independent and unofficial
Prince fan community
Welcome! Sign up or enter username and password to remember me
Forum jump
Forums > Prince: Music and More > Prince's early 90's work has aged horribly.
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Page 3 of 3 <123
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
Reply #60 posted 08/21/09 9:17am

gyoung

MattyJam said:

Poplife88 said:

Symbol...I really only still listen to 7 and God Created Woman...and thats it. The rest really sucks bad and has only gotten worse over the years.


You must dig Damn U, surely?!



I completely agree...those are the only two I can stand either.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #61 posted 08/21/09 9:23am

ufoclub

avatar

OldFriends4Sale said:

1725topp said:



Sounds like to me, it is just more of an issue of tastes. One, nothing--music or video--that Madonna has ever done has moved me. So, I would not consider her videos great. Two, MJ made some great songs and mostly creative and well-executied videos, but both his music and videos don't move me like Prince's music and videos. It's just about what one likes. I think that "Thriller," the song, is decent--at best, but the video is probably the best ever made. However, neither the song or the video for "Thriller" move me like "When Doves Cry," the song and the video. I love the videos for Dirty Mind, Controvery, and 1999 because being raised in a blues town, I love performers. So, concept videos are good, but I'm more moved by performance video. Again, different strokes for different folks. As for his early 90s work/video, they are what I like, and even though I like "Bad," the song and the video, when it was released I could not help but think, "This is nice, but it is the same concept as "Beat It." Prince's musical growth and evolving subject matter, even during the early 90s, moved me more than MJ and Madonna, but that's because that is what I like.

Again, as for the cringe factor, I never had that problem--then or now because I like what I like--then and now. And as for the songs on Diamonds and Pearls and The Symbol Album, I don't skip any when I'm listening to the albums.
[Edited 8/20/09 21:47pm]



MJ & Madonna had very high rated videos almost like little movies, the qualities and direction was very professional, then you add the entertainers touch.

Prince's earlies videos I liked because it felt like the music Controversy sounded like it was in a chapel

1999 had similar feels

Purple Rain videos were mostly cuts from the movie except for When Doves Cry, it was a very good change in direction and showed the band in a differen light
and put Prince in a bit of a more acting role

Around the World in a Day produced one of the top best videos of all time:Raspberry Beret

Parade in my opinion took Prince's videos from point 7 or 8 to point 10
superb videos: Girls & Boys Kiss Mountians Another Lovers

SOTT again concert videos, except for U Got the Look which I love the collage dream sequence at the beginning

Lovesexy to me had better videos: Alphabet St a last minute late night through together, It could have been planned out better the quality was a drop from all previous videos, Glam Slam was really good and planned out, I Wish U Heaven I really liked too,

Overall I think Prince videos don't look thought out, looked to rushed or last minute, which doesn't do the song justice.

Even his videos for Lotus Flower did nothing to pull me in. Matrix inspiration definately

I'm not the biggest fan of mike nor Madonna but the video quality and production were just so much more professional thought out and artistic
I can watch and enjoy a video without being a fan of the person work
and that's actually how a lot of people are won over or their interests in other entertainers are peaked.

MTV 80's generation did a lot to expose people to music they never listened to before because of videos


ha ha... "Alphabet Street" video was planned to look like a retro, PBS, kids video form the 70's. They might have done it quickly, but shooting it in that style was intentional, and me and my friends thought that was so cool back then... before Beck got all acceptably retro humorous.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #62 posted 08/21/09 9:29am

laurarichardso
n

bellanoche said:

laurarichardson said:

Of course it is subjective you have people on this board who hate any rap music, funk and RnB. So you can't really take anything they have to say seriously.


I think the symbol CD is great and so is Emancipation. I play cuts from these CDs for people who don't even like Prince but they really like the cuts on these CDS.


I agree with this. Of course, we are all entitled to our own preferences. However, one thing that I have noticed on this site over the years is that there is a contingent of people who seem to completely trash anything Prince does that is R&B, Funk or has Rap. It seems like some people only have a taste for pop/rock Prince and they dismiss anything else as garbage.

Like you, I plan stuff from Come, D&P, the Symbol album and Emancipation for non-Prince fans, and they love it. I might be listening to some of it and people will stop and ask what it is or what album it's on.

