independent and unofficial
Prince fan community
Welcome! Sign up or enter username and password to remember me
Forum jump
Forums > Prince: Music and More > Would you be a Prince fan if his career began in 2000?
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Page 2 of 4 <1234>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
Reply #30 posted 11/06/15 8:34pm

Funkyalien

pureTsexy said:

No, because if his career would have began in 2000, there wouldn't have been any albums after The Rainbow Children. That would have been the beginning and end of his career. No record label would have backed him after that

I strongly disagree. If a newcomer had made that album, he would have got rave reviews and been hailed as a genius. That album is too musically and thematically complex and grand for a newcomer to make. It's still Prince's greatest post WB work. Just because you (or me, or him) don't like the darth vader voice or the proselytising doesn't make it a bad album. And, of course, 'The Last December' coming from a newcomer would have been a huge hit if it was backed by a big record company at that time. More likely, though, if a newcomer Prince had released that record, he would have been a critic's fave. There is no question of him not getting a record deal after a record like that.

Funky alien
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #31 posted 11/06/15 8:45pm

Blixical

avatar

For me, there are so many reasons why I would not be a Prince fan post-2000, especially if we are factoring in only his post-2000 material and attitude.

Here are just a few:

1. Social Media & connection to fans: There is a transparency that fans tend to demand these days, whether right or wrong, from their artists. Fans take to twitter to thank and interact with their idols, and sometimes get immediate feedback from them. Prince still insists on remaining opaque, and to add insult to injury, he toys with his fan's emotions in doing so. His Q&A in promotion of Art Official Age ended with him answer one single question, and saying almost nothing at all.

2. His public statements are incredibly offputting post-2000. Homophobia? check. Anti-semitic rhetoric? check. Divisive rather than inclusive lyrics? check. No thanks, Prince.

3. His idiotic war on youtube is bewildering. It's one thing to not want your music to be on youtube--it's another thing to sue a mother filimg her toddler dancing to your music; That takes a real douche-bag. But, again, in a post-2000 world, I actually will go to youtube to experience music from people who come to my attention to see if I like their material or learn more about them. Prince? missing.

4. His realization of the wishes of his fans, and blowng them off. I'm so tired of hearing people say, Ït's his music--he can do with it what he wants.".... No shit, Sherlock. That's not the point. IN addition to being the musical genius who wrote Purple Rain and Sigh ó' The Times, he's also a capitalist/entrepreneur who is selling a product. It takes a real arrogant, dissmissive prick to ignore his fans this way. Hell, just being on the org for 10+ years, there have been a handful of fans here who have died already, all of whom would have LOVED to have heared a remaster of PR.

5. His offputting screen persona--it's "low energy" as Trump would say lol. The Arsenio appearance was just absolutely useless. The question thrown his way were idiotic, and his dissengenous answers reveal little to nothing about him, and came off as arrogant and self-concious...FROM man in his mid 50s!

I'll stop there. I could go on forever now :lol:

Suffice it to say, I would be so utterly turned off by him if I had noticed him--but chances are, I would change the channel before getting to even know him considering the lackluster and boring stuff he's mostly released post-2000.
มีเพียงความว่างเปล่า rose 只有空虚 rose Dim ond gwacter rose 만 공허함이있다 rose 唯一の虚しさがあります wilted There is only the void.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #32 posted 11/06/15 10:33pm

luv4u

Moderator

avatar

moderator

Yes

canada

Ohh purple joy oh purple bliss oh purple rapture!
REAL MUSIC by REAL MUSICIANS - Prince
"I kind of wish there was a reason for Prince to make the site crash more" ~~ Ben
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #33 posted 11/06/15 11:00pm

HatrinaHaterwi
tz

avatar

Aerogram said:

HatrinaHaterwitz said:



He would sound like THIS:

2001 The Rainbow Children
  • Released: November 20, 2001
  • Label: NPG, Redline Entertainment

2002
2003 Xpectation
  • Released: January 1, 2003
  • Label: NPG
N.E.W.S
  • Released: July 29, 2003
  • Label: NPG, MP Media

