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Reply #810 posted 09/01/08 7:53am

ButterscotchPi
mp

avatar

robinesque said:

^^^^
it sucks that you have to repeat yourself and BP and re-state you position a hundred times. I'm guessing alot of people aren't reading alot of the posts.. which is understandable, I guess.

This is why I've been fence sitting this whole time... (because murph has made some good points about the minneapolis sound..apologies for spelling errors)

What you said about the contracts/technology playing a part in the reduction of band size is really interesting, and I can see how it would have a massive impact on the sound... like the industrial revolution.

I would be interested though, about whether you feel that Prince and The Time had an identifiable sound when it came to how they used the new technology... what makes Prince sound like Prince (is it more about how he mixed genres?)



oh... and to blame Prince for Brit Spears and JT and timberland etc... bit harsh don't you think lol



Had a couple of dj gigs over the weekend, so i haven't been around so much.


It does suck, Robin. ESPECIALLY when i have to re-do THIS over and over and over and over again.

The INITIAL statement (which i haven't backed off from, or wavered on a BIT while controversially stated and somewhat harsh is, was and still is.....



Prince isn't that "funky". Not in the purest definition of the genre.



I have said like now a TRILLION times that of course i find Prince and many of his songs "funky". And i don't know if it's because some people just don't feel like reading the initial post, or they've heard about this thread from someone else (the amount of orgnotes i've gotten about this thread is RIDICULOUS), but jesus H christ i'm tired of repeating myself.

Now BK, Robin and quite a few others seem to have grasped what i was saying and what the purpose of this thread was originally supposed to be. Some of ya'll see it only as an "anti-Prince thread from a hater". Again, i don't hate Prince. I HATE PRINCE FANS. (that's a joke) (sorta)

Seriously i've never watched VH1 Soul in my life, but i've been watching it all weekend and remembering what it felt like to be a Prince fan. Anyhoo. Let's see what else we got going on here.
http://www.facebook.com/p...111?ref=ts
y'all gone keep messin' around wit me and turn me back to the old me......
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Reply #811 posted 09/01/08 2:15pm

robinesque

murph said:

robinesque said:



No.... I think murph conceded that synths/drum machines were already being used...
he was saying that is was the way they were used that shook things up... stripping everything down, untill the guitar was the only traditional instrument used
(that's how I read it anyway)
sure the technology was out there... but the way Prince used it was influential


Indeed...I've been saying this since the first page...lol...

I'm glad someone is getting it...
[Edited 8/30/08 13:59pm]



lol I feel like I've had my hair tussled

I have a Q for you though...
do you think that BP and Blacques poition has validity (cause I can see it)? If we accept that prince had some influence, could other funk acts not have been equally/ or more influenced by RJ and new wave and the simple fact of the technology?
When it comes to questions of measuring the infuence of one artist over another (when they are all producing music at around the same time), don't you just have to listen to the music and decide for yourself?


(an one more analogy: Prince and funk is like David Lynch and surrealism)
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Reply #812 posted 09/01/08 2:31pm

blackguitarist
z

avatar

pplrain said:

blackguitaristz said:


Um,.. now which "Black" are u refering to? Me or my brutha in crime, Blaque? U talking to "guitaristz" or "Knight"? wink

I quoted you. rolleyes razz

Aaaaah, o.k.
SynthiaRose said "I'm in love with blackguitaristz. Especially when he talks about Hendrix."
nammie "What BGZ says I believe. I have the biggest crush on him."
http://ccoshea19.googlepa...ssanctuary
http://ccoshea19.googlepages.com
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Reply #813 posted 09/01/08 2:43pm

robinesque

ButterscotchPimp said:


Had a couple of dj gigs over the weekend, so i haven't been around so much.


lol.... oh... maybe that explains the somewhat less heated discussion...BK tried to shake it up, but they just don't seem to respond to him in quite the same way



The INITIAL statement (which i haven't backed off from, or wavered on a BIT while controversially stated and somewhat harsh is, was and still is.....



