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Reply #90 posted 03/01/06 9:49am

OskarKristio

pepper7 said:

shayde said:

come on people, get real ...
the mixed band thing was as much about honoring/aping Sly and the Family Stone as much as it was a marketing mechanism to get him a broader audience. And, I might add, at the time both worked extremely well. It had nothing to do with what he really believed.
Also, as a walking legend with nothing to lose, he can indulge whatever altruistic whims he so desires, instead of the pressure of generating sales and being a company man as he was back then. Plus he was younger and dummer, less world experience.
On another note, by your reasoning, you guys would conclude that he had a thing for older large black women since he liked working with Chaka, Mavis, Rosie, Boni, and Patty ...


Yes of course he ONLY had a "mixed band thing" for a marketing mechanism. Obviously Prince really thought about it in that way. Probably only worked with his band as a publicity stunt ot get noticed. That's how you sell records isn't it?? Nothing to do with writing good music that ALL colours, creeds and religions could relate to. Nothing to do with writing songs about being yourself and embracing who you are. No heaven forbid Prince did anything other than try and make money and be famous because afterall I'm sure that's all he ever wanted. He would do that the only way possible. If it meant making music for dumb white folks then he would do it. He would play the game in order to further his career. Now thank god he doens't care about any of that shit and he can be truly balck and sing lyrics about "screaming like a white women" because that's not stereotyping at all. Oh no, that's a fact !!




I dont totally agree, Im sure the same things been said about other artists and there have been black artists that have played music that some dont asscociate with what they think black people should play, look at the band Badbrains,that wasnt conforming they just wanted to be a punk band, I think Prince always just did what he wanted to do plus he's a Gemini so he's naturally got like 4 different personas, and he absorbs all different types things and influences.
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Reply #91 posted 03/01/06 9:54am

OskarKristio

DynamicSavior said:

Revolution said:

Prince's music was better when he saw no colorlines.

I know that's right highfive whatever happened to "Am I black or white, am I straight or gay" I miss Ambiguous Prince.


I agree, I became a fan in 83 Im still a fan but there was a certain energy in those early years
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Reply #92 posted 03/01/06 11:13am

SpecialEd

avatar

OskarKristio said:

DynamicSavior said:


I know that's right highfive whatever happened to "Am I black or white, am I straight or gay" I miss Ambiguous Prince.


I agree, I became a fan in 83 Im still a fan but there was a certain energy in those early years


Offer better wording to this viewpoint. What is "seeing no colorlines" supposed to mean? Sounds like self-delusion. Better to be self deluded? Perhaps you mean he should see colorlines then reject them etc.
Glug, glug like a mug
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Reply #93 posted 03/01/06 12:08pm

nurse

GoldenGlove said:

nurse said:





blahblah blahblah blahblah Jesus Saves and forgives.


falloff now who's acting childish? LMAO ur a joke. lol, but a good one! thumbs up!





neutral neutral neutral neutral neutral. Children.
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Reply #94 posted 03/01/06 12:11pm

ReverendHubert

Prince is working up a Black Sweat ya'll.
It's about funk smelling like fish but tastin' like KFC.
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Reply #95 posted 03/01/06 1:16pm

TurnItUp

Morningstar said:

Prince is black and proud,so what? All people should be proud of their heritage, no harm in it. Tamar is pretty,I wonder if he tapped her yet? Mani better watch out!


Uh I don't think so. The only thing Mani better watch out for is them twins sisters cuz they are LIGHTER than her. Tamar is not a threat. Prince ain't changed that much. confused
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Reply #96 posted 03/01/06 1:19pm

TurnItUp

Graycap23 said:

TurnItUp said:



So am I. Some of you orgers that are old enough and have been Prince fans for a long time need to hang that shit up about Prince being "BLACK" back in the day. You know good and damn well that he used to didn't want to be black. If he did he wouldn't have came up with that shit about this father being black and Italian and his mother " a mixture of a bunch of things". The revolution was mostly white except for him and Brown Mark and like somebody just said he wouldn't have in a million years had a protege' like Tamar. Look at his past resume.


