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Thread started 07/14/07 11:09am

Fury

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would Prince have been as successful if he had peaked in the 70's or 90's instead of the 80's?

i know he started in the late 70's..but he's pretty much an 80's icon. with the more gender-bending androgyny of the 80's, he was able to carve a niche for himself. but would he have been as big in the more politically challenging landscape of the 70's or the hip hop/grunge movement of the 90's?
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Reply #1 posted 07/14/07 1:07pm

moonshine

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He'd have been successful but like Madonna , MJ , Dire Straits and Bruce Springsteen , Prince's career got a huge boost as he became popular during the early to mid 80s when MTV became a huge phenomenon and lots of artists had enormous selling albums due to the exposure they were getting on video at the time . I don't think Purple Rain would necessarily have taken off to such stratospheric heights if it was released in the 1990s , purely because videos
are so easy to see and theres so many of them nowadays , and also rockstars
making successful movies is really not that easy a thing to do anymore .
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Reply #2 posted 07/14/07 6:40pm

krayzie

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Fury said:

i know he started in the late 70's..but he's pretty much an 80's icon. with the more gender-bending androgyny of the 80's, he was able to carve a niche for himself. but would he have been as big in the more politically challenging landscape of the 70's or the hip hop/grunge movement of the 90's?


In the 70's, hard to imagine what Prince would have been in the 70's since he has been influenced by the biggest acts of the 70's... Also there was TOO much competition in 70's, too many multi instrumentalists and talented artistd. No way he would have hae the same success... The 70's was the decade of musicians.


The 90's ? NOWAY, the gansgsta rap took control of Black music.

Prince is definitely an artist of the 80's
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Reply #3 posted 07/14/07 6:53pm

Rinluv

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krayzie said:

Fury said:

i know he started in the late 70's..but he's pretty much an 80's icon. with the more gender-bending androgyny of the 80's, he was able to carve a niche for himself. but would he have been as big in the more politically challenging landscape of the 70's or the hip hop/grunge movement of the 90's?


In the 70's, hard to imagine what Prince would have been in the 70's since he has been influenced by the biggest acts of the 70's... Also there was TOO much competition in 70's, too many multi instrumentalists and talented artistd. No way he would have hae the same success... The 70's was the decade of musicians.


The 90's ? NOWAY, the gansgsta rap took control of Black music.

Prince is definitely an artist of the 80's

I think Hip-hop in general took over in the 90's.
Some people think I'm kinda cute
But that don't compute when it comes 2 Y-O-U.
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Reply #4 posted 07/14/07 7:22pm

krayzie

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Rinluv said:

krayzie said:



In the 70's, hard to imagine what Prince would have been in the 70's since he has been influenced by the biggest acts of the 70's... Also there was TOO much competition in 70's, too many multi instrumentalists and talented artistd. No way he would have hae the same success... The 70's was the decade of musicians.


The 90's ? NOWAY, the gansgsta rap took control of Black music.

Prince is definitely an artist of the 80's

I think Hip-hop in general took over in the 90's.


Seriously, hip hop is first and foremost a Black music. And I believe that it has influenced mostly african americans. African american culture now is so linked to hip hop that even black people who aren't rappers adopt all the codes of hip hop culture (tattoos, sexism, materialism, the N word, machismo, ghetto culture etc).


Yep hip hop took over the 90's but I think Hip-hop took over black music.
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Reply #5 posted 07/14/07 8:31pm

wlcm2thdwn

You'll never know now will you?
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Reply #6 posted 07/14/07 11:01pm

toejam

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krayzie said:

The 70's was the decade of musicians.


Ouch! Couldn't disagree more! Certainly in the early 70s things were happening, but as the decade went on... Rock&Roll had became stale, Jazz was dead, Fusion never really took off, Funk had become this watered down hybrid we now call Disco... Punk was starting up, but at the time it wasn't about 'musicianship'. As far as that goes, the period 1975-1980 was really bland.

Jimi had died
The Beatles had split
Miles was in semi-retirement
JB, Sly, The Rolling Stones etc. had all passed their peak

It wasn't until Prince came along that things picked up again.

Just my opinion, of course.
wink
[Edited 7/14/07 23:06pm]
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Reply #7 posted 07/14/07 11:03pm

mirrorbestfrie
nd

70's
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Reply #8 posted 07/14/07 11:35pm

bungle

An impossible to question to answer for me.I thought someone's most sucessful time was their peak?
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Reply #9 posted 07/15/07 2:35am

krayzie

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toejam said:

krayzie said:

The 70's was the decade of musicians.


Ouch! Couldn't disagree more! Certainly in the early 70s things were happening, but as the decade went on... Rock&Roll had became stale, Jazz was dead, Fusion never really took off, Funk had become this watered down hybrid we now call Disco... Punk was starting up, but at the time it wasn't about 'musicianship'. As far as that goes, the period 1975-1980 was really bland.

Jimi had died
The Beatles had split
Miles was in semi-retirement
JB, Sly, The Rolling Stones etc. had all passed their peak

It wasn't until Prince came along that things picked up again.

Just my opinion, of course.
wink
[Edited 7/14/07 23:06pm]


What you said is completely false. lol

You opinion is not accurate.

And your knowledge of the 70's is very limited.


The 70's was ALL about musicians, and tight bands.


ALL the biggest solo acts of the 70's play instrument : Stevie Wonder, Sly Stone, David Bowie, Elton Jhon, Curtis Mayfield, MArvin Gaye, Hattaway, Roberta Flack, Nina Simone, Todd Lundgren, Paul McCartney, Bruce Springsteen, Bob Marley, Jonh Lennon, Neil Young just to name a few, but the list is just way too long. lol

And I don't talk about all the great tight bands like EWF, FleetWood Mac, Brothers Johnson, Rufus, Led Zepplin, Queen, Isley Brothers, Kool and the gang, Cameo, The J.B.'s, Parliament and Funkadelic, Pink Floyd etc

It was ALL about musicianship.
It was impossible for a solo artist to start a career in the 70's if he/she couldn't play any instrument.

Music was real and great. The competition was terrific. P would have never dominated like in the 80's.

Just my opinion, of course. wink
[Edited 7/15/07 2:36am]
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Reply #10 posted 07/15/07 2:37am

Pochacco

Nah he pretty timeless FACT

Well other than the grey area known as TRC
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Reply #11 posted 07/16/07 5:45am

toejam

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krayzie said:

...lots of name-checking and ranting...


Just kidding lol

You make a fair point. But really, you could say that about any decade prior to the 1980s - especially the 20s, 30s and 40s. I just don't see how the 70s were any more about 'musicianship' than prior eras. I guess coming from more of a Jazz background I've always viewed that period as being either way too simplified (cheesy disco) or way too abstract (fusion). But I'll concede defeat wink.
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Reply #12 posted 07/16/07 6:14am

RUHip2TheJive

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Pochacco said:

Nah he pretty timeless FACT

Well other than the grey area known as TRC


TRC = ...?
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