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Thread started 07/05/11 2:56am

mydrawers

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Why did Prince "farm out" RAP on his albums?

I remember in 1984 / 1985 listening to OLD SCHOOL rap just as it was starting to break big: Run DMC, Egyptian Lover, Twilight 22, UTFO, The Roxanne shit..........

this was clearly the future of soul music. I remember wondering back then why Prince didn't do some RAP songs, seriously!

Prince fought rap for a long time, scoffed at it, etc........... when rap finally started appearing on his albums, it wasn't himself, it was TONY M........

Did Prince feel like he couldn't rap?

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Reply #1 posted 07/05/11 3:05am

KeithyT

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I think it was more that Prince didn't really like rap that much. Apart from those that were "dead on it".

It's like his mantra about real music by real musicians. I'm sure in reality Prince can pick out a quality dance/techno tune when he hears it and knows when something is good. Unfortunately he is a little prone to sweeping generalisations (like most of us) and states that he doesn't really like samples/computers/electronica. What he probably means is that he does not appreciate unimaginative use of those elements. We all know he has also used samples/computers etc to great effect.

Back to rap, of course he can "rap" not like Jay-Z or Chuck D or Q-Tip but I think he pouted about it for a little too long, and then when he did decide to incorporate it he used less stellar rappers initially and of course we all know how fondly we look back on the likes of Tony M, Scrap D, TC Ellis etc now.

Thanks goodness he has also featured Chuck D and Q-Tip on a couple of songs, AND he has also done some pretty good rapping himself.

Just somewhere in the middle,
Not too good and not too bad.
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Reply #2 posted 07/05/11 3:22am

Shango

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Although it might not have been interpreted as rap at the time, i think there's a good flow of rhythmic dialogue going on in Vanity 6's "If A Girl Answers Don't Hang Up"

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Reply #3 posted 07/05/11 3:46am

Shango

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If you read back some interviews with various hip hop pioneers on www.thafoundation.com,

you'll notice that some of them didn't get the recognition from funk or soul bands which they toured with in the early 80's.

But then around that 1984/1985-era, rap slowly began to be flipped in the mix by groups such as Cameo ("She's Strange") and Con Funk Shun ("Electric Lady").

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Reply #4 posted 07/05/11 3:52am

Revolution

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KeithyT said:

I think it was more that Prince didn't really like rap that much. Apart from those that were "dead on it".

It's like his mantra about real music by real musicians. I'm sure in reality Prince can pick out a quality dance/techno tune when he hears it and knows when something is good. Unfortunately he is a little prone to sweeping generalisations (like most of us) and states that he doesn't really like samples/computers/electronica. What he probably means is that he does not appreciate unimaginative use of those elements. We all know he has also used samples/computers etc to great effect.

Back to rap, of course he can "rap" not like Jay-Z or Chuck D or Q-Tip but I think he pouted about it for a little too long, and then when he did decide to incorporate it he used less stellar rappers initially and of course we all know how fondly we look back on the likes of Tony M, Scrap D, TC Ellis etc now.

Thanks goodness he has also featured Chuck D and Q-Tip on a couple of songs, AND he has also done some pretty good rapping himself.

For all his accolades, Chuck D did nothing for Prince's music. Same for Q-Tip.

Tony M gets alot of flack around here, but he was a big part of Prince's sound for a couple of years. Overall, I liked it, but I prefer Prince's rapping to them all.

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 #5 posted 07/05/11 4:01am

NouveauDance

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I think it was just a marketing/$$ thing. He probably knew he couldn't go straight out rap himself, but having a rapper in the band gave him a way in.

Of course, Prince looking at it from a $ POV, he goes after the MC Hammer/pop end of things.

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Reply #6 posted 07/05/11 4:44am

BruthaMoorice

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I think Prince thought rap was fad, he was out of touch, people who bang on about no real instruments, dont know know Hip Hop, it takes alot of skill to use turntables the way Jazzy Jeff etc etc used them, even sampling, can be done in a extremly creative way, not all these guys had access to musical instruments so they vented their creativity else where. Plus their where rap groups that did use traditional instruments.