2004 Musicology
  • Released: March 29, 2004
  • Label: NPG, Columbia
The Chocolate Invasion
  • Released: March 29, 2004
  • Label: NPG
The Slaughterhouse
  • Released: March 29, 2004
  • Label: NPG
2006 3121
  • Released: March 21, 2006
  • Label: NPG, Universal
2007 Planet Earth
  • Released: July 24, 2007
  • Label: NPG, Columbia
2009 Lotusflow3r / MPLSound (released as a 3-CD set together with Elixer by Bria Valente)
  • Released: March 29, 2009
  • Label: NPG
2010 20Ten
  • Released: July 10, 2010
  • Label: NPG
2014 Plectrumelectrum [C]
  • Released: September 30, 2014
  • Label: NPG, Warner Bros.
Art Official Age
  • Released: September 30, 2014
  • Label: NPG, Warner Bros.

2015 HITnRUN phase one
  • Released: September 7, 2015
  • Label: NPG


The OP specifically asked if we'd still be a Prince fan based purely off the albums he's done from 2000 - 2015?

I posted my answer back several posts and I completey agree with pureTsexy, that there wouldn't have been any albums after The Rainbow Children, had that been his very first album. shrug

Ok now, let's play if MJ, Madonna, U2, Dylan, etc. would start their career in 2000.

smile


MJ's first and only album would have been 2001's Invincible, which sold 13 million worldwide. Heaven Can Wait, Butterflies and You Rock My World would have made me a fan. That's not too shabby for a one-hit wonder. wink lol

I knew from the start that I loved you with all my heart.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #34 posted 11/06/15 11:03pm

tahirih

Nope.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #35 posted 11/07/15 12:29am

NorthC

thedance said:

no.. I really don't think I would have bought any of his albums then...

Prince has been under the radar for a very long time to non-fans, I doubt I would catch on in 2000 or later.

I am still a fan because of the WB years 1978-1995. And that's also the music I usually play.. still..

I played my purple vinyl of Purple Rain earlier today... still so fresh & amazing.. smile


But... To answer this question, we will have to pretend those albums don't exist. You can't say Purple Rain is better than Musicology because in this hypothetical world, there is no Purple Rain! Looking at it like that, Musicology is a fine album. I think that's the problem with us old fans anyway: we always compare his new albums to the old ones and we've already made up our minds that the old ones are the best anyway.
[Edited 11/7/15 0:34am]
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #36 posted 11/07/15 3:57am

pdiddy2011

NorthC said:

thedance said:

no.. I really don't think I would have bought any of his albums then...

Prince has been under the radar for a very long time to non-fans, I doubt I would catch on in 2000 or later.

I am still a fan because of the WB years 1978-1995. And that's also the music I usually play.. still..

I played my purple vinyl of Purple Rain earlier today... still so fresh & amazing.. smile

But... To answer this question, we will have to pretend those albums don't exist. You can't say Purple Rain is better than Musicology because in this hypothetical world, there is no Purple Rain! Looking at it like that, Musicology is a fine album. I think that's the problem with us old fans anyway: we always compare his new albums to the old ones and we've already made up our minds that the old ones are the best anyway. [Edited 11/7/15 0:34am]

I think that (bolded) is definitely the case in many old fans' mind.

I am positive I would still be a fan because his live performances set the bar so high - maybe not as high now versus when he was young, but still adequately higher than most other artists currently on the scene, or on the scene since 2000. His live performances are revered, whether the old fans like it or not.

Secondly, there's still all of the bootleg and soundboard and collaboration activity that Prince has had since 2000. He has brought too much to the table, even since 2000, to suggest he wouldn't have successfully created a fan base.

And my response is based on him starting at whatever age he was at 2000. If you are asking if he started his career in 2000 at 18 - 20 years old, he would be as big as any of the others, Justin Timberlake, Britney Spears, various boy bands and girl groups, etc. He would have very few equals, in addition to an legendary work ethic and nearly unrivaled skillset.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #37 posted 11/07/15 4:21am

thedance

avatar

^^ all I no is that Rave In2 + TRC + Musicology wouldn't make me a fan "for life" like 1999 + Purple Rain did.

Those albums mentioned (first) simply aren't that good......

Prince 4Ever. heart
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #38 posted 11/07/15 4:21am

irreverence

avatar

Definately no.

