:

"I wanted to buy my masters back from Warner Bros.," the Artist says of his quest for control. "They said no way. So I'm going to re-record them. All of them." Then he smiles sweetly. "Now you will have two catalogs with pretty much exactly the same music -- except mine will be better -- and you can either give your money to WB, the big company, or to NPG. You choose."

If prince.org were to be made idiot proof, someone would just invent a better idiot.
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Reply #13 posted 08/04/10 1:04pm

NoVideo

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JudasLChrist said:

blackbob said:

have you heard the foefur versions of prince's 80s albums ?....they are a definate improvement on the original cds from the 80s..... wink

Foefur's brickwall remasters is more like it. I listened to When Doves Cry and it was so squished and compressed that toms warbled. Not impressed at all.

Agreed.

* * *

Prince's Classic Finally Expanded
The Deluxe 'Purple Rain' Reissue

http://www.popmatters.com...n-reissue/
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Reply #14 posted 08/04/10 1:04pm

Genesia

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squirrelgrease said:

JudasLChrist said:

Relatedly, did anyone get that remastered Purple Rain vinyl that came out on Rhino? I really wanted a review of the sound quality of that.

It wasn't remastered. It was just re-released on 180 gram vinyl. I don't have it, but a couple of folks said it wasn't any better or worse sounding than the original vinyl pressings.

It sounds exactly the same. nod

We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
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Reply #15 posted 08/04/10 2:03pm

Marrk

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JudasLChrist said:

blackbob said:

have you heard the foefur versions of prince's 80s albums ?....they are a definate improvement on the original cds from the 80s..... wink

Foefur's brickwall remasters is more like it. I listened to When Doves Cry and it was so squished and compressed that toms warbled. Not impressed at all.

Agreed. Ridiculous volume levels across the board. Just horrible.

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Reply #16 posted 08/04/10 8:11pm

eyewishuheaven

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squirrelgrease said:

The article

Thank you for quoting that article, squirrelgrease! That was really informative, and a great read (although I question a few of the journalist's 'best recent Prince songs'! biggrin )

On the subject of remasters, though, it really seems to me that Prince is (was) just pointing fingers. I really have a hard time believing that WB doesn't want to sell us all a brand-new copy of everything from For You to The Gold Experience. It seems to me that when Prince says "tell them!", he's really saying, "tell them to accept the deal on my terms!".

PRINCE: the only man who could wear high heels and makeup and STILL steal your woman!
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Reply #17 posted 08/04/10 10:55pm

PDogz

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blackbob said:

have you heard the foefur versions of prince's 80s albums ?....they are a definate improvement on the original cds from the 80s..... wink

Those things were absolutely AWFUL!!! The way some people were raving about them, I just knew I was in for a treat. Then when I played those things, I was like... WTF?!? They were really, really BAD. He completely destroyed that music. I'd rather listen to Prince's old catalog on 8-Track tape than those Foefur versions. Did I mention they were terrible?

"There's Nothing That The Proper Attitude Won't Render Funkable!"

star
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Reply #18 posted 08/04/10 11:03pm

NeoGeo24bit

Spinlight said:

Because they are in dire need of a remastering.

I hope they never get remastered. They'll make the music way too loud. The old versions are perfect. If you want it louder, just turn it up. All new CDs ruin the old music.

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Reply #19 posted 08/04/10 11:15pm

PDogz

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squirrelgrease said:

eyewishuheaven said:

Do you recall exactly what Prince said on the subject? I mean apart from the "I'm not interested in the past, blah blah... banished ones, blah blah... scriptures, blah blah..."

Did he say anything intelligent?

http://blogs.rockymountai...y_pri.html

Thanks for sharing this, I was going to ask for it but I saw you had already posted it. You are an amazing resource, and I appreciate you very much.

"There's Nothing That The Proper Attitude Won't Render Funkable!"

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Reply #20 posted 08/05/10 1:34am

BartVanHemelen

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NeoGeo24bit said:

Spinlight said:

Because they are in dire need of a remastering.

I hope they never get remastered. They'll make the music way too loud.

Nonsense.

The old versions are perfect.

Nonsense. At best they're acceptable. More often they're rather awful.

Just compare T's 12" archive to the songs that were released officially on CD: T's archive (sourced from vinyl) is always lightyears ahead. Now imagine how good a proper master from original source tapes would be. Hell, I'd love to get those on Blu-ray in hi-def sound (and I'm not talking about 7.1 mixes; I just want high bitrates and higher sampling rates etc).

If you want it louder, just turn it up.

Yes, because that will make the muddy sound disappear.

© Bart Van Hemelen
This posting is provided AS IS with no warranties, and confers no rights.
It is not authorized by Prince or the NPG Music Club. You assume all risk for
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Reply #21 posted 08/05/10 2:49am

Rightly

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check

small circles, big wheels!
I've got a pretty firm grip on the obvious!
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Reply #22 posted 08/05/10 9:10am

ufoclub

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We just need needle drop transfers of all the 80's albums. That would be accurate and sound full and loud.