People are products of their environment. Look where Prince grew up? It had to have an impact on him. Had to. Plus, Prince was no dummy. He knew how to "play" the game. At least that I the way I've always seen it. -Mg


You're right about his enviroment, being from Minneapolis and all.

* Can anyone post pictures of his mother Mattie. I have only seen 2 pictures of her, one of them was the Purple Rain premiere. Last time I saw her she looked like a black woman and she was heavy set.
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Reply #97 posted 03/01/06 1:48pm

VelvetJ

avatar

SpecialEd said:

Well duh. He has a lot of ground to make up. From claiming white parents in interviews, a white mother in Purple Rain and as Spike Lee complained about the disturbing shunning of black women in his Pailsey world. This was when the world had their eyes on him too and he never represented his roots.

Since the NPG, Gold Nigga, "Slave", Exodus, When Will We B Paid, Avalanche, Family Name... was a long journey to where we could imagine a Prince girl/protege like Tamar.

In fact The Revolution complained about Wally and Brookes, hated having them around seeing them as token black buddies. Which perhaps they were. That seems like the start of Prince's public identity as an African-American.


Thank the lord somebody said it. At the time I remember seeing Under the Cherry Moon and being amazed at the lack of black faces in the movie, not to mention the leading lady. I just remember finding it all interesting considering the power he had in the filming of the movie.

I also remember those old interviews, his black fans noticing the lack of black women in his camp, black radio stations complaining they were left off of the list for concert tickets when he came to town, and a number of other things. And to top it off, these things were happening at the height of his career. At the time, VERY FEW, if any, white artist used black women in their videos, especially as leads, and then to have a black man write and produce a movie and the majority of the cast is white? (Please don't think with today's mind where things are more integrated) At that time those of us who had a black consciousness noticed those things.

That's why today when I hear people say things like "Prince has been working with a lot of black people in recent years", or I witness a BLACK WOMAN in Houston during the Musicology Tour complain that Prince didn't choose enough white people to go on stage ( I obviously still haven't gotten over that one wink ), I say good for him. He is making up ground.

Besides, Is it all that off the wall that a black artist work with majority black people?
I am convinced Beyonce's career would not be where it is, if she had dark skin.
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Reply #98 posted 03/01/06 1:52pm

VelvetJ

avatar

Graycap23 said:

TurnItUp said:



So am I. Some of you orgers that are old enough and have been Prince fans for a long time need to hang that shit up about Prince being "BLACK" back in the day. You know good and damn well that he used to didn't want to be black. If he did he wouldn't have came up with that shit about this father being black and Italian and his mother " a mixture of a bunch of things". The revolution was mostly white except for him and Brown Mark and like somebody just said he wouldn't have in a million years had a protege' like Tamar. Look at his past resume.


People are products of their environment. Look where Prince grew up? It had to have an impact on him. Had to. Plus, Prince was no dummy. He knew how to "play" the game. At least that I the way I've always seen it. -Mg


Yeah, Prince grew up in Minneapolis but so did Morris Day and the Time, Jimmy and Terry, and Alexander O'Neil.

I know Prince had to "play the game" like most Black Americans have to to a degree, I'm just glad he realized game time was over.
[Edited 3/1/06 13:54pm]
I am convinced Beyonce's career would not be where it is, if she had dark skin.
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Reply #99 posted 03/01/06 2:02pm

tane1976

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He never really left it. Although Prince favours multi racial players in his groups, dosent mean hes unconscious to being black. Musicology s one of the blackest and funkiest things hes done in years along with Black Sweat.
I think People confused Prince as white concious as he had a light changeable skin colour, especially Parade and Slave eras, where he looks more Polynesian than black, and the fact he could write, play and produce what was essentially white/ white friendly rock/pop.
Prince has always been there, the slave era was a stance at White (Mostly Jewish) owned record companies cheating black artists and ripping them off. But like Hendrix Prince wasnt black power though, I think Prince wanted to be accepted for wwho he was (Color of skin didnt mean much to him, but he wasnt blind to blatant discrimination. Hes always had black conciousness songs on his albums.
What u may find is world fans such as myself are not so concerned about race in Princes music but more the quality and scope of his music.
Prince has and always will be black and a citizen of the world.
17 Years ago I made a commitment to Prince
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Reply #100 posted 03/01/06 2:04pm

VelvetJ

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I'm sorry but I have to add one more thing.

