independent and unofficial
Prince fan community
Welcome! Sign up or enter username and password to remember me
Forum jump
Forums > Prince: Music and More > Admit it...The Vault photos confirm there's very little 'new' unreleased material out there...
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Page 2 of 3 <123>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
Reply #30 posted 04/27/18 3:17am

TheFman

scenario 1: manipulating of public's view of what it's in vault. Family/indexer telling us 'this is work for years, it's huge' while the whole thing was raided already the same day and not much left to be photographing, or by letting out the good parts the photographs, in which case they very good know already at the start what is worthy and what is known out there.

scenario 2: there really isn't much left that we don't yet know, in his own vaults. WB might have more in their vaults. Yes, a most or all of the known outtakes aren't on the pictures, but that's because they didnt come from P's vault, since they came from other sources.


  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #31 posted 04/27/18 3:21am

OperatingTheta
n

rlittler81 said:



OperatingThetan said:


The vault would have gone digital at some point, likely twenty or more years ago. There is a wealth of unreleased material from 1995 onwards and Mayte recently confirmed there was a significant amount from 1992 also, but I'm guessing the 80s are leaner given the number of songs already released and leaked. Morris Hayes recently confirmed that several new unreleased albums were recorded between 2010-14.

Late 93/early 94 "a computer arrived" and the music went digital, according to Michael B in Mobeen's book.



Thanks for that info. Though we obviously haven't seen all of the vault comprehensively in those pictures, that explains it all.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #32 posted 04/27/18 3:39am

paulludvig

TheFman said:

scenario 1: manipulating of public's view of what it's in vault. Family/indexer telling us 'this is work for years, it's huge' while the whole thing was raided already the same day and not much left to be photographing, or by letting out the good parts the photographs, in which case they very good know already at the start what is worthy and what is known out there.



scenario 2: there really isn't much left that we don't yet know, in his own vaults. WB might have more in their vaults. Yes, a most or all of the known outtakes aren't on the pictures, but that's because they didnt come from P's vault, since they came from other sources.




Sure. We probably have the boots from other sources. But what happened with Prince's own copies?
The wooh is on the one!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #33 posted 04/27/18 4:20am

TheFman

paulludvig said:

TheFman said:

scenario 1: manipulating of public's view of what it's in vault. Family/indexer telling us 'this is work for years, it's huge' while the whole thing was raided already the same day and not much left to be photographing, or by letting out the good parts the photographs, in which case they very good know already at the start what is worthy and what is known out there.

scenario 2: there really isn't much left that we don't yet know, in his own vaults. WB might have more in their vaults. Yes, a most or all of the known outtakes aren't on the pictures, but that's because they didnt come from P's vault, since they came from other sources.


Sure. We probably have the boots from other sources. But what happened with Prince's own copies?

Would it be impossible that those are in WB's vaults exclusively? It's work from that era, mostly, and they obviously have things that we don't. But than again, there won't be much left over, I'm afraid.

[Edited 4/27/18 4:20am]

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #34 posted 04/27/18 5:20am

KlyphIsBackAga
in

avatar

If you look at the pictures the tapes seem to be pretty much arranged by album, and there are very few unreleased songs in the pictures. Of course it's all speculation, but perhaps they were organized with a released/unreleased strategy in mind, or a "these songs were/are intended for this project/They came from this session" strategy. That seems to be the most plausible thing to me, at least based on what I see.

What really struck me though is that the majority of the "new" music that has been released/leaked in the last few years is all there in one little section. I don't think that is a coincidence.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #35 posted 04/27/18 6:58am

Feelgood

avatar

We have seen most of the unreleased titles of the '80's?

I don't think so, unless you can confirm that the titles below are widely circulating.............

Doc smile

1973

Do You Feel Like Dancing?


1975


39th St. Party
Machine
You Remind Me Of Me


1976


Aces
Diamond Eyes
Don't Forget
Don't Hold Back
Don't You Wanna Ride?

Fantasy
Grand Central
Hey Lover
Lady Pleasure
Nightingale
Since We've Been Together

Surprise
Whenever
You're Such A Fox


1977


Bump This
Darling Marie
- Funk
Fast Freddie (music only)
Hello, My Love
I Like What You're Doing
Life Is So Neat
Love In The Morning
Neurotic Lover's

Baby's Bedroom

Shine Your Light
Waiting For You
You Really Get To Me


1978


Do It Again
Gypsy
I Met A Virgin Queen
I'm Leaving L.A.
Love Affair
Love Of Mine
Rocking Chair
We Would Like To See You Again


1979


I Am You
The Loser (mistakenly referred to as Turn Me On)

Oh, Baby


1980


American Jam
Big Brass Bed
Bulgaria
Eros
Plastic Love Affair
When The Shit Comes Down


1981


Dancin' Flu

Dear Uncle George (evolved into Private Joy)

Delivery Boy
Everybody Dance
Friction

Gym Class Heart Attack

Hump You

Make U Mine

Mink Kitty Cat

Pizza

Poppa Grooves Rain
The Rain And You

Rearrange

See U Dead
Susan
There's Something I Like About Being Your Fool

Vagina


1982


Bold Generation
Colleen
Dance To The Beat
Fox Trap
Money Don't Grow On Trees

Moral Majority
My Baby Knows
U Should Be Mine


1983


Electrocution (instrumental)

I Am Five (instrumental)

Money
My Love Belongs To You

Promise To Be True


1984


Fish Fries (instrumental)

Small Grey Monkey


1985


Call Of The Wild
Evolsidog
God Is Everywhere
Living Doll
Mobile (instrumental)
My Sex
Polka-Dot Tiger (instrumental)

Run Amok (instrumental)
She Pony
Stella And Charles
Tibet (instrumental)
(U Got The) Good Drawers
U Just Can't Stop
Zebra With The Blonde Hair


1986


And That Says What? (instrumental)
Blanche
Boy U Bad
Frustration
Funny Love
Groove In C Minor (instrumental)
Groove In G Flat Minor (instrumental)
Love And Sex (different than the 1984 song of the same name)

Nine (instrumental) (totally different to the released Madhouse track)

Slow Groove In G Major (instrumental)
Susannah's Blues (instrumental)
Twosday
Up From Below (instrumental)
Walkin' In Glory
Y'All Want Some More?


