Its true what they say - there surely is no accounting for taste, eh? ...we have only scratched the surface of what the mind can do...
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You gotta love the org! [Edited 8/25/10 12:03pm] | |
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I don't understand how you can say you love his music, but find him unimaginativ and spare... come one now, thats one of the trademarks of Prince. The song "sign of the times" works so well because of the minimalistic arrangement. Same cause for "Kiss", "When doves cry" or the haunting "IT".
By the way, you say you were into the Dangerous hype, sweetie, there were hardly any real instruments on that album, and you say "Sign of the times"is cold??? | |
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I think the recorded material sounds very much like the live versions, just more alive and raw. TRUE BLUE | |
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U are right! Dangerous has not many real instruments,but has a rich sound! Something that none of Prince Cds has! Take mjs Thriller and it beats soundwise every prince cd! Thriller sounds still so fresh, so full of live soundwise... Prince cds sounds shit! u have to have a special set up to make them sound good! Thats really sad!
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the album is a classic as it is. i think da revolution wouldve been together, the album wouldnt sound so great. it wouldve sounded like simon and garfunkel or fleetwood mack. no offense but i love sott era, i think is his bet ever. prince was funky, raw., and had a rock edge. | |
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But than it has nothing to do if it was recorded with a band or not (as you stated in your first post), but in the way it was recorded.
Anyway, i remember when Dangerous came out, i read a few reviews saying Michael was using Prince his hard beats...compare "in the closet" to "it" for example... | |
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Gosh, you are so confused!
By the way, a shit cd sounds REALLY shit on a good system! The better and more transparent the system, the more "warts and all" it is - it will deliver all the harshness of the recording in bucketloads.
Most of his 80s output could do with a re-master, but everything from the 90s onwards sounds great on cd and on a decent system. ...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 | |
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Well, both, the way it was recorded and with whom it was recorded has to do with the result!
It cant be true that Mj used the beat from the song "it". Both beats are completely different! And MJ would never use something from Prince! And if he did, he would never talk about it! Thats a fact!!! The beats came from teddy reiley, as far as i know.... | |
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He's NOT saying that - he used "In the Closet" as an example of MJ using harder, more "Prince-like" beats - he didn't say he "sampled" 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 | |
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Sorry, you gotta face it. | |
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Great topic! I believe that the "lifeless" sound of specifically the rock tracks on Sign O' The Times is what caused Prince to lose to U2 for Album of the Year at the Grammiys that year. Industry folks including engineers and producers make up a percentage of the voting for that award and no doubt they weren't impressed. Again, I think the rock numbers like "Play In The Sunshine", "I Could Never Take The Place Of Your Man", and especially "The Cross" suffer from the dry drum tracks. Even though "The Cross" drum track is a real drummer (P of course) and not a machine, the sound is very bland. I think this is what kept me from waiting so long to get SOTT on CD. I always preferred the movie audio which I recorded from my VCR direct to my boombox back in 88 when the VHS came out!!! | |
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LOL! read before you answer, i never said it's excatly the same beat.
But if you look at the pattern of the rhythm, i don't think they are that much different, the arrangement is very spare, so i'm suprised you call the Sign of the times album dry, and Dangerous not....
Maybe Michael paid 20 million for a studio and prince didn't? | |
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The reason was better marketing. Much much better marketing.
Both are great albums, with time proving how much more unique and special SOTT was, but it was just a mater of professional well executed marketing compared to whatever it is we call Prince's promotional efforts. Alack of American tour didn't help matters any. I still have my Joshua Tree concert tee (nice!) and remember how much of an impact that concert had. | |
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He did and here they are
I don't know how much Jerome Greg Wally Mico contributed
but the Revolution + Susannah Sheila E. Eric Leeds Atlanta Bliss and possibly Jill Jones
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I do like 20Ten-but I think your sentiments and the way you said it are great. I don't get this thread at all. There seems to be enough band sound on SOTT to me. I understand criticisms about tracks like slow love but I feel this album is just so weighty. It's ironic that even tho it isn't consistent or has one theme -it just is its own beast in the fact that everything belongs together.
