independent and unofficial
Prince fan community
Welcome! Sign up or enter username and password to remember me
Forum jump
Forums > Prince: Music and More > The Rainbow Children
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Page 4 of 8 <12345678>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
Reply #90 posted 04/14/10 10:39pm

nekronhhr

the album is so good because prince truly stopped listening to critics around this time in his life and just made an album that his heart told him to make. when prince tries to give the people what they want it usually doesnt turn out too well. everyone was excited when they heard about mplsound but that album was mediocre at best. TRC was a sound that he had never explored, it was fresh and new and not just trying to recreate the magic he had in the 80s, and it was good too.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #91 posted 04/14/10 10:54pm

LuneCerise

avatar

ernestsewell said:

It belongs in one spot:



You're being much too kind. Light that shit on fire and kick off the Watchtower.
Do U Lie?
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #92 posted 04/14/10 11:09pm

pennylover

avatar

said:

vivid said:

Fabulous album. Best thing since Lovesexy for me. It reawakened my interest in his music after the constant disappointments of the 90s.

It was the first time in a long time I popped the CD in and thought 'what the dangleberries is he doing now!' I had missed that feeling.

Enjoy.


100% on the same page!

Like all his most interesting songs, Prince adopts a persona and then lets it come to life in music. This is what TRC is all about, a dark journey through the mind of a religious fundamentalist fighting off dark forces on his way to enlightenment. It's crazy insane, it's brilliant, it's both uplifting and depressing, it's the most well rounded album Prince ever made.My brain stored every millisecond of this album, which i cannot say for any post '88 album, so i really really love this one... all killer no filler.
[Edited 4/14/10 7:52am]

Excellent post m3taverse.... When my son brought this CD 4 me, I could not wait 2 hear it, once I heard it I never played it again. I said 2 myself what’s going on with Prince. After joining this site all these threads regarding TRC kept popping up like now with discussions of this album. I said let me try it again. Nope didn’t like it at all, I tried a few more times and all of a sudden, it hit me and did it hit me hard. It is the most beautiful album from beginning 2 end. Indeed, it is a masterpiece. Musically it’s one of his best albums.

I totally love it and play it all the time. It makes me feel good. It is so uplifting. I will always keep this n my heart as one of my favorite albums by him.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #93 posted 04/14/10 11:18pm

NelsonR

I think in terms of musical/instrumental skill demonstration, it's a treat...but i dig it for other reasons as well.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #94 posted 04/15/10 3:52am

Dewrede

avatar

vitriol said:

lotusboy said:

to say TRC is pure trash is just blatant envy of P's musicianship and prowess..and talent..and gift..and style..and creativeness..and religion...and sound...and etc..anyone else?



More than that I'd say it's blatant MUSICAL IGNORANCE. Period.


yeahthat
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #95 posted 04/15/10 4:21am

Mindflux

avatar

ronnwinter said:

Mindflux said:



And again, more rubbish! So now the quality of music is equal to its commercial success - history proves otherwise!

Given that - how many downloads of your track have there been? If it were none, your logic would mean you made one of the most appalling songs in the world!

Look, when a guy like Prince cant even sell 200,000 copies of an album, it must be crap.
As far as quality being based on commercial success....Gold Experience was an incredible album, but it was a commercial failure. But it did at least go gold in the U.S. if im not mistaken.
Rainbow is an awful album. And of course this is just my opinion as well as the opinion most of his fans.


Wow - way to contradict yourself!

He didn't sell more than 200k copies of TRC so it must be crap.
TGE was "an incredible album, but it was a commercial failure"!!!!

So, even great albums are commercial failures! Look, quality of music has NOTHING to do with commercial success. If that was true, then Britney Spears must be some kind of musical genius!

And, TRC being "crap" is not the opinion of "most" fans - that's just your perception.
...we have only scratched the surface of what the mind can do...

My dance project;
www.zubzub.co.uk

Listen to any of my tracks in full, for free, here;
www.zubzub.bandcamp.com

Go and glisten wink
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #96 posted 04/15/10 4:29am

Mindflux

avatar

ronnwinter said:

Bohemian67 said:




I don't listen to record sales. I know of an artist that sold 10 million copies of a cd. Media reported BIG FLOP! That was in 2001. Imagine IF there was no such thing as the internet then. How many sales would there actually have been? That's the question.