This may sound bad but I just don't know how else to put it. I think Prince also realized that black people have a special love for him. We were with him from the very very beginning. And even during the height of his carrer, when there seemed to be so few black women in his camp, the total left field direction his music went to, black people, particularly black women continued to be his back bone and continued to respect and love Prince like never before.

None of this is to say that other communities do not adore Prince, it's just with black people I feel it is a little different.

IMO, black people have a special type of love relationship with certain people. Black folk love Denzel, Halle, Luther Vandross, Frankie Beverly and Maze, Bill Clinton, and Prince. I can't quite explain the type of love it is, but it's a love and respect that seems like only black folk understand, and I think Prince realized that. I mean of course his consciousness of blackness could be because of a million other things but I think what I stated above is also one of them.
I am convinced Beyonce's career would not be where it is, if she had dark skin.
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Reply #101 posted 03/01/06 2:22pm

Graycap23

VelvetJ said:

Graycap23 said:



People are products of their environment. Look where Prince grew up? It had to have an impact on him. Had to. Plus, Prince was no dummy. He knew how to "play" the game. At least that I the way I've always seen it. -Mg


Yeah, Prince grew up in Minneapolis but so did Morris Day and the Time, Jimmy and Terry, and Alexander O'Neil.

I know Prince had to "play the game" like most Black Americans have to to a degree, I'm just glad he realized game time was over.
[Edited 3/1/06 13:54pm]


I agree. That's why I'm not in corporate America right now. It's played out. -Mg
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Reply #102 posted 03/01/06 2:27pm

Graycap23

VelvetJ said:

SpecialEd said:

Well duh. He has a lot of ground to make up. From claiming white parents in interviews, a white mother in Purple Rain and as Spike Lee complained about the disturbing shunning of black women in his Pailsey world. This was when the world had their eyes on him too and he never represented his roots.

Since the NPG, Gold Nigga, "Slave", Exodus, When Will We B Paid, Avalanche, Family Name... was a long journey to where we could imagine a Prince girl/protege like Tamar.

In fact The Revolution complained about Wally and Brookes, hated having them around seeing them as token black buddies. Which perhaps they were. That seems like the start of Prince's public identity as an African-American.


Thank the lord somebody said it. At the time I remember seeing Under the Cherry Moon and being amazed at the lack of black faces in the movie, not to mention the leading lady. I just remember finding it all interesting considering the power he had in the filming of the movie.

I also remember those old interviews, his black fans noticing the lack of black women in his camp, black radio stations complaining they were left off of the list for concert tickets when he came to town, and a number of other things. And to top it off, these things were happening at the height of his career. At the time, VERY FEW, if any, white artist used black women in their videos, especially as leads, and then to have a black man write and produce a movie and the majority of the cast is white? (Please don't think with today's mind where things are more integrated) At that time those of us who had a black consciousness noticed those things.

That's why today when I hear people say things like "Prince has been working with a lot of black people in recent years", or I witness a BLACK WOMAN in Houston during the Musicology Tour complain that Prince didn't choose enough white people to go on stage ( I obviously still haven't gotten over that one wink ), I say good for him. He is making up ground.

Besides, Is it all that off the wall that a black artist work with majority black people?


Hummm don't get me started. We need more Jamie Foxx types in this world. have you checked out his crew? Prince is way over due for this IMHO. -Mg
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Reply #103 posted 03/01/06 3:09pm

SpecialEd

avatar

VelvetJ said:

SpecialEd said:

Well duh. He has a lot of ground to make up. From claiming white parents in interviews, a white mother in Purple Rain and as Spike Lee complained about the disturbing shunning of black women in his Pailsey world. This was when the world had their eyes on him too and he never represented his roots.

Since the NPG, Gold Nigga, "Slave", Exodus, When Will We B Paid, Avalanche, Family Name... was a long journey to where we could imagine a Prince girl/protege like Tamar.