Prince isn't that "funky". Not in the purest definition of the genre.




yeah, they keep seem to miss that second part of the statement... although I gather that some feel that the purist definition of the genre
a) still isn't clear to them (give up on this buddy)
b)is too narrow
c)would mean that acts like Funkadelic are as impure as Prince..in the purest definition..
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Reply #814 posted 09/01/08 8:40pm

violetblues

ButterscotchPimp said:

The INITIAL statement (which i haven't backed off from, or wavered on a BIT while controversially stated and somewhat harsh is, was and still is.....
Prince isn't that "funky". Not in the purest definition of the genre.




falloff
fuckin bafoon, what the fuck does that even mean?

The purest definition, lol,

Yeah, your opinion supersedes dictionaries encyclopedias, journalists, musicians, et all, lol, like has been said here before, you are not the self proclaimed most hated man on the org, just the most childish one.
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Reply #815 posted 09/01/08 10:26pm

SanDiegoFunkDa
ddy

Prince WAS the keeper of the Funk. Prince was the funkiest artist after P. Funk. Even George Clinton admitted it. Nobody has picked up where Prince left off. In my opinion, Prince took it as far as its gonna go. D'Angelo was about take the baton but the drug demons got him. As far as creativity, Prince is still the greatest recording artist ever
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Reply #816 posted 09/02/08 1:18am

robinesque

SanDiegoFunkDaddy said:

Prince WAS the keeper of the Funk. Prince was the funkiest artist after P. Funk. Even George Clinton admitted it. Nobody has picked up where Prince left off. In my opinion, Prince took it as far as its gonna go. D'Angelo was about take the baton but the drug demons got him. As far as creativity, Prince is still the greatest recording artist ever


I'm pretty sure that I disagree with every thing you just said... isn't the funk of today off in some electroland?... is someone going to call me a stupid music ignoramus if i mention Daft Punk here?
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Reply #817 posted 09/02/08 3:37am

gerhard12

To all the critics of Prince`s funk: just listen to the indigo aftershow 9/9/2007 and then be silent!
the best in funk ever heard!
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Reply #818 posted 09/02/08 5:30am

hollywooddove

avatar

As I posted in an earlier thread, I went back and studied some Latimore, Graham Central Station, Bootsie Collins, and more. Prince has definately made some music that stems out of Latimore, but I have never heard him do any raw funk like Graham Central has done.

But there are two schools of thought in here. One that says the old day funk is true funk, and everything else is watered down wanna-be.

The other says that funk is still alive and well, it has simply evolved.

I have to say, if it is has evolved into what is claimed, it has been the most varied and stretched evoltution of a music genre. Perhaps funk is more complex than the other music movements.
[Edited 9/2/08 5:31am]
We are all so full of doody here
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Reply #819 posted 09/02/08 7:29am

OskarKristio2

In my oppinion there is no denying Prince has Funk factor throughout his music career and stage antics influenced from Funk artists.
Having said that and aknowledging the Man is Funky, I still never have seen Prince as a purest Funk artist and for me I have not felt that it was a singularly defining characteristic for Prince I guess Ive always seen him as eclectic and Im an old school fan hip to Prince since 1984.
Sure Prince does the Funk stuff nad does it well but his music overall in my view is more eclectic than straight out Funk.









purplecam said:

Marrk said:

Ah, but Prince is so much more than Funk alone, as well you know. not much more to say. Prince's eclectic as anybody out there and his catalogue speaks for itself.

Exactly, that's why I'm still a HUGE fan of his. His diversity is amazing but to me, funk is the foundation of his musical base. Even when he isn't doing a funk song, elements of funk find their way into the song. Whether he's a funk artist or not, that is debatable but one thing is true, Prince is one funky dude!

Now I'm going to sit back and watch all of you argue over this point. I need some Popcorn and pepsi!
[Edited 8/19/08 8:45am]
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Reply #820 posted 09/02/08 7:42am

ButterscotchPi
mp

avatar

SanDiegoFunkDaddy said:

Prince WAS the keeper of the Funk. Prince was the funkiest artist after P. Funk. Even George Clinton admitted it. Nobody has picked up where Prince left off. In my opinion, Prince took it as far as its gonna go. D'Angelo was about take the baton but the drug demons got him. As far as creativity, Prince is still the greatest recording artist ever



Oh good lord.
When will this madness stop?