-----
Thank you I know I can't be the only one that see the haterade toward RnB music on this board. I play P's unknown by the masses material for people all the time and they always want to know

" How come they never heard that song before"

P is good at writing RnB music and I have always been happy that he never abandoned it and I hope he keeps performing it long after the RnB haters are gone.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #63 posted 08/21/09 11:56am

thebanishedone

avatar

video killed the radio star
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #64 posted 08/21/09 4:01pm

fantasticjoy

avatar

MattyJam said:

funksterr said:

except for 'Gett Off", which deserves it's own thread for being Prince's most illegitimate hit record.

I've never understood the fuss over Gett Off.

The song itself isn't too bad, but Prince's rapping and the god-awful production make it so difficult to listen to.
[Edited 8/20/09 4:29am]

I think Gett Off is flawless.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #65 posted 08/21/09 5:38pm

Gonzalo1979

avatar

I love Prince for his 1991 to 1995 albums (Diamonds & Pearls, o(+>, Come, The Gold Experience, GoldNigga and Exodus, the songs he performs in The Undertaker vhs and the 2 new songs from the Hits/The B-sides: Pink Cashmere and Peach and the outtakes he recorded in this period). It hasn't aged horribly, it's his best music, his BEST WORK EVER the one that proves he's a music genius. I like it much more than the 80s stuff, do you love Prince for songs like Little Red Corvette? The songs his non-fans can name?
His BEST era ever, where he really shows his genius and musicianship is 1991-1995. He didn't look his best until 1991, his best hair clothes (million times better than the 80s) and everything, the way he looks in the 3 Chains of Gold VHS/LD.. His Tours where his best in 1991-1995.
1996 to 2000 is his worst era ever (except for the songs She Spoke 2 Me, Don't Talk To Strangers,Crystal Ball 3-cd set-should we consider music released on this period or just music recorded in this period?), how can anyone say that's his best era?? are you people musically retarded?

Strollin, Willin and Able, Insatiable, Love 2 the 9s, Sexy MF, 3 Chains o Gold, 2Gether, Johnny, In a Deuce and a Quarter, Count the Days, Pink Cashmere, Peach, 2morrow, Dolphin, Shhh, Shy, Gold, Rock n Roll is Alive, Solo (this one is the reason to buy the Come cd), Dark, all the songs that appear in the Undertaker vhs, Purple Medley.

His 80s stuff sounds aged, specially his hits--i don't think any fan/friend loves P for his hits (except of course the song Purple Rain, but the full length version was not a hit, the 3:49 edit was). I do love many of his songs from the 80s: When We're Dancing Close and Slow, With You, Tick Tick Bang-the original recording which is really fast, Condition of the heart, Private Joy, Let's Work, most of the b-sides, Dorothy Parker, Housequake, Adore, Scandalous, Sometimes it snows in April, When 2 r in love, the Black album, Dance With The Devil (outtake from the Batman album), Still Would Stand all time, The Grand Progression (outtake from GRaffiti Bridge).
His best songs from 1991-1995 don't sound aged at all, Pink Cashmere or Peach or Strollin or Count the Days or Dolphin or Shy or Solo, etc these songs are timeless, Solo could have been recorded in the year 3000.

If I could travel back in time to attend Prince's concerts i would go back to 1991 (not the 80s) and go to all the concerts from 1991 to 1995.
[Edited 8/21/09 17:55pm]
[Edited 8/21/09 17:59pm]
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #66 posted 08/21/09 11:55pm

WatchThemFall

avatar

I don't know: there's a certain warmth to the early 1990s sound that makes me want to revisit often. "With This Tear" and "Love Thy Will Be Done" are gorgeous.
Personally . I think we are all Boring with No Lives cause all we do is talk about Prince,Criticize and Gossip. I need a Horny Man is what I Need and probably so do most of yas. We are Sexually Frustrated what we R... Amen..!!! - zelaire
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #67 posted 08/22/09 1:31am

MattyJam

avatar

WatchThemFall said:

and "Love Thy Will Be Done" are gorgeous.


I wholeheartedly agree on that one.