In fact The Revolution complained about Wally and Brookes, hated having them around seeing them as token black buddies. Which perhaps they were. That seems like the start of Prince's public identity as an African-American.


Thank the lord somebody said it. At the time I remember seeing Under the Cherry Moon and being amazed at the lack of black faces in the movie, not to mention the leading lady. I just remember finding it all interesting considering the power he had in the filming of the movie.

I also remember those old interviews, his black fans noticing the lack of black women in his camp, black radio stations complaining they were left off of the list for concert tickets when he came to town, and a number of other things. And to top it off, these things were happening at the height of his career. At the time, VERY FEW, if any, white artist used black women in their videos, especially as leads, and then to have a black man write and produce a movie and the majority of the cast is white? (Please don't think with today's mind where things are more integrated) At that time those of us who had a black consciousness noticed those things.

That's why today when I hear people say things like "Prince has been working with a lot of black people in recent years", or I witness a BLACK WOMAN in Houston during the Musicology Tour complain that Prince didn't choose enough white people to go on stage ( I obviously still haven't gotten over that one wink ), I say good for him. He is making up ground.

Besides, Is it all that off the wall that a black artist work with majority black people?


Yeah it's all very well for those selfish "I liked him best when he didn't see colorlines" folk. He was their boy, while others went ignored.
Glug, glug like a mug
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Reply #104 posted 03/01/06 7:07pm

Revolution

avatar

Early Prince didn't give a fuck about color or much else. He purposely
created his band with a mixture of black and white, male and female people.
It was like he was saying he creates great MUSIC, it doesn't matter who's in
his band. His early songs were great, partly because everyone could relate, regardless of race. It's well documented that Prince created The Time as
an avenue to release his RnB songs.

Someone said that his "consciousness" about his race started during his WB battles. I think that is about right. A few afro-centric releases since:

Avalanche
Dear Mr Man
Black Sweat
When Will We B Paid?
Family Name

What does this mean? Probably nothing. Merely coincidence that his latest
work doesn't catch my fancy like his early work. That probably would have
happened with any artist.
The fact that Prince is happy about his race is great...great for him, great
for his race. There is absolutely nothing wrong with that, he's growing as
an individual. Hell, I love my race much more today than I did 25 years ago too.
Thanks for the laughs, arguments and overall enjoyment for the last umpteen years. It's time for me to retire from Prince.org and engage in the real world...lol. Above all, I appreciated the talent Prince. You were one of a kind.
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Reply #105 posted 03/01/06 7:25pm

Krystal666

avatar

zsazsa said:

i just think he want more black$ to buy his music. its all promotion


You know you might be on to something. Prince is very intelligent and VERY savvy when it comes to self promotion. I always felt like during Sign of the Times and the Tony M years....actually even the Rave era he was trying to reach out to black people and intergrate more of into black culture. I wouldn't put it past him to consider it a marketing ploy...that is not to say he doesn't like being a black man (only he knows what he feels like deep down inside and his fans shouldn't bash him for it...if he has issues you can think whatever you want about it but he's the one that has to live with his feelings about how he feels about himself) or dislikes being with black people but that music critic Nelson George said back in the eighties that he just has a different way of relating or expressing his "blackness" because he has grown up intergrated.

Ok flame on! biggrin
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Reply #106 posted 03/01/06 7:38pm

babynoz

pepper7 said:

babynoz said:





I don't believe anyone here is claiming to have intimate knowledge of Prince's innermost thoughts. People form opinions about Prince based on his words and deeds. They form opinions about you and I the same way. Prince is not exempt from this.

People are not making this stuff up. For whatever reason, Prince did make favorable comments about Reagan in the 80s. He deliberately obscured his heritage/orientation, and he deliberately chose some band members with crossover appeal in mind at the time. He did what he felt was best to get him where he wanted to be and people making observations about it doesn't translate to expecting him to be flawless.

Generally speaking, a man's perspective at 47 is not the same as it was at say, 27. Becoming more confortable in you own skin is a sign of growth and not an indictment of anyone else's skin.