So let me see if i understand you.

PRINCE was the keeper of the funk until D'ANGELO came along and took the baton from him but the drug demons got him.

whofarted


WOW.
And then ya'll wonder why i started this thread in the first place.
http://www.facebook.com/p...111?ref=ts
y'all gone keep messin' around wit me and turn me back to the old me......
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Reply #821 posted 09/02/08 7:44am

ButterscotchPi
mp

avatar

violetblues said:

ButterscotchPimp said:

The INITIAL statement (which i haven't backed off from, or wavered on a BIT while controversially stated and somewhat harsh is, was and still is.....




falloff
fuckin bafoon, what the fuck does that even mean?

The purest definition, lol,

Yeah, your opinion supersedes dictionaries encyclopedias, journalists, musicians, et all, lol, like has been said here before, you are not the self proclaimed most hated man on the org, just the most childish one.



I read what you attempt to contribute to the conversation and all i hear in my head is "Charlie Brown's teacher".

And i never said i was the MOST hated man on the Org. I said i'm one of them. Didn't aspire to be, but i am. And i'm fine with it.
http://www.facebook.com/p...111?ref=ts
y'all gone keep messin' around wit me and turn me back to the old me......
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Reply #822 posted 09/02/08 7:58am

wasitgood4u

avatar

BP - any particular reason you continue to avoid my posts? I'm not that bothered (and if the answer is that they weren't very interesting that's cool too),but am interested in your responses to the questions I raised - or anyone else's for that matter!
"We've never been able to pull off a funk number"

"That's becuase we're soulless auttomatons"
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Reply #823 posted 09/02/08 8:18am

GustavoRibas

avatar

SanDiegoFunkDaddy said:

Prince WAS the keeper of the Funk. Prince was the funkiest artist after P. Funk. Even George Clinton admitted it. Nobody has picked up where Prince left off. In my opinion, Prince took it as far as its gonna go. D'Angelo was about take the baton but the drug demons got him. As far as creativity, Prince is still the greatest recording artist ever


- Hmm...I consider D´Angelo more soul than funk. Prince definitely had solid ROOTS, something that most today´s artists unfortunately dont seem to have.
But I would love to be surprised.
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Reply #824 posted 09/02/08 8:29am

ButterscotchPi
mp

avatar

hollywooddove said:

As I posted in an earlier thread, I went back and studied some Latimore, Graham Central Station, Bootsie Collins, and more. Prince has definately made some music that stems out of Latimore, but I have never heard him do any raw funk like Graham Central has done.

But there are two schools of thought in here. One that says the old day funk is true funk, and everything else is watered down wanna-be.

The other says that funk is still alive and well, it has simply evolved.

I have to say, if it is has evolved into what is claimed, it has been the most varied and stretched evoltution of a music genre. Perhaps funk is more complex than the other music movements.
[Edited 9/2/08 5:31am]



INTERESTING.
Therein lies the rub for me.
Because to me, funk is funk. It hasn't really "evolved". Other "offshoots" or derivitives are just those. And THAT'S why i don't look at Prince or the Minneapolis Sound as "funk".

Like you said, if the Minneapolis Sound is indeed funk then is has to be the most varied and stretched music genre in history.

I don't think funk is that complex.
That is a VERY interesting take!
http://www.facebook.com/p...111?ref=ts
y'all gone keep messin' around wit me and turn me back to the old me......
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Reply #825 posted 09/02/08 8:31am

ButterscotchPi
mp

avatar

wasitgood4u said:

BP - any particular reason you continue to avoid my posts? I'm not that bothered (and if the answer is that they weren't very interesting that's cool too),but am interested in your responses to the questions I raised - or anyone else's for that matter!



I apologize. No particular reason at all other than i had a busy holiday weekend and i jumped in at this page and started responding.

I'll go back a couple of pages and see what i missed.
http://www.facebook.com/p...111?ref=ts
y'all gone keep messin' around wit me and turn me back to the old me......
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Reply #826 posted 09/02/08 8:38am

ButterscotchPi
mp

avatar

A couple of things before i jump back in and respond to some things that have been said.