I see your point...But this is Prince we're talking about. 1999 he went gold (i think) with Rave, 2001 he sells somewhere around 160,000 with rainbow... now fast forward only 3 years later. Musicology went platinum, even without the give away!
My point is.. Prince had fans out there, lots of fans! But Rainbow Children wasnt what most of them wanted and more importantly, needed out of Prince..and the sales refelct that. Whether you like it or not, whether i hate it or not... the FACT remains that MOST prince fans disliked it.
Was it good musically... I guess so, if you like that type of music. Was it good lyrically? Well, in the words of Billy.."Noone understands your music, but yourself".


Actually all that proves is that it was hardcore Prince fans that bought TRC! Because it didn't get the general promotion that the other albums you compare it to did, this just meant that the genereal public were not aware of the album and so only those in the know, the "hardcore" fan base went and bought it. All you can actually conclude from those figures is that most people weren't aware of TRC's existence.

Again, sales figures do not in any way imply what the quality of the music is.

And, let's extend this for a moment - what does it matter to you? You clearly don't like TRC....nothing wrong with that. But why are you trying to prove to people that it must be crap because is sold poorly? Why is that important to you? If people enjoy it, whether or not you think its crap, let them enjoy it!
...we have only scratched the surface of what the mind can do...

My dance project;
www.zubzub.co.uk

Listen to any of my tracks in full, for free, here;
www.zubzub.bandcamp.com

Go and glisten wink
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #97 posted 04/15/10 8:02am

WetDream

avatar

JoeTyler said:

SPOOKYGAS said:

Look, Ernie likes Madonna so lets not get to excited about what his take on the Rainbow Children is!

I mean for Allah's sake Madge!



Confessions on a dance floor>>>>>TRC


LMAOOOOO
This Post is produced, arranged, composed and performed by WetDream
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #98 posted 04/15/10 8:09am

WetDream

avatar

ronnwinter said:

ernestsewell said:


And let's not forget that Prince immediately promoted it as "The New Controversial Album by Prince" when it came out. That note was probably from the response at the Celebration in 2001 when he played the album for fans. Fans seemed to love the music, but called into question the lyrical content.


For the record, Chaos, Black Album, Rainbow, Planet Earth, and Lotusflow3r never even received Gold status. Chaos sold about half of what Lotus did out of the gate. So yes, it's a dismal selling album, and for good reason.

Oh, how could I forget? thats the one thing that got me so excited about this album. When I saw that sticker, I thought.."oh yea..PRINCE IS BACK!" Boy was I wrong!


The controversial album by Prince? A lie?

9 years on it's still a hot topic. 100 replies right here with just the album title as the topic title. Go start a Dirty Mind thread and see if it's as controversial.

It was exactly what it said on the tin.
This Post is produced, arranged, composed and performed by WetDream
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #99 posted 04/15/10 8:32am

Splanknasty

It is a controversial album, yes.

Some don't see the problem in telling Jewish people to stop whining about the Holocaust because at least they know what their original surnames are.

People like this think the The Rainbow Children's OK.

Some people, like me, listen to lyrics, and we don't think that African slavery and the Jewish Holocaust are in competition, and we find The Rainbow Children really mean spirited, ugly and upsetting.

Apart from that, Prince drops hints that Jews might have been responsible for the slave trade in this album.

So it depends. If you listen to lyrics, and you think that Jews should stop whining about the death of 6,000,000 people in the gas chambers, then this is the album for you! smile
[Edited 4/15/10 8:33am]
Spreading heavy funk since 2008: theheaviestfunkintheworld.wordpress.com
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #100 posted 04/15/10 8:40am

violetblues

In 1995 digital downloads and piracy were almost non-existing, Prince was still a major figure and record sales were still relatively healthy.
I will say it again, "The Gold Experience" is majorly overrated by some here, the consumer is not that dim not to avoid that goofball mess. There was a lot of great music in marketplace in '95-96 so i can understand why that album didn't sell.
So when people compare one mess with a hot stinking mess as some kind of prime example of ?, I know i have entered a hardcore alternate purple realm of ultra-fanatic-fandom that makes even some us org purple geeks feel like just casual fans. Its not just drinking the Kool-aid like some of us, its snorting that purple kool-aid right out of the packet.
[Edited 4/15/10 8:57am]
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #101 posted 04/15/10 8:50am

Mindflux

avatar

Splanknasty said:

It is a controversial album, yes.

Some don't see the problem in telling Jewish people to stop whining about the Holocaust because at least they know what their original surnames are.

People like this think the The Rainbow Children's OK.

