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Thread started 12/19/11 7:46pm

jayARDAHB

Great Article from CBC Website: Canadian

Purple reign

The frustrations of being a Prince fan

Prince performs during the Super Bowl half-time show in Miami on Feb. 4, 2007. (Sony Music Canada) Prince performs during the Super Bowl half-time show in Miami on Feb. 4, 2007. (Sony Music Canada)

Not since that gilded moment in 1984 when he had America’s No. 1 single (When Doves Cry), movie and album (Purple Rain and its soundtrack) has there been such an abundance of Prince-ness. If you’re in the U.K., the new Prince album, Planet Earth, might have fallen out of your newspaper. Brits who somehow missed out on one of the nearly three million copies of Planet Earth inserted into The Mail on Sunday on July 15 could still receive a complimentary copy by purchasing a ticket for one of his 21 concerts in London in August. Sony BMG in North America released Planet Earth on July 24 in a rather more conventional fashion, i.e., they expect people to pay for it. But downloadable versions of the disc are already clogging up the Internet, not so surprising considering the glut of the physical version.

Though British music retailers were apoplectic over Prince’s unusual business move, he defended it as an example of “direct marketing.” What he’s marketing is his live shows, which are becoming the primary way musical acts earn their livelihood, seeing as album sales — both Prince’s and everybody else’s — have eroded significantly over the last several years. His strategy does make a certain amount of sense if his only objectives are encouraging people to hear his new music and buy tickets to his concerts. (In 2004, the singer used a new CD as a consumer incentive, giving the album Musicology free to concertgoers.)

Planet Earth is more than simply a marketing enticement. At its best, it’s a sprightly showcase for Prince’s enduring ability to mix up pop, rock, funk and R&B in a pleasing fashion; at worst, it’s mediocre. The album’s two sunniest songs, The One U Wanna C and All the Midnights in the World, are evidence of the return of Prince’s long-absent and much-missed collaborators Wendy Melvoin and Lisa Coleman (a.k.a. Wendy and Lisa). But what’s most troubling to Prince’s older fans — and considering his career peaked commercially in the mid-’80s, that group comprises the vast majority — is his disdain for the idea of the album as a sacrosanct art object. Shouldn’t it be a coherent encapsulation of an artist’s ethos and aesthetic? Short of that, isn’t it supposed to have all his new hot tunes?

Both of those ideals can be found in Prince’s string of masterworks in the ’80s, a period bracketed by two much-revered double albums: 1999 and Sign o’ the Times. Fuelled by his obsessions with sex and religion, the music was heady, lusty, witty and unpredictable. Such was his brilliance and productivity, even his B-sides or giveaways to other artists — like Nothing Compares 2 U, which he originally wrote for funk-pop protegés the Family but which later became a smash for Sinéad O’Connor — were gems.

We couldn’t have expected him to keep up that pace forever. True to form, Prince’s flameout was as idiosyncratic as everything else he’s done. The first sign of trouble was his last-minute decision to spike the release of The Black Album in late 1987. (It instantly became a much-coveted bootleg.) Reportedly unsettled by the disc’s “evil” vibe, he substituted it with the more upbeat Lovesexy in May 1988. Though both discs were flawed, together they comprise a startling vision of his artistry at the time. (Amazingly, he released both albums and Sign o’ the Times within the same 13-month period.) The same cannot be said of his soundtrack to Tim Burton’s Batman (1989), a set of mostly lame, gimmicky funk, or Graffiti Bridge, a slapdash collection of music for his third and most widely ignored movie vehicle.

As the Purple One’s most devoted subjects know, what comes after this juncture has been a lot to endure. Indeed, the typical Prince fan has experienced almost 20 years of bewilderment and frustration, with just enough glimmers of his old magic to keep us from giving up on him entirely. Though the quality of his recorded output never declined as badly as it did for other major artists (e.g., Rod Stewart after Smiler, the Rolling Stones after Some Girls), Prince nevertheless became distressingly cavalier and sometimes wildly counterproductive.

