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Thread started 03/25/11 8:52am

purplenuts

Most ridiculous 80s Prince clone

I love Prince clones. In the purple heyday of the 80s, there was a new one coming out of the woodwork every month. I enjoy seeking out the album of the obscure ones - no matter how bad they were. This morning I grabbed my CD from Le Klass called School of Cool. They must be the ugliest, greasiest jheri curl, Merry Go Round/Chess King wearing crew of black dudes trying to be pretty since Ready For The World - only they were not even half as good. As with most Prince clone albums, I enjoy playing "name that Prince tune" with every track on the record as most of them are rip-offs of a groove or a riff or sometimes an entire chorus.

I was reading the liner notes (yeah, I was that bored) and I noticed that - like most Prince clones - they acknowledged everyone except Prince. These guys even had Jesse Johnson, Rick Jamesm and RFTW listed - they even had a shout out to Full Force! I think is it funny how they make such an overt effort to avoid any inference or comparison of their obviously derivative diddies to the undeniable musical genius of Prince.

Anyway, there were not awful. It is fun to listen to if you just want a break from of all your other Prince and associated MPLS Sound records. I always wonder where guys like this are now.

[Edited 3/25/11 9:08am]

[Edited 3/25/11 10:54am]

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Reply #1 posted 03/25/11 9:28am

KoolEaze

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Even hardcore Dr.Dre and his World Class Wreckin´Cru were Prince clones in the 80s. lol

With all those ruffled shirts, lace, purple garments and whatnot.

What are "Merry Go Rounds" and "Chess King"? Some sort of collar and a black and white, checkered design?

" 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?"
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Reply #2 posted 03/25/11 10:54am

purplenuts

KoolEaze said:

Even hardcore Dr.Dre and his World Class Wreckin´Cru were Prince clones in the 80s. lol

With all those ruffled shirts, lace, purple garments and whatnot.

What are "Merry Go Rounds" and "Chess King"? Some sort of collar and a black and white, checkered design?

There were popular shopping mall clothing stores that carried the parachute pants, studded belts, skinny neckties, leather pants, baggies, boots, leg warmers, bandanas, anything with shoulder pads or that zipped up on the side, and all the various new wave crap to pin on your lapels. May have been primary east coast back then - if you are old enough to shop back then

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Reply #3 posted 03/25/11 12:36pm

Zannaloaf

KoolEaze said:

Even hardcore Dr.Dre and his World Class Wreckin´Cru were Prince clones in the 80s. lol

With all those ruffled shirts, lace, purple garments and whatnot.

What are "Merry Go Rounds" and "Chess King"? Some sort of collar and a black and white, checkered design?

Merry Go Round actually carried the licensed Prince clothing form Purple Rain.

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Reply #4 posted 03/25/11 1:10pm

NouveauDance

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purplenuts said:

There were popular shopping mall clothing stores that carried the parachute pants, studded belts, skinny neckties, leather pants, baggies, boots, leg warmers, bandanas, anything with shoulder pads or that zipped up on the side, and all the various new wave crap to pin on your lapels. May have been primary east coast back then - if you are old enough to shop back then

lol Sounds awesome!! Anyone got a spare time machine they can loan me for a couple of days!

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Reply #5 posted 03/25/11 1:29pm

minneapolisFun
q

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I wouldn't define Le Klass as Prince clones.

Compare their music to what Prince was doing at the time, they don't sound alike.

You're so glam, every time I see you I wanna slam!
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Reply #6 posted 03/25/11 5:20pm

laurarichardso
n

NouveauDance said:

purplenuts said:

There were popular shopping mall clothing stores that carried the parachute pants, studded belts, skinny neckties, leather pants, baggies, boots, leg warmers, bandanas, anything with shoulder pads or that zipped up on the side, and all the various new wave crap to pin on your lapels. May have been primary east coast back then - if you are old enough to shop back then

lol Sounds awesome!! Anyone got a spare time machine they can loan me for a couple of days!

The stores were cool and they made a small fortune off of me and my friends. (LOL)

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Reply #7 posted 03/26/11 4:13pm

lavender1983

purplenuts said:

KoolEaze said:

Even hardcore Dr.Dre and his World Class Wreckin´Cru were Prince clones in the 80s. lol

With all those ruffled shirts, lace, purple garments and whatnot.

What are "Merry Go Rounds" and "Chess King"? Some sort of collar and a black and white, checkered design?