1987


Beat Town
Bloody Mouth
Camille
Everything Could Be So Fine

Famous
I Believe I Love U
In A Winter Mood (instrumental)

Knucklehead
Latino Barbie Doll
No Changes
Rhythm Angel
Ruthie Washington Jet Blues

Stimulation
Take This Beat – (ev. inc. into I Wish U Heaven Pt 3)

What Did I Do?
XYZ


1988


A Man Called Jesus
Am I Without U?
Billie Holiday
Cat And Mouse
Cat Attack
Come Back 2 Me
Everything But U
If U Let Me Undress U
Pickle (instrumental)
The Rock That Keeps Rolling


1989


R U There?

Spiritual World

[Edited 4/27/18 7:01am]

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #36 posted 04/27/18 7:48am

soladeo1

Great summary. But are these titles seen in the recent photos from The Vault or just rumored titles?

I was happy to see If It'll Make U Happy from 1981 in the photos, though.

I think we've only heard a bare minute of this track but what we've heard is AWESOME. Sort of a super catchy reggae-infused pop track...

Feelgood said:

We have seen most of the unreleased titles of the '80's?

I don't think so, unless you can confirm that the titles below are widely circulating.............

Doc smile

1973

Do You Feel Like Dancing?

1975

39th St. Party
Machine
You Remind Me Of Me

1976

Aces
Diamond Eyes
Don't Forget
Don't Hold Back
Don't You Wanna Ride?

Fantasy
Grand Central
Hey Lover
Lady Pleasure
Nightingale
Since We've Been Together

Surprise
Whenever
You're Such A Fox

1977


Bump This
Darling Marie
- Funk
Fast Freddie (music only)
Hello, My Love
I Like What You're Doing
Life Is So Neat
Love In The Morning
Neurotic Lover's

Baby's Bedroom

Shine Your Light
Waiting For You
You Really Get To Me

1978


Do It Again
Gypsy
I Met A Virgin Queen
I'm Leaving L.A.
Love Affair
Love Of Mine
Rocking Chair
We Would Like To See You Again

1979


I Am You
The Loser (mistakenly referred to as Turn Me On)

Oh, Baby

1980


American Jam
Big Brass Bed
Bulgaria
Eros
Plastic Love Affair
When The Shit Comes Down

1981

Dancin' Flu

Dear Uncle George (evolved into Private Joy)

Delivery Boy
Everybody Dance
Friction

Gym Class Heart Attack

Hump You

Make U Mine

Mink Kitty Cat

Pizza

Poppa Grooves Rain
The Rain And You

Rearrange

See U Dead
Susan
There's Something I Like About Being Your Fool

Vagina

1982


Bold Generation
Colleen
Dance To The Beat
Fox Trap
Money Don't Grow On Trees

Moral Majority
My Baby Knows
U Should Be Mine

1983

Electrocution (instrumental)

I Am Five (instrumental)

Money
My Love Belongs To You

Promise To Be True

1984


Fish Fries (instrumental)

Small Grey Monkey

1985

Call Of The Wild
Evolsidog
God Is Everywhere
Living Doll
Mobile (instrumental)
My Sex
Polka-Dot Tiger (instrumental)

Run Amok (instrumental)
She Pony
Stella And Charles
Tibet (instrumental)
(U Got The) Good Drawers
U Just Can't Stop
Zebra With The Blonde Hair

1986


And That Says What? (instrumental)
Blanche
Boy U Bad
Frustration
Funny Love
Groove In C Minor (instrumental)
Groove In G Flat Minor (instrumental)
Love And Sex (different than the 1984 song of the same name)

Nine (instrumental) (totally different to the released Madhouse track)

Slow Groove In G Major (instrumental)
Susannah's Blues (instrumental)
Twosday
Up From Below (instrumental)
Walkin' In Glory
Y'All Want Some More?

1987

Beat Town
Bloody Mouth
Camille
Everything Could Be So Fine

Famous
I Believe I Love U
In A Winter Mood (instrumental)

Knucklehead
Latino Barbie Doll
No Changes
Rhythm Angel
Ruthie Washington Jet Blues

Stimulation
Take This Beat – (ev. inc. into I Wish U Heaven Pt 3)

What Did I Do?
XYZ

1988


A Man Called Jesus
Am I Without U?
Billie Holiday
Cat And Mouse
Cat Attack
Come Back 2 Me
Everything But U
If U Let Me Undress U
Pickle (instrumental)
The Rock That Keeps Rolling

1989

R U There?

Spiritual World

[Edited 4/27/18 7:01am]

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #37 posted 04/27/18 7:55am

jaypotton

SquirrelMeat said:

Just playing the percentages, based on the pictures, there won't be heaps of unknown gems.

But that's the negative side of listening to bootlegs. There are a lot of unlreased tracks, but we happen to have most of them in one form or another. The fans that shunned boots are going to have a much better time over the next few years.

This is why I'd rather have the unlreased songs in project form, i.e. a few on each remaster, and concepts like The Time by Prince, or The Family, plus things like Dream Factory.

That, for me, will keep the excitement of new releases.

Also, I'm one of those die hards who would like all of the off cuts and takes of songs. For that, perhaps they do a subscription.



I am with you on that. Personally I would rather see all his albums (not just Warners) get the remaster treatment that Purple Rain got. Then some additional anthology type releases for the remaining non-project specific tracks and another line of live performances... Well I can dream!
'I loved him then, I love him now and will love him eternally. He's with our son now.' Mayte 21st April 2016 = the saddest quote I have ever read! RIP Prince and thanks for everything.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #38 posted 04/27/18 9:04am

OnlyNDaUsa

avatar

soladeo1 said:

Great summary. But are these titles seen in the recent photos from The Vault or just rumored titles?

I was happy to see If It'll Make U Happy from 1981 in the photos, though.

I think we've only heard a bare minute of this track but what we've heard is AWESOME. Sort of a super catchy reggae-infused pop track...

[Edited 4/27/18 7:01am]

Princevault.com has a list of some 333 unreleased songs for which there was some record of having been recorded by Prince or some close associate. Many of the songs on that list (If not all) come from princevault or some shared source.

"Keep on shilling for Big Pharm!"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #39 posted 04/27/18 9:27am

bonatoc

avatar

"Admit it..." biggrin
Sounds like "confess U bitch!"