Because mostly our musical tastes are grounded in our teenage years, for me, anyway, this is the case. I would miss out on listening to some great funk, but would likely listen mostly to rock of one kind or another.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #39 posted 11/07/15 5:05am

SchlomoThaHomo

avatar

No. There would have been a better chance of me becoming a fan had he started in 2010, but only a slight one.

"That's when stars collide. When there's space for what u want, and ur heart is open wide."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #40 posted 11/07/15 5:43am

databank

avatar

Dilan said:

Would you be a Prince fan still if his career began in 2000 and the only albums he had were those from then until 2015?

IDK because my musical tastes have literally been shaped by listening to P since I was 12. I'd probably have those records same way I have D'Angelo's or Janelles's or Macy's etc., I'd certainly like them a lot, but if my appreciation of 'em hadn't been built on a legacy and a passion for P's music they may not have had such a strong impact on me as they did, IDK.

+ there's the question of Prince paying homage to himself in certain records such as TCI, TS, Mpslound or 20ten. How would I perceive those albums if there hadn't been a Prince in the 80's? Hell I listen to a lot of things influenced by the Mpls sound: would I if it wasn't for Prince creating it?

What I'm certain of, though, is that if TRC had been the first album of a rookie, after said rookie feeding us with dozens of tracks on his website in 2001, then followed by every album in exact order until now, Prince would be have been hailed as an absolute musical genius and received the same kind of praise from critics D'Angelo and the whole Soulquarians posse, or Janelle for example, did.

P's work, since about 1988-89 (pretty early in fact when u think of it!), has always been judged by comparison to his genius 80-88 overproductive and seminal musical marathon. If only it had been judged for what it is instead of being compared to earlier works, it would certainly have been way more appreciated: every one would have tripped nod

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #41 posted 11/07/15 5:45am

stpaisios

From this perspective Prince is the most important musican of 20&21 century.Talent is a talent...it's a gift.It's all about time and perspective.In Prince case it's a masterful possiblity to absorb music from generations back in a new form (and i can't name an artist that can to that in a way Prince does) and express something that smoldering in you (which is not always clear & profound it is almost something personal and patological deep inside) but also permeating with a zeitgeist in which you are born...smoldrering like a star far away in a sky at night.And with a star of that kind, every new coming generation will stand and look into it, trying to reach and reflect themselves through that...like today we are standing beside one Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Maler, Shostakovich..etc.

So question would I be a fan it's not predictable, because we are taliking about ART with a big A, which always creates a new world - "To create a work of art is to create the world." Wassily Kandinsky.Just look at Prince...he lives what he is doing a 100%, a true Artist.So no matter what time, a talent like this will be recognizable to a lot of people.

[Edited 11/7/15 5:46am]

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #42 posted 11/07/15 6:03am

databank

avatar

stpaisios said:

From this perspective Prince is the most important musican of 20&21 century.Talent is a talent...it's a gift.It's all about time and perspective.In Prince case it's a masterful possiblity to absorb music from generations back in a new form (and i can't name an artist that can to that in a way Prince does) and express something that smoldering in you (which is not always clear & profound it is almost something personal and patological deep inside) but also permeating with a zeitgeist in which you are born...smoldrering like a star far away in a sky at night.And with a star of that kind, every new coming generation will stand and look into it, trying to reach and reflect themselves through that...like today we are standing beside one Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Maler, Shostakovich..etc.

So question would I be a fan it's not predictable, because we are taliking about ART with a big A, which always creates a new world - "To create a work of art is to create the world." Wassily Kandinsky.Just look at Prince...he lives what he is doing a 100%, a true Artist.So no matter what time, a talent like this will be recognizable to a lot of people.

[Edited 11/7/15 5:46am]

There are many other musicians from the last 40 years that I consider as significant and/or talented as Prince, few of them being as popular as he is, though. Some also have a catalogue that's as, if not more impressive than his in terms of quantity.

Obviously (I wouldn't be here) I consider Prince to be among the greatest of the greatest in contemporary popular music, and he's by far my favorite, but my point is just that he's not as uniquely talented as I used to think when I was a teen, and that some people sometimes say he is here.