Superb track.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #68 posted 08/23/09 12:06am

1725topp

Gonzalo1979 said:

His 80s stuff sounds aged, specially his hits--i don't think any fan/friend loves P for his hits (except of course the song Purple Rain, but the full length version was not a hit, the 3:49 edit was).


Where I still love Prince's nineties work, I disagree that his eighties work has aged poorly. And I must definitely disagree that a fan does not love Prince for his hits. Maybe it's because of where I live, but from 1978 to 1986, before I learned how to purchase bootleg material, I was introduced to Prince through radio and later video, which means that I fell in love with the hits on the radio, which caused me to purchase the entire album. Now to be clear, I'm not one who feels that I must choose between hits and lesser known songs. I'm moved equally by both, but it has never bothered me that many only know the songs that are mostly played on the radio. Even today, though I rarely listen to the radio, if a Prince "usual suspect" jam is played, I still put the volume on ten...well, as I'm getting older and my ears hurt more now, I can only make it to the volume level of seven.

OldFriends4sal said:

Overall I think Prince videos don't look thought out, looked to rushed or last minute, which doesn't do the song justice.


I can completely understand your sentiment, especially compared to the funds and production used by MJ and Madonna. And I can see how one would or could desire to see more elaborate and conceptual videos to compliment if not enhance Prince's great storytelling ability. Yet, since I've always seen him as a guitar hero first, I was cool with just seeing that in a video. Again, I'm not knocking the need for or the desire to see a more conceptual video with solid production, but I like that Prince decided to showcase himself as a musician, songwriter, and singer with a few moves/dance steps to work the crowd. I don't get as many opportunities now, but in rare moments when I'm not reading or writing and my wife is away on business, I'll watch his videos or a live concert and still enjoy them. Whether it is the live performance of the "Take Me with You" video or the "Willing and Able," "Diamonds and Pearls," "Insatiable," "Cream," "Live 4 Love," "Daddy Pop," "My Name Is Prince," "The Morning Paper," "Gold," or "Dolphin" videos, they all still rock, funk, and groove for me. While others were selling mini-movies, Prince was selling that he is a musician who can plug and play with the best of them. I don't mind well-funded and well executed conceptual videos; I just like the concept of selling quality musicianship more.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #69 posted 08/23/09 1:28am

errant

avatar

it may sound dated, but so does his 80's work.

at least he was still trying back in the 90's. through most of them, anyway.
"does my cock look fat in these jeans?"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #70 posted 08/23/09 1:55am

NONSENSE

if you think they've aged you probably never liked them.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #71 posted 08/23/09 2:15am

Huggiebear

avatar

I disagree , as music is always going to date, I think when Prince wrote a song in 1991, he did not give a goddamn how it was going to go down in 2009 or even 1993 for that matter, it was made mainly to please the fans in 1991. Fortunately most of the 1991 material has aged well. And the mid 90s stuff was funky and real as it is now, have you ever heard "Hide the Bone" at full volume, none of the rappers today could compare to that. Its great he recorded his 90s stuff loud and full of the rap and swearing, because you won't get it off him now. I mean will you ever hear Prince say "Come here you sexy motherfucka" in 2010 or "What u stopping 4 nigga, I didn't say stop". Some of the Batman and GB stuff hasn't aged well, but Diamonds and Pearls, Symbol and Come have all aged well (In fact I love Symbol more now, than when it came out). The joy with Prince music, is that most of it was way ahead of its time when it came out and people are appreciating it now. cool
So what are u going 2 do? R u just gonna sit there and watch? I'm not gonna stop until the war is over. Its gonna take a long time
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #72 posted 08/23/09 9:38am

errant

avatar

Huggiebear said:

I disagree , as music is always going to date, I think when Prince wrote a song in 1991, he did not give a goddamn how it was going to go down in 2009 or even 1993 for that matter, it was made mainly to please the fans in 1991. Fortunately most of the 1991 material has aged well. And the mid 90s stuff was funky and real as it is now, have you ever heard "Hide the Bone" at full volume, none of the rappers today could compare to that. Its great he recorded his 90s stuff loud and full of the rap and swearing, because you won't get it off him now. I mean will you ever hear Prince say "Come here you sexy motherfucka" in 2010 or "What u stopping 4 nigga, I didn't say stop". Some of the Batman and GB stuff hasn't aged well, but Diamonds and Pearls, Symbol and Come have all aged well (In fact I love Symbol more now, than when it came out). The joy with Prince music, is that most of it was way ahead of its time when it came out and people are appreciating it now. cool