The Colors R brighter, the Bond is much tighter
No Child's a failure
Until the Blue Sailboat sails him away from his dreams
Don't Ever Lose, Don't Ever Lose
Don't Ever Lose Your Dreams
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #40 posted 04/27/18 9:31am

OnlyNDaUsa

avatar

bonatoc said:

"Admit it..." biggrin
Sounds like "confess U bitch!"

what?

"Keep on shilling for Big Pharm!"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #41 posted 04/27/18 9:32am

bonatoc

avatar

Thizz said:

Pessimistic and shortsighted thread.

There’s more than the eyes can see


"Admit it" and "very little" say a lot.

Perhaps the OP has Steve Austin's eye.

The Colors R brighter, the Bond is much tighter
No Child's a failure
Until the Blue Sailboat sails him away from his dreams
Don't Ever Lose, Don't Ever Lose
Don't Ever Lose Your Dreams
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #42 posted 04/27/18 12:44pm

luvsexy4all

soladeo1 said:

Great summary. But are these titles seen in the recent photos from The Vault or just rumored titles?

I was happy to see If It'll Make U Happy from 1981 in the photos, though.

I think we've only heard a bare minute of this track but what we've heard is AWESOME. Sort of a super catchy reggae-infused pop track...

Feelgood said:

We have seen most of the unreleased titles of the '80's?

I don't think so, unless you can confirm that the titles below are widely circulating.............

Doc smile

1973

Do You Feel Like Dancing?

1975

39th St. Party
Machine
You Remind Me Of Me

1976

Aces
Diamond Eyes
Don't Forget
Don't Hold Back
Don't You Wanna Ride?

Fantasy
Grand Central
Hey Lover
Lady Pleasure
Nightingale
Since We've Been Together

Surprise
Whenever
You're Such A Fox

1977


Bump This
Darling Marie
- Funk
Fast Freddie (music only)
Hello, My Love
I Like What You're Doing
Life Is So Neat
Love In The Morning
Neurotic Lover's

Baby's Bedroom

Shine Your Light
Waiting For You
You Really Get To Me

1978


Do It Again
Gypsy
I Met A Virgin Queen
I'm Leaving L.A.
Love Affair
Love Of Mine
Rocking Chair
We Would Like To See You Again

1979


I Am You
The Loser (mistakenly referred to as Turn Me On)

Oh, Baby

1980


American Jam
Big Brass Bed
Bulgaria
Eros
Plastic Love Affair
When The Shit Comes Down

1981

Dancin' Flu

Dear Uncle George (evolved into Private Joy)

Delivery Boy
Everybody Dance
Friction

Gym Class Heart Attack

Hump You

Make U Mine

Mink Kitty Cat

Pizza

Poppa Grooves Rain
The Rain And You

Rearrange

See U Dead
Susan
There's Something I Like About Being Your Fool

Vagina

1982


Bold Generation
Colleen
Dance To The Beat
Fox Trap
Money Don't Grow On Trees

Moral Majority
My Baby Knows
U Should Be Mine

1983

Electrocution (instrumental)

I Am Five (instrumental)

Money
My Love Belongs To You

Promise To Be True

1984


Fish Fries (instrumental)

Small Grey Monkey

1985

Call Of The Wild
Evolsidog
God Is Everywhere
Living Doll
Mobile (instrumental)
My Sex
Polka-Dot Tiger (instrumental)

Run Amok (instrumental)
She Pony
Stella And Charles
Tibet (instrumental)
(U Got The) Good Drawers
U Just Can't Stop
Zebra With The Blonde Hair

1986


And That Says What? (instrumental)
Blanche
Boy U Bad
Frustration
Funny Love
Groove In C Minor (instrumental)
Groove In G Flat Minor (instrumental)
Love And Sex (different than the 1984 song of the same name)

Nine (instrumental) (totally different to the released Madhouse track)

Slow Groove In G Major (instrumental)
Susannah's Blues (instrumental)
Twosday
Up From Below (instrumental)
Walkin' In Glory
Y'All Want Some More?

1987

Beat Town
Bloody Mouth
Camille
Everything Could Be So Fine

Famous
I Believe I Love U
In A Winter Mood (instrumental)

Knucklehead
Latino Barbie Doll
No Changes
Rhythm Angel
Ruthie Washington Jet Blues

Stimulation
Take This Beat – (ev. inc. into I Wish U Heaven Pt 3)

What Did I Do?
XYZ

1988


A Man Called Jesus
Am I Without U?
Billie Holiday
Cat And Mouse
Cat Attack
Come Back 2 Me
Everything But U
If U Let Me Undress U
Pickle (instrumental)
The Rock That Keeps Rolling

1989

R U There?

Spiritual World

[Edited 4/27/18 7:01am]

ive heard at least 2 :53 minutes of that...

[Edited 4/27/18 12:46pm]

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #43 posted 04/27/18 5:13pm

KoolEaze

avatar

Remember that Prince mentioned that there are several unreleased Revolution albums, and that Morris Hayes mentioned a couple of Purple Rain era songs that sounded really great to him. I´m sure that there are still many unreleased songs from the 80s unless both were exaggerating, which I doubt.

And then there´s probably hundreds of unreleased songs from the late 90s up until 2016.

" I´d rather be a stank ass hoe because I´m not stupid. Oh my goodness! I got more drugs! I´m always funny dude...I´m hilarious! Are we gonna smoke?"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #44 posted 04/27/18 6:03pm

bonatoc

avatar

At some point, we're going to have to let go the theory of one song a day...

I dunno, the OP's bitching about the greatest intimate musical journal in all pop history,
from which he has already ripped all the best pages.
Still he bitches. The man's dead! Still them orgers want new pages!

That's very little, if I may admit.
Be thankful for what you've got. Be hopeful for what you may get.
Hey, I can almost write fortune cookies!

I mean imagine finding a dozen of "Small Clubs" in the Vault.
You'll still be bitching about the missing thirteenth!

What they need to do is to start a proper live anthology.
We have great video concerts, but live records, even compilations,
say of the most outstanding performances for a given tour... They're long overdue.
We have fanstastic versions of stuff scattered across a bunch a well-known bootlegs "Shark Tank! San Jose!".

