independent and unofficial
Prince fan community
Welcome! Sign up or enter username and password to remember me
Forum jump
Forums > Prince: Music and More > When did Prince reach his creative peak?
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Page 3 of 4 <1234>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
Reply #60 posted 09/15/09 12:11am

vivid

rialb said:

1985-1986. The outtakes from this era really speak volumes about how creative he was at this time. I suppose you could say 1983-1986 if you wanted to extend it a bit. I really don't see how anyone can say 1987 was part of Prince's peak. We haven't heard much music that was recorded in that year (compared to the years immediately before and after) and what we have heard pales when compared to the 1983-1986 era.



I'm not just thinking of recording. Did you see that tour?!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #61 posted 09/15/09 12:34am

purplesweat

mzkqueen03 said:

....HARD 2 TELL...cuz he STILL climax'in lol
.this has been the L-O-N-Gest ORGASM i have ever experienced musically EVER in the history of my L-I-F-E!!!..
.
...and i never want it 2 end!!!
..mzsexybaby'EVERYTHING U THINK..IS TRUE..NOBODY CAN CHANGE UR UNIVERSE..BUT U' sexy


LMFAO falloff Oh gawd....


Anyway, I'd say 1987. He's had his moments after that point of course - Shhh..., Black Sweat, SHOE, Dreamer - but that's not many songs in 22 years!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #62 posted 09/15/09 2:42am

Huggiebear

avatar

Main One Dream Factory, Crystal Ball, Sign o the Times, Camille, The Black Album (Basically 1986-87)

1980 -82, more innovative and he was hungrier at the time

1993-96, not really he was more adventorous than creative
[Edited 9/15/09 2:44am]
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 #63 posted 09/15/09 5:01am

rialb

avatar

vivid said:

rialb said:

1985-1986. The outtakes from this era really speak volumes about how creative he was at this time. I suppose you could say 1983-1986 if you wanted to extend it a bit. I really don't see how anyone can say 1987 was part of Prince's peak. We haven't heard much music that was recorded in that year (compared to the years immediately before and after) and what we have heard pales when compared to the 1983-1986 era.



I'm not just thinking of recording. Did you see that tour?!

Well I differentiate between Prince the studio artist and Prince the live artist. As a liver performer I think you can argue that he is currently among the best and has been for most of his career. I don't think his studio albums have been as consistently excellent as his live performances.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #64 posted 09/15/09 5:32am

jcurley

I think this is a really difficult one to answer. I think that when you discover someone that will feel to you like their creative peak because it feels personal to you. Like a lot of people I discovered prince during Purple rain and very quickly purchased his earlier albums. Even tho i adored PR it was an absolute joy to discover a catalogue of music prior to thsi era. So to me that felt like a "Peak" because I felt i had been let in to a secret-well a secret shared by millions. God you can't imagine this happening today, someone being huge on their sixth album. Today it's one big marketing push or you are out!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #65 posted 09/15/09 7:33am

Fenwick

Riverpoet31 said:

1981 - 1988 (Dirty Mind unto Lovesexy) remains his 'golden period' IMO:
A stream of recordings, releases and concerts that can be compared to the creative growth and the artistic importance of the Beatles in their period between Rubber Soul and Abbey Road.

Within that period i think he had his real peak from 1985 - 1987:
ATWIAD, Parade, songs like In All my dreams and Crystal Ball, The Family Album, The Jill Jones debut, Clare Fisher, The aborted Camille Album, Dream Factory, The Crystal Ball set resulting in the Sign of the Times album.

He did a tremendous job between 1981 - 1984 (Dirty Mind unto Purple Rain) by mixing 'black' and 'white' styles: mixing funk, soul, pop, rock, electronic dance music and new-wave into the 'Minneapolis sound', but it also was a bit too calculated for me sometimes (using his clothes and lyrics for 'shock value', his posure as the new black-white 'crossover' artist 'raunchier' then Michael Jackson, the rather blatant 'american dream' story of the Purple Rain movie)

Between 1985 and 1987 he sounds 'liberated' IMO. Its like the succes and money Purple Rain (the album and the movie) brought him, gave him he thought: i have reached my goal, lets go 'freewheeling' now!
His music from this short period simply bursts with rewarding creativity: wether its the stripped down drummachine beats meeting baroque orchestrations of the Family album and the Jill Jones debut, the Parade album going from Beatlesque marches, to calypso, to vaudeville, 'Pet sounds', Parisian Jazz, stripped down funk and a folky ballad, his embrace of jazz-funk on the Madhouse albums, the genious minimalism of songs like Sign of the Times and If I was your girlfriend, let alone the music that didnt get officially released (the dark, dense 'psycho-funk' of the Camille album, playfully genre-leaping compositions like Crystal Ball and In all my dreams).
Its like he 'paid off' his duties as a 'superstar' with the Purple Rain project, and it opened the way the just follow his creativity without caring too much what the 'big public' would think off it. IMO his music (and lyrics) did benefit a lot from that: it became less obvious, less superficial and more subtle and playfull.
The fact that the Sign of the Times album derives from an aborted 3 album-set, that it compromises three types of Prince sessions (Prince with the Revolution, Prince as his Camille alter-ego, and stripped down, minimalistic Prince after 'getting rid' of the Revolution) and that it still is such a great album, seen by many as his 'magnum opus', shows how much he was 'on a roll' in those years.