Don't get me wrong, though: I think at some point after Prince passes (the later the better) there'll be a rediscovery of the immensity of his catalogue and I'm not even talking what's in the vault but anything he'll have released in his lifetime (if the vault is opened either before or after his death, then it'll be even more massive). I really try to appreciate his work as a whole and not mostly/only in light of the first decade, and everytime I think of the colossal amount of quality, inspired material that he's been accumulating for nearly 40 years, I'm like wow!

But some others such as Björk or Kate Bush have a similarly unique "voice" (style) that have been extremely influencial, and yet others such as Ryuichi Sakamoto, Haruomi Hosono, Bill Laswell, Frank Zappa, the P-Funk All-Stars (as a collective), John Zorn, Herbie Hancock or Chick Corea will also leave an stunningly massive legacy behind them in terms of both quality and quantity.

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #43 posted 11/07/15 6:23am

redsock

No.

Probably not even if he began in 1990, to be honest.

(Although adding in live stuff mightmake a difference...)

[Edited 11/7/15 6:24am]

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #44 posted 11/07/15 6:28am

sexton

avatar

"Black Sweat" would have made me get 3121 which would lead to checking out other albums like The Rainbow Children and LOtUSFLOW3R, but beyond those, I don't see me being a big fan if his entire output was post-2000.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #45 posted 11/07/15 6:51am

Graycap23

avatar

Ask that question 2 any musician breathing..........

FOOLS multiply when WISE Men & Women are silent.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #46 posted 11/07/15 7:06am

stpaisios

databank said:

stpaisios said:

From this perspective Prince is the most important musican of 20&21 century.Talent is a talent...it's a gift.It's all about time and perspective.In Prince case it's a masterful possiblity to absorb music from generations back in a new form (and i can't name an artist that can to that in a way Prince does) and express something that smoldering in you (which is not always clear & profound it is almost something personal and patological deep inside) but also permeating with a zeitgeist in which you are born...smoldrering like a star far away in a sky at night.And with a star of that kind, every new coming generation will stand and look into it, trying to reach and reflect themselves through that...like today we are standing beside one Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Maler, Shostakovich..etc.

So question would I be a fan it's not predictable, because we are taliking about ART with a big A, which always creates a new world - "To create a work of art is to create the world." Wassily Kandinsky.Just look at Prince...he lives what he is doing a 100%, a true Artist.So no matter what time, a talent like this will be recognizable to a lot of people.

[Edited 11/7/15 5:46am]

There are many other musicians from the last 40 years that I consider as significant and/or talented as Prince, few of them being as popular as he is, though. Some also have a catalogue that's as, if not more impressive than his in terms of quantity.

Obviously (I wouldn't be here) I consider Prince to be among the greatest of the greatest in contemporary popular music, and he's by far my favorite, but my point is just that he's not as uniquely talented as I used to think when I was a teen, and that some people sometimes say he is here.

Don't get me wrong, though: I think at some point after Prince passes (the later the better) there'll be a rediscovery of the immensity of his catalogue and I'm not even talking what's in the vault but anything he'll have released in his lifetime (if the vault is opened either before or after his death, then it'll be even more massive). I really try to appreciate his work as a whole and not mostly/only in light of the first decade, and everytime I think of the colossal amount of quality, inspired material that he's been accumulating for nearly 40 years, I'm like wow!

But some others such as Björk or Kate Bush have a similarly unique "voice" (style) that have been extremely influencial, and yet others such as Ryuichi Sakamoto, Haruomi Hosono, Bill Laswell, Frank Zappa, the P-Funk All-Stars (as a collective), John Zorn, Herbie Hancock or Chick Corea will also leave an stunningly massive legacy behind them in terms of both quality and quantity.