I'm not sure why you would be distainful of the term black consciosness? How does his self acceptance and identification threaten anybody else's well being?



Well just tell me what exactly is Black Conscionsness??? I can't understand why everyone makes such a big deal out of the colour of someone else's skin. Isn't up to Prince who or what he is ?? You can't tell a person that just because they have a certain skin colour then they SHOULD act a certain way. Is as rascist and as stereotyping as ANY other type of rascism.

Your arguments are far too simplistic. You have no idea what you are talking about when it comes to skin colour. What do you mean by "His self acceptance and identification??" What the hell does your skin colour have to do with who you are???? Really I'd absolutely love to know...

It's like the arguments about women having to get back in touch with themselve becuase they are having to confirm to a male dominated society. You just become a victim if you aspire to these ideals
[Edited 2/28/06 17:08pm]




First of all, you need to slow your roll 'cause you don't know me like that. Secondly, you may be having an argument but I'm having a discussion so I don't see the need here to vent your spleen on me. Third, simplistic questions get simplistic answers.

Would you ask the same of a gay person or a Jewish person?

Consciousness and acceptance of any aspect of one's self is an important ingredient in the emotional well being of anyone. The inability to acknowledge certain aspects of yourself is what produces the Michael Jacksons of the world. Should Prince become a characature of himself to keep from embracing a part of who he is?

It's disturbing how folks get mighty peeved up in here at the thought of a black man expressing too much of his "blackness". Like it or not, a "black consciosness if a part of who you are if you happen to be "black". No amount of "let's just pretend we're colorblind" delusional thinking will nurture that consciousness.

Evolution is not advanced by such pretense. It is advanced by acknowledging and accepting ourselves and one another for who we are and what we bring to the table and those that want others to suppress any portion of their identity and just assimilate are seeking their own comfort without regard to the well being of the other person. "Thinking like the keys on Prince's piano, we'll be just fine".

If prince has grown more comfortable expressing more of himself as he sees himself then he is dealing from a position of strengh and maybe that's what instills such fear and loathing in individuals such as yourself. I'm not getting the impression that you really want to know what "black consciosness" is. Perhaps you simply want it to go away.

It may rattle a whole lotta folks but Prince ain't gonna do the buck dance for nobody...just ask WB.
Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise.
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Reply #107 posted 03/01/06 8:25pm

bellanoche

As a black woman who has loved, supported and followed Prine for more than 20 years - and I am only 30 - I have to say that I love the fact that Prince does not shy away from his blackness. One thing that I have always loved about him is his "brothaness." Even when there weren't any dark skinned women in his camp, he was always a brotha - his mannerisms, talk, everything. Too many black artists try to ingratiate themselves to the white mainstream. The problem with most of them is that they never wake up. There are countless people who I could name here.

In the early days, Prince was all about controversy, mystery and shattering taboos. This was all about marketing and making himself stand out during a time where the majority of acts were actually talented. Without all the controversy he couldn't have penned Controversy. The white women were all about taboos to me. So many black men go through that. However, His tastes tend to lean more toward fair skinned or mixed black women and Latinas. I am just happy that he doesn't feel the need to challenge taboos or create mystery anymore.

It is funny that we are talking about the lack of dark skinned women in Prince videos 20 years ago, because when you look at most black male artists' videos today, you are hard pressed to find a dark skinned black woman. The video girls are usually fair skinned, mixed, Latina or Asian.

Prince started noticeably "embracing" his blackness around Sign O The Times in my opinion. The addition of Cat and more black musicians not only showed an increased black awareness, it also improved his live sound.
perfection is a fallacy of the imagination...
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Reply #108 posted 03/01/06 8:32pm

babynoz

bellanoche said:

As a black woman who has loved, supported and followed Prine for more than 20 years - and I am only 30 - I have to say that I love the fact that Prince does not shy away from his blackness. One thing that I have always loved about him is his "brothaness." Even when there weren't any dark skinned women in his camp, he was always a brotha - his mannerisms, talk, everything. Too many black artists try to ingratiate themselves to the white mainstream. The problem with most of them is that they never wake up. There are countless people who I could name here.

