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Thread started 12/18/18 2:47am

yello1

Song composed by Prince and Valerie Carter in a new compilation


It's called "I Got Over It" and it appears in the new compilation "The Lost Tapes" by Valerie Carter ...

Thanks once more to PrinceVault.com for the information:


http://princevault.com/in...ot_Over_It


https://www.youtube.com/w...Y5U8w4WYYE


(Thread title amended for accuracy - l'ange bleu moderator)

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Reply #1 posted 12/18/18 3:26am

IstenSzek

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nice to hear such an early collaboration cool

and true love lives on lollipops and crisps
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Reply #2 posted 12/18/18 4:03am

iZsaZsa

avatar

Have this on repeat. music

What?
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Reply #3 posted 12/18/18 4:58am

paulludvig

Does Prince play piano on the track?
The wooh is on the one!
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Reply #4 posted 12/18/18 5:52am

PURPLEIZED3121

fairly non-descript BUT always nice to have something new.

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Reply #5 posted 12/18/18 6:32am

iZsaZsa

avatar

PURPLEIZED3121 said:

fairly non-descript BUT always nice to have something new.


Someone asked, if you had to choose between listening to your one favorite song with Prince, always and forever, only, or, every song with Prince, one time and done, which would you choose. I would choose the latter.

What?
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Reply #6 posted 12/18/18 12:17pm

Dandroppedadim
e

Did this man ever stop writing and recording?! Sounds like a Prince composition from the era, I imagine Prince did the ‘demo’ and her musicians re-recorded it. But I’m only guessing, so don’t hate me cuz I’m beautiful!
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Reply #7 posted 12/18/18 3:44pm

2freaky4church
1

avatar

I doubt he wrote this.

All you others say Hell Yea!! woot!
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Reply #8 posted 12/18/18 4:29pm

paulludvig

2freaky4church1 said:

I doubt he wrote this.



Why?
The wooh is on the one!
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Reply #9 posted 12/18/18 7:13pm

pinkcashmere23

Nice! Thanks for sharing

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Reply #10 posted 12/18/18 9:10pm

EddieC

Sounds about right to me--it's not a great song, but it sounds like a Prince one from around then.

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Reply #11 posted 12/19/18 2:15am

yello1

En respuesta a

Prince and Val were both managed by Bob Cavallo and became friends and started writing and working together. They did several songs. Steve Lukather talks about one of the Prince sessions in his new book which is great BTW!

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Reply #12 posted 12/19/18 2:28am

jaawwnn

I like it, sounds like a lot of his late 70's stuff, even the intonation of her singing, whether that's a Prince thing, a 70's thing or a bit of both. Wish it was a big longer though, sounds like there could be a few more minutes in there.

[Edited 12/19/18 2:29am]

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Reply #13 posted 12/19/18 2:32am

darkroman

Very sweet indeed.

She has a lovely voice.

It sounds like something that could have been on For You.

Very '70s.

wink

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Reply #14 posted 12/19/18 6:13am

iZsaZsa

avatar

yello1 said:

En respuesta a

Prince and Val were both managed by Bob Cavallo and became friends and started writing and working together. They did several songs. Steve Lukather talks about one of the Prince sessions in his new book which is great BTW!


drool

What?
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Reply #15 posted 12/19/18 8:48am

jjam

iZsaZsa said:



yello1 said:






En respuesta a


Prince and Val were both managed by Bob Cavallo and became friends and started writing and working together. They did several songs. Steve Lukather talks about one of the Prince sessions in his new book which is great BTW!





drool


There's a reply to a similar topic in a Valerie Carter official group where it states that Valerie and Prince worked together on a project with Prince singing and playing. They're trying to get clearance to release these tracks.
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Reply #16 posted 12/19/18 10:12am

yello1

jjam said:

iZsaZsa said:


drool

There's a reply to a similar topic in a Valerie Carter official group where it states that Valerie and Prince worked together on a project with Prince singing and playing. They're trying to get clearance to release these tracks.

Waaaaa...Has anyone read the memories of Steve Lukather?


Prince Estate: (...if you read this) ...one more time

We want to know everything he recorded.

Thank you.

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Reply #17 posted 12/19/18 10:49am

Wolfie87

Please enlighten me, what is she famous for and what is her musical impact? Wikipedia didn't give me enough answers.
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Reply #18 posted 12/19/18 11:34am

pinkcashmere23

Wolfie87 said:

Please enlighten me, what is she famous for and what is her musical impact? Wikipedia didn't give me enough answers.