Some people, like me, listen to lyrics, and we don't think that African slavery and the Jewish Holocaust are in competition, and we find The Rainbow Children really mean spirited, ugly and upsetting.

Apart from that, Prince drops hints that Jews might have been responsible for the slave trade in this album.

So it depends. If you listen to lyrics, and you think that Jews should stop whining about the death of 6,000,000 people in the gas chambers, then this is the album for you! smile
[Edited 4/15/10 8:33am]


That's your interpretation. But I'd love to see you justify it.
...we have only scratched the surface of what the mind can do...

My dance project;
www.zubzub.co.uk

Listen to any of my tracks in full, for free, here;
www.zubzub.bandcamp.com

Go and glisten wink
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #102 posted 04/15/10 9:15am

txlaw

ernestsewell said:

ronnwinter said:

Look...Prince isnt stupid, he knew VERY FEW would like this album. Its absolutely horrible! Its his worst selling album of all time if im not mistaken (excluding NEWS)..

And let's not forget that Prince immediately promoted it as "The New Controversial Album by Prince" when it came out. That note was probably from the response at the Celebration in 2001 when he played the album for fans. Fans seemed to love the music, but called into question the lyrical content.


For the record, Chaos, Black Album, Rainbow, Planet Earth, and Lotusflow3r never even received Gold status. Chaos sold about half of what Lotus did out of the gate. So yes, it's a dismal selling album, and for good reason.


When did album sales become a measure of whether an album is lyrically good or not? I happen to love this album as a masterpiece. But that's just my opinion, regardless of album sales.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #103 posted 04/15/10 9:36am

Splanknasty

Mindflux said:

Splanknasty said:

It is a controversial album, yes.

Some don't see the problem in telling Jewish people to stop whining about the Holocaust because at least they know what their original surnames are.

People like this think the The Rainbow Children's OK.

Some people, like me, listen to lyrics, and we don't think that African slavery and the Jewish Holocaust are in competition, and we find The Rainbow Children really mean spirited, ugly and upsetting.

Apart from that, Prince drops hints that Jews might have been responsible for the slave trade in this album.

So it depends. If you listen to lyrics, and you think that Jews should stop whining about the death of 6,000,000 people in the gas chambers, then this is the album for you! smile
[Edited 4/15/10 8:33am]


That's your interpretation. But I'd love to see you justify it.


Sure.

Where would you like me to start?

How about the lyrics to 'Family Name', where he drops a bunch of Jewish surnames, a different one for every verse, just as we get the point. Perlman. Rosenbloom. Goldstruck (yep, Jews sure are greedy for gold).

And then he says "you might say "what you mad about?"/But you still got your family name."

Right. I'm sorry, but the Atlantic slave trade was one of the greatest crimes ever committed by human beings, and all Americans of African ancestry have every right to be angry to this day, and to commemorate their losses.

But it is not in competition with the Holocaust. Not unless you have a particular point to make, with regard to Jews. What Prince's problem with Jews is between him and whatever conspiracy-theorist sat him down and fired his imagination before he wrote that tune.
Spreading heavy funk since 2008: theheaviestfunkintheworld.wordpress.com
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #104 posted 04/15/10 10:14am

Joyinrepatitio
n

avatar

The Rainbow Children is a hell of a good album, how people can hate it is beside me.
Nevermind the lyrical undertones, this album is musically "BRILLIANT"...and that surely is what it's all about cool
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #105 posted 04/15/10 10:16am

PurpleLove7

avatar

moderator

Christopher said:

PurpleLove7 said:

When I 1st heard this album I was like "Um, what" ... Musically it's top notch but the lyrics (when you read em) let's you know what Prince was reading and being heavily influenced by: the JW way of life. That's cool for him but I'm not feelin' it. The music again, was great (imho) ...

same here.the content of some of the lyrics-totally not my thing.but i can appreciate the artistic merit of the album.


I don't know how I do it but I can zone out the lyrics in most Prince songs and it's like not knowing the lyrics and just humming them or something. There are a few songs where I do know the lyrics from beginning to end but TRC's music is much stronger and more liked imho.
Peace ... & Stay Funky ...

~* The only love there is, is the love "we" make *~

www.facebook.com/purplefunklover
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #106 posted 04/15/10 10:19am

ernestsewell

txlaw said:

When did album sales become a measure of whether an album is lyrically good or not?

Because if people don't like what the album has to say, they won't support it w/ their dollars.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #107 posted 04/15/10 10:21am

NDRU

avatar

Splanknasty said:

Mindflux said:



That's your interpretation. But I'd love to see you justify it.