I think Prince at the time may have looked down on it, didnt understand it, even felt threarned that he may not be seen as "cutting edge" anymore. The fact he picked Tony M as a rapper further illustrates he didnt know what a good MC was.

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Reply #7 posted 07/05/11 5:17am

robertgeorgeak
abob

BruthaMoorice said:

I think Prince thought rap was fad, he was out of touch, people who bang on about no real instruments, dont know know Hip Hop, it takes alot of skill to use turntables the way Jazzy Jeff etc etc used them, even sampling, can be done in a extremly creative way, not all these guys had access to musical instruments so they vented their creativity else where. Plus their where rap groups that did use traditional instruments.

I think Prince at the time may have looked down on it, didnt understand it, even felt threarned that he may not be seen as "cutting edge" anymore. The fact he picked Tony M as a rapper further illustrates he didnt know what a good MC was.

i don't think prince ever really took the time to listen to hiphop. he displays his ignorance in musicology, stating if it ain't chuck d or run dmc he ain't interested, very arrogant and dismissive. prince's rapping style complied with those lazy critics, "oh rapping is just nursery rhymes over beats". i bet you there ain't no rakim albums in prince's record collection!

don't play me...i'm over 30 and i DO smoke weed....
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Reply #8 posted 07/05/11 5:29am

alexnvrmnd777

robertgeorgeakabob said:

BruthaMoorice said:

I think Prince thought rap was fad, he was out of touch, people who bang on about no real instruments, dont know know Hip Hop, it takes alot of skill to use turntables the way Jazzy Jeff etc etc used them, even sampling, can be done in a extremly creative way, not all these guys had access to musical instruments so they vented their creativity else where. Plus their where rap groups that did use traditional instruments.

I think Prince at the time may have looked down on it, didnt understand it, even felt threarned that he may not be seen as "cutting edge" anymore. The fact he picked Tony M as a rapper further illustrates he didnt know what a good MC was.

i don't think prince ever really took the time to listen to hiphop. he displays his ignorance in musicology, stating if it ain't chuck d or run dmc he ain't interested, very arrogant and dismissive. prince's rapping style complied with those lazy critics, "oh rapping is just nursery rhymes over beats". i bet you there ain't no rakim albums in prince's record collection!

I think what he meant by that line was actually a bit of revisionist history, saying the only truly cool rap was the old school, original rap. And of course we know that around the time those guys were initially releasing albums, he wanted absolutely NOTHING to do with rap (or at least the culture).

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Reply #9 posted 07/05/11 7:40pm

mzsadii

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He just didn't like it.

Prince's Sarah
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Reply #10 posted 07/05/11 10:32pm

treehouse

A lot of musicians were dismissive of hip hop as not real music.

Think about it, if you grew up with Gil-scott Heron, Watts Prophets, or Black Poets, then rhapsodic hip hop was a strange trend to wrap your head around outside of political music, and interestingly enough, musical theater.

Anyway, the first hip hop records were around 1978 and Prince recorded Irresistible Bitch in 1981. Darling Nikki was recorded in 1984, and My name is Prince came out in 1992.

What more can you ask for?

[Edited 7/5/11 22:33pm]

[Edited 7/5/11 22:34pm]

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Reply #11 posted 07/06/11 10:15am

EyeJester7

treehouse said:

A lot of musicians were dismissive of hip hop as not real music.

Think about it, if you grew up with Gil-scott Heron, Watts Prophets, or Black Poets, then rhapsodic hip hop was a strange trend to wrap your head around outside of political music, and interestingly enough, musical theater.

Anyway, the first hip hop records were around 1978 and Prince recorded Irresistible Bitch in 1981. Darling Nikki was recorded in 1984, and My name is Prince came out in 1992.

What more can you ask for?

[Edited 7/5/11 22:33pm]

[Edited 7/5/11 22:34pm]

Really Good points here! Totally agree with you here! biggrin

It's Button Therapy, Baby!
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Reply #12 posted 07/06/11 11:08am

funkomatic

1st sign of prince becoming a conservative musician!