There were popular shopping mall clothing stores that carried the parachute pants, studded belts, skinny neckties, leather pants, baggies, boots, leg warmers, bandanas, anything with shoulder pads or that zipped up on the side, and all the various new wave crap to pin on your lapels. May have been primary east coast back then - if you are old enough to shop back then

Lol. Nice. I guess the biggest fashion icons that everyone wanted to look like or got the most copy cats were MJ, Prince and Madonna. I probably would have been in that store too if I was a teen in the 80's.

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Reply #8 posted 03/26/11 6:15pm

MissParkerr

laurarichardson said:

NouveauDance said:

lol Sounds awesome!! Anyone got a spare time machine they can loan me for a couple of days!

The stores were cool and they made a small fortune off of me and my friends. (LOL)

All the cool kids shopped at Merry Go Round. I remember being in awe of that store! I spent every nickel I had there. smile

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Reply #9 posted 03/26/11 6:18pm

MissParkerr

MissParkerr said:

laurarichardson said:

The stores were cool and they made a small fortune off of me and my friends. (LOL)

All the cool kids shopped at Merry Go Round. I remember being in awe of that store! I spent every nickel I had there. smile

P.S. Not that I was "cool" , but my babysitter from elementary school was uber "cool" and she and her friends shopped there, as soon as I was able to buy my own stuff, that's where I went, although I didn't know they had a Prince line!

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Reply #10 posted 03/27/11 8:58am

MickyDolenz

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lavender1983 said:

Lol. Nice. I guess the biggest fashion icons that everyone wanted to look like or got the most copy cats were MJ, Prince and Madonna. I probably would have been in that store too if I was a teen in the 80's.

Don't forget Cosby Show sweaters. razz

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #11 posted 03/27/11 9:26am

lavender1983

MickyDolenz said:

lavender1983 said:

Lol. Nice. I guess the biggest fashion icons that everyone wanted to look like or got the most copy cats were MJ, Prince and Madonna. I probably would have been in that store too if I was a teen in the 80's.

Don't forget Cosby Show sweaters. razz

doh! Of course. How could I leave out the biggest fashion icon of the 80's. We get to relive them again with reruns on TV ONE and Centric. lol

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Reply #12 posted 03/29/11 5:48am

purplenuts

minneapolisFunq said:

I wouldn't define Le Klass as Prince clones.

Compare their music to what Prince was doing at the time, they don't sound alike.

Right - they sounded like what Prince had done years before - as many Prince clones did.

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Reply #13 posted 03/29/11 5:50am

purplenuts

MissParkerr said:

MissParkerr said:

All the cool kids shopped at Merry Go Round. I remember being in awe of that store! I spent every nickel I had there. smile

P.S. Not that I was "cool" , but my babysitter from elementary school was uber "cool" and she and her friends shopped there, as soon as I was able to buy my own stuff, that's where I went, although I didn't know they had a Prince line!

All I remember is the ruffled shirt - I dont know about a "Prince line". THey had the leather jacket from Thriller - my boy bought a white one and we all thought it was cool as hell.

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Reply #14 posted 04/07/11 5:35pm

ficktyt

RFTW may have been Prince clones, but they had some great jams, especially the love songs like Tonight and Love you Down and Slide Over. Great fast jams too besides Oh Sheila, who can forget Digital Display, Mary goes Round, Ceramic Girl, My Girly.

I remember driving from Michigan State University with some friends to see them perform in Detroit in the late 1980's.

[Edited 4/7/11 17:41pm]

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Reply #15 posted 04/07/11 8:58pm

benjaminira

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I always thought that Bobby Nunn had a Prince quality about his music...especially the song "The Party's Over"...

If it breaks when it bends, U better not put it in!
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Reply #16 posted 04/08/11 12:45pm

Romeoblu

Jak I Go Wild.

Not ridiculous at all.

A great album but still you play name the Prince song on every cut on this album.

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Reply #17 posted 04/08/11 1:26pm

PurpleJedi

avatar

purplenuts said:

KoolEaze said:

Even hardcore Dr.Dre and his World Class Wreckin´Cru were Prince clones in the 80s. lol

With all those ruffled shirts, lace, purple garments and whatnot.

What are "Merry Go Rounds" and "Chess King"? Some sort of collar and a black and white, checkered design?

There were popular shopping mall clothing stores that carried the parachute pants, studded belts, skinny neckties, leather pants, baggies, boots, leg warmers, bandanas, anything with shoulder pads or that zipped up on the side, and all the various new wave crap to pin on your lapels. May have been primary east coast back then - if you are old enough to shop back then

For my junior prom, I bought a silver lamé cumberbun & matching skinny bowtie from Chess King!