Sure.

Where would you like me to start?

How about the lyrics to 'Family Name', where he drops a bunch of Jewish surnames, a different one for every verse, just as we get the point. Perlman. Rosenbloom. Goldstruck (yep, Jews sure are greedy for gold).

And then he says "you might say "what you mad about?"/But you still got your family name."

Right. I'm sorry, but the Atlantic slave trade was one of the greatest crimes ever committed by human beings, and all Americans of African ancestry have every right to be angry to this day, and to commemorate their losses.

But it is not in competition with the Holocaust. Not unless you have a particular point to make, with regard to Jews. What Prince's problem with Jews is between him and whatever conspiracy-theorist sat him down and fired his imagination before he wrote that tune.


I'm not sure it's about telling Jews to stop whining about the holocaust, it seems more to be explaining why African Americans are mad.

Of course, I have heard people compare the holocaust to slavery, and I think it's silly to have a "which is worse" contest when they're both about as bad as it gets.

I don't clearly get that he's making that comparison, but Prince doesn't always choose his words wisely, so maybe he is. Still I think it's more about black people, and simply happens to be using Jewish names as an example. Of course, many Jews don't have their family names but changed them on immigration.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #108 posted 04/15/10 10:25am

NDRU

avatar

I think Prince's message is pretty incoherent, actually, and that's why I can't get mad about it. lol How am I going to get outraged about something that makes no sense?

But one thing that is pretty clear is the end of the album "we need to come together as one"

Prince may go to some ugly places, but I don't believe his ultimate message is one of division & banishment. He does it on the prince album, Gold, and Purple Rain, too. The journey may be rough, but the end is positive.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #109 posted 04/15/10 12:01pm

Bohemian67

avatar

NDRU said:

I think Prince's message is pretty incoherent, actually, and that's why I can't get mad about it. lol How am I going to get outraged about something that makes no sense?

But one thing that is pretty clear is the end of the album "we need to come together as one"

Prince may go to some ugly places, but I don't believe his ultimate message is one of division & banishment. He does it on the prince album, Gold, and Purple Rain, too. The journey may be rough, but the end is positive.


Really nice post.
"Free URself, B the best that U can B, 3rd Apartment from the Sun, nothing left to fear" Prince Rogers Nelson - Forever in my Life -
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #110 posted 04/15/10 12:10pm

NDRU

avatar

Bohemian67 said:

NDRU said:

I think Prince's message is pretty incoherent, actually, and that's why I can't get mad about it. lol How am I going to get outraged about something that makes no sense?

But one thing that is pretty clear is the end of the album "we need to come together as one"

Prince may go to some ugly places, but I don't believe his ultimate message is one of division & banishment. He does it on the prince album, Gold, and Purple Rain, too. The journey may be rough, but the end is positive.


Really nice post.


why thank you! touched
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #111 posted 04/15/10 1:26pm

m3taverse

Splanknasty said:

It is a controversial album, yes.

Some don't see the problem in telling Jewish people to stop whining about the Holocaust because at least they know what their original surnames are.

People like this think the The Rainbow Children's OK.

Some people, like me, listen to lyrics, and we don't think that African slavery and the Jewish Holocaust are in competition, and we find The Rainbow Children really mean spirited, ugly and upsetting.

Apart from that, Prince drops hints that Jews might have been responsible for the slave trade in this album.

So it depends. If you listen to lyrics, and you think that Jews should stop whining about the death of 6,000,000 people in the gas chambers, then this is the album for you! smile
[Edited 4/15/10 8:33am]

Over the years i found that fundamental to Prince's creative genius is his ability to invent different personas through which he performs his songs.
He's always had them actually, at least since Dirty Mind, where we get to meet a guy proclaiming to be a "Rude Boy".

These personas aren't real to Prince, they are not Prince. And most of us are aware of this, at least on a sub conscious level. Unless of course you really believe that Prince was screwing his sister at the time.
Over the years these personas got more elaborate. They had their own outfits, their own sound, frequently a voice that was entirely their own and often they had their own unique message.

I first started thinking about this when Prince introduced us to a persona called ... Prince, on an album so insignificant i can't right now even remember its name. His name was Prince, and he was funky. When it came to funk, he was a junky... Prince made a caricature of a rock star called Prince, and then attempted to emulate the hit sound that such an artist would bring forth.