Going forward to his 1988 release: Lovesexy. I think that album is great on some levels, and not so great on other ones.
The great part of Lovesexy is that it musically tries to combine everything he did in the eighties: soul, funk, gospel, jazz, hard rock, dance, psychedelic rock, resulting in rather busy, but nonetheless ingenious arrangements (George Clinton and Frank Zappa come to my mind).
Also on a 'lyrical level' he tries to go for 'big answers': trying to combine the carnal with the spiritual, God and sex, love and lust.
But ultimately its a step back from what he achieved with the lyrics of Parade and especially Sign of the Times: On 'Sign' he finally showed some subtle doubts and vulnerability i could relate to. But on Lovesexy he reacts on some bad trip in a totally exeggerated way. Hiding himself behind dogma's and acting like some catholic from the 1930's. He might bring the 'sex' element into his redemption, but its annoying to see someone losing himself in his own dogma's.

1988 was the year when Prince did start to censor himself again upto to an annoying level. He played the funk-rock sexgod between 1981 and 1984. He seemed to get more carefree and 'human' between 1985 and 1987, But for whatever reason he decided to hide himself again in 1988.

IMO he has never recovered from it. He has delivered some great songs (at least, on a musical level) since. His own dogma's about romance (Emancipation), religion (The Rainbow Children, the Jehovah thing) and ownership (the '00's, the youtube-issue) have first of all shown me Prince is an artist affraid to grow up and develop himself as a person, and second, a dogmatic conservative who seems to doesnt know shit about life.


Wow, great post. On the music front, I couldn't have said it better myself. Two add-ons.

Lovesexy is either my favorite or second favorite album. You appear to be on the fence about its' conclusion, but I would definitely include it in your timeframe/assessment. Outside of When 2 R In Love and the tacky, over the top keyboards in Glam Slam, I think it is absolutely brilliant.

His post 88 material is definitely below the amazingly high bar, but I think there are a TON of great songs he's created since then. It's just that he's also created a TON of bad ones too, which before 88, the bad ones were really few and far between.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #66 posted 09/15/09 12:18pm

shonenjoe

avatar

Purple Rain

or SOTT, depending on perspective.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #67 posted 09/16/09 2:23am

vivid

rialb said:

vivid said:




I'm not just thinking of recording. Did you see that tour?!

Well I differentiate between Prince the studio artist and Prince the live artist. As a liver performer I think you can argue that he is currently among the best and has been for most of his career. I don't think his studio albums have been as consistently excellent as his live performances.



He is still brilliant live, but in '87 he was on fire. I don't differntiate I guess. I think his live performances mirror where he's at in the studio - now he's still a lot of fun and musically wonderful (live and in the studio), whereas back in the day he was outrageous, trail-blazing and better than everyone else (live and in the studio)
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #68 posted 09/16/09 2:46am

NouveauDance

avatar

ernestsewell said:

Dave1992 said:

1985-87

1993-95


yeahthat Although I would extend it to 1996.

yeahthat Although I wouldn't extend it to 1996, but I would change the first one to 1981-1986.

So, :yeahnotthat: razz
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #69 posted 09/16/09 4:04am

SoulAlive

1988.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #70 posted 09/16/09 5:04am

Madison88

avatar

It ain't o-vah wink
Help others get ahead. You will always stand
taller with someone else on your shoulders.
--Bob Moawad
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #71 posted 09/16/09 4:05pm

mzkqueen03

avatar

.
[Edited 12/23/09 9:47am]
..She's Just A Baby..but she's my lady..my loveR..my only friend!..true love that will last!..PEOPLE DON'T UNDERSTAND..WHAT SHE SEES IN AN OLDER MAN..they never stop 2 think that maybe i'm what she's looking 4..THEY NEVER TAKE THE TIME..2 look in her mind
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #72 posted 09/16/09 11:06pm

Shango

avatar

rialb said:

I really don't see how anyone can say 1987 was part of Prince's peak.
We haven't heard much music that was recorded in that year (compared to the years immediately before and after) and what we have heard pales when compared to the 1983-1986 era.

squirrelgrease said:


Well the reason I put 1986-1987 as his creative peak was because he recorded the majority of Lovesexy in 1987. '87 also saw the recording of the Black Album.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #73 posted 09/17/09 4:35am

rialb

avatar

Shango said:

rialb said:

I really don't see how anyone can say 1987 was part of Prince's peak.
We haven't heard much music that was recorded in that year (compared to the years immediately before and after) and what we have heard pales when compared to the 1983-1986 era.

squirrelgrease said:


Well the reason I put 1986-1987 as his creative peak was because he recorded the majority of Lovesexy in 1987. '87 also saw the recording of the Black Album.

