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Reply #30 posted 05/08/07 8:28am

SS4GOKU

Madonna, hands down they both started back in the 80's and they both were controversial in back their hey days biggrin
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Reply #31 posted 05/08/07 8:28am

DreamyPopRoyal
ty

avatar

If the person Prince claims to be inside him turns out to be female, there you go.

Otherwise, I couldn't think of anyone else with the same dedication who has the music flowing thru them and can manipulate music to say whatever his heart desires.
had 2 run away... pride was 2 strong. It started raining, baby, the birds were gone
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Reply #32 posted 05/08/07 8:33am

SS4GOKU

SS4GOKU said:

Madonna, hands down they both started back in the 80's and they both were controversial in back their hey days biggrin


please excuse the mis-type guys, i meant to say that they were both controversial back in their hey days.
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Reply #33 posted 05/08/07 1:21pm

Lovesexy82

My vote would be for the Wild and Peaceful Lady Tee (Teena Marie).

She might not be as versatile as Prince, but I think she comes closest. That woman can play the hell out of a guitar and SANG her ass off.

Also, her first album Wild and Peaceful like Prince's For You, while incredibly entertaining is a very slick, overproduced affair. Yet, also like Prince she soaked up everything like a sponge and worked to perfect her craft by insisting on writing and producing her own songs. She also had similar battles with Motown, like the one that Prince had with Warner Brothers. That "comebacks" were even parallel, with her success with La Dona and Prince's success with Musicology being about a year apart.
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Reply #34 posted 05/08/07 1:22pm

Graycap23

No such animal.
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Reply #35 posted 05/08/07 1:29pm

Angelic1302

avatar

me wink
Um... let me warm up my vocals
Me ME ME ME ME...U U U U U!
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Reply #36 posted 05/08/07 1:34pm

sumtymes

is this world

ready 4 a female prince?
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Reply #37 posted 05/08/07 1:46pm

pasquerto

I w
[Edited 12/5/11 10:34am]
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Reply #38 posted 05/08/07 2:01pm

sumtymes

pasquerto said:

I would be open to it!




indeed

however, part of prince's

claim 2 fame was how he broke

down barriers across the board

could a female prince do the same?
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Reply #39 posted 05/08/07 3:23pm

khemseraph

SS4GOKU said:

Madonna, hands down they both started back in the 80's and they both were controversial in back their hey days biggrin


i agree with you all the way.not to mention that they had the biggest influence on todays pop stars,and regardless what anyone on here says her music was really really good.
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Reply #40 posted 05/08/07 3:46pm

THINKTIMM

ANI DI FRANCO!!!!
If U don't know, u best get some of her music!!!! evil
THINKTIMM... if nothing else!!!
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Reply #41 posted 05/08/07 4:08pm

rbrpm

Sheila E no contest! wink
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Reply #42 posted 05/08/07 5:14pm

theodore

Christina Aguilera touched
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Reply #43 posted 05/08/07 5:25pm

anon

avatar

Graycap23 said:

Jamzone333 said:



highfive Now, you know that some of these younguns don't remember Patrice.. lol lol lol
[Edited 5/7/07 20:34pm]

Lol.....right but she would be the ONLY one and I had 2 rack my brain(Graycap) 4 that.....

Patrice in March (with Stanley Clarke and Lenny White). Very impressive. She plays everything well.
Why do you like playing around with my narrow scope of reality? - Stupify
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Reply #44 posted 05/08/07 6:54pm

purplesweat

sumtymes said:

pasquerto said:

I would be open to it!




indeed

however, part of prince's

claim 2 fame was how he broke

down barriers across the board

could a female prince do the same?

Nope. Prince would be nowhere near as successful as he is if he were female. The sexual songs and lyrics and performances would not go down well with anyone.
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Reply #45 posted 05/08/07 7:05pm

fantasticjoy

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Lovesexy82 said:

My vote would be for the Wild and Peaceful Lady Tee (Teena Marie).

She might not be as versatile as Prince, but I think she comes closest. That woman can play the hell out of a guitar and SANG her ass off.

Also, her first album Wild and Peaceful like Prince's For You, while incredibly entertaining is a very slick, overproduced affair. Yet, also like Prince she soaked up everything like a sponge and worked to perfect her craft by insisting on writing and producing her own songs. She also had similar battles with Motown, like the one that Prince had with Warner Brothers. That "comebacks" were even parallel, with her success with La Dona and Prince's success with Musicology being about a year apart.