This is when, in the early 90's, i started to lose interest. Still bought the albums, still went to the shows, no longer believed that Prince couldn't help but produce strictly brilliant music.
For Prince, being a rock star became a cognitive process. You need ingredient X, Y and Z to make a Prince album. Rinse & repeat.

It took nearly a decade for Mr. Nelson to invent a completely new persona. One that was, once again, profoundly original and deeply inspired.
As TRC starts off with its 10 minute, unlike anything we've ever heard before, title track, and the dark voice greets us for the first time, it's immediately clear : here are no welcoming arms inviting us into a warm familiar bath, this musician is fierce and uncompromising.
And yes, the TRC persona was invented to be controversial from its inception, unless of course you believe that Prince really felt that the world needed to hear about some awkwardly formulated racial issue, and that females take second place.

So it depends. If you listen to lyrics, and you think that Jews should stop whining about the death of 6,000,000 people in the gas chambers, then this is the album for you!


So yeah, this is like saying that if you enjoy screwing your sister, then Dirty Mind is the album for you.
"this especially prepared potato is called pomme de terre"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #112 posted 04/15/10 1:31pm

Efan

avatar

m3taverse said:

Splanknasty said:

It is a controversial album, yes.

Some don't see the problem in telling Jewish people to stop whining about the Holocaust because at least they know what their original surnames are.

People like this think the The Rainbow Children's OK.

Some people, like me, listen to lyrics, and we don't think that African slavery and the Jewish Holocaust are in competition, and we find The Rainbow Children really mean spirited, ugly and upsetting.

Apart from that, Prince drops hints that Jews might have been responsible for the slave trade in this album.

So it depends. If you listen to lyrics, and you think that Jews should stop whining about the death of 6,000,000 people in the gas chambers, then this is the album for you! smile
[Edited 4/15/10 8:33am]

Over the years i found that fundamental to Prince's creative genius is his ability to invent different personas through which he performs his songs.
He's always had them actually, at least since Dirty Mind, where we get to meet a guy proclaiming to be a "Rude Boy".

These personas aren't real to Prince, they are not Prince. And most of us are aware of this, at least on a sub conscious level. Unless of course you really believe that Prince was screwing his sister at the time.
Over the years these personas got more elaborate. They had their own outfits, their own sound, frequently a voice that was entirely their own and often they had their own unique message.

I first started thinking about this when Prince introduced us to a persona called ... Prince, on an album so insignificant i can't right now even remember its name. His name was Prince, and he was funky. When it came to funk, he was a junky... Prince made a caricature of a rock star called Prince, and then attempted to emulate the hit sound that such an artist would bring forth.

This is when, in the early 90's, i started to lose interest. Still bought the albums, still went to the shows, no longer believed that Prince couldn't help but produce strictly brilliant music.
For Prince, being a rock star became a cognitive process. You need ingredient X, Y and Z to make a Prince album. Rinse & repeat.

It took nearly a decade for Mr. Nelson to invent a completely new persona. One that was, once again, profoundly original and deeply inspired.
As TRC starts off with its 10 minute, unlike anything we've ever heard before, title track, and the dark voice greets us for the first time, it's immediately clear : here are no welcoming arms inviting us into a warm familiar bath, this musician is fierce and uncompromising.
And yes, the TRC persona was invented to be controversial from its inception, unless of course you believe that Prince really felt that the world needed to hear about some awkwardly formulated racial issue, and that females take second place.

So it depends. If you listen to lyrics, and you think that Jews should stop whining about the death of 6,000,000 people in the gas chambers, then this is the album for you!


So yeah, this is like saying that if you enjoy screwing your sister, then Dirty Mind is the album for you.


No offense, but this logic makes very little sense.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #113 posted 04/15/10 1:37pm

m3taverse

Efan said:

m3taverse said:



So yeah, this is like saying that if you enjoy screwing your sister, then Dirty Mind is the album for you.


No offense, but this logic makes very little sense.


Can you explain? smile
"this especially prepared potato is called pomme de terre"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #114 posted 04/15/10 1:47pm

Efan

avatar

m3taverse said:

Efan said:



No offense, but this logic makes very little sense.


Can you explain? smile


I don't think you can diminish The Rainbow Children to being, essentially, played by a character. For better or worse, his conversion was real to him and it played out--and continues to play out--in his music. I don't think every word of every song Prince has ever written is literally true in his life, but in the case of TRC, it's clear he was making some very personal statements.