ONE, the myth of me "back peddling". I've been extrememly consistant throughout this thread. I've said the same things since page 1. Haven't backed off one bit with the exception being that i modified my position of Prince being "somewhat" a "keeper of the funk" due to the fact that he's hipped people to the genre. But that's the only point i've conceeded thus far.

TWO, is there some kind of Org sub-culture that i'm not aware of? Is there some kind of award for "longest thread"? I mean i get the impression that to some of ya'll "thread size" is equal to "member-size" because some of ya'll seemed PISSED that this convo is still going and some of you seem almost desperate to see it die. I don't care either way, i just wonder if there's some rule/prize that i don't know about.

Anyhoo.....
http://www.facebook.com/p...111?ref=ts
y'all gone keep messin' around wit me and turn me back to the old me......
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Reply #827 posted 09/02/08 8:52am

ButterscotchPi
mp

avatar

wasitgood4u said:

This has been an, at times, interesting discussion but it gets incredibly frustrating because of BP's back-peddling and side-stepping (to mix sport metaphors):

The most important point made, and ignored repeatedly by BP, is the contradiction implied by his acceptance of the transition from JB to GC in his definition of "pure funk" but his rejection of Prince and the so-called "Minny sound." If he had been listening to music in the 60s and 70s and been a funk purist, he would have been saying that what GC and P-Funk were doing is not funk whatever they call themselves because it doesn't conform to the unchangeable characteristics instituted by JB.

I went back and listened to some Troutman and Barkays thanx to this thread (and I mean thank you), and I can understand why you might see them as "hard-core funk" and most Prince as more pop-oriented funk (BP still hasn't responded to some of the counter-examples like the 12-inch of I Wish U Heaven). BUT, to my ears they are clearly not innovative to the funk to the same degree that JB (originator), GC, Sly and P were.

Here's a different question, though: should the value of P's funk influence be downgraded because of those influenced BY him (someone quoted a bunch in a post above)? Most of them are light-weight crap that, in my opinion alone, have had a negative influence on pop, funk and black music in general. The exceptions (from the list above at least) are Outkast and the Roots and that may just be enough to make it worth crediting P's longlasting influence: it seems that a new generation of artists making innovative and different styles of funk credit P as a major influence. (I'd put jdavey in there too - but I think they're too many removes from funk for it to be a major classifier).



Okay, here's something that just popped in my head that maybe will clarify things. I think that where Sly and James Brown definately laid the foundation of what became the genre "funk", the genre was created by George. I mean as George used to say "funk used to be a bad word". I think that's when the rawer elements of R&B/Soul spun into what became "funk". So in my mind, i can't even get my brain around "pop-oriented funk" because by nature if it's pop-oriented it ceases to be "funk".

Now some genres are broad enough to have "types". "pop" is very broad. "rock" is somewhat broad. even "jazz" but with that one i wish a lot of things that are called "jazz" weren't, because they really aren't. that's where you get into weird areas like "acid jazz" or "neo-soul". eh.

to me "funk" is like "blues". it is, or it isn't. something can be "bluesy" or "funky" but with genres as pure and as fundamentally unique as those two are, "bluesy" and "funky" are LESS than the original genres.


Outkast. Now that's one of those groups that certainly can be counted as adding somewhat to the funk legacy, and you could argue that they also add to P's legacy. They're heavily influenced by both artists, but i don't think that somehow is an indicator of P's "influence" on the funk, i think that's more of a case where fans of the one genre usually tend to be fans of the other.

I mean it would be difficult to imagine a true "funk" fan not being able to appreciate Prince's diversity and in your face controversial style/subject matter (in the early days, certainly not now).

Does that make any sense? (
(sooper-tired, sun baked and hung over)
http://www.facebook.com/p...111?ref=ts
y'all gone keep messin' around wit me and turn me back to the old me......
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Reply #828 posted 09/02/08 8:57am

wasitgood4u

avatar

ButterscotchPimp said:

A couple of things before i jump back in and respond to some things that have been said.

