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Thread started 01/11/03 3:13am

thecloud9missi
on

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Can one of you more knowlegable Prince fans help me with this????

Hope you can help

Is the biog below 100% correct?:

Prince is, without a doubt one of the most influential figures in modern rock history. His unparalleled ability to fuse funk, pop and rock helped redefine the boundaries of musical genres. As a songwriter, Prince has certainly earned his tenure, penning countless hits--trashy, eloquent, fragile and blustering--for himself and many other musicians.

Prince's first two albums, For You (1978) and Dirty Mind (1979), though impressive efforts for an unknown Midwestern teenager, failed to foreshadow his impending brilliance. "I Feel For You," off the second release is perhaps the best track of the lot. The song is both delicate and sleazy with a funky pop melody--a combination Prince honed in his two next releases, Dirty Mind (1980) and Controversy (1981).

1999, released in 1982 made Prince a star. The album, which sold over 3 million copies, was a whirlwind of sexual fantasy, catchy lyrics and electronic funk. From the anthemic "Free" to the mantra in D.M.S.R. ("Dance, Music Sex...") to the perfect pop sounds in "Delirious" and "Little Red Corvette," 1999 quickly sped to the top of the stacks of wax.

If 1999 made Prince a star, then Purple Rain made him a king. Recorded, in part, with his band The Revolution, this album sold over 10 million copies and spent twenty weeks at the top of the charts. "When Doves Cry," "I Would Die 4 U" and "Purple Rain" were defining moments in '80s music.

After the bounding success of Purple Rain Prince took a bizarre turn down the path of pop-psychedelia with Around The World in a Day (1985). "Raspberry Beret" and "Pop Life" were brilliant, if unsettling, and definitely ahead of their time.


After releasing the marginal Parade and roosting permanently in Minneapolis with his own record label (Paisley Park), Prince came out with his second masterpiece of the decade. Sign O' the Times. At once sexy and messy, tight, forlorn and ecstatic, Sign O' the Times came together both as a complete work and as a series of great singles. "I Could Never Take The Place of Your Man", a heartwrenching score, the wistful, electronic "If I Was Your Girlfriend" and the cocksure "U Got The Look" are all winners. "Starfish and Coffee" is perhaps the unsung hero of this 1987 collection.

In lieu of the hastily shelved Black Album (unreleased until 1994, either due to Prince's dissatisfaction or the controversy-wary label), Prince followed up Sign O' the Times with the stripped down and relatively serene Lovesexy. While it was a cathartic break from the emotional buildup of his last three albums, Prince's spark on Lovesexy was noticeably missing.

After a contrived Batman soundtrack and the gospel-tinged Graffiti Bridge, where he wrote all, but only sang about half of the songs, Prince teamed up with the New Power Generation. Conceived as a return to urban R&B, Prince and the NPG released two albums, each of which contained flashes of brilliance but ultimately failed to live up to the larger body of work. After the second one, marked by the "The Symbol," Prince had his name officially changed to "The Symbol."

While the NPG continued to perform on the remaining Prince albums, its name was dropped from the main titles. Come was essentially a rehash of earlier sounds, and released under the old "Prince" name. 1994 saw the official release of The Black Album as well as a three-disc "greatest hits" set.

Gold Experience and Chaos & Disorder were released in 1995 and 1996, respectively. These two albums ended Prince's long-standing relationship with Warner Bros. Records. In spite of the bitter quarrels between artist and label, the albums feel fresh and new--a renaissance of creativity for Prince.

Emancipation, released in late 1996 on EMI is another three disc set--this time comprising a bevy of new music. The album is well composed and stylistically diverse. Though not as wild as his earlier releases, it stands on its own right, proving that Prince, a.k.a "The Symbol," a.k.a. "The Artist Formerly Known As Prince" can mature gracefully.

In the spring of 1998, the Artist released Crystal Ball, a four-CD set comprising three discs of previously unreleased tracks and a fourth disc, subtitled "The Truth," containing a collection of acoustic ballads.

The vexing question of what to call a man whose name is an unpronouncable symbol came to an official end in May 2000, when The Artist Formerly Known As Prince announced that since his Warner/Chappell publishing contract expired on Dec. 31, 1999 he would formally be taking back the name Prince.

Ive spotted a few errors but wanted to check. Check out http://prince.cloud9mission.uk.co to see what its for.
[This message was edited Fri Jan 10 19:14:55 PST 2003 by thecloud9mission]
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Reply #1 posted 01/11/03 3:15am

Supernova

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No, it's not 100%. Firstly his second album is not Dirty Mind...

Purple Rain spent 24 weeks at the top, not 20...

checking for more errors...
[This message was edited Fri Jan 10 19:19:23 PST 2003 by Supernova]
This post not for the wimp contingent. All whiny wusses avert your eyes.
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Reply #2 posted 01/11/03 3:15am

thecloud9missi
on

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Supernova said:

No, it's not 100%. Firstly his second album is not Dirty Mind...


checking for more errors...

Yup, of course lol, that was called Prince hehe. Cheers
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Reply #3 posted 01/11/03 3:19am

herb4

Supernova said:

No, it's not 100%. Firstly his second album is not Dirty Mind...


checking for more errors...


That. You left out 'Controversy" and "Prince".

Also, are you writing a bio or a critique. It reads like an odd mix of fact and opinion to me.
[This message was edited Fri Jan 10 19:20:00 PST 2003 by herb4]
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Reply #4 posted 01/11/03 4:12am

4LOVE

Supernova said:

No, it's not 100%. Firstly his second album is not Dirty Mind...

