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The Story of how the song "SOLO" came about with David Henry Hawg http://youoffendmeyouoffe...th-prince/
I always liked this song and I think the story behind it is interesting. | |
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Cool story "Keep on shilling for Big Pharm!" | |
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Nice to hear postive interactions with Prince and others. So much negativity about him being difficut or self-obsorbed. Thanks for the post Prince's Sarah | |
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That is a great story. | |
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Without a doubt, one of the worst things Prince did in his entire career was 'Solo'.
If I were Hwang, I wouldn't be very proud. | |
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Prince doing a capella - I like it, but still it sounds more like an experiement,
Lovesign (the 1-800-New-Funk version) should have been on the "Come" album instead,
then "Come" would have been perfect. Prince 4Ever. | |
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Interesting story. "Solo" gets no love, but I've always really liked that track. Nothing particularly profound, but I think it's a great vocal performance. That final run is a monster! Ὅσον ζῇς φαίνου
μηδὲν ὅλως σὺ λυποῦ πρὸς ὀλίγον ἐστὶ τὸ ζῆν τὸ τέλος ὁ χρόνος ἀπαιτεῖ.” | |
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I think I've read this before, it rang bells. What I wondered about is if Hawg got paid? With no contracts and he didn't even know what was happening with the work he submitted till some girl from PP called him to say the track was going to be on Come..... weird set up.
I respect 'Solo' for what it is, but it's not something I really return to, I kinda see it more of an ungerminated seed. The musical idea sounds like it morphed into The Undertaker or L4OA, but it would've been interesting to see where else it could've gone if Prince was considering material like Solo for it. | |
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very cool | |
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I really like it! [Edited 6/12/11 4:01am] | |
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http://youoffendmeyouoffe...amily.com/
What the FUCK is that website's name and what on EARTH is it supposed to mean???
A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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solo is one of my favorite. interesting story. | |
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Not from me, I love the song It coincides perfectly with the album's dark sound, and it marks as one of Prince' most unusual musical moments and I still consider "Come" to be my fave 90s album.
There's a 10 mix tracklist that I used to send to my non-Prince friends/family members, that song is on No.5, and damn near all of them said that they didn't see this one coming. Some dug it, some were intrigued enough to check his discography because of it, others didn't think twice but hell it served the purpose just the same. | |
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I really like it. My art book: http://www.lulu.com/spotl...ecomicskid
VIDEO WORK: http://sharadkantpatel.com MUSIC: https://soundcloud.com/ufoclub1977 | |
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Nice article. Thanks for posting it. It's cool to see a Prince fan get a chance to work with Prince. When go 2 a Prince concert or related event it's all up in the house but when log onto this site and the miasma of bitchiness is completely overwhelming! | |
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very positive insight, thx for sharing
| |
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This was posted already sometime last year.
http://prince.org/msg/7/3...8&pg=1 [Edited 6/12/11 19:29pm] | |
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Beautifully haunting and compelling...I love the song. His vocals are exquisite. Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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I knew I wasn't imagining it | |
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I like Lovesign but dont think it would have fitted on Come. Whereas Solo may not be one of my favourite songs but it fits perfectly with the general dark sound and feel to the album. | |
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solo is personally one of his most interresting tracks musically, and I think it it's it's freakyness that people can't stand. It's an amazing vocal performance that I don't think is possible to duplicate. I'ts not as good as God as a song, but as a mindblowing performance it is. But it's more of an experiment, yet I love it for the obscurety, emotion, freakyness everything about it is SO Prince. If you want to explain Prince, this song explains him pretty well. | |
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Hell yes. PIPS! Eurgh... | |
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Not sure that link is linking where that link is supposed to link.
Try this: http://prince.org/msg/7/344099
So, yup, posted a while back.
===============================
Now edited - my link isn't working that well either - goes to something about "Computer World" article?
Anyways, cut and paste into the URL bar and it'll take you there.
[Edited 6/13/11 3:52am] | |
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That happens when putting a URL into a message here on the Org. Whatever you link it to doesn't matter, as it seemingly always goes to that one weird, particular topic. So, most people here now know to just copy and paste the referred "Org" link into their address bar. Frustrating indeed. | |
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Working with Prince
DHH David Henry Hwang is a playwright who has been producing plays, musicals and operas for three decades. He won the Tony Award for his play M. BUTTERFLY and also writes for movies and television. After his previous blogs where he unleashed his Asian Shame and discussed his worst career moves (see here, here and here), he turns to write about something more…funky. Growing up, I listened to lots of music, but the two artists who meant most to me were David Bowie and Prince. I discovered Prince through his 1980 album DIRTY MIND. See, back in 1980, there was black music, and there was white music. Period. I listened mostly to black artists cuz I imagined most of the white guys would just as soon beat me up as pick up their guitars. Unless they were British, in which case they might not beat me up cuz, I dunno, they had cool accents. But Prince. DIRTY MIND. What WAS this? Kinda R&B, kinda New Wave. Kinda disco, kinda … punk? How was this guy managing to pull it off? The sound wasn’t black, wasn’t white, it was BOTH. Or neither. Whatever. It was totally new. And brilliant. So danceable. And … really nasty. I loved, loved, loved it. From then on, I bought every Prince album the day of its release, scoured record stores for unreleased and bootleg tracks, followed each concert tour. I saw 1984’s PURPLE RAIN show in Prince’s hometown of Minneapolis — on Christmas Eve. So imagine my groupie heart in 1989, when I opened PEOPLE Magazine to find a picture of Prince, coming out of M. BUTTERFLY, my Broadway show! Prince goes to Broadway? Who knew? He saw my play! Did he like it? How come no one told me? I could’ve been there! I could had like a … casual conversation with him. “Hey, Prince, how ya doin’?” Do people actually call him “Prince?” Four years later, in 1993, I began hearing through my agents that Prince was interested in meeting with me. To talk about an idea for a stage musical.
