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Thread started 09/26/10 4:36pm

Swa

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Graffiti Bridge: A Celebration

GRAFFITI BRIDGE

In 1990 I was 17 and had finished high school and I was starting university. It was a new chapter in my life, and with it came a new soundtrack – or so I had hope. The day Graffiti Bridge came out I headed straight from the uni class room to the record store and picked up both the vinyl and CD copy. With the chart success for the Batman soundtrack behind him Prince was unveiling another soundtrack. And with it came the hopes that it would match the musical direction of Batman and perhaps even the song writing brilliance of Purple Rain (unrealistic expectations - perhaps)

As if clarifying that this is indeed a sequel Prince opens the album with “Dear Dad things didn’t turn out quiet like I wanted them to…” so where was the Kid now, what had happened to The Time? With it’s 1999 / Controversy inspired drum pattern, CAN’T STOP THIS FEELING I’VE GOT seemed dated straight away almost reminding me (dare I say it) of 1980 movie anthems like Footloose. Now several years later, I understand why I had this feeling as the majority of tracks on Graffiti Bridge were re-recordings of tracks Prince has composed several years earlier (not surprising this track was originally written in 1982 and rerecorded in 1986). As the song shuffled along with it’s rockabilly vibe I tried to get into it but it just failed to grab me. The moment of excitement came too late in the final 10 seconds when the song hit more of a funk groove.

Well thankfully, if it was a funk groove I was after, then NEW POWER GENERATION delivered. Whereas some of the other tracks felt throwaway, NPG felt like it was a song with a purpose. As if stating the claim for a new (power) generation Prince addresses the optimism and willingness to change the world that he had hoped this new generation would have, unfortunately as history shows the whole grunge scene of the next few years would be a greater voice of a generation with it’s share of angst and frustration. Zeitgeist aside, this is one of Prince’s finest moments on record from this period mixing dance floor grooves with a social message as he had done with 1999 and Controversy.

Ah Morris, when you hear him strutting his stuff you just know a funk (and most likely Prince penned) groove is going to hit. And doesn’t it just. Packing a funky drummer inspired loop RELEASE IT just hits you where your funk bone resides. With those super sublime backing vocals by his truly, this song just packs the party jam vibe. And tell me you don’t make that funk face after Morris calls for the bass – and that funky run diddladoo. Increasingly using samples and manipulation to supplement the tracks, Prince uses everything he has learned from his years tweaking the Fairlight to brilliant effect. As if continuing the theme of Purple Rain where The Time packed the true funk punch it appeared to me that they still had the goods, and at this point it was 1 all for The Time v the Kid battle.

As if happy to let The Time corner the funk market, Prince decides to move in other fields with the brilliant THE QUESTION OF U (originally recorded in 1985). Taking the blues and making it his, Prince makes it look so effortless. With that flanged underwater bass underpinning the song, Prince’s vocals cut clear and reach for their heavens in their bid to find the answer. Initially I heard this as a romantic song about questioning one’s lover, but over the years I have come to appreciate the higher message, of wanting to live a just and righteous life and trying to find that illusive answer to life and God. I love how this song allows for 3/4 of it to be this magical musical arrangement complete with glorious guitar playing, harpsichord runs and those moments of the double hand claps and “ha” being called out, something I do every time I hear this song much to the amusement of other motorists if I happen to be driving.

As soon as I heard the intro and offbeat drum pattern of ELEPHANTS & FLOWERS (originally recorded in 1987) I was taken back to the Around the World in a Day album and was presented with a song that wouldn’t have been out of place on it. This song has a hopeful essence about it that is contagious, and Prince’s arrangement and delivery of the backing vocals is amongst his best. I simply adore this song. One of Prince’s most underrated tracks.

ROUND AND ROUND with its new jack swing beat and Tevin Campbell’s innocent vocals felt a little light back in the day, and unfortunately it’s the beat that dates it now. I always felt the lyrics were stronger than the song they accompanied and I have always wondered how Prince would re-invent this song in the 2000s.

With its mix of Knee Deep P-funk and Prince Minneapolis sound, WE CAN FUNK (original circa 1983) is a true meeting of the minds. This is one of the rare occasions where two artists with distinct feels come together and it mesh’s without one overpowering the other. George Clinton’s understated vocal delivery has a sense of confidence, while Prince’s have his well patented sense of urgency and passion. One of the stand out tracks on the album for me.