In the early days, Prince was all about controversy, mystery and shattering taboos. This was all about marketing and making himself stand out during a time where the majority of acts were actually talented. Without all the controversy he couldn't have penned Controversy. The white women were all about taboos to me. So many black men go through that. However, His tastes tend to lean more toward fair skinned or mixed black women and Latinas. I am just happy that he doesn't feel the need to challenge taboos or create mystery anymore.

It is funny that we are talking about the lack of dark skinned women in Prince videos 20 years ago, because when you look at most black male artists' videos today, you are hard pressed to find a dark skinned black woman. The video girls are usually fair skinned, mixed, Latina or Asian.

Prince started noticeably "embracing" his blackness around Sign O The Times in my opinion. The addition of Cat and more black musicians not only showed an increased black awareness, it also improved his live sound.





nod nod
Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise.
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Reply #109 posted 03/01/06 9:19pm

Krystal666

avatar

bellanoche said:

As a black woman who has loved, supported and followed Prine for more than 20 years - and I am only 30 - I have to say that I love the fact that Prince does not shy away from his blackness. One thing that I have always loved about him is his "brothaness." Even when there weren't any dark skinned women in his camp, he was always a brotha - his mannerisms, talk, everything. Too many black artists try to ingratiate themselves to the white mainstream. The problem with most of them is that they never wake up. There are countless people who I could name here.

In the early days, Prince was all about controversy, mystery and shattering taboos. This was all about marketing and making himself stand out during a time where the majority of acts were actually talented. Without all the controversy he couldn't have penned Controversy. The white women were all about taboos to me. So many black men go through that. However, His tastes tend to lean more toward fair skinned or mixed black women and Latinas. I am just happy that he doesn't feel the need to challenge taboos or create mystery anymore.

It is funny that we are talking about the lack of dark skinned women in Prince videos 20 years ago, because when you look at most black male artists' videos today, you are hard pressed to find a dark skinned black woman. The video girls are usually fair skinned, mixed, Latina or Asian.

Prince started noticeably "embracing" his blackness around Sign O The Times in my opinion. The addition of Cat and more black musicians not only showed an increased black awareness, it also improved his live sound.


What an interesting perspective. I love reading what is said here on the org cuz sometimes you get some really thought provoking reads like this! wink
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Reply #110 posted 03/01/06 11:29pm

meow85

avatar

ReverendHubert said:



I don't hate U. I also agree totally. Now, my question is, working from what you established, do you think some Prince fans might feel excluded by this Blackness, or is Prince more real to them; or do ya'll think that most reacting 2 this would say "f*#@ the consciousness" and drop mo' songs like Jack U Off, Gett Off, Head, etc?

Humbily, Reverend Hubert


Speaking as a non-black person with barely any real-life contact or experience with black people (the Org ? It's pretty far removed from the real world. wink )
I'm really not sure what to think. It's great that he's showing more pride than he used to, but the labelling he's made a point of in recent years seems a bit, I dunno. I won't say necessarily exclusionary, but it's interesting. I mean, I'm not sure I understand why now, after decades of an all-inclusionary Uptown vibe, he'd make a point of highlighting his race and sexuality.

He is what he is obviously, but I kinda liked it better when it was a non-issue. I don't care what colour you are, Prince. If it made a difference to me, I wouldn't be a fan in the first place. confused
"A Watcher scoffs at gravity!"
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Reply #111 posted 03/02/06 12:14am

ReverendHubert

tane1976 said:

He never really left it. Although Prince favours multi racial players in his groups, dosent mean hes unconscious to being black. Musicology s one of the blackest and funkiest things hes done in years along with Black Sweat.
I think People confused Prince as white concious as he had a light changeable skin colour, especially Parade and Slave eras, where he looks more Polynesian than black, and the fact he could write, play and produce what was essentially white/ white friendly rock/pop.
Prince has always been there, the slave era was a stance at White (Mostly Jewish) owned record companies cheating black artists and ripping them off. But like Hendrix Prince wasnt black power though, I think Prince wanted to be accepted for wwho he was (Color of skin didnt mean much to him, but he wasnt blind to blatant discrimination. Hes always had black conciousness songs on his albums.
What u may find is world fans such as myself are not so concerned about race in Princes music but more the quality and scope of his music.
Prince has and always will be black and a citizen of the world.