I'm pretty sure that most of The Black Album was recorded in 1986.

Lovesexy, in my opinion, is nowhere near the level of the material recorded circa '83-'86.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #74 posted 09/17/09 5:49am

OldFriends4Sal
e

vivid said:

rialb said:

1985-1986. The outtakes from this era really speak volumes about how creative he was at this time. I suppose you could say 1983-1986 if you wanted to extend it a bit. I really don't see how anyone can say 1987 was part of Prince's peak. We haven't heard much music that was recorded in that year (compared to the years immediately before and after) and what we have heard pales when compared to the 1983-1986 era.



I'm not just thinking of recording. Did you see that tour?!


In my opinion, what we saw and heard on the Sign o the Times album & tour was the aftershocks of the previous years

I think Cat brought the added live encouragement for the live show, but I don't think the band had the studio creative connection he had with the previous band, it would have been cool to see Cat with the Revolution
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #75 posted 09/17/09 5:56am

LittleNicci

I think this is a strange question almost as strange as people ask if you got any spare change. How do you know till you'v spent all you need. The same with this question how can anyone judge (even if we should) when he aint finished delivering wonderful music - surely this can only be judged once he stops making music and that aint gonna be anytime soon and who are we to judge anyways its all subjective. Just my thoughts so don't hate me cos I is beautiful !!!!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #76 posted 09/17/09 5:58am

LittleNicci

2freaky4church1 said:

When Jehovah inserted the butt plug.


Why you got to be so rude ? to some people that might seem like religious bigotry and is just so pointless and crass ???? love one another
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #77 posted 09/17/09 7:44am

vivid

OldFriends4Sale said:

vivid said:




I'm not just thinking of recording. Did you see that tour?!


In my opinion, what we saw and heard on the Sign o the Times album & tour was the aftershocks of the previous years

I think Cat brought the added live encouragement for the live show, but I don't think the band had the studio creative connection he had with the previous band, it would have been cool to see Cat with the Revolution



True, but also true of every other year previous to that. I get your point, but all in all, I still think he was on fire in '87 and so I include that year.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #78 posted 09/18/09 2:16am

squirrelgrease

avatar

rialb said:

Shango said:


I'm pretty sure that most of The Black Album was recorded in 1986.


Bob George, 2 Nigs United 4 West Compton and Le Grind were recorded in December of '86. Cindy C. and Dead On It - March of '87. The released versions of When 2 R In Love, Cindy C, Le Grind and 2 Nigs United 4 West Compton were recorded in October of 1987.
If prince.org were to be made idiot proof, someone would just invent a better idiot.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #79 posted 09/18/09 7:21am

OldFriends4Sal
e

vivid said:

OldFriends4Sale said:



In my opinion, what we saw and heard on the Sign o the Times album & tour was the aftershocks of the previous years

I think Cat brought the added live encouragement for the live show, but I don't think the band had the studio creative connection he had with the previous band, it would have been cool to see Cat with the Revolution



True, but also true of every other year previous to that. I get your point, but all in all, I still think he was on fire in '87 and so I include that year.



Oh I agree, he was he just didn't have the all around creative connections he had before to take it higher SOTT & Lovesexy he was on fire
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #80 posted 09/18/09 1:16pm

organgrinder

avatar

1993-1995 cool
~ "don'tcha wanna see my 'Tootsie Roll?' Baby I'm sho' you would!" ~
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #81 posted 09/18/09 1:53pm

GiGi319

SPOOKYGAS said:

He has not reached it YET!

This is what I'm praying for!
love the one who is Love!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #82 posted 09/18/09 8:26pm

saafiir

avatar

From 1999 to Lovesexy !

cool
I'll die in your arms under the cherry moon...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #83 posted 09/18/09 8:42pm

Rinluv

avatar

OldFriends4Sale said:

rialb said:

1985-1986. The outtakes from this era really speak volumes about how creative he was at this time. I suppose you could say 1983-1986 if you wanted to extend it a bit. I really don't see how anyone can say 1987 was part of Prince's peak. We haven't heard much music that was recorded in that year (compared to the years immediately before and after) and what we have heard pales when compared to the 1983-1986 era.