We're often speaking of pristine sound for studio recordings, but hey,
the First Avenue '87 "Strange Relationship", I'm pretty sure the best sounding version
is hidden somewhere in one of these boxes.

We need a live record where I'm not gonna skip tracks or make alternate track listings after a week.
"One Night Alone" was great, but it came unexplicably late in his career.
Thank God for the piano medley, though.

[Edited 4/27/18 18:03pm]

The Colors R brighter, the Bond is much tighter
No Child's a failure
Until the Blue Sailboat sails him away from his dreams
Don't Ever Lose, Don't Ever Lose
Don't Ever Lose Your Dreams
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #45 posted 04/27/18 6:09pm

Se7en

avatar

There were a few songs released/leaked just this past 12 months that I had never heard of.

Examples: on Purple Rain, I had never heard of Velvet Kitty Cat, Katrina's Paper Dolls or Love And Sex. On the same album, Father's Song and studio Electric Intercourse suprised me.

On a Christmas leak, I had never heard of If It'll Make U Happy and Don't Let Him Fool Ya.

I'm sure a LOT of people knew about this, but to me it was all a surprise!

If there are even a half dozen albums of unreleased material, I will be more than happy.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #46 posted 04/27/18 6:40pm

SquirrelMeat

avatar

The problem is, we've already been spoiled.

If you look at the Jackson or 2Pac releases, they scratch around for something to put out next (although I never understand why Jackson's 'If you don't love me' hasn't been released because it has 'hit' written all over it).

George Michael fans will be lucky to hear 15 unreleased songs, and Bowie fans not much more.

If we count all the known boots alone, Prince material will smash it. But inevitably, some will knock it, because it won't be the 'right version' or will not be the right choice of song.

Prince is probably the only artist to have a selection of 'hits' sitting unreleased, like 'Uh-Huh', 'I Wonder', 'Heaven', 'Open Book'. Tracks that acutally surpass some of the released material.

.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #47 posted 04/28/18 12:03am

Rebeljuice

SquirrelMeat said:

The problem is, we've already been spoiled.

If you look at the Jackson or 2Pac releases, they scratch around for something to put out next (although I never understand why Jackson's 'If you don't love me' hasn't been released because it has 'hit' written all over it).

George Michael fans will be lucky to hear 15 unreleased songs, and Bowie fans not much more.

If we count all the known boots alone, Prince material will smash it. But inevitably, some will knock it, because it won't be the 'right version' or will not be the right choice of song.

Prince is probably the only artist to have a selection of 'hits' sitting unreleased, like 'Uh-Huh', 'I Wonder', 'Heaven', 'Open Book'. Tracks that acutally surpass some of the released material.

Frank Zappa has the same sort of ridiculously sized unreleased catalogue. Perhaps not as big a fan base as Prince though. Prince still has a chance at commercial appeal if the estate play their cards right. Even if he doesn't his fan base will keep the pennies rolling in.

Incidently, if we think Prince's heirs and estate is a mess, take a look at Zappa's!

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #48 posted 04/28/18 12:44am

lemoncrush19

avatar


well ...



I made a little drawing of the main Vault so that people can grasp the amount of audio tapes that were in there. (And of course this was only the main vault, there were many mastertapes in other rooms in PP as well as tons of harddisks, potentially full of recordings!)

I did this because I see a lot of people saying things like "there really weren't that many unreleased songs as most of what we see from the photos are familiar titles". Well, WRONG.

What we can see clearly on the photos is just a fraction of the Vault, most of it is blurry so we can't identify the tapes. WE HAVE NOT SEEN THE VAST MAJORITY OF TAPES IN THE VAULT.

I went through all of the published photos and wrote down every single title on the tape boxes that I could read and so far there are 522 tapes listed with some song titles (and an additional 240 or so without titles) on the spreadsheet that I've published. (https://goo.gl/FPbxLj) Note that some of these tapes weren't even in the Vault but were found elsewhere in the building.

But to understand how much more the original Vault contained, have a look at the layout of the room. You can see each shelving unit. There are 68 units, each having 5 shelves, so that's 340 shelves in total.

These 340 shelves have the capacity to hold 4080 reels of 2" multitrack tapes, or roughly 10,000 reels of 1/2" tapes, or maybe around 13,000 reels of 1/4" tapes.
As the shelves contained a mixture of 2" analog multitracks, 1/2" digital multitracks, 1/2" analog mixdown and 1/4" analog mixdown tapes, and some shelves didn't have any tapes, I'm guessing that there could've been maybe 7-7500 tapes inside the Vault.

In addition to these 7-7500 tapes, I'm guessing (based on the photos we've seen) that there could've been perhaps another 500 or so audio tapes scattered in other rooms (there were some in the video vault, some on the floor in the trophy room and some on shelves in the garage storage area). And... in addition to these 8000 audio tapes there were boxes and boxes of hard drives, with only God knows how many original recordings.

Of course often there are several tape reels of the same song as first it had to be recorded on a multitrack, then that multitrack was mixed down to a stereo tape, and there are some safety copies as well. But often tapes contain more than one song (a 2500ft tape has a playing time of approx. 16 minutes at 30ips speed), so the bottom line is:

what we can see and identify from the photos is just the tip of the iceberg, ONLY ABOUT 6% OF THE TAPES – and we have absolutely no idea how much more stuff the hard drives contain!

So have a look at the Vault room layout: the green ovals show the shelves included in the photos. The smaller green ovals mean that we can only identify a small number of tapes on those shelves.



https://www.facebook.com/...378697142/

the only love there is is the love we make heart
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #49 posted 04/28/18 1:31am

jaypotton

I do wonder why now after two years the estate and/or Warners cannot provide a definitive statement as to what they actually have in the vault?

Yes I know it takes hundreds of hours (maybe thousands) to listen to and catalogue everything (what a job) as well as determine the quality of the tapes etc and whether they can be used still.

But surely some kind of statement could be provided by now?

I am assuming the vagueness of the announcement about the September release is possibly to protect it from having a bootleg version compiled in advance and stealing their thunder.
'I loved him then, I love him now and will love him eternally. He's with our son now.' Mayte 21st April 2016 = the saddest quote I have ever read! RIP Prince and thanks for everything.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #50 posted 04/28/18 2:29am

JorisE73

Feelgood said:

We have seen most of the unreleased titles of the '80's?