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Reply #13 posted 07/06/11 12:34pm

Jatrig

While not on many of his "released" tracks, I think Prince did dabble in rapping in the 80's. Check out Shockadelica extended, and I think Hello extended too. Also - he included Cat's rap on Positivity in 1988.

I do not understand why Prince farmed out rappers though - I think his smooth voice would've sounded much better rapping on tracks like Mr. Happy - and, well, deadpan silence would've sounded better than Tony M's best rap (except willing and able - where the effcts made that rap bearable).

I think it does have to do w/ Prince wanting to have "credibility" and not feeling he'd have it on his own rapping. But - see his styling on the big city remix, adam & eve version of TGRES, strange but true, or even the get wild bridge - and he can hold his own in my opinion. He has some cheese out there (see Mr. Goodnight & "feel good") - but for the most part he's solid

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Reply #14 posted 07/06/11 1:05pm

MickyDolenz

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Most singers didn't try to rap themselves and got actual rappers. Stevie Wonder did do a little rhyme on Do I Do though (and Each Others Throat years later). Debbie Harry did one on Rapture. Herbie Hancock embraced hip hop with the turntablism on Rockit.

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #15 posted 07/06/11 1:44pm

Graycap23

mydrawers said:

I remember in 1984 / 1985 listening to OLD SCHOOL rap just as it was starting to break big: Run DMC, Egyptian Lover, Twilight 22, UTFO, The Roxanne shit..........

this was clearly the future of soul music.

How is rap Soul music?

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Reply #16 posted 07/07/11 9:24am

Epicboy

Listen to 'push' - off Diamonds and pearls. Three people rap on that tune, one is Prince - he wins that battle hands down. The rappers he has used don't, in the main, have much credibility themselves so why didn't he do his own rap.

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Reply #17 posted 07/07/11 11:47am

xlr8r

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Irresisstible Bitch?

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Reply #18 posted 07/07/11 12:05pm

funksterr

Rap is best left to rappers. And rap is disco music, not soul.

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Reply #19 posted 07/07/11 1:41pm

MickyDolenz

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funksterr said:

Rap is best left to rappers. And rap is disco music, not soul.

Maybe early rap was, as it was generally performed with a band playing the music. But after around 1985, the funk and disco was mostly abandoned. This was around the time the 1st samplers came into the market. Paying a band is more costly than just getting a drum machine and sampler and programming a beat. Samplers also slowly phased out the DJ. The DJ was more important than the MC in the early days.

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #20 posted 07/07/11 2:19pm

treehouse

MickyDolenz said:

funksterr said:

Rap is best left to rappers. And rap is disco music, not soul.

Maybe early rap was, as it was generally performed with a band playing the music. But after around 1985, the funk and disco was mostly abandoned. This was around the time the 1st samplers came into the market. Paying a band is more costly than just getting a drum machine and sampler and programming a beat. Samplers also slowly phased out the DJ. The DJ was more important than the MC in the early days.

Grandmaster Flash had a modified Vox drum machine in the late 70's. Afrika Bambaata and Jazzy Jay also had access to drum machines long before. Once T-LaRock's "It's Yours" came out, everyone copied the stripped down electro sound, which was actually Jazzy Jay scratching, not a drum machine. The samplers actually rekindled the interest in the old breaks from the early-70's.

Hip Hop earliest breaks came from disco, funk, soul, rock and virtually anything they could get crowds to dance to. Rap mostly takes after the early disco, which used a lot of latin beats, and actual musicianship, more so than Donna Summers, and all that came later.

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Reply #21 posted 07/07/11 2:20pm

funksterr

MickyDolenz said:

funksterr said:

Rap is best left to rappers. And rap is disco music, not soul.

Maybe early rap was, as it was generally performed with a band playing the music. But after around 1985, the funk and disco was mostly abandoned. This was around the time the 1st samplers came into the market. Paying a band is more costly than just getting a drum machine and sampler and programming a beat. Samplers also slowly phased out the DJ. The DJ was more important than the MC in the early days.

No, rap is disco. Think big picture and you will see it. Rap follows the rules of disco much more than it does rock or soul or even funk.