By St. Boogar and all the saints at the backside door of Purgatory!
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Reply #18 posted 04/08/11 11:44pm

alexnvrmnd777

The most ridiculous Prince clone? The one that's been masquerading as Prince for the past 16 years or so.

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Reply #19 posted 04/09/11 6:47am

PurpleJedi

avatar

alexnvrmnd777 said:

The most ridiculous Prince clone? The one that's been masquerading as Prince for the past 16 years or so.

spit

By St. Boogar and all the saints at the backside door of Purgatory!
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Reply #20 posted 04/10/11 1:57pm

Acrylic

avatar

alexnvrmnd777 said:

The most ridiculous Prince clone? The one that's been masquerading as Prince for the past 16 years or so.

TRUE STORY. nod

batting eyes ACRYLIC batting eyes
I do nothing professionally.
I only do things for fun.

johnart: Acrylic's old bras is where tits of all sizes go to frolic after they die. Tit Heaven.
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Reply #21 posted 04/10/11 5:41pm

Shango

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good vibes

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Reply #22 posted 04/11/11 2:31pm

daytonohioplay
er

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That group called Exotic Storm and that dude named Clayton Savage.

Upper persuasion for the lower invasion
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Reply #23 posted 04/19/11 7:52am

purplenuts

daytonohioplayer said:

That group called Exotic Storm and that dude named Clayton Savage.

Two of my favs - I actually have their albums and 12" records. Just greasy, jheri curl, MPLS rip offs - I loved them. Exotic Storm was almost clownish in the aping of the Prince sound.

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Reply #24 posted 04/21/11 3:24pm

funksterr

purplenuts said:

I love Prince clones. In the purple heyday of the 80s, there was a new one coming out of the woodwork every month. I enjoy seeking out the album of the obscure ones - no matter how bad they were. This morning I grabbed my CD from Le Klass called School of Cool. They must be the ugliest, greasiest jheri curl, Merry Go Round/Chess King wearing crew of black dudes trying to be pretty since Ready For The World - only they were not even half as good. As with most Prince clone albums, I enjoy playing "name that Prince tune" with every track on the record as most of them are rip-offs of a groove or a riff or sometimes an entire chorus.

I was reading the liner notes (yeah, I was that bored) and I noticed that - like most Prince clones - they acknowledged everyone except Prince. These guys even had Jesse Johnson, Rick Jamesm and RFTW listed - they even had a shout out to Full Force! I think is it funny how they make such an overt effort to avoid any inference or comparison of their obviously derivative diddies to the undeniable musical genius of Prince.

Anyway, there were not awful. It is fun to listen to if you just want a break from of all your other Prince and associated MPLS Sound records. I always wonder where guys like this are now.

[Edited 3/25/11 9:08am]

[Edited 3/25/11 10:54am]

How many decades (and albums and tours and dollars later) did it take Prince to give props to those that influenced him? Really has he ever given much credit to his actual influences? And if dude is such an "undeniable musical genius" why aren't people emulating anything other than 1980-82? And yes I intentionally left out the Purple Rain years because I don't think it was copied musically.

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Reply #25 posted 04/22/11 1:20pm

purplenuts

funksterr said:

purplenuts said:

I love Prince clones. In the purple heyday of the 80s, there was a new one coming out of the woodwork every month. I enjoy seeking out the album of the obscure ones - no matter how bad they were. This morning I grabbed my CD from Le Klass called School of Cool. They must be the ugliest, greasiest jheri curl, Merry Go Round/Chess King wearing crew of black dudes trying to be pretty since Ready For The World - only they were not even half as good. As with most Prince clone albums, I enjoy playing "name that Prince tune" with every track on the record as most of them are rip-offs of a groove or a riff or sometimes an entire chorus.

I was reading the liner notes (yeah, I was that bored) and I noticed that - like most Prince clones - they acknowledged everyone except Prince. These guys even had Jesse Johnson, Rick Jamesm and RFTW listed - they even had a shout out to Full Force! I think is it funny how they make such an overt effort to avoid any inference or comparison of their obviously derivative diddies to the undeniable musical genius of Prince.

Anyway, there were not awful. It is fun to listen to if you just want a break from of all your other Prince and associated MPLS Sound records. I always wonder where guys like this are now.

[Edited 3/25/11 9:08am]

[Edited 3/25/11 10:54am]

How many decades (and albums and tours and dollars later) did it take Prince to give props to those that influenced him? Really has he ever given much credit to his actual influences? And if dude is such an "undeniable musical genius" why aren't people emulating anything other than 1980-82? And yes I intentionally left out the Purple Rain years because I don't think it was copied musically.