Of course.My post is probably to much pro-Prince orientated, but i don't have intention to idealize him in order to underestimate other big names in music, especially when i know what influenced him in a musical way.But somehow in Prince things have crystallized and get new higher levels of artistic approach to life, music, freedom.Those are that rare moments in one century or decade, where someone just appears on earth from nowhere and make big things.For example, from your list above i appreciate every name mentioned...but lets look at Frank Zappa and John Zorn, because they are close to my taste.Talented, very productive musicans, you can listen to them, enrich your musical taste and life...but there is something missing in their work, some magical link that would let them being a reflective stars of their generations in a way and level Prince is.I don't tell they are not reflective and good to people that take them serious in artistic way or that they are not good because they dont have Hits as massive as Prince has, but you just step aside and listen one Purple Rain, Sign of O' times, 1999, Parade...and take some notable work of other artist...and when U interpret them in correlation with a time they appeared, personal reflections and they way thier affect people...U can easily make a diffrence.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #47 posted 11/07/15 7:34am

stpaisios

Blixical said:

The Arsenio appearance was just absolutely useless. The question thrown his way were idiotic, and his dissengenous answers reveal little to nothing about him, and came off as arrogant and self-concious...FROM man in his mid 50s!

Yeah...i think that show could be much, much, much better if you didn't have one Arsenio on other side, who worship Prince in some exaggerated way that makes me cringe...Ok, dude just relax, he is also a human being, not an alien.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #48 posted 11/07/15 8:43am

Shockedelicus

Nope. I doubt many of us would have even heard of him if that was the case. The Rainbow Children would have been seen as culty and unsettling if we weren't familiar with the eccentric personality behind it. Musicology would go unnoticed by the press and 3121 would be seen as a one-album-wonder.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #49 posted 11/07/15 8:48am

Graycap23

avatar

Anyone who has ever seen Prince live post 2000 would laugh at this question.

FOOLS multiply when WISE Men & Women are silent.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #50 posted 11/07/15 9:21am

kapo74

Imagine Purple Rain being released in 2006... No idea if anyone would have noticed.

I mean, if his carreer started in 2000 with For You...
[Edited 11/7/15 9:23am]
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #51 posted 11/07/15 9:34am

stpaisios

kapo74 said:

Imagine Purple Rain being released in 2006... No idea if anyone would have noticed. I mean, if his carreer started in 2000 with For You... [Edited 11/7/15 9:23am]

Well, the whole point is that something like that would not happen...diffrent times, context, society, etc.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #52 posted 11/07/15 9:38am

radici27

Probably but it would most likely be because I heard about how good a player and live performer he was.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #53 posted 11/07/15 9:43am

OldFriends4Sal
e

NorthC said:

thedance said:

no.. I really don't think I would have bought any of his albums then...

Prince has been under the radar for a very long time to non-fans, I doubt I would catch on in 2000 or later.

I am still a fan because of the WB years 1978-1995. And that's also the music I usually play.. still..

I played my purple vinyl of Purple Rain earlier today... still so fresh & amazing.. smile

But... To answer this question, we will have to pretend those albums don't exist. You can't say Purple Rain is better than Musicology because in this hypothetical world, there is no Purple Rain! Looking at it like that, Musicology is a fine album. I think that's the problem with us old fans anyway: we always compare his new albums to the old ones and we've already made up our minds that the old ones are the best anyway. [Edited 11/7/15 0:34am]

Well the old ones are better, they just are. But I do try to take each album for what it is. Being a HUGE fan of 1978-1989 Prince Rainbow Children I listen to just as much all the way through as I do the older albums.
.
I think there is a lot of reason why, but the biggest is he SOLD it, you got a complete package that had flow connection cohesive the music the style the band the proteges the performances etc

.

If 2000 Rave In2 the Joy Fantastic was Princes first we would not have gotten any of that.
If 2001 Rainbow Children for me musically and lyrically I would have been very much interested(being someone who hears music first, who lyrics are sung 2nd, who it all connects 3rd, what the actuall lyrics are 4th) I would have been a fan even if it was that one album, because as we know the style totally changed after this.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #54 posted 11/07/15 9:46am

RaspBerryGirlF
riend

avatar

HatrinaHaterwitz said:

Aerogram said:

Ok now, let's play if MJ, Madonna, U2, Dylan, etc. would start their career in 2000.

smile


MJ's first and only album would have been 2001's Invincible, which sold 13 million worldwide. Heaven Can Wait, Butterflies and You Rock My World would have made me a fan. That's not too shabby for a one-hit wonder. wink lol

In addition several of Bob Dylan's post-2000 albums are extremely well regarded critically, with some, like Love And Theft and Modern Times being considered among his best, so he's not a great example to use in this regard.