:agree:

nobody ever wrote or produced any great or interesting music by coming at it from a desire for it sound "timeless". nothing every changes or evolves that way.
"does my cock look fat in these jeans?"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #73 posted 08/23/09 10:10am

violetblues

Music does age, and new music can be timeless. Originality is timeless.
It's the artist from the 50's that kept on writing doo-wop songs, using tired popular phrases of the day that have been beat to death, while people and music had moved on.
Every genre deserves credit and respect, but when it becomes a formula, going through the motions it became dated. Same with any genre from any era.

Prince was going through the motions of what was "supposedly" in style. That makes it dated because he didn't bring anything new to what was going on, didn't put a spin on it to make it his own like he did earlier, it was an artist thinking formulaic doo-wop was still in vogue.

It has nothing to do with recording techniques or technology, its about the substance of the music. If you like Prince's 90's music that's fine, but that's not to say it doesn't sound dated.
It was cringe-worthy to see an artist of Prince's caliber, reduced to getting on his hands and knees pandering to what he thought was the lowest common denominator, it was Norma Desmond waiting for her close up. It was very sad to see.
[Edited 8/23/09 11:24am]
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #74 posted 08/23/09 11:59am

Educated313

MattyJam said:

And I'm not just talking about the tracks with Tony M.

Apart from a small handful of slow jams (namely the exquisite Damn U, Sweet Baby and Money Don't Matter) his output from 1990-1992 has aged awfully. I would be embarassed if tracks like Daddy Pop or Pope or My Name Is Prince or Graffiti Bridge or Blue Light or Jughead or The Flow or New Power Generation came on my iPod shuffle in front of a friend.

Even the better tracks from this era have aged poorly. Everything was so big and over-produced, from the cowbells and cringeful rap on Gett Off to the naff sound effects that ruin 7... this really wasn't a time for Prince to be proud of.

And it's not just the music... Take a look at the D&P video compilation... everything from the ghastly music videos, to the clothes he wore, to the stage sets from the Nude tour... it's all aged so horribly.
[Edited 8/19/09 6:51am]



I also concur with the title of the this forum because ALOT of his music back then was for lack of better words, weak as hell. It's funny that this topic is generating some of the same sentiments I had about "Pussy Control" because thats a song I'd be ashamed to play around a friend..

One of the reasons I don't care too much for 90s output was his incorporation rap and the gangsta image he attempted to portray at the time. Also, like a few others have said, most of the things he came out with at the time sounded rushed, I realize he was trying to escape his record contract, but even stuff from Diamonds and Pearls and the symbol album sounds dated...

Another thing that bothered was not only Prince's "infusion" of rap, but how a 35, 36-year-old artist who denounced the genre a decade prior was now using it as a way to appeal to the youth. Sounds like a sell out to me...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #75 posted 08/23/09 12:16pm

errant

avatar

Educated313 said:

MattyJam said:

And I'm not just talking about the tracks with Tony M.

Apart from a small handful of slow jams (namely the exquisite Damn U, Sweet Baby and Money Don't Matter) his output from 1990-1992 has aged awfully. I would be embarassed if tracks like Daddy Pop or Pope or My Name Is Prince or Graffiti Bridge or Blue Light or Jughead or The Flow or New Power Generation came on my iPod shuffle in front of a friend.

Even the better tracks from this era have aged poorly. Everything was so big and over-produced, from the cowbells and cringeful rap on Gett Off to the naff sound effects that ruin 7... this really wasn't a time for Prince to be proud of.