One reason was his war with Warner Bros., the record label that first signed him in 1979, when he was 19. The enmity arose over the ownership of his master tapes. Prince’s guerrilla tactics in the fight included writing “slave” on his face for public appearances and replacing his name with a symbol. (Hence the phrase The Artist Formerly Known As Prince, which yielded the unlovable acronym TAFKAP.) Later Warner albums like Come (1994) and Chaos and Disorder (1996) put the “obligation” in the phrase “contractual obligation.” Once he’d been released from his contract, Prince formed his own label, New Power Generation, also the name of his backing group since the end of his fabled Revolution line-up in the mid-’80s. The three-disc set that followed, Emancipation (1996), suggested that he had indeed been holding back goodies from Warner, but the set wasn’t exactly free of chaff. A daunting number of NPG releases ensued — including ones only available online or to fan-club members, self-indulgent instrumental discs and The Rainbow Children (2001), a stupefying though intermittently brilliant concept album devoted to his new faith as a Jehovah’s Witness.

Every so often, he would make a temporary alliance with a major label (like Arista for 1999’s Rave Un2 the Joy Fantastic) to release a disc that was inevitably — if implausibly — trumpeted as a comeback. But only with the greatest-hits tour that accompanied the release of Musicology (2004) did Prince make a strong return to the charts. The upcoming world tour should also buoy the fortunes of Planet Earth.

Concertgoers may take a shine to Guitar, a recent single that repurposes half of the riff to U2’s I Will Follow with infectiously funky results, or Planet Earth’s breezy closer, Revelation. Part of what makes these songs so appealing is that they could have surfaced during Prince’s heyday. Having heard so many of his new ideas misfire over the last 20 years, I’m not the only fan who’s happier when he relies on the tried and true.

In many ways, Prince has been unable to progress past his innovations of the ’80s because he fell out of step with a music scene for which he’d once been at the vanguard. As critic Michaelangelo Matos outlined in his book on Sign o’ the Times (part of the 33 1/3 series on classic albums), Prince’s artistic crisis in the late ’80s stemmed in large part from his inability to face the challenge posed by hip-hop. At first dismissive of the new sound, he later tried to integrate it, with poor results: 1991’s Diamonds & Pearls was badly marred by the lacklustre MC action by rapper Tony M. and Prince himself. Once the quality that allowed him to unite previously disparate rock and R&B (read: white and black) audiences, Prince’s genre mashing became a liability in the ’90s. He was too much of a showboat polymath to adopt the trendier, neo-traditionalist take on soul and R&B practised by artists like Maxwell and D’Angelo in the ’90s, and Ne-Yo, Musiq Soulchild and Robin Thicke now.

Ultimately, Prince belongs in a category of one, a situation that likely suits him fine. A generation ago, a residency at a Las Vegas casino was a sure sign of an artist’s decline, but Prince’s profile received an additional boost after the brisk sales and rave reviews of his recent six-month run at the Rio. (Lest you think he’s giving everything away for free, tickets for the Rio shows started at $125.) Still the consummate entertainer, he provided the only spark of life during the moribund Super Bowl telecast this past January. Planet Earth may only be modestly engaging, but it’s enough to stave off demands that Prince abdicate his lonely throne.

Planet Earth is in stores now.


Jason Anderson is a Toronto-based writer.

Prince seeks some crowd response during a concert in 1991. (Frank Micelotta/Getty Images)Prince seeks some crowd response during a concert in 1991. (Frank Micelotta/Getty Images)

The beautiful ones

Ten great songs from 10 less-than-great Prince albums

Joy in Repetition (from Graffiti Bridge): This slow-burning Sign o’ the Times outtake climaxes with one of his most fiery displays of guitar histrionics.

Cream (from Diamonds & Pearls): A sly ’n’ sweet slice of T.Rextasy, this 1991 synthesis of pop, rock and funk is quintessential Prince.

Sexy MF (from The Love Symbol Album): Boasting a production style so Spartan it makes the Neptunes seem decadent, this was his dance-floor filler during the time when he started wearing drapes over his face.

Loose (from Come): Prince’s brief attempt to go rave in 1994 (hey, everybody was doing it) yields this frenetic and extremely weird rocker.

P Control (from The Gold Experience): There’s no mistaking what the “p” stands for in the wildest, horniest track to emerge from the slagheap of Prince’s final years with Warner.