ONE, the myth of me "back peddling". I've been extrememly consistant throughout this thread. I've said the same things since page 1. Haven't backed off one bit with the exception being that i modified my position of Prince being "somewhat" a "keeper of the funk" due to the fact that he's hipped people to the genre. But that's the only point i've conceeded thus far.


I guess you did read my posts since I was the one who said that lol (oh and I also think you bandy the word "myth" about a bit too loosely, I don't think there are any myths abou you, but I could be wrong...). Anyway, the main reason I was using htis was because your original post said that Prince isn't that funky, but since then you continually say that you think Prince IS funky and that he plays funky music but not "funk music" (or something like that...)

TWO, is there some kind of Org sub-culture that i'm not aware of? Is there some kind of award for "longest thread"? I mean i get the impression that to some of ya'll "thread size" is equal to "member-size" because some of ya'll seemed PISSED that this convo is still going and some of you seem almost desperate to see it die. I don't care either way, i just wonder if there's some rule/prize that i don't know about.

Anyhoo.....


Umm - yeah. You win the prize for the longest....
"We've never been able to pull off a funk number"

"That's becuase we're soulless auttomatons"
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Reply #829 posted 09/02/08 9:05am

wasitgood4u

avatar

ButterscotchPimp said:

wasitgood4u said:

This has been an, at times, interesting discussion but it gets incredibly frustrating because of BP's back-peddling and side-stepping (to mix sport metaphors):

The most important point made, and ignored repeatedly by BP, is the contradiction implied by his acceptance of the transition from JB to GC in his definition of "pure funk" but his rejection of Prince and the so-called "Minny sound." If he had been listening to music in the 60s and 70s and been a funk purist, he would have been saying that what GC and P-Funk were doing is not funk whatever they call themselves because it doesn't conform to the unchangeable characteristics instituted by JB.

I went back and listened to some Troutman and Barkays thanx to this thread (and I mean thank you), and I can understand why you might see them as "hard-core funk" and most Prince as more pop-oriented funk (BP still hasn't responded to some of the counter-examples like the 12-inch of I Wish U Heaven). BUT, to my ears they are clearly not innovative to the funk to the same degree that JB (originator), GC, Sly and P were.

Here's a different question, though: should the value of P's funk influence be downgraded because of those influenced BY him (someone quoted a bunch in a post above)? Most of them are light-weight crap that, in my opinion alone, have had a negative influence on pop, funk and black music in general. The exceptions (from the list above at least) are Outkast and the Roots and that may just be enough to make it worth crediting P's longlasting influence: it seems that a new generation of artists making innovative and different styles of funk credit P as a major influence. (I'd put jdavey in there too - but I think they're too many removes from funk for it to be a major classifier).



Okay, here's something that just popped in my head that maybe will clarify things. I think that where Sly and James Brown definately laid the foundation of what became the genre "funk", the genre was created by George. I mean as George used to say "funk used to be a bad word". I think that's when the rawer elements of R&B/Soul spun into what became "funk". So in my mind, i can't even get my brain around "pop-oriented funk" because by nature if it's pop-oriented it ceases to be "funk".

Now some genres are broad enough to have "types". "pop" is very broad. "rock" is somewhat broad. even "jazz" but with that one i wish a lot of things that are called "jazz" weren't, because they really aren't. that's where you get into weird areas like "acid jazz" or "neo-soul". eh.

to me "funk" is like "blues". it is, or it isn't. something can be "bluesy" or "funky" but with genres as pure and as fundamentally unique as those two are, "bluesy" and "funky" are LESS than the original genres.


Outkast. Now that's one of those groups that certainly can be counted as adding somewhat to the funk legacy, and you could argue that they also add to P's legacy. They're heavily influenced by both artists, but i don't think that somehow is an indicator of P's "influence" on the funk, i think that's more of a case where fans of the one genre usually tend to be fans of the other.

I mean it would be difficult to imagine a true "funk" fan not being able to appreciate Prince's diversity and in your face controversial style/subject matter (in the early days, certainly not now).