Good points: anyone who is familiar with the outtakes will know the largest amount were made in the 1983-1986 years, and the people in his life and band had a lot 2 do with it,

Just 4 Purple Rain era alone there are rumored 2 be about 300 outtakes
and Prince said similar in a 1985 interview
it started to pick up during the 1999 era, Vanity's place in his life also influenced or stimiluated it

Purple Rain - Dream Factory hit out music we still have not heard yet it started to go down immediately during SOTT era and onward

That interveiw was from 1986 and Prince said that there were 320 unreleased songs, he meant overall. Not just from the Purle Rain era. Overall.
Some people think I'm kinda cute
But that don't compute when it comes 2 Y-O-U.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #84 posted 09/19/09 8:22am

squirrelgrease

avatar

Rinluv said:

OldFriends4Sale said:




Good points: anyone who is familiar with the outtakes will know the largest amount were made in the 1983-1986 years, and the people in his life and band had a lot 2 do with it,

Just 4 Purple Rain era alone there are rumored 2 be about 300 outtakes
and Prince said similar in a 1985 interview
it started to pick up during the 1999 era, Vanity's place in his life also influenced or stimiluated it

Purple Rain - Dream Factory hit out music we still have not heard yet it started to go down immediately during SOTT era and onward

That interveiw was from 1986 and Prince said that there were 320 unreleased songs, he meant overall. Not just from the Purle Rain era. Overall.


Yep. On the 20th Anniversary of Purple Rain DVD extras, there is an interview with (I forget who) who states that there were about 100 songs written for Purple Rain.
The majority of those have been released on albums like PR, Ice Cream Castles, Apollonia 6, Jill Jones, Around The World In A Day, B-Sides, Romance 1600 etc.
If prince.org were to be made idiot proof, someone would just invent a better idiot.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #85 posted 09/19/09 11:11am

ass

Do u draw charts? Do u know about patterns, waves, technical analysis? its a cycle dam it
if u cant tell me if Prince or Rosie did the opening scream for Gett Off, then u are not purple !!!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #86 posted 09/19/09 11:26am

saafiir

avatar

ass said:

Do u draw charts? Do u know about patterns, waves, technical analysis? its a cycle dam it


A peak is a peak... nothin' to do with a cycle

cool
I'll die in your arms under the cherry moon...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #87 posted 09/19/09 12:12pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

Rinluv said:

OldFriends4Sale said:




Good points: anyone who is familiar with the outtakes will know the largest amount were made in the 1983-1986 years, and the people in his life and band had a lot 2 do with it,

Just 4 Purple Rain era alone there are rumored 2 be about 300 outtakes
and Prince said similar in a 1985 interview
it started to pick up during the 1999 era, Vanity's place in his life also influenced or stimiluated it

Purple Rain - Dream Factory hit out music we still have not heard yet it started to go down immediately during SOTT era and onward

That interveiw was from 1986 and Prince said that there were 320 unreleased songs, he meant overall. Not just from the Purle Rain era. Overall.


1985 Interview: Around the World in a Day was not 2 long released and talk of a new film

Yeah, someone else reminded me of the overall number and I went back and read it



THE ELECTRIFYING MOJO (1985)
-----
On the eve of his birthday in 1985, Prince gave a surprise interview to legendary Detroit disc jockey the Electrifying Mojo.
MOJO: Some people say you probably have in your secret vault...in the Prince music vault, about 500 tunes that you've done that you haven't even considered using yet...that you could put out an album for the next twenty years, two a year --

PRINCE: Naw, not that many...320 to be exact. Not 500. (laughs)

MOJO: 320 songs? That have never been released.

PRINCE: Mmm-hmm.

MOJO: It's been rumored that they all sound different, that's probably why each album you release is just a little bit different.

PRINCE: Yeah. They don't ALL sound different. There's a couple times I copied myself.

MOJO: It's alright to copy yourself.

PRINCE: You think you hit on something, right! You try to do it again...ya know? (both laugh) I try not to do that too much. If I do, then it's usually someone around, Wendy or Lisa, who says, "Hey, man, I've heard that. Put it away." And it goes away. And we don't hear from that song for a while. Mojo, guess what? We're all going to see Purple Rain tonight.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #88 posted 09/19/09 12:16pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

1985 Interview

I think that's the problem with the music industry today. When a person does get a hit, they try to do it again the same way. I don't think I've ever done that. I write all the time and cut all the time. I want to show you the archives, where all my old stuff is. There's tons of music I've recorded there. I have the follow-up album to 1999. I could put it all together and play it for you, and you would go "Yeah!" And I could put it out, and it would probably sell what 1999 did. But I always try to do something different and conquer new ground.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #89 posted 09/19/09 3:36pm

simonthetimes

avatar

PRINCE: You think you hit on something, right! You try to do it again...ya know? (both laugh) I try not to do that too much. If I do, then it's usually someone around, Wendy or Lisa, who says, "Hey, man, I've heard that. Put it away." And it goes away.

That's a telling line.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Page 3 of 4 <1234>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Forums > Prince: Music and More > When did Prince reach his creative peak?