U know, Hendrix is rumoured to have supported the Black Panthers. Check this out if u have the time:

http://blogcritics.org/ar...201823.php
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Reply #112 posted 03/02/06 12:17am

ReverendHubert

about Jimi & the Black Panthers. (these r not my views, just sharing)

It seems Hendrix was supportive of the Black Panthers when they were rising up to create a stir in America. The government did not want rich rock stars funneling money to a group that threatened the status quo and the sovereignty of our nation (or so it was perceived at the time), thus the CIA made their ties with the Mafia's drug cartel to learn more about Jimi's habits and created an ongoing profile of his daily life. Not one person has stepped forward in over 35 years since Jimi's death to claim that they were with him when he died; therefore, the conclusion reached in a series of interviews with people that knew Jimi is that he was murdered in order to squelch the Black Panthers rise to power.

Source >>> http://blogcritics.org/ar...201823.php
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Reply #113 posted 03/02/06 2:33am

tane1976

avatar

ReverendHubert said:

tane1976 said:

He never really left it. Although Prince favours multi racial players in his groups, dosent mean hes unconscious to being black. Musicology s one of the blackest and funkiest things hes done in years along with Black Sweat.
I think People confused Prince as white concious as he had a light changeable skin colour, especially Parade and Slave eras, where he looks more Polynesian than black, and the fact he could write, play and produce what was essentially white/ white friendly rock/pop.
Prince has always been there, the slave era was a stance at White (Mostly Jewish) owned record companies cheating black artists and ripping them off. But like Hendrix Prince wasnt black power though, I think Prince wanted to be accepted for wwho he was (Color of skin didnt mean much to him, but he wasnt blind to blatant discrimination. Hes always had black conciousness songs on his albums.
What u may find is world fans such as myself are not so concerned about race in Princes music but more the quality and scope of his music.
Prince has and always will be black and a citizen of the world.


U know, Hendrix is rumoured to have supported the Black Panthers. Check this out if u have the time:

http://blogcritics.org/ar...201823.php



In Electric Gypsy by Glebbek and Shapiro, it mentions Jimi Hendrix bought a copy of a Black Panther newspaper with Buddy Girl and Juma Sultan when he was in band of gypsys (Hendrix and Guy). Someone asked why he did, and Jimi said, because I thought I was supposed too, as opposed to him buying the Black Panther paper out of fascination. Black Power never really appealed to Jimi Much, he knew he was black like Prince but it never dominated his life. There may have been some conciousness in his music, but if others picked it up, Jimi barely noticed, if anything he was more interested in his Cherokee heritage, Songs like Red House and I don't live today for instance.
17 Years ago I made a commitment to Prince
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Reply #114 posted 03/02/06 4:09am

pepper7

avatar

[quote]

First of all, you need to slow your roll 'cause you don't know me like that. Secondly, you may be having an argument but I'm having a discussion so I don't see the need here to vent your spleen on me. Third, simplistic questions get simplistic answers.

Would you ask the same of a gay person or a Jewish person?


Yes I would.

Consciousness and acceptance of any aspect of one's self is an important ingredient in the emotional well being of anyone. The inability to acknowledge certain aspects of yourself is what produces the Michael Jacksons of the world. Should Prince become a characature of himself to keep from embracing a part of who he is?


Michael Jackson is screwed up because his father was a strict disciplinarian and Michael has struggled to accept himself on all types of levels. Even as a man. He's like a little child because he can't accept himself. But there are many factors for this. Maybe being hugely famous and living in a make believe bubble. Michael believes he can buy anything. He has a disillusional view of reality.



It's disturbing how folks get mighty peeved up in here at the thought of a black man expressing too much of his "blackness". Like it or not, a "black consciosness if a part of who you are if you happen to be "black". No amount of "let's just pretend we're colorblind" delusional thinking will nurture that consciousness.