Does that make any sense? (
(sooper-tired, sun baked and hung over)


1. The first half is the most sense you've made (to me) in a long time - so I'm glad I pushed you to respond. This is the closest you've come to answering those who were asking you to give your own definition of funk. I think most ppl DO see what JB was doing as funk and Sly's and GC's take as an evolution which continued with P. I even think there are some posts where you namecheck JB and Sly as funk-masters (can't be f-d going to check, tho). OTOH if I just go by this last post of yours, it simplifies things down to what appeared to be the case from the beginning and had been becoming clearer as we went along: it's all about definitions. If you define GC as inventing and representing "pure funk" then I agree with 90% or more of what you've said - but I don't accept that definition and I don't think most folks do either. You, or some1 else, referred 2 JB as the pioneer of funk (Papa's Got a Brand New Bag?) - and that's how I've always seen it.

2. Outkast - I don't understand your take at all and how it doesn't completely contradict the first half of your post. Outkast are miles from your definition of "pure funk" and much closer to a next stage in the evolutionary definition...

And so it goes, around again...
"We've never been able to pull off a funk number"

"That's becuase we're soulless auttomatons"
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Reply #830 posted 09/02/08 9:56am

Graycap23

ButterscotchPimp said:



Outkast. )

Ohh Larwd.....u have no idea what u are talking about.
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Reply #831 posted 09/02/08 10:10am

jdcxc

There's an interesting article in the new Waxpoetics magazine (Bad Brains cover). For anyone not familiar with this excellent monthly magazine, it examines funk, r&b, soul, hiphop, rock and any other african based genre. Recent covers have profiled Bill Withers, James Brown, Rick James and Herbie Hancock.

On the last page, the article titled, "Sound Synthesis: The Punk-Funk of Prince and the Rebels", details Prince's musical roots. It talks about Prince conceptualizing funk, punk and new wave influences in 1979. The Rebels were a project that he was going to release highlighting his newfound band approach. The unreleased Demo included "uncut Minneapolis funk" and an early version of "Head." The early music was never released and P produced Dirty Mind in 1980 which was a continuation of the Rebels themes and expanded Prince's vision of "stripped down funk." The album received "glowing reviews in the rock press but a lukewarm reception by Black music critics who didn't get Prince's freaky-deaky lyrics nor minimalist Devo-meets-Sly-Stone production technique."

The article concludes by describing the Dirty Mind tour as finding a "global audience hungry for more- their brand of punk-funk controversy was about to define a decade."

But I know, it's not funk if it's not pure.
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Reply #832 posted 09/02/08 1:14pm

DreamyPopRoyal
ty

avatar

falloff @ this thread

I agree with the threadstarter on this.
Who made Prince the keeper of funk anyway?

People keep saying how he's not funky enough these days... I don't see him as a funk artist so much as an artist who can do just about every genre well. He's an everything sort of guy, but I'd call him an R&B artist with a million flavors.
had 2 run away... pride was 2 strong. It started raining, baby, the birds were gone
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Reply #833 posted 09/02/08 2:39pm

ButterscotchPi
mp

avatar

wasitgood4u said:

ButterscotchPimp said:




Okay, here's something that just popped in my head that maybe will clarify things. I think that where Sly and James Brown definately laid the foundation of what became the genre "funk", the genre was created by George. I mean as George used to say "funk used to be a bad word". I think that's when the rawer elements of R&B/Soul spun into what became "funk". So in my mind, i can't even get my brain around "pop-oriented funk" because by nature if it's pop-oriented it ceases to be "funk".

Now some genres are broad enough to have "types". "pop" is very broad. "rock" is somewhat broad. even "jazz" but with that one i wish a lot of things that are called "jazz" weren't, because they really aren't. that's where you get into weird areas like "acid jazz" or "neo-soul". eh.

to me "funk" is like "blues". it is, or it isn't. something can be "bluesy" or "funky" but with genres as pure and as fundamentally unique as those two are, "bluesy" and "funky" are LESS than the original genres.


Outkast. Now that's one of those groups that certainly can be counted as adding somewhat to the funk legacy, and you could argue that they also add to P's legacy. They're heavily influenced by both artists, but i don't think that somehow is an indicator of P's "influence" on the funk, i think that's more of a case where fans of the one genre usually tend to be fans of the other.