I agree
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Reply #46 posted 05/08/07 11:11pm

Afronomical

You guys are so slow. It's Lady T herself - Teena Marie.
Make Afros not War fro grenade
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Reply #47 posted 05/09/07 11:57am

psychodelicide

avatar

Christaro said:



falloff WTF? lol
RIP, mom. I will forever miss and love you.
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Reply #48 posted 05/09/07 12:07pm

happyhappy

probably sum warped mix of mahalia jackson, joni mitchell, andddd..sheila e
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Reply #49 posted 05/09/07 12:07pm

Ranetta

avatar

sumtymes said:

i don't think his female

equivalent exists

so u would have 2 roll

these kittens 2 gether 2

make a female version of that cat:

madonna: 4 her balls

mya: 4 her looks

alicia keys: 4 her chops and key board skills

aaliyha aka baby girl: 4 her mystique
and her moves

kelis: 4 her walk on the wild side

KELIS IS NOT WORTHY!! I agree with the rest, but you should add Alanis Morissette for her in your face, tell the truth,genuine true depth,and always in progress of thought lyrics!! Surprised? I know kinda out of left field. But its TRUE! wink
All 7 and we'll watch them fall Stand in the way of love and we will smoke them all
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Reply #50 posted 05/10/07 3:39am

PriceAndTheRev
olution

I'm amazed that nobody's mentioned Kate Bush.

(Frankly, most of the suggestions on this thread aren't worthy of being mentioned in the same breath as Kate, never mind the same breath as Prince.)
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Reply #51 posted 05/10/07 3:43am

wlcm2thdwn


Sade, she's smooth and cool and beautiful
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Reply #52 posted 05/10/07 4:56am

Flowerz

well ..

musician wise..= Sheila ..

dancing = uhm.. gotta come back on this one..

singing wise = ... well.. i wanna say Mariah..but Mariah doesnt scream in her records .. like Prince does .. maybe Patti or Chaka.. cause they can scream down and it sounds great..

hard question..

[Edited 5/10/07 5:08am]
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Reply #53 posted 05/19/07 6:53pm

parishilton

DreamyPopRoyalty said:[quote]If the person Prince claims to be inside him turns out to be female, there you go.[/quote]"before i was a woman, before u were a man" i think he's already said it.if his equal is inside him, then i guess a course in parallel dimensions is next on the prince to do list lol
Love Beauty
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Reply #54 posted 05/19/07 6:57pm

Janfriend

I introduced someone to Nikka Costa's music and the first thing she said was "She's the female Prince." lol
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Reply #55 posted 05/19/07 7:36pm

Shawnt24

wlcm2thdwn said:


Sade, she's smooth and cool and beautiful


Damn I love Sade.
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Reply #56 posted 05/19/07 7:38pm

LazarusHeart

avatar

Christaro said:


lol lol lol
Love
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Reply #57 posted 05/19/07 8:47pm

parishilton

LazarusHeart said:

Christaro said:


lol lol lol
funny u mention it cuz i was just reading this statement on another website "A Fat female goddess earning a nitch in time in order to produce an offspring which is half human and half divine." off to smoke more crack n repent lol
Love Beauty
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Reply #58 posted 05/19/07 8:56pm

sexyone

avatar

LazarusHeart said:

Christaro said:


lol lol lol



OMG! You guys are too funny. I love this board. nutty
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Reply #59 posted 05/19/07 9:08pm

mehogeni

hey yall! I love this post butttt

but my VOTE DEFINENTLY goes to my main FEMALE funkatier Betty Davis!!..who I still believe to this day is one of Prince's main female inspirations!!!

A major inspiration for Miles Davis

The person who oozed sex, sensuality and pure funky ferocity and was a "Nasty Gal" wayyy before Prince made Vanity sing of being such a thing in the 80s?

yall might wanna read this insightful article about her Royal Badness cool

oh and here ARE some pic links!!!
http://www.dustygroove.co...t_101b.jpg

http://blog.tilos.hu/male...0Davis.jpg
MUSTHEAR REVIEW:


"If Betty were singing today she be something like Madonna, something like Prince, only as a woman. She was the beginning of all that when she was singing as Betty Davis."--Miles Davis with Quincy Troupe, Miles: The Autobiography

The former wife of Miles, Betty Mabry Davis is perhaps the only woman in the world who could rightfully have the following legend tattooed across her rear: THIS ASS INVENTED FUSION. While their marriage only lasted a year (1968-1969), Betty's impact on the immortal jazz trumpeter was tremendous. Her cutting-edge musical tastes and incomparable sense of style were too much for Miles to resist. A self-righteous 23-year old model, Betty conquered the man twice her age with a potent mixture of youth, beauty, and sex. Within a year, she had completely remade Miles in her own youthful image. As she poured herself into him, his playing grew younger, his outlook fresh. She ripped through his closets, tossing out the elegant suits he had worn for years. This was the late '60s, revolution was in the air, and suits were the uniforms of the Establishment. The time had come to get hip, and Betty pointed the way, introducing Miles to the musical and material gods of revolutionary style: Jimi Hendrix and Sly Stone.