For about two weeks, a woman from Paisley Park, his music studio outside Minneapolis, would ring my home. “Are you available to speak to Prince?” Hey, they do call him “Prince!” Even though, by then, he’d renounced his name over a contract dispute with Warner Brothers and changed it to that unpronounceable symbol thing. But his People were still calling him “Prince.” I was already getting Inside Information, Baby!
“OK, he might call you tomorrow.” Then a couple of days later: “Are you available to speak to Prince?” Finally, “He’s going to call you at 2 pm tomorrow.” Around the appointed time, the phone rings. “Prince would like to speak with you.” I’m falling into a groupie coma. “Hi.” It’s Him. I know that voice! Here I am, a Chinese kid from San Gabriel who grew up wearing coke-bottle bottom glasses and with terrible acne, the antithesis of cool. I’m on the phone. With Prince!
“Hi!” I motor-mouth. “I’m really happy to meet you on the phone cuz your music has meant so much to me, and thank you for thinking of me.” Dead silence. From the other end of the line, not a peep. “SO! I-understand-you’re-interested-in-maybe-doing-a-musical-and-I’m-really-excited-to-talk-to-you-about-it-and-the-possibility-of-our-maybe-working-together.” Prince finally speaks. Wants to meet me in person. In New York. I’m living in LA at the time, but, hell, I can go to New York. When? I meet Prince in the penthouse of the Riga Royal Hotel on West 54th St. He has the whole top floor. The door opens, and — there he stands. Prince. But, I mean, really Prince. Like, with the high heels, and the make-up and the purple jacket and — For our meeting, he’s donned full Prince drag. Or maybe this is how he hangs around his hotel room all day, who knows? All I know for sure is, this is the same guy I’ve seen onstage in countless cities. On albums and bootlegs and in fan magazines and … I’ve come prepared with lots to say cuz, you know, he might not speak.
This time, however, Prince turns out to be remarkably down to earth. For him. We sit and drink, I dunno, soda water, and he tells me this story based on his own experience. About his relationship with a fan. Which became obsessive and weird — in a sexual way (of course). He wants to do a show about it.
I am so on the case. I can go home. Do a draft of the script. Send it back to him. We can bat it around. I don’t talk about money, or contracts — I figure, I am doing this on spec. After all, I am friggin’ Working With Prince! One more thing. He’d like me to write a poem for him. About loss. The way you feel when you’ve lost someone you love. And you know they’re never coming back. And that, for the rest of your life, you’re going to be alone. He wants to do a song that suddenly breaks into a spoken word interlude. He rolls his eyes, “They’re gonna say, ‘The boy’s really lost it this time.’” The whole meeting lasts maybe half an hour. Then I’m back on West 54th St. Having met my idol. The greatest pop star of the decade. And we’re Working Together! I return to LA and a couple of days later, an envelope shows up. From Paisley Park. With cassette tapes. Of new Prince songs for the show. This is the ultimate bootleg. Wait, it’s not even technically a bootleg. They’re just … unreleased songs. That I’m hearing before the rest of the world. Why? Oh yeah. Because I’m Working With Prince.
Interestingly, all the songs include a middle section that fades out. Then the song comes back in. Oh, I get it! That’s so they can’t be Bootlegged. More Inside Information, Baby! I write a poem about Love and Loss. Fax it to Paisley Park. A few days later, I get another cassette. A new song. Incorporating my poem. Not as a spoken word interlude after all, but as part of the lyrics. It’s called “Solo.” Hey, I’ve written a song. With Prince. Just like that. The musical doesn’t end up working out, and Prince and I have never had reason to speak again. But a year later, I got a call from the woman at Paisley Park. “Just wanted to let you know that the album is coming out. It will include ‘Solo.’ We’re thinking is it’s probably also going to be the B-side of the first single. I’m glad because it’s one of my favorite tracks.”
The album is called COME, whose first single, “LetItGo,” does indeed include “Solo” as its B-side. I checked the writing credit on the CD case: “Prince with David Henry Hwang.” No contracts between us, nothing on paper. But he remembered. That we had Worked Together. COME ends up becoming Prince’s lowest-selling album to that date. Which is still good enough, though, to be certified by the RIAA as a Gold Record. To be honest, “Solo” is not the greatest Prince song ever written. But that doesn’t matter, does it? I got to become part of the Prince discography. And if that weren’t orgasmic enough, Paisley Park even sent me a Gold Album. The greatest piece of fan memorabilia a life-long groupie could ever desire. [Edited 6/14/11 9:58am] "Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato
https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0 | |
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Gr8 story! wonder was he ever compensated 4 co writing credit.... will ALWAYS think of like a "ACT OF GOD"! N another realm. mean of all people who might of been aliens or angels.if found out that wasn't of this earth, would not have been that surprised. R.I.P. | |
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