First of all, it is not that smart as a young artist getting established to be associated too closely with legends that went before you. If you come out talking about them too much, people either reject you for hinting that you are the next James Brown or SMokey Robinson or Sly Stone - OR they expect you to be just like them - which never works whether yo can pull it off anyway. Be it completely planned or not, the positioning, packaging, publicizing and marketing of Prince from FOr You to Purple Rain was legendary - especially when you consider it was prior to the internet age.

Aside from that, no artist is obligated to give props to anyone for influences. But if you want to look at it closely in the case of Prince, the cover of his fourth album does have the name of an artist that influenced him printed in bold letters (find the vinyl record to see JONI as in Joni Mitchell). Watch the Purple Rain tour and tell me that is not a nod to James Brown when he does Baby I'm A Star. In 1988 he had Miles Davis onstage with him at Paisley Park. IN the 80s covered his heroes such as the Temptations and Joni Mitchell in live shows.

In the 90s I saw him read off a list of names of legends to thank them during an award acceptance speech - it was cool that he included Malcolm X, Muhaammad Ali, and Martin Luther King.

Of course, you can not name an artist who shares more with his forefathers: he has given sopngs to Earth Wind and Fire, Miles Davis, and Kid Creole. He has made records with George CLinton, Chaka Khan, Larry Graham, Stevie Wonder, and Mavis Staples. He has invited influential people onstage like Santana and Ron Wood.

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Reply #26 posted 04/23/11 7:57am

sosgemini

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Wow! By the time I became a mall shopping teen, Merry Go Round was a joke. Interesting to learn it was a cool place at one point in time. Or is it the equivalent of those goth stores in the mall that only the wannabe kids actual shop at? lol
Space for sale...
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Reply #27 posted 04/23/11 10:51am

funksterr

purplenuts said:

funksterr said:

How many decades (and albums and tours and dollars later) did it take Prince to give props to those that influenced him? Really has he ever given much credit to his actual influences? And if dude is such an "undeniable musical genius" why aren't people emulating anything other than 1980-82? And yes I intentionally left out the Purple Rain years because I don't think it was copied musically.

First of all, it is not that smart as a young artist getting established to be associated too closely with legends that went before you. If you come out talking about them too much, people either reject you for hinting that you are the next James Brown or SMokey Robinson or Sly Stone - OR they expect you to be just like them - which never works whether yo can pull it off anyway. Be it completely planned or not, the positioning, packaging, publicizing and marketing of Prince from FOr You to Purple Rain was legendary - especially when you consider it was prior to the internet age.

Aside from that, no artist is obligated to give props to anyone for influences. But if you want to look at it closely in the case of Prince, the cover of his fourth album does have the name of an artist that influenced him printed in bold letters (find the vinyl record to see JONI as in Joni Mitchell). Watch the Purple Rain tour and tell me that is not a nod to James Brown when he does Baby I'm A Star. In 1988 he had Miles Davis onstage with him at Paisley Park. IN the 80s covered his heroes such as the Temptations and Joni Mitchell in live shows.

In the 90s I saw him read off a list of names of legends to thank them during an award acceptance speech - it was cool that he included Malcolm X, Muhaammad Ali, and Martin Luther King.

Of course, you can not name an artist who shares more with his forefathers: he has given sopngs to Earth Wind and Fire, Miles Davis, and Kid Creole. He has made records with George CLinton, Chaka Khan, Larry Graham, Stevie Wonder, and Mavis Staples. He has invited influential people onstage like Santana and Ron Wood.

Then why are you moaning in this thread about 'Prince Clones' not giving Prince props?

Second, I knew someone would mention Joni Mitchell. Lord knows when you hear Minneapolis Funk, you can hear the Joni Mitchell folk influence, LOL!!!! Not. I'm talking about his real influences. The Brothas. How long did it take Prince to credit one by name in his album liners? One who isn't from his own inner circle? I'm talking the cats that started funk, soul and r&b.

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Reply #28 posted 04/25/11 11:21am

purplenuts

funksterr said:

purplenuts said:

First of all, it is not that smart as a young artist getting established to be associated too closely with legends that went before you. If you come out talking about them too much, people either reject you for hinting that you are the next James Brown or SMokey Robinson or Sly Stone - OR they expect you to be just like them - which never works whether yo can pull it off anyway. Be it completely planned or not, the positioning, packaging, publicizing and marketing of Prince from FOr You to Purple Rain was legendary - especially when you consider it was prior to the internet age.