Purple Rain spent 24 weeks at the top, not 20...

checking for more errors...
[This message was edited Fri Jan 10 19:19:23 PST 2003 by Supernova]


She knows her shit. If only her knowledge on Rick James was a little better lol
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Reply #5 posted 01/11/03 5:04am

XtrueX

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A little nitpicky but...the 3 disc "greatest hits" set came out in 93. Not 94.
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Reply #6 posted 01/11/03 5:35am

chaos96

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Hmm...I don't know if I would call the Lovesexy album stripped down...it's actually quite dense musically boasting tons of intricate arrangements.

Then again, maybe I'm misunderstanding this...

Matt
"Because when you say annihilation my friends, you've said all there is to say" - Henry Rollins
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Reply #7 posted 01/11/03 7:06am

Supernova

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4LOVE said:

Supernova said:

No, it's not 100%. Firstly his second album is not Dirty Mind...

Purple Rain spent 24 weeks at the top, not 20...

checking for more errors...
[This message was edited Fri Jan 10 19:19:23 PST 2003 by Supernova]


She knows her shit. If only her knowledge on Rick James was a little better lol

fight
This post not for the wimp contingent. All whiny wusses avert your eyes.
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Reply #8 posted 01/11/03 12:18pm

sabaisabai

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Who is the intended audience? There are a few items which assume the reader is already familiar with Prince's work.

"After releasing the marginal Parade"
-- There was an album called Parade?
"Prince came out with his second masterpiece of the decade"
-- what was the first masterpiece? It doesn't say.
"In lieu of the hastily shelved Black Album"
-- There was a hastily shelved Black Album?
"but only sang about half of the songs"
-- pretty vague. Was it about half?
"subtitled "The Truth,""
-- I thought it was titled The Truth?
Life it ain't real funky unless you got that orgPop.
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Reply #9 posted 01/11/03 1:04pm

Lospigg

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Nitpicking here to but "Marginal" Parade album? and no mention of that being the sound track to "UTCM" or even the "Purple Rain" movie!! and Prince's spark noticebly missing on Lovesexy? Lovesexy is full of Prince spark and as previuosly mentioned is a very dence album, musicaly.

"to the mantra in D.M.S.R. ("Dance, Music Sex...") " what does the R stand for then?

name is an unpronouncable symbol came to an official end in May 2000.

not strictly true. 1999's "Rave Unto..." was produced by Prince.
[This message was edited Sat Jan 11 5:06:32 PST 2003 by Lospigg]
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Reply #10 posted 01/11/03 1:15pm

Partyboy

Close but no cigar.

Did a fan write this? (PS Don’t give me all that “Fam” crap. It’s 2 early in the morning 4 me)
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Reply #11 posted 01/11/03 1:24pm

thecloud9missi
on

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The biog was taken from rollingstone.com & its mainly for non Prince fans (hence why it needs to be correct) & will be going on my Prince tribute page. Gonna spread the word wink
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Reply #12 posted 01/11/03 1:27pm

Partyboy

Nice one. So I take it your gonna corect it first.
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Reply #13 posted 01/11/03 5:34pm

Joshy84au

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thecloud9mission said:

The biog was taken from rollingstone.com & its mainly for non Prince fans (hence why it needs to be correct) & will be going on my Prince tribute page. Gonna spread the word wink

Rolling Stone ? ? ?

NUFF SED !
***************************************************************************************
Song of the Day: Prince *Acknowledge Me*
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Reply #14 posted 01/11/03 8:01pm

Handclapsfinga
snapz

Prince's first two albums, For You (1978) and Dirty Mind (1979), though impressive efforts for an unknown Midwestern teenager, failed to foreshadow his impending brilliance. "I Feel For You," off the second release is perhaps the best track of the lot. The song is both delicate and sleazy with a funky pop melody--a combination Prince honed in his two next releases, Dirty Mind (1980) and Controversy (1981).

there are two big contradictions in that paragraph. i ain't sayin what, tho'...they're big, glarin ones...eek
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Reply #15 posted 01/11/03 10:50pm

fragisexy

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Handclapsfingasnapz said:

Prince's first two albums, For You (1978) and Dirty Mind (1979), though impressive efforts for an unknown Midwestern teenager, failed to foreshadow his impending brilliance. "I Feel For You," off the second release is perhaps the best track of the lot. The song is both delicate and sleazy with a funky pop melody--a combination Prince honed in his two next releases, Dirty Mind (1980) and Controversy (1981).

there are two big contradictions in that paragraph. i ain't sayin what, tho'...they're big, glarin ones...eek


LOL, yeah, Dirty Mind came out in 1979 and 1980, and it contains "I Feel For You" - who knew??
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Reply #16 posted 01/12/03 12:14am

thecloud9missi
on

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fragisexy said:

Handclapsfingasnapz said:

Prince's first two albums, For You (1978) and Dirty Mind (1979), though impressive efforts for an unknown Midwestern teenager, failed to foreshadow his impending brilliance. "I Feel For You," off the second release is perhaps the best track of the lot. The song is both delicate and sleazy with a funky pop melody--a combination Prince honed in his two next releases, Dirty Mind (1980) and Controversy (1981).

there are two big contradictions in that paragraph. i ain't sayin what, tho'...they're big, glarin ones...eek


LOL, yeah, Dirty Mind came out in 1979 and 1980, and it contains "I Feel For You" - who knew??

lol. Better find another description entirely I think lol @ rollingstone.

Thanks for the help guys. Anyone know where I'll find a better description???

Lewis
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