She Spoke 2 Me (from the Girl 6 soundtrack and The Vault): The soundtrack for Spike Lee’s phone-sex comedy was a fine occasion for Prince to dust off this long-shelved but lovely R&B number.

One Kiss at a Time (from Emancipation): One of many dreamy songs on the three-disc set, which celebrated his escape from corporate clutches and the beginning of his marriage to Mayte Garcia.

So Far So Pleased (from Rave Un2 the Joy Fantastic): This bouncy duet with Gwen Stefani is reminiscent of his classic pairings with Sheena Easton on U Got the Look and Sheila E. on A Glamorous Life.

Call My Name (from Musicology): This buttery ballad stands out on an album filled with songs that try too hard to be funky.

The Dance (from 3121): Though the first few minutes suggest a standard mid-tempo smoocher, it ramps up into Prince’s freakiest crescendo since If I Was Your Girlfriend.

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Reply #1 posted 12/19/11 8:27pm

kiasheri

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good article cool cool cool cool cool

I want everybody 2 make it in2 PARADISE!!!!!!!
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Reply #2 posted 12/19/11 8:33pm

uuhson

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is p control really horny? sometimes i wonder if these people even listen to these songs

Bogey and Bacall, peanut butter and jelly, Wall being on fucking point, is "classic" dipshit. An iphone is top shelf technology. Get it straight. This thing is 4g. -Wall the great
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Reply #3 posted 12/19/11 9:47pm

mzsadii

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uuhson said:

is p control really horny? sometimes i wonder if these people even listen to these songs

No its not. I finally stopped turning this tune down when my 17 y.o. grandson and friends were in the car. Then all liked it and said she one baaaaaad biatha--the right kind a of woman you want in your life. Now this song gets played in heavy rotation.

Prince's Sarah
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Reply #4 posted 12/20/11 12:20am

NouveauDance

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Same old, same old. The author seems to know a bit, so I imagine they had a tough time editing down the article/talking down to the layman.

With regards to the point brought up about hip-hop and his trouble at first dismissing, then awkwardly integrating it into his output - I recently saw a 1990 Vanilla Ice performance on TV, and it was pretty funny - well it would be, right?! but not that - he had 3 backing dancers, who looked almost exactly like the L/Game Boyz, right down to the clothes, the dancing and the high tops.

It pretty much confirmed what my fuzzy memory had always told me - that Prince's hasty addition of hip-hop to his amoury basically consisted of Prince switching on MTV and seeing what was making money there and then. Much like him copying 'Mama Said Knock You Out' for MNIP and the 2 Whom It May Concern promo. All the scratches too, etc.

Prince does a dis-service to himself when he does this kind of thing - that's why I'm down on a lot of the stuff from 3121 and MPLSound for example, I see the same kind of thing going on now, as then. It's beneath his ability to try to copy the likes of Vanilla Ice, LL Cool J or Usher - why bother? For money? For sales? For a HIT?! shrug

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Reply #5 posted 12/20/11 12:50am

ThisOne

thank u 4 posting ~ i really enjoyed reading that cool

mailto:www.iDon'tThinkSo.com.Uranus
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Reply #6 posted 12/20/11 5:22am

joyfulwarrior

I can't believe he says Lovesexy is flawed! The only flaw for me is that it ends smile

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Reply #7 posted 12/20/11 12:36pm

jayARDAHB

joyfulwarrior said:

I can't believe he says Lovesexy is flawed! The only flaw for me is that it ends smile

I so agree with you joyfulwarrior...

I love this record... the only flaw with it is how crappy the sound quality is.

I hope it gets remastered.

J

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Reply #8 posted 12/21/11 5:16am

uuhson

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mzsadii said:

uuhson said:

is p control really horny? sometimes i wonder if these people even listen to these songs

No its not. I finally stopped turning this tune down when my 17 y.o. grandson and friends were in the car. Then all liked it and said she one baaaaaad biatha--the right kind a of woman you want in your life. Now this song gets played in heavy rotation.


i wish my grandmother was this cool

Bogey and Bacall, peanut butter and jelly, Wall being on fucking point, is "classic" dipshit. An iphone is top shelf technology. Get it straight. This thing is 4g. -Wall the great
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