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Thread started 05/05/16 11:48am

emesem

Prince in the 90s - RS

http://www.rollingstone.c...505?page=6

Good read. Pretty much confirms what I thought if this period. (was Tommy talking about Wendy or Miko?)

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Reply #1 posted 05/05/16 11:51am

2freaky4church
1

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If it's a put down I won't read it. The 90s were actually more consistant.

All you others say Hell Yea!! woot!
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Reply #2 posted 05/05/16 11:54am

emesem

Not a put down but an honest and frank look back by some of the members of the band. (Michael and Tommy and some managers).

Here's the subtitle "Inside the decade when the late icon formed one of his greatest bands – and faced some of his toughest trials"

here's a highlight:

"There was a guy who worked at Paisley who wore unusually short cut-off shorts. It was just these hairy white legs. I was passing that guy in the hallway and Prince was talking to somebody on the phone downstairs, and he ended the conversation by saying, "Yeah, and tell that dude the next time he comes to work with those Daisy Dukes on, he's done.""

2freaky4church1 said:

If it's a put down I won't read it. The 90s were actually more consistant.

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Reply #3 posted 05/05/16 12:01pm

2freaky4church
1

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He said for every good album there was a dud. There were no duds. 92-98 were a grand era. Made me a stronger fan. When it made me finally get into the bootlegs. The 80s did not do that.

I will agree Prince was really weird during that time. His most humble period was when duds became commonplace.

All you others say Hell Yea!! woot!
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Reply #4 posted 05/05/16 12:12pm

IstenSzek

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the first part of that is pretty insightful and fun.

the second part is still insightful but pretty grim.

i guess he could be quite a bastard at times.

although i do believe that he changed tremendously in 1996 and even more later on, circa 2001.

especially these last 10 years he seems to have become a much more relaxed, open individual.

and true love lives on lollipops and crisps
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Reply #5 posted 05/05/16 12:38pm

McD

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Best article yet. A real insight into the wacky world of Prince and the NPG.

This is my favourite Prince period too. I'm not saying it was better than his great 80's run... but my fandom was never more intense than from Diamonds and Pearls until Emancipation. And all those wonderful collaborations (Kate Bush, Monie Love, Martika, Eric Leeds, 1800-New-Funk).

I'd love to read a book in this format. I'm sure these guys could easily fill one.
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Reply #6 posted 05/05/16 12:40pm

McD

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I should add that a lot of people will come away from this article with just one thought: 'Wow, Michael Jackson sent Prince video tapes!'
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Reply #7 posted 05/05/16 12:49pm

2freaky4church
1

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Prince may have been doing drugs then too. sad. He was acting like a drug addict. Explained how he stayed awake.

All you others say Hell Yea!! woot!
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Reply #8 posted 05/05/16 12:55pm

DarlingKris

This was a really good article. I am a big fan of the music he made with The Revolution, but the songs he made with NPG was really amazing as well. Thanks for sharing biggrin

Forever In My Life, forever in my heart. I love you Prince Rogers Nelson heart
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Reply #9 posted 05/05/16 12:57pm

AzorAhai

Great article.

'Just cause it's nasty, don't mean it's bad.'
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Reply #10 posted 05/05/16 1:16pm

BanishedBrian

Great article, and I also loved this era. If there is one Prince band that I'd pay to see play on its own, it's that 93-96 NPG lineup with Sonny, Michael, Morris and Tommy. They were fierce.

No Candy 4 Me
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Reply #11 posted 05/05/16 1:21pm

jtfolden

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It also confirms he had an apt in PP as of 1990. Several were saying it was never designed with a living space, despite the architect saying otherwise, but that's obviously not true.

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Reply #12 posted 05/05/16 1:22pm

GirlBrother

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I love that Tommy Barbarella owns a bootleg MP3 of that BBC mini-concert. lol
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Reply #13 posted 05/05/16 1:24pm

Marrk

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GirlBrother said:

I love that Tommy Barbarella owns a bootleg MP3 of that BBC mini-concert. lol

lol

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Reply #14 posted 05/05/16 1:26pm

tab32792

loved this. something different. i'm tired of always hearing about the revolution and 78-88. the original NPG was his best band and the early 90's are underrated. not to mention, overshadowed by the WB feud.

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Reply #15 posted 05/05/16 1:37pm

BillieBalloon

Interesting thanks.

He did seem to mellow as he got older. However, it's not as if he held his band to very high standards and slacked off himself. He pushed himself more than anyone else and this is where the respect for him comes from.
Baby, you're a star.

