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Thread started 04/21/04 5:07am

EROTICCITYNPG

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U Still Got It, Prince

http://www.washingtonpost...Apr20.html


Recordings
U Still Got It, Prince
The Purple One's Back, More Vibrant Than He's Been in Years With 'Musicology'
By David Segal
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, April 21, 2004; Page C01


It seems strange to call "Musicology" a comeback album, since Prince never really left and he never stopped recording. But unless you're a hard-core fan, you probably didn't know that last year he released a four-song album of jazz instrumentals ("N.E.W.S."), and a 36-track live album the year before that ("One Nite Alone . . . Live!"). And you might have missed the parable-saddled "Rainbow Children," a 2001 collection that told a convoluted religious tale with 14 songs.



You didn't know about any of this because in the early '00s, Prince ditched the mainstream pop market and sold his work almost entirely through his Web site, NPGMusicClub.com. It was his final kiss-off to the major-label system he'd been trying to escape for years, and it followed a tumultuous -- and artistically uneven -- period in the late 1990s when Prince battled and ultimately left Warner Bros. The Internet-only approach that he adopted in 2001 added to the sense that the artist formerly known as a symbol was retreating further into his own eccentricities. You had to come to Prince if you wanted his music, and his music usually wasn't worth the trip.

So "Musicology" feels like a comeback even if it isn't. Having struck a deal with Columbia Records and now touring arenas around the country, Prince wants to reclaim the front-and-center spot on the pop-soul stage that he owned for more than a decade. On the basis of "Musicology," it's his -- and he doesn't even have to ask nice.

This is a warm, snappy and sweetly nostalgic album that parties with dignity and croons with heartfelt emotion. "Musicology," as befits its academic-sounding title, is loaded with history and filled with a semester's worth of styles -- funk, jazz, neo-soul, old-school jams and a bit of hip-hop. Class is in and Prof. Prince is demonstrating how an X-rated lover boy and recent Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee can age with grace.

Lesson 1: Drop the X-rating. During the prime years of his reign, Prince pushed music to its pornographic outer limits and he was scandalizing the masses before Janet Jackson owned a training bra. Yet there was a mystique about the guy, no matter how much of himself he exposed. It was largely a matter of raw talent; his relentless output, his effortless blend of rock and psychedelic soul, his insistence on playing every instrument on many of his albums -- all of it screamed of his singular gifts. For his millions of fans, the raunch was just a bonus.

"Musicology" is hardly prim, but it's nearly family-friendly compared with the man's sauciest output. One theme is the joy of a faithful marriage. So here's Prince -- who plays nearly all the instruments on every cut -- pining for his woman an hour after she's left him ("A Million Days"), and deep in falsetto love on a couple of slow ballads (most memorably "Call My Name"). And there's chastity here, albeit reluctant chastity. The narrator of "On the Couch" winds up on the sofa when he can't talk his girlfriend into a premarital frolic. For 51/2 minutes, over some stately, Ray Charles-inspired piano, he begs her to surrender; it's unclear if he succeeds.

When some nightclub harlot comes on to him after a show on "What Do U Want Me 2 Do?" he croons a sultry tsk-tsk and announces that he's taken. He sounds tempted on "The Marrying Kind" when he assumes the persona of a single guy and warns a friend to treat his woman right. Otherwise, "She's gonna find out what I like in my eggs." You see, even when he contemplates infidelity Prince sounds domesticated these days.

But he isn't a homebody, either. "Life 'O' the Party" is a classic dance floor grind, with a Parliament Funkadelic bottom and lyrics that suggest that Prince -- who is now a Jehovah's Witness -- isn't giving up on good times. He even takes a moment to ridicule detractors, then takes a little swipe at Michael Jackson: "My voice is getting high / And I ain't never had my nose done." The title track channels James Brown, with some Godfather of Funk yelps and calls to the many heroes who will be referenced throughout the album, including Brown, Sly and the Family Stone, and Run-DMC. (Brown's longtime sax player Maceo Parker appears on several tracks.)

"Musicology" sags toward the end, when it gets political with "Dear Mr. Man" and then meanders to a conclusion with the listless "Reflection." But for anyone who worried that we'd lost Prince for good, this album isn't just entertaining. It's a relief. Once self-exiled to the hinterlands, he isn't through with fame, or us, quite yet.

Join David Segal tomorrow for a live online chat at noon at washingtonpost.com
Erotic City Come Alive...!!!

http://groups.yahoo.com/g...icCityNPG/
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Reply #1 posted 04/21/04 4:33pm

Kissmequick

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Prince pushed music to its pornographic outer limits and he was scandalizing the masses before Janet Jackson owned a training bra.

Now that's funny! lol

Great review, thanks for the post! woot!
pray God bless everyone. NO exceptions. pray
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Reply #2 posted 04/21/04 7:52pm

Starmist7

GREAT!
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Reply #3 posted 04/21/04 8:05pm

Zelaira

And any Record Company Don't Realize that Prince is the Best Talent and try to Push him Underneath is Sh*% and should Drop Dead! He shoulda been doing this Great ALWAYS and doing MAJOR STADIUMS and GETTING all THESE AWARDS. And Really,he NEVER needed to Change and it was Just ya Didn't UNDERSTAND HIM or EVEN CARE ENOUGH BOUT HIm... Now Ya are Waking Up... He's Tremendous as a Performer and his Band is The Best Ever. This is Such an exciting time for him and the Fans who Love him. Sorry Prince But You are My IDOl. My Hero and Nothing is Ever Gonna Change that. Please just let it be and please just realize I hope God tells him that it's a good thing. It's a Good thing to Have People who really Dig Ya. It Truly is. So I hope he actually get's Comfortable with this fact and he doesn't Freak on it too much. It shouldn't as he has Been such a Positive Force for us when we were Down and he made us Happy with his songs and movies and we just loved everything Quirky he did;well at least I did. I always defended him and always kinda Got what he meant by things. I was always Uplifted and he never made me depressed. It was Always a Positive thing. So I gotta really put him up there in a SPECIAL PLACE. It's Been so Significant and SUCH A JOY. He's Great...
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Reply #4 posted 04/21/04 9:11pm

Mynameisspmarc

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Kissmequick said:

Prince pushed music to its pornographic outer limits and he was scandalizing the masses before Janet Jackson owned a training bra.