I heard that someone processed three albums (SOTT, Black, Lovesexy) in the style of todays balls-to-the-wall brickwall compression (much to the lament of traditional audiophiles). Every detail pushed up front. They did this just to hear what the albums would sound like in context of modern pop mastering and mixing, and the results were interesting, because you could hear every tape hiss of a quiet track, every little rattle of a cymbal, or buzz...

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Reply #23 posted 08/05/10 9:48am

NeoGeo24bit

I wasn't impressed with T's 12" collection.

Like I said before, I hope the collection never gets remastered. All remastered discs today are way too loud and contain too much clipping. Just listen to the Billy Joel remasters. They're absolutely terrible. Prince's catalog is fine the way it is. Turn it up or get your ears checked.

[Edited 8/5/10 9:49am]

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Reply #24 posted 08/05/10 10:41am

ufoclub

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NeoGeo24bit said:

I wasn't impressed with T's 12" collection.

Like I said before, I hope the collection never gets remastered. All remastered discs today are way too loud and contain too much clipping. Just listen to the Billy Joel remasters. They're absolutely terrible. Prince's catalog is fine the way it is. Turn it up or get your ears checked.

[Edited 8/5/10 9:49am]

T's 12" collection wasn't processed to attempt a remaster, the point was to preserve the vinyl sound. It sounds accurate. If you don't like that sound you're probably looking for a remaster and don't even know it! Did you hear the actual CD/wave/flac files?

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Reply #25 posted 08/05/10 12:21pm

squirrelgrease

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eyewishuheaven said:

squirrelgrease said:

The article

Thank you for quoting that article, squirrelgrease! That was really informative, and a great read (although I question a few of the journalist's 'best recent Prince songs'! biggrin )

On the subject of remasters, though, it really seems to me that Prince is (was) just pointing fingers. I really have a hard time believing that WB doesn't want to sell us all a brand-new copy of everything from For You to The Gold Experience. It seems to me that when Prince says "tell them!", he's really saying, "tell them to accept the deal on my terms!".

I think you're right about that. But I really, truly think the only way that remasters will happen is if Prince can work out a lucrative, huge payday deal while Warner Bros has ownership of the masters. If Prince were to somehow own the masters, I believe they would languish and become another project that never sees fruition, as we can see what has become of all of Prince's independent albums - they're out of print.

And if WB/Prince make the deal that is rumored to be in the works regarding remastering and bonus material, the sticking point is almost certainly going to be less about Prince's current religious beliefs and more about the money transfer going through.

If prince.org were to be made idiot proof, someone would just invent a better idiot.
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Reply #26 posted 08/05/10 12:44pm

squirrelgrease

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NeoGeo24bit said:

Spinlight said:

Because they are in dire need of a remastering.

I hope they never get remastered. They'll make the music way too loud. The old versions are perfect. If you want it louder, just turn it up. All new CDs ruin the old music.

Huh?

True, compressing the music to make it louder can have horrible results on the finished product, but it can be done correctly. There's a strong and very vocal faction of audiophiles that are lobbying the industry to make sure digital remasters are done with the finesse and expertise needed to bring clarity and depth back to the CD format. Labels have been adamant that loudness is key, but engineers are now doing their best to buck the system and educate their employers by bringing a big, full sound without compromising the integrity of the artist's vision.

When the Beatles catalog was first released on CD, those discs were startlingly louder than everything else out there - and the quality was less than optimal. It started a trend of compression and loudness over substance. Ironically, the care taken with the new Beatles remasters may be a trend worth following.

If prince.org were to be made idiot proof, someone would just invent a better idiot.
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Reply #27 posted 08/05/10 12:45pm

squirrelgrease

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PDogz said:

squirrelgrease said:

http://blogs.rockymountai...y_pri.html

Thanks for sharing this, I was going to ask for it but I saw you had already posted it. You are an amazing resource, and I appreciate you very much.

smile

If prince.org were to be made idiot proof, someone would just invent a better idiot.
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Reply #28 posted 08/05/10 12:45pm

NeoGeo24bit

Prince will probably allow remasters to happen each year starting in 2013 when he regains the masters to "For You".

It would be cool to have a new remastered disc each year that he gets his master back. 2013 = For You, 2014 = Prince 2015 = Dirty Mind, etc.

I would suggest doing a Now and Then theme. Prince releases his current new album and a remaster of his old work in the same year. Maybe offer it as a pack. I just hope he doesn't edit out the cuss words and that the remaster is done without making the music too loud and without all the clipping.

Can you imagine... in 2013 there's a remaster of his first album, For You, and his new album, Jehovah Says I Shoudn't Pay My Lawyer.

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Reply #29 posted 08/05/10 1:18pm

eyewishuheaven

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squirrelgrease said:

And if WB/Prince make the deal that is rumored to be in the works regarding remastering and bonus material,

There's a rumour?

All I heard about was that Prince was 'at' WB. Is there more to the story that I didn't hear? Oh god, I hope so...

And anybody who doesn't believe that remastering can be done with style and restraint should really check out the new Deluxe Editions of a-ha's Hunting High and Low and Scoundrel Days... music

PRINCE: the only man who could wear high heels and makeup and STILL steal your woman!
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