I don't think so, unless you can confirm that the titles below are widely circulating.............

Doc smile

1973

Do You Feel Like Dancing?

1975

39th St. Party
Machine
You Remind Me Of Me

1976

Aces
Diamond Eyes
Don't Forget
Don't Hold Back
Don't You Wanna Ride?

Fantasy
Grand Central
Hey Lover
Lady Pleasure
Nightingale
Since We've Been Together

Surprise
Whenever
You're Such A Fox

1977


Bump This
Darling Marie
- Funk
Fast Freddie (music only)
Hello, My Love
I Like What You're Doing
Life Is So Neat
Love In The Morning
Neurotic Lover's

Baby's Bedroom

Shine Your Light
Waiting For You
You Really Get To Me

1978


Do It Again
Gypsy
I Met A Virgin Queen
I'm Leaving L.A.
Love Affair
Love Of Mine
Rocking Chair
We Would Like To See You Again

1979


I Am You
The Loser (mistakenly referred to as Turn Me On)

Oh, Baby

1980


American Jam
Big Brass Bed
Bulgaria
Eros
Plastic Love Affair
When The Shit Comes Down

1981

Dancin' Flu

Dear Uncle George (evolved into Private Joy)

Delivery Boy
Everybody Dance
Friction

Gym Class Heart Attack

Hump You

Make U Mine

Mink Kitty Cat

Pizza

Poppa Grooves Rain
The Rain And You

Rearrange

See U Dead
Susan
There's Something I Like About Being Your Fool

Vagina

1982


Bold Generation
Colleen
Dance To The Beat
Fox Trap
Money Don't Grow On Trees

Moral Majority
My Baby Knows
U Should Be Mine

1983

Electrocution (instrumental)

I Am Five (instrumental)

Money
My Love Belongs To You

Promise To Be True

1984


Fish Fries (instrumental)

Small Grey Monkey

1985

Call Of The Wild
Evolsidog
God Is Everywhere
Living Doll
Mobile (instrumental)
My Sex
Polka-Dot Tiger (instrumental)

Run Amok (instrumental)
She Pony
Stella And Charles
Tibet (instrumental)
(U Got The) Good Drawers
U Just Can't Stop
Zebra With The Blonde Hair

1986


And That Says What? (instrumental)
Blanche
Boy U Bad
Frustration
Funny Love
Groove In C Minor (instrumental)
Groove In G Flat Minor (instrumental)
Love And Sex (different than the 1984 song of the same name)

Nine (instrumental) (totally different to the released Madhouse track)

Slow Groove In G Major (instrumental)
Susannah's Blues (instrumental)
Twosday
Up From Below (instrumental)
Walkin' In Glory
Y'All Want Some More?

1987

Beat Town
Bloody Mouth
Camille
Everything Could Be So Fine

Famous
I Believe I Love U
In A Winter Mood (instrumental)

Knucklehead
Latino Barbie Doll
No Changes
Rhythm Angel
Ruthie Washington Jet Blues

Stimulation
Take This Beat – (ev. inc. into I Wish U Heaven Pt 3)

What Did I Do?
XYZ

1988


A Man Called Jesus
Am I Without U?
Billie Holiday
Cat And Mouse
Cat Attack
Come Back 2 Me
Everything But U
If U Let Me Undress U
Pickle (instrumental)
The Rock That Keeps Rolling

1989

R U There?

Spiritual World

[Edited 4/27/18 7:01am]


Fast Freddy is wideley circulating because it was released in various forms: ONce as 'Fast Freddy The Roller Disco King' by the Imperials (on vinyl and later on CD on a Disco compilation) and than later as 'One Man Jam' on those 94 East releases with the Imperials overdubs replaced by other overdubs.

This version in the vault is probably the original recordings from Prince without the Imperials overdubs.
Some versions of some of the titles here are in widely circulation.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #51 posted 04/28/18 2:34am

JorisE73

lemoncrush19 said:


well ...



I made a little drawing of the main Vault so that people can grasp the amount of audio tapes that were in there. (And of course this was only the main vault, there were many mastertapes in other rooms in PP as well as tons of harddisks, potentially full of recordings!)

I did this because I see a lot of people saying things like "there really weren't that many unreleased songs as most of what we see from the photos are familiar titles". Well, WRONG.

What we can see clearly on the photos is just a fraction of the Vault, most of it is blurry so we can't identify the tapes. WE HAVE NOT SEEN THE VAST MAJORITY OF TAPES IN THE VAULT.

I went through all of the published photos and wrote down every single title on the tape boxes that I could read and so far there are 522 tapes listed with some song titles (and an additional 240 or so without titles) on the spreadsheet that I've published. ( https://goo.gl/FPbxLj) Note that some of these tapes weren't even in the Vault but were found elsewhere in the building.

But to understand how much more the original Vault contained, have a look at the layout of the room. You can see each shelving unit. There are 68 units, each having 5 shelves, so that's 340 shelves in total.

These 340 shelves have the capacity to hold 4080 reels of 2" multitrack tapes, or roughly 10,000 reels of 1/2" tapes, or maybe around 13,000 reels of 1/4" tapes.
As the shelves contained a mixture of 2" analog multitracks, 1/2" digital multitracks, 1/2" analog mixdown and 1/4" analog mixdown tapes, and some shelves didn't have any tapes, I'm guessing that there could've been maybe 7-7500 tapes inside the Vault.

In addition to these 7-7500 tapes, I'm guessing (based on the photos we've seen) that there could've been perhaps another 500 or so audio tapes scattered in other rooms (there were some in the video vault, some on the floor in the trophy room and some on shelves in the garage storage area). And... in addition to these 8000 audio tapes there were boxes and boxes of hard drives, with only God knows how many original recordings.

Of course often there are several tape reels of the same song as first it had to be recorded on a multitrack, then that multitrack was mixed down to a stereo tape, and there are some safety copies as well. But often tapes contain more than one song (a 2500ft tape has a playing time of approx. 16 minutes at 30ips speed), so the bottom line is:

what we can see and identify from the photos is just the tip of the iceberg, ONLY ABOUT 6% OF THE TAPES – and we have absolutely no idea how much more stuff the hard drives contain!