Now that's funny! lol

Great review, thanks for the post! woot!


Not being a woman, how does a training bra work? Aren't genetics responsible for Janet's breastes? err headlp
Jeux Sans Frontiers
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Reply #5 posted 04/21/04 9:29pm

daPrettyman

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Mynameisspmarc said:

Kissmequick said:

Prince pushed music to its pornographic outer limits and he was scandalizing the masses before Janet Jackson owned a training bra.

Now that's funny! lol

Great review, thanks for the post! woot!


Not being a woman, how does a training bra work? Aren't genetics responsible for Janet's breastes? err headlp

Yeah, along with some help from her plastic surgeon. cool
**--••--**--••**--••--**--••**--••--**--••**--••-
U 'gon make me shake my doo loose!
http://www.twitter.com/nivlekbrad
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Reply #6 posted 04/22/04 2:18am

Krid

Zelaira said:

And any Record Company Don't Realize that Prince is the Best Talent and try to Push him Underneath is Sh*% and should Drop Dead! He shoulda been doing this Great ALWAYS and doing MAJOR STADIUMS and GETTING all THESE AWARDS. And Really,he NEVER needed to Change and it was Just ya Didn't UNDERSTAND HIM or EVEN CARE ENOUGH BOUT HIm... Now Ya are Waking Up... He's Tremendous as a Performer and his Band is The Best Ever. This is Such an exciting time for him and the Fans who Love him. Sorry Prince But You are My IDOl. My Hero and Nothing is Ever Gonna Change that. Please just let it be and please just realize I hope God tells him that it's a good thing. It's a Good thing to Have People who really Dig Ya. It Truly is. So I hope he actually get's Comfortable with this fact and he doesn't Freak on it too much. It shouldn't as he has Been such a Positive Force for us when we were Down and he made us Happy with his songs and movies and we just loved everything Quirky he did;well at least I did. I always defended him and always kinda Got what he meant by things. I was always Uplifted and he never made me depressed. It was Always a Positive thing. So I gotta really put him up there in a SPECIAL PLACE. It's Been so Significant and SUCH A JOY. He's Great...


So, in other words, you like him a bit lol
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Reply #7 posted 04/22/04 5:49am

Giovanni777

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"During the prime years of his reign, Prince pushed music to its pornographic outer limits and he was scandalizing the masses before Janet Jackson owned a training bra. Yet there was a mystique about the guy, no matter how much of himself he exposed. It was largely a matter of raw talent; his relentless output, his effortless blend of rock and psychedelic soul, his insistence on playing every instrument on many of his albums -- all of it screamed of his singular gifts. For his millions of fans, the raunch was just a bonus."

I just love this quote, especially the bold part.

So much love 4 P in my old stompin' ground (D.C.)

Peace.

Giovanni.
"He's a musician's musician..."
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Reply #8 posted 04/22/04 6:13am

Kissmequick

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daPrettyman said:

Mynameisspmarc said:



Not being a woman, how does a training bra work? Aren't genetics responsible for Janet's breastes? err headlp

Yeah, along with some help from her plastic surgeon. cool



lol well she has the receipt so that would make them hers.....
pray God bless everyone. NO exceptions. pray
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Reply #9 posted 04/22/04 10:22am

pkidwell

You had to come to Prince if you wanted his music, and his music usually wasn't worth the trip. .....What albums is he comparing Musicology to in this quote? Why is every review of this album good? Do I not get it or something? I'm a big Prince fan and can honestly say that this album stinks. So does Chocolate Invasion and Slaughterhouse. If I took the best songs of each one of those albums, I'd have about 2 songs, and even then I'd have to remix them. Does anyone agree with me?
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Reply #10 posted 04/22/04 11:11am

lillybleu

Im going to get heavy on this one (opinion that is)although i have read alot of very good reviews on the new album.I have noticed one thing that seems to be in almost every review,the need to compare the songs that are clearly Princes expressions if you will, to the songs of some very respectable musicians,that is not bad by any means, but we have to remember that we cannot go through life always compairing ourselves or anyone to others,other wise we could lose the a sense of self indentity,no one is the same we all have special gifts.Prince is very unique,as anyone one of us living this life.I do not care for much of the reviews i read for this reason,let the man,be himself.God bless neutral
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Reply #11 posted 04/22/04 11:24am

Marrk

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pkidwell said:

You had to come to Prince if you wanted his music, and his music usually wasn't worth the trip. .....What albums is he comparing Musicology to in this quote? Why is every review of this album good? Do I not get it or something? I'm a big Prince fan and can honestly say that this album stinks. So does Chocolate Invasion and Slaughterhouse. If I took the best songs of each one of those albums, I'd have about 2 songs, and even then I'd have to remix them. Does anyone agree with me?


Not yet.

Now i'm of a certain age and married, so alot of the album's tone is something i can fully appreciate and relate to, unlike TRC's content and themes. It's a mature sounding 'pop' album to me. Very cleverly done.
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