Anyone with half a grip on the past knows that Miles experienced far more than a wardrobe makeover during his tumultuous Betty year. Deeply influenced by the cosmic rock guitar of Hendrix and the experimental funk of Sly Stone, Miles turned mad genius and unleashed the electrified musical Frankenstein known as Bitches Brew. This monster he created would sadly run amok as fusion lost its soul and became an F word. But for a brief moment during these still glowing days of late '60s Eden, Betty ruled as the mentor-muse for the original man and his music. There are even rumors about an unreleased album of songs that Betty wrote and recorded with Miles and his band.

Betty was fire, and while Miles welcomed the sparks, he knew better than to stay too close for too long. In his autobiography he wrote: "Betty was too young and wild for the things I expected from a woman...Betty was a free spirit, she was raunchy and all that kind of shit." Rumor holds that Miles broke things off because he suspected that his wife was tangled up in a torrid affair with Jimi Hendrix, an infidelity that she has flatly denied to this day. Miles claims that it was he who gave up his good thing in the end, while an old friend of Betty's claims that it was she who got bored, leaving Miles for an unnamed rock star.

It might have been enough if the story ended there, but it certainly did not. As Betty's lyrics attest, she was not a tragic woman beholden to any man. This was a woman with the strength of a Black Panther, a woman in total control, a predatory feline fully aware of the power that her beauty and sexuality gave her over men. On her self-titled 1973 debut album, she declares war on love in her raunchy funk masterpiece, "Anti Love Song." In sharp lines probably directed at her ex-husband, she sings: "No I don't want to love you / 'Cause I know how you are / Sure you say you're right on and you're righteous / But with me I know you'd be right off / Cause you know I could posess your body / You know I could make you crawl / And just as hard as I'd fall for you, boy / You know you'd fall for me harder / That's why I don't want to love you." Belted out in a ferocious over the top style, "Anti Love Song" is the classic bad girl anthem. It was songs like this, along with the album's openning track, "If I'm In Luck I Might Get Picked Up," that solidified her notorious image as a "nasty girl." Unfortunately for Betty, America was not yet ready to embrace a woman with such an explicitly sexual persona. Her outrageously flamboyant image eclipsed her talent. Several of her live shows were boycotted by religious groups and even canceled. Radio steered clear of her unconventional music, judging it too hard for black stations and too black for white ones. Her records didn't sell. Betty vanished from the scene, a rumored victim of a drug overdose. According to several old friends, Betty was very much set against drugs, making this oft-repeated and persistent rumor particularly vicious.

That the record buying public shunned Betty Davis should come as no surprise. She had a much rougher edge to her music than other female funk and soul artists of the '70s. Song for song, Betty Davis is actually one of the most extreme sounding debut records of the decade. Like Bitches Brew, it takes equal parts inspiration from Hendrix and Sly Stone. Future Journey guitarist Neal Schon gives the music its distinctly hard rock Hendrix edge. The Sly angle is fleshed out by former Family Stone drummer Gregg Errico, who plays on and produces the entire record. Former Sly bassist Larry Graham adds an even more unmistakable sound with his trademark grooves. The roster of other musicians playing on this record is impressive: Patryce Banks, Willie Sparks, and Hershall Kennedy of Graham Central Station; Tower of Power horn players Greg Adams and Michael Gillette; and the Pointer Sisters. All these musicians come together to form a flexible and propulsive band, laying down heavy beats behind Neal Schon's dominant lead guitar and Betty's shocking vocals. One critic aptly described their sound as something like a cross between Tina Turner, Funkadelic, and Sly & The Family Stone.

Like all original sounding music, Betty's voice eludes description, and must be heard. A friend was struck by how contemporary it sounded. It's pretty obvious that she was a major influence on Macy Gray. Betty was a powerhouse, pushing her vocal cords to the limit on every performance. She gave it all up, unpredictably alternating between sexy breathiness, moans, and full throated screams. Her voice is not for the feint hearted, as she drags the listener on an fiery tour of her bad-ass soul. This take no prisoners style of singing can sometimes be a bit much to handle. Make no mistake, Betty's brand of black music is not pleasantly soulful, it's ecstatically hard. Many will find it grating and inaccessible in places. Here was a woman capable of projecting sex in a single scream, an unsentimental envelope pusher with the raucous pipes of a banshee. Even on the album's only slow song, "In The Meantime," Betty sings with tongue in cheek sweetness about the dark pleasures in being alone, closing out the record with a promise that she will survive with or without a man.

Way ahead of her time, Betty was the original super freak, a musical extremist who demanded too much from her audience. She came and went with a thunderous roar.
[Edited 5/19/07 21:09pm]
[Edited 5/19/07 21:14pm]
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Forums > Prince: Music and More > Who is Princes female equivalent?