So have a look at the Vault room layout: the green ovals show the shelves included in the photos. The smaller green ovals mean that we can only identify a small number of tapes on those shelves.



https://www.facebook.com/...378697142/


wow thanks for this!

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #52 posted 04/28/18 4:32am

OperatingTheta
n

lemoncrush19 said:


well ...




I made a little drawing of the main Vault so that people can grasp the amount of audio tapes that were in there. (And of course this was only the main vault, there were many mastertapes in other rooms in PP as well as tons of harddisks, potentially full of recordings!)



I did this because I see a lot of people saying things like "there really weren't that many unreleased songs as most of what we see from the photos are familiar titles". Well, WRONG.


What we can see clearly on the photos is just a fraction of the Vault, most of it is blurry so we can't identify the tapes. WE HAVE NOT SEEN THE VAST MAJORITY OF TAPES IN THE VAULT.


I went through all of the published photos and wrote down every single title on the tape boxes that I could read and so far there are 522 tapes listed with some song titles (and an additional 240 or so without titles) on the spreadsheet that I've published. (https://goo.gl/FPbxLj) Note that some of these tapes weren't even in the Vault but were found elsewhere in the building.


But to understand how much more the original Vault contained, have a look at the layout of the room. You can see each shelving unit. There are 68 units, each having 5 shelves, so that's 340 shelves in total.


These 340 shelves have the capacity to hold 4080 reels of 2" multitrack tapes, or roughly 10,000 reels of 1/2" tapes, or maybe around 13,000 reels of 1/4" tapes.
As the shelves contained a mixture of 2" analog multitracks, 1/2" digital multitracks, 1/2" analog mixdown and 1/4" analog mixdown tapes, and some shelves didn't have any tapes, I'm guessing that there could've been maybe 7-7500 tapes inside the Vault.


In addition to these 7-7500 tapes, I'm guessing (based on the photos we've seen) that there could've been perhaps another 500 or so audio tapes scattered in other rooms (there were some in the video vault, some on the floor in the trophy room and some on shelves in the garage storage area). And... in addition to these 8000 audio tapes there were boxes and boxes of hard drives, with only God knows how many original recordings.


Of course often there are several tape reels of the same song as first it had to be recorded on a multitrack, then that multitrack was mixed down to a stereo tape, and there are some safety copies as well. But often tapes contain more than one song (a 2500ft tape has a playing time of approx. 16 minutes at 30ips speed), so the bottom line is:


what we can see and identify from the photos is just the tip of the iceberg, ONLY ABOUT 6% OF THE TAPES – and we have absolutely no idea how much more stuff the hard drives contain!


So have a look at the Vault room layout: the green ovals show the shelves included in the photos. The smaller green ovals mean that we can only identify a small number of tapes on those shelves.





https://www.facebook.com/...378697142/



Thank you. This post constitutes the conclusion to the entire debate for me.

As you state, we've only seen a mere fraction of what the vault contains on those photos. 94% of the vault is still unseen and unknown. Any comments to the contrary here are mere conjecture and as usual, pessimism, which this forum has an epidemic of.

*
[Edited 4/28/18 4:33am]
[Edited 4/28/18 4:35am]
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #53 posted 04/28/18 4:42am

IstenSzek

avatar

lemoncrush19 said:


well ...



I made a little drawing of the main Vault so that people can grasp the amount of audio tapes that were in there. (And of course this was only the main vault, there were many mastertapes in other rooms in PP as well as tons of harddisks, potentially full of recordings!)

I did this because I see a lot of people saying things like "there really weren't that many unreleased songs as most of what we see from the photos are familiar titles". Well, WRONG.

What we can see clearly on the photos is just a fraction of the Vault, most of it is blurry so we can't identify the tapes. WE HAVE NOT SEEN THE VAST MAJORITY OF TAPES IN THE VAULT.

I went through all of the published photos and wrote down every single title on the tape boxes that I could read and so far there are 522 tapes listed with some song titles (and an additional 240 or so without titles) on the spreadsheet that I've published. ( https://goo.gl/FPbxLj) Note that some of these tapes weren't even in the Vault but were found elsewhere in the building.

But to understand how much more the original Vault contained, have a look at the layout of the room. You can see each shelving unit. There are 68 units, each having 5 shelves, so that's 340 shelves in total.

These 340 shelves have the capacity to hold 4080 reels of 2" multitrack tapes, or roughly 10,000 reels of 1/2" tapes, or maybe around 13,000 reels of 1/4" tapes.
As the shelves contained a mixture of 2" analog multitracks, 1/2" digital multitracks, 1/2" analog mixdown and 1/4" analog mixdown tapes, and some shelves didn't have any tapes, I'm guessing that there could've been maybe 7-7500 tapes inside the Vault.

In addition to these 7-7500 tapes, I'm guessing (based on the photos we've seen) that there could've been perhaps another 500 or so audio tapes scattered in other rooms (there were some in the video vault, some on the floor in the trophy room and some on shelves in the garage storage area). And... in addition to these 8000 audio tapes there were boxes and boxes of hard drives, with only God knows how many original recordings.

Of course often there are several tape reels of the same song as first it had to be recorded on a multitrack, then that multitrack was mixed down to a stereo tape, and there are some safety copies as well. But often tapes contain more than one song (a 2500ft tape has a playing time of approx. 16 minutes at 30ips speed), so the bottom line is:

what we can see and identify from the photos is just the tip of the iceberg, ONLY ABOUT 6% OF THE TAPES – and we have absolutely no idea how much more stuff the hard drives contain!

So have a look at the Vault room layout: the green ovals show the shelves included in the photos. The smaller green ovals mean that we can only identify a small number of tapes on those shelves.



https://www.facebook.com/...378697142/



thumbs up! thanks!

and true love lives on lollipops and crisps
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #54 posted 04/28/18 5:05am

scorp84

I don’t take those few pics as any confirmation that the volume of 30+ years of unreleased work was grossly overestimated. We’re talking about a musician that’s clocked a lot of hours in studios across the world. While there may be logs detailing many of his sessions at certain studios, it’s been said that many physical copies of tapes weren’t always labeled correctly, if at all, and there’s still much work to be done with inventories. I’m not banking on hearing every single recording from those vaults in my lifetime lol
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #55 posted 04/28/18 5:16am

PURPLEIZED3121

lemoncrush19 said:


well ...



