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Why "Pandemonium" worked and "Condensate" didn't. Aside from the original run of The Time in the early 80's, we have two projects that we can study - "Pandemonium" and "Condensate". Funk was not an "in vogue" genre in either of the years these albums were released. Yet the former led to The Time's only ever #1 single (Jerk Out) whilst the latter fell apart just weeks after release. Why do you think one worked and one did not?
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Jimmy Jam:
"There's a big difference between what Terry and I do as producers and the role we play in The Time. As producers we look for the sound that works best for a certain artist. But when I'm in The Time, I'm not a producer, I'm a musician. " |
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What do you mean by "worked" when it comes to Condensate? Do you mean as a collective piece of music or as a music lp that didn't go anywhere with lack of promotion and participation, etc.? A lot of us on here really liked the album and thought it "worked" well as an album for the most part and were really disappointed when the expected follow-up tour fell apart... "Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato
https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0 | |
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purplethunder3121 said: What do you mean by "worked" when it comes to Condensate? Do you mean as a collective piece of music or as a music lp that didn't go anywhere with lack of promotion and participation, etc.? A lot of us on here really liked the album and thought it "worked" well as an album for the most part and were really disappointed when the expected follow-up tour fell apart... Musically I liked it when it came out. But I've found that it doesn't have a great deal of replay value, especially compared to previous albums. It's slightly above average. But given the calibre of the people involved it should have been mindblowing. What I was talking about though, was the lack of decent promotion and the fact that it fell apart after one single and a handful of shows. I too was extremely disappointed by the events that transpired. It could have been my one and only chance to see all the original bandmembers together and now that will likely never happen. |
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condensation didnt work b/c prince wasnt involved they were trying to created with him in mind and that cant work b/c prince is the time and this was there 1st time actually being a band outside of princes vision | |
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cbarnes3121 said: condensation didnt work b/c prince wasnt involved they were trying to created with him in mind and that cant work b/c prince is the time and this was there 1st time actually being a band outside of princes vision Agreed. Jimmy Jam said as much himself - when it comes to The Time, he and Terry aren't producers - they are musicians. When they try and step into the producer role amongst this group of people, it seems like that changes the dynamic. I love J&L, but I think the only person who should produce The Time, is Prince. |
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i liked Condesate far better as an album. I dont listen to either on the regualr though because I have so many artists I listen to. My musical palette is far broader than 15 years ago. Musically and production wise I found Condestate superior to Pandemonium. Jerk Out and Chocolate were pretty tired to me even at the time - felt like leftovers not heated up all the way.. Maybe I liked Blondie for the guitar. Condensate had some tracks I skipped but I liked the core of it. Too bad it never had real promotion. I guess that's a lesson these guys cant seem to learn. | |
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Condensate was basicaly an independent release. 90 percent of why something is a commercial hit depends on who's marketing and selling it and the amount of money poured into promotion. Condensate didn't receive a lot of early promotion. Add to that the name change, the 20 year absence of new material or a full on Time tour. Most Time fans STILL don't know it exists. We are in an era when high profile acts, on major labels with an enormous pop culture and social media prescense, and a fanbase of millions of young people, can drop new material and get virtually no sales. Chris Brown and Justin Bieber come to mind, but they are far from alone. The road can get a lot tougher for acts who were most popular in the 70's, 80's and 90's. That's why it's so important for bands to bring their A game. I think the guys got it right musically, but without their true brand name "The Time" and a commitment from Prince to cross market their project, they were working at an extreme disadvantage. Add to that creative differences with Jesse and the project stumbled straight out of the gate. However, not before I had the chance to do the bird with Morris and Jerome!!!!!!!!!!!!! I have no complaints. In a perfect world Prince would commit 2 weeks in LA with Jimmy, Terry, Morris, Wendy, Lisa and Sheila writing and recording 3 new records for Prince and The Revolution, The Time and Sheila E. They would then tour the world over the next 2 years promoting those albums and all would be right in the Purple Kingdom for the first time since the mid-80's, but one can only dream. | |
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I agree.I think Pandemonium was surprisingly mediocre.The only tracks that I really like are "Jerkout","It's Your World" and the title track.The album is messy and unfocused and even Prince's contributions aren't that strong."My Summertime Thing" and "Data Bank" are just old,dusty jams that he pulled out of the vault.They're not great tunes."Chocolate" sounded horribly dated in 1990.
I think Condensate is a stronger album than both Ice Cream Castles and Pandemonium. | |
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plus,these days,a funk band from the 80s isn't gonna sell alot of records and get alot of airplay and promotion.I never had any unrealistic expectations about how well the album would do in today's musical climate.
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They tried too hard to be something they just aren't anymore.
Pandemonium is clearly superior! I like that album.