I mean it would be difficult to imagine a true "funk" fan not being able to appreciate Prince's diversity and in your face controversial style/subject matter (in the early days, certainly not now).

Does that make any sense? (
(sooper-tired, sun baked and hung over)


1. The first half is the most sense you've made (to me) in a long time - so I'm glad I pushed you to respond. This is the closest you've come to answering those who were asking you to give your own definition of funk. I think most ppl DO see what JB was doing as funk and Sly's and GC's take as an evolution which continued with P. I even think there are some posts where you namecheck JB and Sly as funk-masters (can't be f-d going to check, tho). OTOH if I just go by this last post of yours, it simplifies things down to what appeared to be the case from the beginning and had been becoming clearer as we went along: it's all about definitions. If you define GC as inventing and representing "pure funk" then I agree with 90% or more of what you've said - but I don't accept that definition and I don't think most folks do either. You, or some1 else, referred 2 JB as the pioneer of funk (Papa's Got a Brand New Bag?) - and that's how I've always seen it.

2. Outkast - I don't understand your take at all and how it doesn't completely contradict the first half of your post. Outkast are miles from your definition of "pure funk" and much closer to a next stage in the evolutionary definition...

And so it goes, around again...



Well that answers my question as to whether that made sense or not, because right off the bat 2 of ya'll misunderstood what i was trying to say. I said that Outkast has SOMEWHAT added to the funk legacy as they are obviously HEAVILY influenced by "funk". That's not saying that Outkast is "pure funk". They're NOT. Andre's also heavily influenced by Prince. That doesn't make him "the next one".

Are we clear now?
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Reply #834 posted 09/02/08 2:41pm

ButterscotchPi
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DreamyPopRoyalty said:

falloff @ this thread

I agree with the threadstarter on this.
Who made Prince the keeper of funk anyway?

People keep saying how he's not funky enough these days... I don't see him as a funk artist so much as an artist who can do just about every genre well. He's an everything sort of guy, but I'd call him an R&B artist with a million flavors.



Well i could've used you about 18 pages or so ago, but i'll take the support when i can get it!
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Reply #835 posted 09/02/08 3:40pm

OskarKristio2

Maybe cuz of Prince's overall fame as a recording artists he is more widely known and hence can carry Funk to the ears of a lot more people than others but having said that Im sure there's lot more less known artists that play much more pure funk and less other music styles/diversity than Prince.

With Prince he is ultimatly an eclectic artist was right from the start to now he never been just straight out Funk like JB or Sly. Sure the Funk is there and played well but significant percentage of Prince's stuff is not Funk.


SanDiegoFunkDaddy said:

Prince WAS the keeper of the Funk. Prince was the funkiest artist after P. Funk. Even George Clinton admitted it. Nobody has picked up where Prince left off. In my opinion, Prince took it as far as its gonna go. D'Angelo was about take the baton but the drug demons got him. As far as creativity, Prince is still the greatest recording artist ever
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Reply #836 posted 09/03/08 6:34am

ButterscotchPi
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murph said:

BlaqueKnight said:

So, while Murph and you cheerleaders try to re-write history on a message board, the facts still stand.Influence and synths have nothing to do with Prince not being one of the major forces of FUNK. He isn't/wasn't. He IS funky, though. Without a doubt. He's just not at the top of the funk food chain. This thread has been shifted from point to point to point. People have tried to strawman it into "Prince isn't funky at all" to "Prince didn't influence music" to "Prince's use of synths and other side topics. A lot of people on here try to imply that Prince "mastered" funk and moved on. He didn't. He moved on, yes. Mastered funk? No. He borrowed elements. In the context of funk songs, his resume is light.



LOL..it amazes me how all of a sudden I've become the leader of the Prince cheerleaders...That to me is hilarious...The only thing that has shifted about this thread is you and dude grabbing on to whatever argument u can find to veer from the original point that was made...

I mean really...The first post read simply as "Prince was never that funky"....Then it said "Prince was a joke when it came to the funk" because of Scotch had a few friends to back him up...