Meet me in another world, space and joy
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Reply #16 posted 05/05/16 1:40pm

lwr001

Stop doing A&R with your dick..........dead

Dave, stay away from my plants ...i cant breathe

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Reply #17 posted 05/05/16 1:52pm

RogerRoger

Thanks. I love to hear real things, not purple fantasy stories

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Reply #18 posted 05/05/16 1:53pm

lwr001

and it appears had a little squabble in him; nice

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Reply #19 posted 05/05/16 2:03pm

DarkKnight1

avatar

2freaky4church1 said:

He said for every good album there was a dud. There were no duds. 92-98 were a grand era. Made me a stronger fan. When it made me finally get into the bootlegs. The 80s did not do that.

I will agree Prince was really weird during that time. His most humble period was when duds became commonplace.

The early to mid 90s is the era that made me more than a passing Prince fan. Outside of PR, the Symbol Album is my favorite Prince Album, period. I love everything from 91- to around 96ish.

D & P

o+>

Come

TGE

Chaos and Disorder

Throw in the black albums official release, Exodus, The Undertaker, The Beautiful Experience, some mixes from Come and TGE, maxi singles, and some videos and that era was incredible.

(Insert something clever here)
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Reply #20 posted 05/05/16 2:42pm

SPYZFAN1

Damn!!..That was a great read. I think the guitarist P disputed with was Miko. Someone on the org said they had a rehearsal tape where P and Miko get into a shouting match and almost go at it. The part where P wrestled with the manager was interesting. Would love to hear from Levi and Miko.

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Reply #21 posted 05/05/16 3:06pm

jtfolden

avatar

DarkKnight1 said:

The early to mid 90s is the era that made me more than a passing Prince fan. Outside of PR, the Symbol Album is my favorite Prince Album, period. I love everything from 91- to around 96ish.

D & P

o+>

Come

TGE

Chaos and Disorder

Throw in the black albums official release, Exodus, The Undertaker, The Beautiful Experience, some mixes from Come and TGE, maxi singles, and some videos and that era was incredible.

Yes, I love this era, as well. prince is my favorite Prince album. ...and Come is an album I've always loved playing all the way through. It's great as a whole. TGE is very strong too.

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Reply #22 posted 05/05/16 3:28pm

sexton

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I've even come to appreciate 1993's Goldnigga recently as the novelty of Prince recording a full on rap album. It was a very diverse era for him.

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Reply #23 posted 05/05/16 3:48pm

jdcxc

What a lame piece. They give too much ink to the suits. It would've been only fair to have an alternative view of the corporate record business. And they didn't give a fair shake to some of the great music of this P era.

I already see it's going to be difficult hearing former band mates pump up their roles in his music.
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Reply #24 posted 05/05/16 3:51pm

IstenSzek

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sexton said:

I've even come to appreciate 1993's Goldnigga recently as the novelty of Prince recording a full on rap album. It was a very diverse era for him.


the music on that album is gorgeous. i could listen to an instrumental version of that album

for days.

drool

although, i've come to like it even with tony. smile

and true love lives on lollipops and crisps
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Reply #25 posted 05/05/16 11:32pm

squish

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It's a good read. That one quote from Sheila E was awesome.

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Reply #26 posted 05/06/16 12:22am

jayspud

sexton said:

I've even come to appreciate 1993's Goldnigga recently as the novelty of Prince recording a full on rap album. It was a very diverse era for him.

The Hornz on that album are remarkable, some great riffs too.

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Reply #27 posted 05/06/16 12:28am

TheW00denLeg

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Thanks for sharing this. I enjoy critical views and serious remembrance more than this bellypowdering that´s going on right now.

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Reply #28 posted 05/06/16 1:50am

rusty1

Listen Prince had some good albums in the 90's
But he didn't set the trends anymore..
Prince hated rap in the 1980's..
Alen Leeds confirmed that..
Then a few years later had rappers in his band..
I feel come, chaos& disorder, new power soul,
The vault old friend's album,
Were throw away albums..
Rave was ok ..
Planet earth was another throw away..
Musicology was also nothing special...

I have to admit that The one night alone period with rainbow children
Was probably his best in the year 2000 era
BOB4theFUNK
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Reply #29 posted 05/06/16 3:53am

dodger

Brilliant article. Best thing I've read in last 2 weeks. Some great untold inside info from my favourite era.

.

Funny about Tommy getting an mp3 of the BBC Radio One appearance.

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