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I liked Chocolate. But I remember when I bought the maxi single. The cashier (who was mostly a hip hop fan) laughed when I put it on the counter. This was the new jack swing era and other older acts like The Gap Band, Cameo, Kool & The Gang, James Ingram, Bar Kays, Sheena Easton, The Jacksons, James Brown, and even Boy George were releasing new jack records. So Pandemonium didn't really fit. They played Jerk Out on the radio, both R&B & pop stations, but I never heard Chocolate played. The R&B station did play Sometimes I Get Lonely a lot. I think Jerk Out might have been popular on pop radio because Morris was kinda rapping the lyrics, and rap was becoming really mainstream around this time with Tone Loc, Young MC, Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince, Vanilla Ice, Technotronic, MC Hammer, etc. getting heavy Top 40 airplay and selling a lot. 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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I loved Condensate. I was blown away at how great the production of the songs were, however I believe the CD fell flat because the group did not tour. Simple as that. | |
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They're signed to Saguaro Records. Here's some of their other acts. How many of them have any really popular recent albums? . Adam Hood . Lots of acts tour, but it doesn't necessarily help them sell big, especially ones seen as "oldies". The Cars had a new record out around the same time as the O7. It didn't do that much, and they had no name change. You can't really expect an old group on a small label to sell much. Superheavy (Mick Jagger, Dave Stewart, Joss Stone, etc) was on a major and they had some media mention, but I don't think it sold much, and neither has Sting's recent album. 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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^^ exactly! Very few artists or bands from the 80s are still selling alot of records these days.Even Prince's recent albums didn't sell very well.But it's especially difficult for an 80s funk band (on an independent label) to sell records in this era.I don't think touring would have made much of a difference. | |
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The reunion albums of Black Sabbath and the one with the return of David Lee Roth to Van Halen had a lot of hype and media coverage, but still the sales were not much, and both groups did tour. Rush had a popular tour with Clockwork Angels, but I don't think the album was that big. All of these groups were and still are way more popular than The Time ever was. They get played all the time on classic rock stations, but I don't hear The Time that much on the radio, and none of the Morris & Jesse solo stuff at all, except Don't Wait For Me on the Quiet storm every once in awhile. That's probably the reason some old rock groups can still have successful tours today. They still get heard, either on oldies, classic rock, commercials, TV shows, video games, store muzak, and movies. How many times have you heard Bad To The Bone by George Thorogood somewhere? That wasn't a big hit when originally released. I've heard Let's Get It On by Marvin Gaye in many commercials. That's how some old hits are still popular today, and others long forgotten. They don't get played anywhere. . The boomers tend to be more loyal to their music than the generations after. They're the ones behind a Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame, and many of the acts in there are boomer era, music circa 1964-1975. The acts popular with boomers are the main ones getting re-packaged all the time like Dark Side Of The Moon and the endless compilations of 1960's era Motown. Remember those big selling soundtracks to Dirty Dancing & Big Chill, which were full of 1960s music. The Dirty Dancing one was so popular, they later released a second one More Dirty Dancing. 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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Why Pandemoniupm was a commercial success and Condensate wasn't is a no brainer: one benefited from a decent promo by WB/Reprise, at a time when record sales were extremely high and benefited from the hype of being a Prince-related project, and the other was an indy release at a time when records don't sell no more and had little to create a hipe around it. . Artistically I always loved Pandemonium but one has to keep in mind that it's an album I've had for 23 years, I literally grew up with it (I was 14 when I first bought it). I really didn't like Condensate when it was released, it was a big disappointment for me and even though P wasn't on it I was really expecting something I'd love because I love what Morris, Jesse, Jam & Lewis have done separately. I've been listening to it again lately and I'm starting to like it. It took me 3 years but now I see many qualities in it, but it's not an album that makes me dance on my chair the way Rise Up does, or daydream the way Gaslight does, it's just that it has enough elements of its creators' and The Time's (Prince's) sound in it to make me enjoy it. Maybe it'll keep growing and I'll end-up really loving it, IDK, but now I just like it OK. The thing for me is that Pandemonium really kept the Prince sound of The Time while at the same time being relevant to the new jack swing sound of the era (Pandemonium - the song - was kind of perfectly in the middle), so it was a really cool achievement by 1990. The 2 rock songs were kind of a surprise (even though there was a precedent with My Drawers), and let's not forget it contains 2 of Prince's most lethal funk jams: Chocolate and Jerk Out! Thing is also that in the end Pandemonium was the first really collaborative Time album: it cumulated the talents of Prince, Morris, Jesse, Jam & Lewis, 5 individuals who were extremely strong songwriters and producers at the time. Condensate lacks... Prince! And it feels. In terms of content it's more like a mix of a little bit of this and a little bit of that, there are some obvious self-The Time/Morris Day homages in it, some obvious references to Prince and others (Strawberry Lake really is Ice Cream Castles meets Everyday People), Jesse's unavoidable rock tracks, a few unexpected things (the relatively experimental-sounding Faithful: I'd never thought I'd hear tablas in a Time song!!!), and some songs that I find a bit irritating because they try too much to sound like 2010... In the end it's a much nicer collection of songs that I first thought, but I don't think it'll ever replace Pandemonium in my heart. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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I don't think there's really any point to be made here. First we're starting off with a quote from JJ that's decades old with no current quote as a comparison. No link to said quote either. Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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The best response to this thread period. Yes Prince involvement would have made Condensate a huge success. It would have went double platinum. Silly notion considering Prince isn't selling records himself these days. All you can ask from these veteran acts from the 70's and 80's is a good album and tour. At least you got one in Condensate which was a good album imo. Don't laugh at my funk
This funk is a serious joint | |
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first of all and the end of all the time is prince and his vision and the guys only lived out what prince envisioned 4 them its hard 2 do that on their own cuz they trying 2 recreate something that is not theres.the 1st time album was done before the group was even formed which goes 2 show how much prince and morris day is the time.i would love 2 see prince and all 7 of those guys lay all the bull shit aside go in the studio no vault track start from jam sessions and just create.every last member of that groups is super talented there is no way on this earth they cant come 2gether and just work out some magic | |
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"Condensate" just doesn't hold up next to "Pandemonium", IMO.