Robinhood- I think you have a broader point and I like it-either put up or shut up. Prince regardless of our tastes seems to do what he thinks is good and in terms of artistry I suppose you either run with it or not-you can't detail how it could have been improved as a listener-it is a redundant exercise | |
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Also
I've had a glass of wine now and think this is surely a wind up. Particularly by the posters responses. Sorry mate I feel embarrassed for you. | |
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This is all very true... but now listening to it, that sound is what is kind of cool and futuristic about the album. It is a very unique attitude and very non-conventional. And the live renditions are completely conventional in the sense of the purpose of the arrangement to breath life and energy into the song.
An example of this later on is "Days of Wild"
I love the studio version of this, it's like he's too cool for school...the laid back vibe of it mixed with a kind of level energy that's almost held down.
most people like the live versions, of which I like the original Beautiful Experience premiere of the song live. But it's a completely different vibe.
Compare Play in the Sunshine studio vs Live.... or Strange Relationship.... My art book: http://www.lulu.com/spotl...ecomicskid
VIDEO WORK: http://sharadkantpatel.com MUSIC: https://soundcloud.com/ufoclub1977 | |
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I hear you
I think it depends on the actual performance
I think the SOTT DVD version of Play In the Sunshine is killer, but I've heard other renditions of it that I prefer the album version
I like some renditions of Ballad of Dorothy Parker from ONA shows that I love, but once he goes into the jazzy part it looses me. I still prefer the album cut to any other.
Strange Relationship I love all of it, DF cut SOTT cut 1st Avenue 1987 live, ONA live I just love that song all together | |
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If you haven't already, you need to hear the SOTT reheasals from Paisley Park. The one where it's pretty much a run through of the entire album. TRUE BLUE | |
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Yes, thats what should be heard! The Sott rehearsals from 1987, where he plays dorothy, starfish and coffee, Adore and most of the Sott songs..! Go and hear them and than compare them to the Sott album. maybe that u will realise what i talking about... | |
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The question is how much they contributed to all the tracks! Was it a single note or..... When u hear Sott it is clear that the contibution was very limited and minimal! So not a classic Band recording!
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"Play in the Sunshine" and "The Cross" have dry drum tracks? lol... | |
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I don't know, from a lot of different people there the collaboration on Dream Factory with the band was even bigger. I'm not saying every song was full band. Outtakes like In A Large Room With No Light was a full band(not all Revolution) contribution
Power Fantastic (Lisa Coleman) was full Revolution
Ballad of Dorothy Park was a Prince song, a version had Eric with sax but I'm glad that didn't make it.
if course Visions was Lisa Coleman on piano, Interlude Wendy Melvoin on guitar
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I've heard, and I said I hear u
Everyone like what they like, and why, most songs I love to hear it live, But like I said, some shows I heard songs live and it didn't sound as lively and then another the same song was hot. SOTT rehearsals that's a rehearsal and the renditions are going to be different.
I love the album version of SOTT and I love the live version with the rock guitar(which tends to tip the scale for me)
I think I prefere U Got the Look album cut over live versions. It -the same. Didn't like most renditions of Adore live on the Lovesexy tour. Love Star Fish & Coffee no matter what album full band or piano medley | |
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SOTT is universally considered one of the greatest albums ever made in the history of popular music.
The outtakes, b-sides, live performances, period bootlegs, Madhouse and other side projects; all make this an unforgettable era. Someday there will be an amazing remastered collection on DVD/CD. | |
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I agree with on that one
I love it, probably more than the Lovesexy era SOTT era had an almost underground feel 2 it I still would love on the DVD/CD collection the Hard Knock Life video
One thing though SOTT didn't really produce a lot of 'outtakes' I think most of what general fans perceive as outtakes of SOTT are outtakes of Dream Factory/Camille project era even a lot of the Black album was recorded in that era
I love the era it was definately too short | |
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None of Prince's releases, as a whole, were classic band recordings prior to Diamonds and Pearls. Maybe Wendy and Lisa were able to play around with some tracks 1985-1986, but after the "skeleton" of the song was already complete. Matt Fink has said they had very little input on what ended up on vinyl, ever more so towards the end of the Revolution time. Prince didn't need a full band to record an album, he could do it better himself. The last statement being my opinion, ofcourse. TRUE BLUE | |
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Get serious! lmao! | |
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