Aside from that, no artist is obligated to give props to anyone for influences. But if you want to look at it closely in the case of Prince, the cover of his fourth album does have the name of an artist that influenced him printed in bold letters (find the vinyl record to see JONI as in Joni Mitchell). Watch the Purple Rain tour and tell me that is not a nod to James Brown when he does Baby I'm A Star. In 1988 he had Miles Davis onstage with him at Paisley Park. IN the 80s covered his heroes such as the Temptations and Joni Mitchell in live shows.

In the 90s I saw him read off a list of names of legends to thank them during an award acceptance speech - it was cool that he included Malcolm X, Muhaammad Ali, and Martin Luther King.

Of course, you can not name an artist who shares more with his forefathers: he has given sopngs to Earth Wind and Fire, Miles Davis, and Kid Creole. He has made records with George CLinton, Chaka Khan, Larry Graham, Stevie Wonder, and Mavis Staples. He has invited influential people onstage like Santana and Ron Wood.

Then why are you moaning in this thread about 'Prince Clones' not giving Prince props?

Second, I knew someone would mention Joni Mitchell. Lord knows when you hear Minneapolis Funk, you can hear the Joni Mitchell folk influence, LOL!!!! Not. I'm talking about his real influences. The Brothas. How long did it take Prince to credit one by name in his album liners? One who isn't from his own inner circle? I'm talking the cats that started funk, soul and r&b.

Because there is a difference in naming legends in liner notes as a show of reverance and respect and being promoted or pigeonholed as the next version of a legend.

That you can not hear it doesnt mean it was not an influence. Prince has made her influence obvious - he covered her song live before Purple Rain was released. Find his first interview with Rolling Stone and he makes it plain that Mitchell and Stevie Wonder influenced him. I thought that even the most casual Prince fan knew this.

Prince did all those other things listed above that are greater than liner notes - like working with legends and lendng his clout to their projects. George Clinton was dead after Atomic Dog -I doubt he even had a contract until he was signed to Paisley Park. Mavis Staples' career was helped with by her Paisley projects. These were not huge commercial his but it was quality stuff and helped their exposure - yes, even their appearances in the GRaffiti Bridge film got them out in front of more people and a younger demo than their own core fanbases.

[Edited 4/25/11 11:25am]

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Reply #29 posted 04/26/11 5:21am

funksterr

purplenuts said:

funksterr said:

Then why are you moaning in this thread about 'Prince Clones' not giving Prince props?

Second, I knew someone would mention Joni Mitchell. Lord knows when you hear Minneapolis Funk, you can hear the Joni Mitchell folk influence, LOL!!!! Not. I'm talking about his real influences. The Brothas. How long did it take Prince to credit one by name in his album liners? One who isn't from his own inner circle? I'm talking the cats that started funk, soul and r&b.

Because there is a difference in naming legends in liner notes as a show of reverance and respect and being promoted or pigeonholed as the next version of a legend.

That you can not hear it doesnt mean it was not an influence. Prince has made her influence obvious - he covered her song live before Purple Rain was released. Find his first interview with Rolling Stone and he makes it plain that Mitchell and Stevie Wonder influenced him. I thought that even the most casual Prince fan knew this.

Prince did all those other things listed above that are greater than liner notes - like working with legends and lendng his clout to their projects. George Clinton was dead after Atomic Dog -I doubt he even had a contract until he was signed to Paisley Park. Mavis Staples' career was helped with by her Paisley projects. These were not huge commercial his but it was quality stuff and helped their exposure - yes, even their appearances in the GRaffiti Bridge film got them out in front of more people and a younger demo than their own core fanbases.

[Edited 4/25/11 11:25am]

Liner notes please? Again Joni Mitchell isn't making Blues, Gospel, Funk, Soul or R&B, so Prince is full of ish saying she is this great influence on him, when 99% of his tunes show a completely DIFFERENT set of influences. He was just trying to sound well rounded while talking to white folks. biggrin You are criticizing these kids who are clearly influenced by The Time, Vanity 6 and Prince records of the early 80's, which was the hot sound on black radio at the time, as not giving Prince credit. Prince's first album had a lot of disco on it. Who did he thank in the liner notes for starting disco?

And Prince did not revive Mavis Staples or George Clinton's career. Even if you want to credit him as having done so, it's like 20 albums into his career that he reached out to those artists. You are criticizing guys for not naming Prince that had like one shot.

If anything Prince stole "Erotic City" from a George Clinton jam session. Jacked "Mother Popcorn" from James Brown and mixed it with a sample from "En Vogue" to make "Gett Off" and I don't recall him thanking any of those artists in his liner notes. And this was deep into his career where he had already made a name for himself.

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