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Reply #22 posted 07/07/11 3:03pm

MickyDolenz

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funksterr said:

MickyDolenz said:

Maybe early rap was, as it was generally performed with a band playing the music. But after around 1985, the funk and disco was mostly abandoned. This was around the time the 1st samplers came into the market. Paying a band is more costly than just getting a drum machine and sampler and programming a beat. Samplers also slowly phased out the DJ. The DJ was more important than the MC in the early days.

No, rap is disco. Think big picture and you will see it. Rap follows the rules of disco much more than it does rock or soul or even funk.

Some of the hip hop that came out later wasn't designed for dancing, but for big booming speaker systems that were put in cars. Dance music and house has more to do with disco than rap. Rappers who made dance pop (C+C Music Factory, Snap, Marky Mark, Technotronic, 2 Unlimited, Gerardo, MC Hammer, Vanilla Ice, etc.) weren't taken seriously by the "streets".

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #23 posted 07/07/11 3:07pm

Timmy84

"Rap is disco."

[img:$uid]http://i56.tinypic.com/2hdxt7a.jpg[/img:$uid]

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Reply #24 posted 07/07/11 3:25pm

Meloh9

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Timmy84 said:

"Rap is disco."

[img:$uid]http://i56.tinypic.com/2hdxt7a.jpg[/img:$uid]



As much as I hate to admit it, and while I would never consider Hip Hop disco, we all know disco played a part early on in breaking rap in, even the fact that disco was instrumental in getting people used to the idea of hearing a DJ spin music at a club, it's funny how every little element in poular music plays a part in how it influences other generes one way or another.

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Reply #25 posted 07/07/11 3:29pm

robertgeorgeak
abob

funksterr said:

MickyDolenz said:

Maybe early rap was, as it was generally performed with a band playing the music. But after around 1985, the funk and disco was mostly abandoned. This was around the time the 1st samplers came into the market. Paying a band is more costly than just getting a drum machine and sampler and programming a beat. Samplers also slowly phased out the DJ. The DJ was more important than the MC in the early days.

No, rap is disco. Think big picture and you will see it. Rap follows the rules of disco much more than it does rock or soul or even funk.

so tell me how all those late 80s tracks that sampled funky drummer are disco?? or rick rubin using led zepellin riffs when he produced run dmc and beastie boys? think big picture!

don't play me...i'm over 30 and i DO smoke weed....
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Reply #26 posted 07/07/11 3:38pm

Timmy84

Meloh9 said:

Timmy84 said:

"Rap is disco."

[img:$uid]http://i56.tinypic.com/2hdxt7a.jpg[/img:$uid]



As much as I hate to admit it, and while I would never consider Hip Hop disco, we all know disco played a part early on in breaking rap in, even the fact that disco was instrumental in getting people used to the idea of hearing a DJ spin music at a club, it's funny how every little element in poular music plays a part in how it influences other generes one way or another.

That's true but rap can be displayed in different formats. It sure didn't start off in disco though it kinda helped it initially. But I think the person who said that dismiss it AS disco music. That's why I was rolling my eyes at the comment.

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Reply #27 posted 07/07/11 4:04pm

treehouse

funksterr said:

No, rap is disco. Think big picture and you will see it. Rap follows the rules of disco much more than it does rock or soul or even funk.

More like Disco is rock, soul and funk. As is Hip Hop.

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Reply #28 posted 07/07/11 4:13pm

treehouse

This might change your mind.

http://www.youtube.com/embed/HzANEroh6aY

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Reply #29 posted 07/07/11 5:24pm

Militant

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moderator

The creation of hip-hop came about as the ANTITHESIS of Disco.

The guys in the streets, and in the hoods, couldn't get in to the Disco clubs, those clubs were too "bourgeois" and most had dress codes that didn't allow you to wear sneakers.

So the guys like Kool Herc and Flash were like "Fuck it, we'll have our OWN jams!". They hooked up equipment in the streets using electricity bypassed from streetlights, etc. These were the first Block Parties. DJ's like Herc would spin and loop the drum breaks from classic funk jams, like "Funky Drummer" - some guys would grab a mic and rap on them and others would breakdance.

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