An offcast from 1986’s Crystal Ball, JOY IN REPETITION could easily be pushed aside as one of Prince’s experimental tracks, but that just diminishes its brilliance. With a slow build melody, half spoken half sung vocal delivery and unfolding story of passion this is Prince at his most free. I love that the guitar refrain from Soul Psychadelicide (and had they been playing it 4 months or for months?) pops up when referenced, and how the line “was this woman he had never noticed before he lost himself in the articulated manner in which she said them” is squeezed somewhat effortlessly into a space that shouldn’t hold them. I find this song fittingly hypnotic and love to listen to it in complete darkness just letting myself get lost in the slow burn.

LOVE MACHINE again was a new jack swing track that just felt weak. While it can’t be denied that Prince can take most genres and make them his own and make it sound fresh, I fear new jack wasn’t one of them. File under – if you can’t say anything nice…

With a Jimi Hendrix sampled groove and sense of madness in the musical accompaniment TICK TICK, BANG (originally slated for a 1981 release) has just the right mix of Prince funk and sense of humour to make lines such as “there’s no telling how long I’d last” seem cool. And as if inspired by the drum loop Prince slays the guitar solos with the right mix of Hendrix fire.

SHAKE! always sounded like a part of BatDance turned into a full track. And while acceptable at the time it feels a bit weak – The Time had stronger material on Pandemonium that could have popped up on here.

By the time THIEVES IN THE TEMPLE hit, I had discovered an uneasy pattern in the album, weak songs that almost made you lose faith in going any further were always backed up with songs that made you glad you did. Once of Prince’s most haunting dance tracks TITT just hit me, and was it any surprise that this was the song swirling around my head when I had to confront a cheating girlfriend, thankfully Prince made getting my heart broken feel almost cool.

THE LATEST FASHION (a 1988 Rave Un2 the Joy Fantastic intended track) always seemed a bit of a mish mash to me. And it wasn’t until I heard “My summertime thang” on The Time’s Pandemonium did I know why. While the groove is dead on, the melody of the vocal seems a bit stilted. My Summertime Thang will always be the stronger of the two interpretations for me.

Ok so maybe MELODY COOL redeems some of the Prince can’t write new jack swing, as this is slower new jack groove and arrangement is right on the money. Mavis with her powerful vocals and Prince’s punctuated “melody” that grooves this song along. “if we all play in the same key everything will be melody cool”.

Like Purple Rain and Sometimes it Snows in April I can’t hear STILL WOULD STAND ALL TIME (originally a Rave track) now and not think of my best friend who would die a few years after this album came out. During a time of questioning and sadness for me this song helped me find the beauty and happiness in those times I had shared with him. He was also a huge Prince fan and we use to spend hours listening to the albums and dissecting them. And even now as I listen to the beautiful arrangement and the gospel inspired backing vocals I am moved. And as Prince sings “we’re not alone… can you see the light” I can still feel the comfort and solace this song gave me. My favourite lines however as the last ones “you better run to the light, leave your past behind… all things will be fine”. Thank you Prince for this song.

For me when I listen now to the album this where I stop. But I know for the rest of you there is the epic GRAFFITI BRIDGE. Whilst musically it is a richly textured song, I feel the lyrical melody just fails to do it for me. And although you can hear how Prince would take what he learnt in the arrangement of this and apply it to the opuslike 3 chains of gold, I just feel it doesn’t have the same power the latter does, and feels a bit overblown.

And the reprise of New Power Generation seems a bit unnecessary, but it a viewed like a movie then I guess these are the closing credits just like in the actual film. But like a movie – most of us have probably walked out during the credits. The only thing I can think of mentioning is that it contains a sample of “love to the left of me, love to the right” one of the coolest b-sides from this era along with the original Get Off.

On a whole, it’s the Prince tracks that I gravitate to on this album, songs like Question of U, Joy in repetition, Elephants and flowers and obviously Still could stand all time that keep me coming back to this cd. However a tell tale sign was when I was transferring my prince collection to my ipod, and GB became a 10 track album rather than a 17 track one.

"I'm not human I'm a dove, I'm ur conscience. I am love"
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Reply #1 posted 09/26/10 4:38pm

rbrpm

Oh joy!smile

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Reply #2 posted 09/26/10 4:59pm

MikeyB71

This is the first Prince album that made me think oh dear.

Not keen on this one, though it still has moments of hope, Joy In Repetition, Tick Tick Bang and Still Would Stand All Time still gives me shivers.

There are great alternate versions of the tracks on this album in circulation, in great quality, including The Grand Progression, which should have stayed on the album imo, so i think that those versions are a much better listening experience, but that is not what this thread is about.

Anyway, not my cup of tea this one, but the alternate versions are great.

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Reply #3 posted 09/26/10 8:49pm

Swa

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MikeyB71 said:

This is the first Prince album that made me think oh dear.

Not keen on this one, though it still has moments of hope, Joy In Repetition, Tick Tick Bang and Still Would Stand All Time still gives me shivers.