Beyond that, the comparison to Dirty Mind falls short for me. I disagree on several levels, but even if your premise were true, the conclusion ("if you enjoy screwing your sister then Dirty Mind is the album for you") is completely wrong. Nowhere in "Sister" does Prince promote incest (just the opposite: "Incest is everything it's said to be," which is horrible, awful, etc.). Not that I take "Sister" to be literally true. I'm just saying you can't use it to make the same argument as with TRC. In TRC, he's promoting ideas of--in my mind, at least--sexism and anti-Semitism. In "Sister," he's speaking against incest. They're not parallel.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #115 posted 04/15/10 1:48pm

Heiress

avatar

It's odd and special... this coming from a JW... and not an album that I feel like listening to all the time... but when I do, I really enjoy it.

When I first heard that Prince was coming out with an album about preaching and the like, my first feeling was not excitement, but embarrassment. Then I had to find out what was going on... so I ended up here, for the first time.

Then I ended up writing a Masters paper about it, but that's a whole notha story. lol
I know it's not aurora borealis... that makes the sky this way.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #116 posted 04/15/10 1:49pm

m3taverse

pennylover said:

I totally love it and play it all the time. It makes me feel good. It is so uplifting. I will always keep this n my heart as one of my favorite albums by him.


TRC is almost 10 years old now, and I can still get goosebumps from Everywhere. This is beautiful music.
"this especially prepared potato is called pomme de terre"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #117 posted 04/15/10 1:54pm

Heiress

avatar

m3taverse said:

pennylover said:

I totally love it and play it all the time. It makes me feel good. It is so uplifting. I will always keep this n my heart as one of my favorite albums by him.


TRC is almost 10 years old now, and I can still get goosebumps from Everywhere. This is beautiful music.


That one is really inspiring. It sounds like everyone should come out dancing in the streets to it.
I know it's not aurora borealis... that makes the sky this way.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #118 posted 04/15/10 1:59pm

NDRU

avatar

m3taverse said:


Over the years i found that fundamental to Prince's creative genius is his ability to invent different personas through which he performs his songs.

These personas aren't real to Prince, they are not Prince. And most of us are aware of this, at least on a sub conscious level. Unless of course you really believe that Prince was screwing his sister at the time.

I first started thinking about this when Prince introduced us to a persona called ... Prince, on an album so insignificant i can't right now even remember its name. His name was Prince, and he was funky. When it came to funk, he was a junky... Prince made a caricature of a rock star called Prince, and then attempted to emulate the hit sound that such an artist would bring forth.

So yeah, this is like saying that if you enjoy screwing your sister, then Dirty Mind is the album for you.


I agree with much of what you say. I've always felt that My Name is Prince was a "character"

There are a lot of songs that say things I find questionable "yeah do that baby just like a dog" "ohh baby you're so good, aw shut up!" "close your eyes I'm gonna cover your ass with this sheet" "incest is everything it's meant to be" "U take her to your crib and you tie her to a chair and you make funny faces and they get real scared"

But I think sometimes they're just characters to tell a story or express a feeling--this is most obvious in a song like Bob George, which literally is played as another character. We've all expressed feelings at times that were not representative of our best sides. Prince just doesn't shy away from the feeling if it's real--he seems to love the theme of conflict & resolution.

I find it hard to believe that he doesn't give a shit about the holocaust.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #119 posted 04/15/10 2:02pm

NDRU

avatar

Efan said:

m3taverse said:



Can you explain? smile


I don't think you can diminish The Rainbow Children to being, essentially, played by a character. For better or worse, his conversion was real to him and it played out--and continues to play out--in his music. I don't think every word of every song Prince has ever written is literally true in his life, but in the case of TRC, it's clear he was making some very personal statements.

Beyond that, the comparison to Dirty Mind falls short for me. I disagree on several levels, but even if your premise were true, the conclusion ("if you enjoy screwing your sister then Dirty Mind is the album for you") is completely wrong. Nowhere in "Sister" does Prince promote incest (just the opposite: "Incest is everything it's said to be," which is horrible, awful, etc.). Not that I take "Sister" to be literally true. I'm just saying you can't use it to make the same argument as with TRC. In TRC, he's promoting ideas of--in my mind, at least--sexism and anti-Semitism. In "Sister," he's speaking against incest. They're not parallel.


I think you're making an assumption that Sister is speaking against incest. There's really nothing to indicate that.

Personally I have always thought it wasn't about incest at all, though, but about a "sister" and that the incest part is just wordplay.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Page 4 of 8 <12345678>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Forums > Prince: Music and More > The Rainbow Children