And it's not just the music... Take a look at the D&P video compilation... everything from the ghastly music videos, to the clothes he wore, to the stage sets from the Nude tour... it's all aged so horribly.
[Edited 8/19/09 6:51am]



I also concur with the title of the this forum because ALOT of his music back then was for lack of better words, weak as hell. It's funny that this topic is generating some of the same sentiments I had about "Pussy Control" because thats a song I'd be ashamed to play around a friend..



ironic, because that's one of the few that my friends even like from the last 20 years.

hell, at work the other day, two guys in their early 20's were begging me to put on Pussy Control. it's a cult classic even to this day.
"does my cock look fat in these jeans?"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #76 posted 08/23/09 7:40pm

Tame

avatar

I still play all of Prince's music. I just get in the mood for a particular song one day, and play the whole cd. cool
"The Lion Sleeps Tonight...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #77 posted 08/23/09 7:46pm

pplrain

avatar

MattyJam said:

Blah, blah, blah... [b]



I listen to Prince's music almost daily and really depends on my mood ie what I want to listen to. I love blue light and so I can listen to it anytime. wink

I love "my name is Prince" it brings up some good memories from times past of the younger, flash in your face type of Prince biggrin .
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #78 posted 08/27/09 9:07pm

gyoung

mozfonky said:

I liked Prince's rap when he would toy with it, before it was a fad, like on Girls and boys, now that to me was cool as fuck. His trying to be gangsta is really embarassing to me. The attempt to imitate the street accent is embarassing. But, I have to say some of the Hip hop stuff ain't bad, Sexy MF was a great tune, BUT.. not because of the hip hop elements but because the music. I think the raps hurt some very good songs. But, i'm not closed minded either, Joint to Joint from Emancipation was funky as hell to me. As it were, D&P was his biggest commercial triumph since purple rain I believe and was the impetus to the ill fated 100 million dollar deal he signed. Anyway, does he hit a home run for me everytime? No, but no one else does either. Compared to my other faves he's incredibly consistent. I admire him so much for his work ethic, you don't see many others in his field who can keep up that pace.


I like to think Joint to Joint was more spoken word. I agree with you about Girls & Boys and about the effects of him trying to be hard in raps (as if we can ever really accuse Prince of trying to be hard). I just thin the whole Tony M. thing was a disaster...dude SUCKS...and that's that.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #79 posted 08/28/09 3:09am

r1ghteousone

avatar

Well Diamonds & Pearls was when Prince stopped leading and started following the pack. Everyone always said he was one step ahead of everybody else in the 80's but I think he wanted more commercial success (him getting pissy with WB over sales figures and lack of promotion proves this) and so started to conform to current musical trends. Tony M & The Game Boyz were a disaster, yes, but Prince knew what we wanted and he's stubborn so is gonna stick with it despite the criticism.

There is some stuff from D&P & prince that's held up very well though...Willing & Able, Insatiable, Money Don't Matter 2Nite, Damn U, And God Created Woman, Sweet Baby...

The material got tighter later when he stripped it down to just him, Sonny T & Michael B (Barbarella can go shampoo his hair)...
pray love is god, god is love, girls and boys love god above pray
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #80 posted 09/08/09 9:26am

bellanoche

laurarichardson said:

bellanoche said:



I agree with this. Of course, we are all entitled to our own preferences. However, one thing that I have noticed on this site over the years is that there is a contingent of people who seem to completely trash anything Prince does that is R&B, Funk or has Rap. It seems like some people only have a taste for pop/rock Prince and they dismiss anything else as garbage.

Like you, I plan stuff from Come, D&P, the Symbol album and Emancipation for non-Prince fans, and they love it. I might be listening to some of it and people will stop and ask what it is or what album it's on.

-----
Thank you I know I can't be the only one that see the haterade toward RnB music on this board. I play P's unknown by the masses material for people all the time and they always want to know

" How come they never heard that song before"

P is good at writing RnB music and I have always been happy that he never abandoned it and I hope he keeps performing it long after the RnB haters are gone.


I know I am late with this response, but I compeltely agree with you. Prince has NEVER abandoned his RnB side, even though many of his Pop/Rock fans seem to want him to. Unlike those RnB artists who achieve crossover success and then abandon their RnB roots to continue chasing crossover money, he has always navigated both worlds without losing his roots only to later come crawling back when the crossover Pop/Rock crowd has moved on to its latest RnB fixation. He never left, and I love him for it.
perfection is a fallacy of the imagination...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Page 3 of 3 <123
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Forums > Prince: Music and More > Prince's early 90's work has aged horribly.