There are great alternate versions of the tracks on this album in circulation, in great quality, including The Grand Progression, which should have stayed on the album imo, so i think that those versions are a much better listening experience, but that is not what this thread is about.

Anyway, not my cup of tea this one, but the alternate versions are great.

Agree, give me The Grand Progression any day over Graffiti Bridge. Someone slipped on the quality control that day.

"I'm not human I'm a dove, I'm ur conscience. I am love"
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Reply #4 posted 09/26/10 9:30pm

motherfunka

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Get rid of The Latest Fashion and Graffiti Bridge and that would be a CD that I could easily get all the way through. I kind of lost track of Prince for a minute with the whole Batman thing, but was right back into with Graffiti Bridge. Thieves In The Temple is one of my all time favorites.

TRUE BLUE
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Reply #5 posted 09/26/10 10:04pm

emesem

The tinny plastic production carried over from Batman, makes this a very disappointing set.

He ruined the wonderful trio "Girl of My Dreams/Cant Stop/We can Funk" although the new Can't Stop was not horrible.

Also this is the first post Prince Prince album with truly 100% cringeworthy tunes like New Power Generation and the title cut.

Never understood how RS gave this just a glowing review. Even Joy in Repetition couldn't save this.

This was a huge letdown after we were all expecting Purple Rain II

[Edited 9/26/10 22:05pm]

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Reply #6 posted 09/27/10 12:46am

Swa

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File:Prince Thieves.jpgFile:Prince NPGsong.jpg

* of note - the New Power Generation single which featured the original recording of Get Off

"I'm not human I'm a dove, I'm ur conscience. I am love"
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Reply #7 posted 09/27/10 1:06am

LuneCerise

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emesem said:

This was a huge letdown after we were all expecting Purple Rain II

[Edited 9/26/10 22:05pm]

I wasn't expecting Purple Rain II, nor was I letdown. The movie on the other hand....

Do U Lie?
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Reply #8 posted 09/27/10 1:14am

PURplEMaPLeSyr
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i agree with you about elephants and flowers being underrated. to me it's very unique-sounding among prince's songs -- he uses his voice in a different way too. it's like a rarely used door in prince's brain swung open and that came out...

can't stop this feelin i got -- i enjoy the complexity of it. on one hand, it's one of those songs like my name is prince that has some element that reminds me of an mj song, but besides that i like it. (but i do like mj songs) this record came out when i was around 11 and that phrase 'only we can change the world' was so powerful to me, i just wrote it really big on my bedroom wall. just the other day i was pondering that part of the lyrics where he goes "...feelin feelin feelin feelin -Hey!....Hey-- pardon me for livin..." the 'hey' at the end of the feelin's had seemed random to me and i had never connected it to the following hey. i got to thinking that the repetition of 'feelin' was like being in a dream and the first hey was where you hear a waking word in the dream, and the second hey is where you're actually awake, perhaps!

joy in repetition was my favorite track for a while

i think half the fun of the whole gb experience is the film, it wasn't made to be a stand-alone record so much

flowing through the veins of the tree of life...purplemaplesyrup
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Reply #9 posted 09/27/10 6:27am

trickykid59

I hate "New Power Generation", it's certainly the worst song he ever released. "Thieves in the temple" is pretty awful too.

I really like "Release it" & "We can funk" but the stand-out here is "Joy in repetition".

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Reply #10 posted 09/27/10 6:30am

Spinlight

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Swa said:

File:Prince Thieves.jpgFile:Prince NPGsong.jpg

* of note - the New Power Generation single which featured the original recording of Get Off

* Of even more note - the recording of "Get Off" is the only recording. razz

"Get Off" and "Gett Off" are 2 totally different and unrelated songs.

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Reply #11 posted 09/27/10 3:30pm

Swa

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Spinlight said:

Swa said:

File:Prince Thieves.jpgFile:Prince NPGsong.jpg

* of note - the New Power Generation single which featured the original recording of Get Off

* Of even more note - the recording of "Get Off" is the only recording. razz

"Get Off" and "Gett Off" are 2 totally different and unrelated songs.

Well there are more like sister tracks - sharing some common musical themes - but yes they are two songs in their own right. It's almost as if Prince felt he had something the first time round and knew he could do better.

"I'm not human I'm a dove, I'm ur conscience. I am love"
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Reply #12 posted 09/27/10 3:55pm

lydiaravenswoo
d

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I LOVE almost all of Prince's songs from this. My fav song by him is the extended version of "Thieves in the Temple" and the video is funny lol I just can't stand the title song, it's crap. But Joy in Rep, Question of U, Elephants and Flowers...and of course NPG, those rock. Took me a bit to like Tick, Tick, Bang though.

eye kisses prince
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