Every individual is free to express themselves how they want regardless of the colour of there skin. Expressing your "blackness" sounds as rascist as saying to express your "whiteness". People don't need to be stereotyped by the colour of their skin.

Evolution is not advanced by such pretense. It is advanced by acknowledging and accepting ourselves and one another for who we are and what we bring to the table and those that want others to suppress any portion of their identity and just assimilate are seeking their own comfort without regard to the well being of the other person. "Thinking like the keys on Prince's piano, we'll be just fine".


That is only IF you aspire to that belief system. Religion and race are man made structures to some people. Some people don't feel a connection to their race or the religion they were born into. If you are born into a Catholic family does that mean YOU will have the same beliefs??



If prince has grown more comfortable expressing more of himself as he sees himself then he is dealing from a position of strengh and maybe that's what instills such fear and loathing in individuals such as yourself. I'm not getting the impression that you really want to know what "black consciosness" is. Perhaps you simply want it to go away.


I actually DON'T believe Prince is MORE comfortable expressing himself these days. He comes across as confused and unsure of himself. It think that he is trying to live upto this term of being "black" rather than just allow himself to be free and to be himself.



It may rattle a whole lotta folks but Prince ain't gonna do the buck dance for nobody...just ask WB.


I think Prince split with WB for all kinds of reasons.
Shut up already, damn.
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Reply #115 posted 03/02/06 6:49am

OskarKristio

Yeah it's all very well for those selfish "I liked him best when he didn't see colorlines" folk. He was their boy, while others went ignored.

[/quote]

Really eek , Did people really see it that way , Wow I always thought music was for everyone I didnt know it worked that way eek

Does that mean Carlos Santana can only be appreciated by Mexican People,

I dont understand Your attitude man, Ofcourse Prince is black, thats Great and why would anyone say otherwise , But why must music always be looked at Politically I believe music should be for everybody, Prince is a fantastic African American Songwriter,Muscician,Dancer, etc etc but why should he be any ones boy, Prince is Prince.
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Reply #116 posted 03/02/06 6:53am

DavidEye

interesting discussion!
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Reply #117 posted 03/02/06 7:10am

OskarKristio

SpecialEd said:

OskarKristio said:



I agree, I became a fan in 83 Im still a fan but there was a certain energy in those early years


Offer better wording to this viewpoint. What is "seeing no colorlines" supposed to mean? Sounds like self-delusion. Better to be self deluded? Perhaps you mean he should see colorlines then reject them etc.




Should he reject his heritage ? of course not, Prince grew up in a particuliar environment and was influenced by particuliar things, I think what he did early in his career was kinda natural for him to do, I mean he was pretty young his hormones were raging he had a certain fascination with sexual energy his music reflected that and he had certain fashion sense etc, so what if he wasnt coming off like Public Enemy or Ice Cube or whatever, that wouldnt of been natural for him he didnt come from that type of environment I think he just did what he did that interested him at the time, actually its pretty weird he gets called by some people unblack, look at his major influences "James Brown", "Jimi Hendrix" and
"Sly & The Family Stone", Prince always struck me as an original even though he wasnt really an originall he was able to take all his influences add to them and somehow have his own kinda vibe to the whole thang, to me this was Prince, I dont think he made music that was restricted by racial boudaries maybe thats the connection to that line about "seeing no colorlines"
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Reply #118 posted 03/02/06 7:35am

OskarKristio

I don't care what colour you are, Prince. If it made a difference to me, I wouldn't be a fan in the first place. confused

[/quote]


My thoughts too
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Reply #119 posted 03/02/06 7:40am

JonnyApplesauc
e

pepper7 said:[quote]




I actually DON'T believe Prince is MORE comfortable expressing himself these days. He comes across as confused and unsure of himself. It think that he is trying to live upto this term of being "black" rather than just allow himself to be free and to be himself.



It may rattle a whole lotta folks but Prince ain't gonna do the buck dance for nobody...just ask WB.


I think Prince split with WB for all kinds of reasons.


Hes Black. His family and many friends are Black. He grew up Black. Hes probably more comfortable being himself not a marketing strategy.
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