I was not familiar with her either. I listened to her cover of EWF's "That's The Way Of The World" that played after and saw that it listed Maurice White and Phoebe Snow as singing on it as well. They said that it was from Valerie's 1996 album 'The Way It Is' I really like her voice.

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Reply #19 posted 12/19/18 11:41am

luv2tha99s

avatar

Nice song. No one mentioned the rain in the beginning lol.
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Reply #20 posted 12/19/18 11:55am

Latin

Here is Valerie's version of Prince's "Crazy You":

https://m.youtube.com/wat...1q1yhptQ0k
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Reply #21 posted 12/19/18 12:23pm

pinkcashmere23

Latin said:

Here is Valerie's version of Prince's "Crazy You": https://m.youtube.com/wat...1q1yhptQ0k

Nice version. Thanks Latin!

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Reply #22 posted 12/19/18 3:54pm

BartVanHemelen

avatar

From Steve Lukather's book:

.

Like Carlton, Graydon and Ritenour, James was in the process of breaking out from session work and, in his case, into producing. He had just then landed a gig producing a record, Wild Child, for a singer-songwriter named Valerie Carter, and brought me along to play on it. I had dug Valerie back in high school and from her first solo album, which Lowell George of Little Feat fame produced. Wild Child turned out to be a wonderful record to make. The songs were great. It was done at one of my favourite studios, Sunset Sound, and that was when I started to feel as if I had been welcomed into the A-list of guys. James had me write a tune with him for the record, too, called 'Lady in the Dark'. Other than me, he also called in Jeff on drums, David Hungate on bass, and an unbelievable jazz pianist and percussionist, Victor Feldman, who was twenty years older than the rest of us and was another to have worked on Steely's stuff.

.

James had an enigmatic assistant on the record, this little black dude from Minnesota who was supposed to be the new wunderkind. This guy was meant to be there in a co-producer capacity, but didn't actually speak. I would be doing a guitar overdub and his head would just appear over the top of the console. He would stare at me for a few seconds and slowly disappear from view again. It was really fucking weird. He didn't once even acknowledge me, never mind introduce himself. I only found out later that this cat was Prince.

.

Four years later, the two of us would both be back at Sunset Sound. I was doing a session for Greg Mathieson and Prince was working in an adjoining room with his band. I would see him outside the complex at ten in the morning, sat astride a purple motorbike and wearing a silver lame suit. I would smile and nod my head to him, but the most that I ever got out of him in return was a raised eyebrow. He was one very strange, talented cat.

.

There si another reference to Prince in his book which seems to relate to Prince playing keyboards on Stevie Nicks's "Stand Back", but that page wasn't available in Google Books for me.

© Bart Van Hemelen
This posting is provided AS IS with no warranties, and confers no rights.
It is not authorized by Prince or the NPG Music Club. You assume all risk for
your use. All rights reserved.
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Reply #23 posted 12/19/18 5:27pm

PennyPurple

avatar

biggrin I can just see Prince doing that. Cool story.

BartVanHemelen said:

From Steve Lukather's book:

.

Like Carlton, Graydon and Ritenour, James was in the process of breaking out from session work and, in his case, into producing. He had just then landed a gig producing a record, Wild Child, for a singer-songwriter named Valerie Carter, and brought me along to play on it. I had dug Valerie back in high school and from her first solo album, which Lowell George of Little Feat fame produced. Wild Child turned out to be a wonderful record to make. The songs were great. It was done at one of my favourite studios, Sunset Sound, and that was when I started to feel as if I had been welcomed into the A-list of guys. James had me write a tune with him for the record, too, called 'Lady in the Dark'. Other than me, he also called in Jeff on drums, David Hungate on bass, and an unbelievable jazz pianist and percussionist, Victor Feldman, who was twenty years older than the rest of us and was another to have worked on Steely's stuff.

.

James had an enigmatic assistant on the record, this little black dude from Minnesota who was supposed to be the new wunderkind. This guy was meant to be there in a co-producer capacity, but didn't actually speak. I would be doing a guitar overdub and his head would just appear over the top of the console. He would stare at me for a few seconds and slowly disappear from view again. It was really fucking weird. He didn't once even acknowledge me, never mind introduce himself. I only found out later that this cat was Prince.

.