And of course, the album suffers without Prince. |
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No, it was Monte 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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Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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Ah, no wonder! Monte is the master of the slow jam. Alex O Neal's "If You Were Here Tonight" is one of the best slow jams of all time, IMO, and he did that one too. |
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You think "Trendin" is better than "Jerk Out"? "AYDKMN" and "Lifestyle" better than "Blondie" and "Skillet"?
All opinions are subjective. But in no universe does "Condensate" stand up to "Pandemonium". It used to be, and with Prince in charge, that The Time had a cohesive sound and style that worked perfectly for them.
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Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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You didn't answer my question, though.
Do you really like "Trendin" more than "Jerk Out"? and "ADYKMN" and "Lifestyle" more than "Blondie" and "Skillet"? I legitimately would like to know this. |
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Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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Here's some current video views on Youtube for newer stuff by veteran acts
Original 7ven: Trendin' ~ 144,725 Van Halen: Tattoo ~ 6,244,778 Van Halen: She's The Woman ~ 1,145,414 Sade: Babyfather ~ 2,126,810 Sade: Soldier Of Love ~ 10,808,036 Sting: The Last Ship ~ 52,662 Ricky Martin: Vida ~ 5,409,574 Rod Stewart: Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow! ~ 479,839 Red Hot Chili Peppers: Brendan's Death Song ~ 4,288,441 Black Sabbath: God Is Dead? ~ 4,709,046 Earth, Wind & Fire: Guiding Lights ~ 14,461 The Brand New Heavies: Sunlight ~ 155,856 Charlie Wilson: My Love Is All I Have ~ 2,305,771 Ronald Isley ft. Kem: My Favorite Thing ~ 666,158 The Delfonics: Stop and Look (And You Have Found Love) ~ 30,100 Lou Reed & Metallica: The View ~ 757,653 George Strait: Here For A Good Time ~ 2,230,560 LL Cool J ft. Joe: Take It ~ 1,484,820 El DeBarge ft. Faith Evans: Lay With You ~ 2,033,982 Eric Benet: Real Love ~ 471,437 Paul McCartney: Queenie Eye ~ 3,809,149 Paul McCartney: New ~ 1,078,356 Ringo Starr: Wings ~ 200,798 The Beatles: Words Of Love ~ 2,214,788 Depeche Mode: Heaven ~ 13,074,553 Depeche Mode: Soothe My Soul ~ 4,007,241 ZZ Top: I Gotsta Get Paid ~ 4,882,835 Gloria Estefan: Wepa ~ 1,407,765 / (audio only video) ~ 4,959,460 Sananda Maitreya: Kangaroo ~ 9,201 Donald Fagen: I'm Not The Same Without You ~ 237,615 Michael Jackson: Hollywood Tonight ~ 29,235,292 The Cars: Sad Song ~ 24,202 Prince: Breakfast Can Wait ~ 2,772,984 George Benson: Unforgettable ~ 45,835 Duran Duran: Girl Panic! ~ 6,739,371 George Michael: Let Her Down Easy ~ 822,389 Karyn White: Unbreakable ~ 36,051 Chaka Khan: Angel ~ 1,338,764 Madonna: Turn Up The Radio ~ 7,898,129 Tears For Fears: My Girls ~ 131,187 Ratt: Eat Me Up Alive ~ 109,094 Lionel Richie ft. Shania Twain: Endless Love ~ 7,283,785 Elton John: Home Again ~ 1,260,175 Beastie Boys: Make Some Noise ~ 8,066,162 Toni Braxton & Babyface: Hurt You ~ 2,522,729 Heart: Fanatic ~ 53,114 New Kids On The Block: Remix ~ 2,834,879 Eddie Murphy ft. Snoop Lion: Red Light ~ 3,683,292 Shaggy ft. Ne-Yo: You Girl ~ 2,117,706 Rush: The Wreckers ~ 248,523 Wilson Phillips: Good Vibrations ~ 195,429 Color Me Badd: Skywalkin' ~ 2,781 Phil Collins: Going Back ~ 1,787,535 The Lonely Island feat. Michael Bolton: Jack Sparrow ~ 122,773,955 Mariah Carey ft. Trey Songz: You're Mine (Eternal) ~ 1,846,089 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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