All of the other stuff you guys latched onto was just smokescreen...The "Prince wasn't the first to use synths" bit...The "Prince wasn't the first to use drum machines" bs (these "strawman" arguments, as you call them, came from Butterscotch Pimp, not me...) Of course no one (with knowledge of music history) ever said he was the first to do any of those things...But I did say he was first to strip the entire usage down to the point where he created a "Prince" sound...Again, how is that a crazy statement?

I even agreed, from the jump, that Prince was never a "funk God" (one of the other points that was bought up to zero in on the fandom on this site), a point btw, that was never made or co-signed by me his genre hopping....

What I did say and will continue to say is the Midget had a huge impact on the evolution of modern funk...Nothing crazy there, right? Except it is when you are dealing with folks that mistake being a Contrarian with being the rebel of a Prince fan site...That's what happens when you try too hard...

What continues to fly over your head is this: Prince did indeed master the funk....He contributed greatly (and some music historians say created) and mastered the "new funk" that left many a band behind that could not adapt after the '70s...If you can't understand that, then that's on you...
[Edited 8/31/08 13:33pm]



It's also hilarious how much you've "side-stepped" on this thread. But, whatever. You've moved all over the place on this. I'm still waiting to put the nail on the coffin on "Prince heavily influenced the funk from '80-'82". After i've shown repeatedly that i don't think he did. And then when the top of the charts don't reflect what you've said, then you shift the discussion to "i wasn't talking about just synths and drum machines, that's crazy!!!" (nevermind that exactly what you said at first), now it's about the "sparseness" of them, the "coldness". So again i'm asking for AN EXAMPLE of one of the heavy hitters we've discussed, or ANY heavy hitters that sounded like PRINCE in '80-'82?


And GTFOHWTBS about Prince having "mastered the funk".
[Edited 9/3/08 6:35am]
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Reply #837 posted 09/03/08 7:59am

DreamyPopRoyal
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Actually, I find it very difficult to believe Prince was a "trailblazer" or to have mastered of any genre.

Why so skeptical?

Because nobody talks about him in that manner. I rarely hear him talked about at all and in those cases, it was because people thought he was a freak or because they think he's great in all respects.
He's such an under-rated artist, which I find to be very sad.

Truth is that I never thought of him to be a "funk" artist and never heard him put in that category until I came here. Don't you think if he was that it'd be as common knowledge as the fact that he was involved in "Purple Rain?"
had 2 run away... pride was 2 strong. It started raining, baby, the birds were gone
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Reply #838 posted 09/03/08 8:13am

ButterscotchPi
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DreamyPopRoyalty said:

Actually, I find it very difficult to believe Prince was a "trailblazer" or to have mastered of any genre.

Why so skeptical?

Because nobody talks about him in that manner. I rarely hear him talked about at all and in those cases, it was because people thought he was a freak or because they think he's great in all respects.
He's such an under-rated artist, which I find to be very sad.

Truth is that I never thought of him to be a "funk" artist and never heard him put in that category until I came here. Don't you think if he was that it'd be as common knowledge as the fact that he was involved in "Purple Rain?"



Which was why i started this thread in the first place. It confused me that some in here think of him as a "funk master". I'd never heard of him referred to in that manner until i started coming here as well.
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Reply #839 posted 09/03/08 12:53pm

hollywooddove

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DreamyPopRoyalty said:

Actually, I find it very difficult to believe Prince was a "trailblazer" or to have mastered of any genre.

Why so skeptical?

Because nobody talks about him in that manner. I rarely hear him talked about at all and in those cases, it was because people thought he was a freak or because they think he's great in all respects.
He's such an under-rated artist, which I find to be very sad.

Truth is that I never thought of him to be a "funk" artist and never heard him put in that category until I came here. Don't you think if he was that it'd be as common knowledge as the fact that he was involved in "Purple Rain?"

It is rare when a person can just be themself and have such a following of people who like not only the uniqueness of what they do, but who they are. This is what Prince has achieved. He has a definate unique style, that is not only singular, but enjoyed by many.

Being different is easy. Being different but also good, now that is what makes a star.
We are all so full of doody here
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