Heavenly wine and roses seems to whisper to me when you smile...
Always cry for love, never cry for pain...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #55 posted 11/07/15 10:23am

luvsexy4all

he wouldnt release THOSE types of albums so early in a career

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #56 posted 11/07/15 10:28am

KingSausage

avatar

This site is so fucked up.
"Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #57 posted 11/07/15 10:28am

databank

avatar

stpaisios said:

databank said:

There are many other musicians from the last 40 years that I consider as significant and/or talented as Prince, few of them being as popular as he is, though. Some also have a catalogue that's as, if not more impressive than his in terms of quantity.

Obviously (I wouldn't be here) I consider Prince to be among the greatest of the greatest in contemporary popular music, and he's by far my favorite, but my point is just that he's not as uniquely talented as I used to think when I was a teen, and that some people sometimes say he is here.

Don't get me wrong, though: I think at some point after Prince passes (the later the better) there'll be a rediscovery of the immensity of his catalogue and I'm not even talking what's in the vault but anything he'll have released in his lifetime (if the vault is opened either before or after his death, then it'll be even more massive). I really try to appreciate his work as a whole and not mostly/only in light of the first decade, and everytime I think of the colossal amount of quality, inspired material that he's been accumulating for nearly 40 years, I'm like wow!

But some others such as Björk or Kate Bush have a similarly unique "voice" (style) that have been extremely influencial, and yet others such as Ryuichi Sakamoto, Haruomi Hosono, Bill Laswell, Frank Zappa, the P-Funk All-Stars (as a collective), John Zorn, Herbie Hancock or Chick Corea will also leave an stunningly massive legacy behind them in terms of both quality and quantity.

Of course.My post is probably to much pro-Prince orientated, but i don't have intention to idealize him in order to underestimate other big names in music, especially when i know what influenced him in a musical way.But somehow in Prince things have crystallized and get new higher levels of artistic approach to life, music, freedom.Those are that rare moments in one century or decade, where someone just appears on earth from nowhere and make big things.For example, from your list above i appreciate every name mentioned...but lets look at Frank Zappa and John Zorn, because they are close to my taste.Talented, very productive musicans, you can listen to them, enrich your musical taste and life...but there is something missing in their work, some magical link that would let them being a reflective stars of their generations in a way and level Prince is.I don't tell they are not reflective and good to people that take them serious in artistic way or that they are not good because they dont have Hits as massive as Prince has, but you just step aside and listen one Purple Rain, Sign of O' times, 1999, Parade...and take some notable work of other artist...and when U interpret them in correlation with a time they appeared, personal reflections and they way thier affect people...U can easily make a diffrence.

I agree. Regardless of commercial success and accessibility of the music to mainstream audiences, Zappa and Zorn and all of the prolific ones named above had/have a much more intellectual approach, more experimental but more distanced from their work while P's music is often like a diary and has a much stronger, more intimate emotional approach. Bush or Björk or other songwriters could compete in that domain but none that I know of offer such extensive discographies (by far).

Prince in that sense managed to bridge the gap between quantity and diversity on one hand, emotional strength and intimacy on the other. I wish he would have recorded (or released, we don't know what's in the vault after 95) more experimental works a la Crystal Ball (the song), The Flesh, 16, Kamasutra, The War or N.E.W.S.: had he allowed himself to be a little more of an experimental artist, and to explore more genres beyond american R&B/pop/rock, his legacy would have blown everyone away nod

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #58 posted 11/07/15 10:56am

thekidsgirl

avatar

If his post-2000 work was all that had ever come out, I'd definitely still be a fan, just not to the same degree... I didn't start seriously getting into P until 2001, and I remember Rave Un2 the Joy Fantastic being one of the first albums of his I bought... I wore that cd OUT boxed


Yes, yes, yes. Rave technically came out in 1999, but it was late in the year.

.
[Edited 11/7/15 10:58am]
If you will, so will I
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #59 posted 11/07/15 11:01am

JediNation

Yes. definitely.

I've been a fan since 1981-82? and I'm really happy with the direction his music has taken.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Page 2 of 4 <1234>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Forums > Prince: Music and More > Would you be a Prince fan if his career began in 2000?