Four years later, the two of us would both be back at Sunset Sound. I was doing a session for Greg Mathieson and Prince was working in an adjoining room with his band. I would see him outside the complex at ten in the morning, sat astride a purple motorbike and wearing a silver lame suit. I would smile and nod my head to him, but the most that I ever got out of him in return was a raised eyebrow. He was one very strange, talented cat.

.

There si another reference to Prince in his book which seems to relate to Prince playing keyboards on Stevie Nicks's "Stand Back", but that page wasn't available in Google Books for me.

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Reply #24 posted 12/21/18 1:11am

BartVanHemelen

avatar

A brand new Prince song emerges and details about his pre-fame involvement with another artist, and this isn't a sticky or front-page material? And the thread basically dies after a handful of posts?

.

Seriously?

© Bart Van Hemelen
This posting is provided AS IS with no warranties, and confers no rights.
It is not authorized by Prince or the NPG Music Club. You assume all risk for
your use. All rights reserved.
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Reply #25 posted 12/21/18 4:51am

EddieC

BartVanHemelen said:

A brand new Prince song emerges and details about his pre-fame involvement with another artist, and this isn't a sticky or front-page material? And the thread basically dies after a handful of posts?

.

Seriously?

It is strange. At first I thought, "Well, maybe none of the mods have noticed the thread"--but nope, l'ange bleu amended the thread title, so at least one mod knows about the thread. This certainly seems like news-worthy news to me.

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Reply #26 posted 12/21/18 8:10am

Neversin

avatar

yello1 said:


It's called "I Got Over It" and it appears in the new compilation "The Lost Tapes" by Valerie Carter ...

Thanks once more to PrinceVault.com for the information:


http://princevault.com/in...ot_Over_It


https://www.youtube.com/w...Y5U8w4WYYE


(Thread title amended for accuracy - l'ange bleu moderator)


Why the fuck isn't this on the front page?!
This is genuine "News", mods... Fucking hell...

Neversin.

O(+>NIИ<+)O

“Is man merely a mistake of God's? Or God merely a mistake of man's?”

- Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche
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Reply #27 posted 12/21/18 8:13am

pinkcashmere23

BartVanHemelen said:

From Steve Lukather's book:

.

Like Carlton, Graydon and Ritenour, James was in the process of breaking out from session work and, in his case, into producing. He had just then landed a gig producing a record, Wild Child, for a singer-songwriter named Valerie Carter, and brought me along to play on it. I had dug Valerie back in high school and from her first solo album, which Lowell George of Little Feat fame produced. Wild Child turned out to be a wonderful record to make. The songs were great. It was done at one of my favourite studios, Sunset Sound, and that was when I started to feel as if I had been welcomed into the A-list of guys. James had me write a tune with him for the record, too, called 'Lady in the Dark'. Other than me, he also called in Jeff on drums, David Hungate on bass, and an unbelievable jazz pianist and percussionist, Victor Feldman, who was twenty years older than the rest of us and was another to have worked on Steely's stuff.

.

James had an enigmatic assistant on the record, this little black dude from Minnesota who was supposed to be the new wunderkind. This guy was meant to be there in a co-producer capacity, but didn't actually speak. I would be doing a guitar overdub and his head would just appear over the top of the console. He would stare at me for a few seconds and slowly disappear from view again. It was really fucking weird. He didn't once even acknowledge me, never mind introduce himself. I only found out later that this cat was Prince.

.

Four years later, the two of us would both be back at Sunset Sound. I was doing a session for Greg Mathieson and Prince was working in an adjoining room with his band. I would see him outside the complex at ten in the morning, sat astride a purple motorbike and wearing a silver lame suit. I would smile and nod my head to him, but the most that I ever got out of him in return was a raised eyebrow. He was one very strange, talented cat.

.

There si another reference to Prince in his book which seems to relate to Prince playing keyboards on Stevie Nicks's "Stand Back", but that page wasn't available in Google Books for me.

Interesting! Thanks for sharing

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Reply #28 posted 12/21/18 12:42pm

Latin

BartVanHemelen said:

A brand new Prince song emerges and details about his pre-fame involvement with another artist, and this isn't a sticky or front-page material? And the thread basically dies after a handful of posts?


.


Seriously?


yeahthat
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Reply #29 posted 12/22/18 7:25am

Graycap23

avatar

Awful..........Prince was no where near this track.

I can see why it was lost.

FOOLS multiply when WISE Men & Women are silent.
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