I made a little drawing of the main Vault so that people can grasp the amount of audio tapes that were in there. (And of course this was only the main vault, there were many mastertapes in other rooms in PP as well as tons of harddisks, potentially full of recordings!)

I did this because I see a lot of people saying things like "there really weren't that many unreleased songs as most of what we see from the photos are familiar titles". Well, WRONG.

What we can see clearly on the photos is just a fraction of the Vault, most of it is blurry so we can't identify the tapes. WE HAVE NOT SEEN THE VAST MAJORITY OF TAPES IN THE VAULT.

I went through all of the published photos and wrote down every single title on the tape boxes that I could read and so far there are 522 tapes listed with some song titles (and an additional 240 or so without titles) on the spreadsheet that I've published. ( https://goo.gl/FPbxLj) Note that some of these tapes weren't even in the Vault but were found elsewhere in the building.

But to understand how much more the original Vault contained, have a look at the layout of the room. You can see each shelving unit. There are 68 units, each having 5 shelves, so that's 340 shelves in total.

These 340 shelves have the capacity to hold 4080 reels of 2" multitrack tapes, or roughly 10,000 reels of 1/2" tapes, or maybe around 13,000 reels of 1/4" tapes.
As the shelves contained a mixture of 2" analog multitracks, 1/2" digital multitracks, 1/2" analog mixdown and 1/4" analog mixdown tapes, and some shelves didn't have any tapes, I'm guessing that there could've been maybe 7-7500 tapes inside the Vault.

In addition to these 7-7500 tapes, I'm guessing (based on the photos we've seen) that there could've been perhaps another 500 or so audio tapes scattered in other rooms (there were some in the video vault, some on the floor in the trophy room and some on shelves in the garage storage area). And... in addition to these 8000 audio tapes there were boxes and boxes of hard drives, with only God knows how many original recordings.

Of course often there are several tape reels of the same song as first it had to be recorded on a multitrack, then that multitrack was mixed down to a stereo tape, and there are some safety copies as well. But often tapes contain more than one song (a 2500ft tape has a playing time of approx. 16 minutes at 30ips speed), so the bottom line is:

what we can see and identify from the photos is just the tip of the iceberg, ONLY ABOUT 6% OF THE TAPES – and we have absolutely no idea how much more stuff the hard drives contain!

So have a look at the Vault room layout: the green ovals show the shelves included in the photos. The smaller green ovals mean that we can only identify a small number of tapes on those shelves.



https://www.facebook.com/...378697142/

wowzers that's incredible.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #56 posted 04/28/18 6:46am

OnlyNDaUsa

avatar

lemoncrush19 said:


well ...

31351487_1659899890713213_1621676666243776512_o.jpg?_nc_cat=0&oh=60e7c765f4e00db65d8b8fc675629b47&oe=5B622316

I made a little drawing of the main Vault so that people can grasp the amount of audio tapes that were in there. (And of course this was only the main vault, there were many mastertapes in other rooms in PP as well as tons of harddisks, potentially full of recordings!)

I did this because I see a lot of people saying things like "there really weren't that many unreleased songs as most of what we see from the photos are familiar titles". Well, WRONG.

What we can see clearly on the photos is just a fraction of the Vault, most of it is blurry so we can't identify the tapes. WE HAVE NOT SEEN THE VAST MAJORITY OF TAPES IN THE VAULT.

I went through all of the published photos and wrote down every single title on the tape boxes that I could read and so far there are 522 tapes listed with some song titles (and an additional 240 or so without titles) on the spreadsheet that I've published. ( https://goo.gl/FPbxLj) Note that some of these tapes weren't even in the Vault but were found elsewhere in the building.

But to understand how much more the original Vault contained, have a look at the layout of the room. You can see each shelving unit. There are 68 units, each having 5 shelves, so that's 340 shelves in total.

These 340 shelves have the capacity to hold 4080 reels of 2" multitrack tapes, or roughly 10,000 reels of 1/2" tapes, or maybe around 13,000 reels of 1/4" tapes.
As the shelves contained a mixture of 2" analog multitracks, 1/2" digital multitracks, 1/2" analog mixdown and 1/4" analog mixdown tapes, and some shelves didn't have any tapes, I'm guessing that there could've been maybe 7-7500 tapes inside the Vault.

In addition to these 7-7500 tapes, I'm guessing (based on the photos we've seen) that there could've been perhaps another 500 or so audio tapes scattered in other rooms (there were some in the video vault, some on the floor in the trophy room and some on shelves in the garage storage area). And... in addition to these 8000 audio tapes there were boxes and boxes of hard drives, with only God knows how many original recordings.

Of course often there are several tape reels of the same song as first it had to be recorded on a multitrack, then that multitrack was mixed down to a stereo tape, and there are some safety copies as well. But often tapes contain more than one song (a 2500ft tape has a playing time of approx. 16 minutes at 30ips speed), so the bottom line is:

what we can see and identify from the photos is just the tip of the iceberg, ONLY ABOUT 6% OF THE TAPES – and we have absolutely no idea how much more stuff the hard drives contain!

So have a look at the Vault room layout: the green ovals show the shelves included in the photos. The smaller green ovals mean that we can only identify a small number of tapes on those shelves.



https://www.facebook.com/...378697142/

thanks! I said early on that someone needed to map out the vault...and compare that to what was photographed. I guess I just assumed (oops) that the photos were either comprehensive or at least representative.

Even if we say 30 years of only a song a week that is over 1500 songs... and that place is packed.

But thank you... i feel better about this... and I so far they say there are no major issues with the tapes!


EDIT:


http://prince.org/msg/7/453739

Reply #385 posted 04/19/18 4:17pm

OnlyNDaUsa¤

43774.ava

onnow.gif

so there are dozens of photos of vault tapes! someone needs to try to map it out and catalog what they all say

Anyone for banning the AR15 must be on the side of the criminal as once banned only criminals will have them.

[Edited 4/28/18 6:53am]

"Keep on shilling for Big Pharm!"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #57 posted 04/28/18 7:21am

databank

avatar

lemoncrush19 said:


well ...



I made a little drawing of the main Vault so that people can grasp the amount of audio tapes that were in there. (And of course this was only the main vault, there were many mastertapes in other rooms in PP as well as tons of harddisks, potentially full of recordings!)

I did this because I see a lot of people saying things like "there really weren't that many unreleased songs as most of what we see from the photos are familiar titles". Well, WRONG.

What we can see clearly on the photos is just a fraction of the Vault, most of it is blurry so we can't identify the tapes. WE HAVE NOT SEEN THE VAST MAJORITY OF TAPES IN THE VAULT.

I went through all of the published photos and wrote down every single title on the tape boxes that I could read and so far there are 522 tapes listed with some song titles (and an additional 240 or so without titles) on the spreadsheet that I've published. ( https://goo.gl/FPbxLj) Note that some of these tapes weren't even in the Vault but were found elsewhere in the building.

But to understand how much more the original Vault contained, have a look at the layout of the room. You can see each shelving unit. There are 68 units, each having 5 shelves, so that's 340 shelves in total.

These 340 shelves have the capacity to hold 4080 reels of 2" multitrack tapes, or roughly 10,000 reels of 1/2" tapes, or maybe around 13,000 reels of 1/4" tapes.
As the shelves contained a mixture of 2" analog multitracks, 1/2" digital multitracks, 1/2" analog mixdown and 1/4" analog mixdown tapes, and some shelves didn't have any tapes, I'm guessing that there could've been maybe 7-7500 tapes inside the Vault.

In addition to these 7-7500 tapes, I'm guessing (based on the photos we've seen) that there could've been perhaps another 500 or so audio tapes scattered in other rooms (there were some in the video vault, some on the floor in the trophy room and some on shelves in the garage storage area). And... in addition to these 8000 audio tapes there were boxes and boxes of hard drives, with only God knows how many original recordings.

Of course often there are several tape reels of the same song as first it had to be recorded on a multitrack, then that multitrack was mixed down to a stereo tape, and there are some safety copies as well. But often tapes contain more than one song (a 2500ft tape has a playing time of approx. 16 minutes at 30ips speed), so the bottom line is:

what we can see and identify from the photos is just the tip of the iceberg, ONLY ABOUT 6% OF THE TAPES – and we have absolutely no idea how much more stuff the hard drives contain!

So have a look at the Vault room layout: the green ovals show the shelves included in the photos. The smaller green ovals mean that we can only identify a small number of tapes on those shelves.



https://www.facebook.com/...378697142/

clapping

Thank you so much for your hard work!!

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #58 posted 04/28/18 1:45pm

PeteSilas

honestly, even if there were 0 songs, he still gave us more than 99 percent of rock musicians with the official releases.

OnlyNDaUsa said:

lemoncrush19 said:


well ...

31351487_1659899890713213_1621676666243776512_o.jpg?_nc_cat=0&oh=60e7c765f4e00db65d8b8fc675629b47&oe=5B622316

I made a little drawing of the main Vault so that people can grasp the amount of audio tapes that were in there. (And of course this was only the main vault, there were many mastertapes in other rooms in PP as well as tons of harddisks, potentially full of recordings!)

I did this because I see a lot of people saying things like "there really weren't that many unreleased songs as most of what we see from the photos are familiar titles". Well, WRONG.

What we can see clearly on the photos is just a fraction of the Vault, most of it is blurry so we can't identify the tapes. WE HAVE NOT SEEN THE VAST MAJORITY OF TAPES IN THE VAULT.

I went through all of the published photos and wrote down every single title on the tape boxes that I could read and so far there are 522 tapes listed with some song titles (and an additional 240 or so without titles) on the spreadsheet that I've published. ( https://goo.gl/FPbxLj) Note that some of these tapes weren't even in the Vault but were found elsewhere in the building.

But to understand how much more the original Vault contained, have a look at the layout of the room. You can see each shelving unit. There are 68 units, each having 5 shelves, so that's 340 shelves in total.

These 340 shelves have the capacity to hold 4080 reels of 2" multitrack tapes, or roughly 10,000 reels of 1/2" tapes, or maybe around 13,000 reels of 1/4" tapes.
As the shelves contained a mixture of 2" analog multitracks, 1/2" digital multitracks, 1/2" analog mixdown and 1/4" analog mixdown tapes, and some shelves didn't have any tapes, I'm guessing that there could've been maybe 7-7500 tapes inside the Vault.

In addition to these 7-7500 tapes, I'm guessing (based on the photos we've seen) that there could've been perhaps another 500 or so audio tapes scattered in other rooms (there were some in the video vault, some on the floor in the trophy room and some on shelves in the garage storage area). And... in addition to these 8000 audio tapes there were boxes and boxes of hard drives, with only God knows how many original recordings.

Of course often there are several tape reels of the same song as first it had to be recorded on a multitrack, then that multitrack was mixed down to a stereo tape, and there are some safety copies as well. But often tapes contain more than one song (a 2500ft tape has a playing time of approx. 16 minutes at 30ips speed), so the bottom line is:

what we can see and identify from the photos is just the tip of the iceberg, ONLY ABOUT 6% OF THE TAPES – and we have absolutely no idea how much more stuff the hard drives contain!

So have a look at the Vault room layout: the green ovals show the shelves included in the photos. The smaller green ovals mean that we can only identify a small number of tapes on those shelves.



https://www.facebook.com/...378697142/

thanks! I said early on that someone needed to map out the vault...and compare that to what was photographed. I guess I just assumed (oops) that the photos were either comprehensive or at least representative.

Even if we say 30 years of only a song a week that is over 1500 songs... and that place is packed.

But thank you... i feel better about this... and I so far they say there are no major issues with the tapes!


EDIT:


http://prince.org/msg/7/453739

Reply #385 posted 04/19/18 4:17pm

OnlyNDaUsa¤

43774.ava

onnow.gif

so there are dozens of photos of vault tapes! someone needs to try to map it out and catalog what they all say

Anyone for banning the AR15 must be on the side of the criminal as once banned only criminals will have them.

[Edited 4/28/18 6:53am]

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #59 posted 04/29/18 1:56am

bonatoc

avatar

The Colors R brighter, the Bond is much tighter
No Child's a failure
Until the Blue Sailboat sails him away from his dreams
Don't Ever Lose, Don't Ever Lose
Don't Ever Lose Your Dreams
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Page 2 of 3 <123>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Forums > Prince: Music and More > Admit it...The Vault photos confirm there's very little 'new' unreleased material out there...