and because i'm in a talkative mood...
i feel kinda bad for saying that a person's music is 'unremarkable'... an artist repeatedly puts his balls out for people to stomp on. When they put their heart in something and present what they think is the best they can do in the given circumstances, it seems extremely harsh to call it irrelevant. In fact even when an artist phones it in, I'm not entirely comfortable in criticizing them unless I paid too much money.
I dunno. I'm not obligated to like everything I hear and I'm free to state my opinion, but it somehow seems unfair to speak up about the perceived failures of an artist without acknowledging how much I enjoy the successes. And I enjoy Prince's successes VERY much, it's hard to put into words. I'm extremely glad he's had such a long and fruitful career for me to enjoy, judge, praise and critique at my leisure, and I hope it continues well into the future. | |
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ya, i hate to be brutal in criticizing any artists work, I'm one myself and it's no fun to have people take shots at something you put you're all into. However, those people, I know from experience ain't going nowhere. Most of those kind are unhappy with themselves, want to criticize other people and can't stand it when someone else thinks they are great. I don't really strongly dislike any of Prince's work outside of his missteps into hip hop which considering how everyone had to acknowledge it is forgivable. The fans here are pretty picky and in one of the other threads, I said "if I were Prince, I wouldn't want fans like most of you guys". | |
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Out of curiosity, those of you who say you haven't been moved by Prince's music since [insert whichever album applies], are there other artists that move you now the way Prince did in his heyday?
I've been a Prince fan since the very early 80's and I dig a lot of his stuff from throughout his career. But, I admit, few things hit me like Parade or SOTT did when I first heard them. Hell, I don't even think those albums hit me like they used to. Like some other posters said, I can remember listening to Prince for hours, memorizing the words to every song, reading the liner notes down to "lyric translation by..." But with age, real life manages to creep in when I'm listening to something. Midway through a great song, I'll start thinking like, I've never noticed this mole on my shoulder...I hope it's not cancer.
And I don't think it's the music itself. I've discovered a lot great artists in my adulthood, from The Beatles and Dylan to Miles Davis and Sonny Rollins, but I've never been entranced like I was as kid listening to Prince.
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that's what I'm talking about, I was loving the shit out of Springsteen's latest album but for whatever reason, i put it on now and my mind just ain't on music. What's the difference here? I guess our ability to invest ourselves as enthusiastic receptors changes on a day to day basis as well as age. Most of the time I'm too anxious to really chill out and listen to music by anyone. | |
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If you don't mind me asking, how old are you? "New Power slide...." | |
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I get this impression as well. | |
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Hey thedance,
That was a long time ago wasn't it?!?! God, how time just flies!!!
Anyhow, Come was a great record and I've felt this way since its release in 1994.
I hope somehow Prince gets inspired to try new sounds and tackle new genres of music.
When he comes back to Earth, maybe he can sing songs about some of the things that he has experienced that we also experience but I highly doubt that will happen...
I hold very closely the material he released from 78 to 95 and take what I can from the stuff that followed... just imagine the Lovesexy era Prince, who had an incredible band and who arranged phenomenal versions of his material, releasing the bland drivel he called NewPowerSoul!!!!
YIKES!!! The guy that wrote La La La He He Hee released that stinker! I could never have imagined that so many years later.
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I have to say the last time Prince had me absolutely rivetted was when I first heard Avalanche, those are songs I couldn't have cared less for when I was young and likewise Prince would have never written something like that in the years when he was doing his best to distance himself from his blackness and try to crossover. It was a potent song for me and I'd say he still has his old powers in those moments. | |
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24. Not the youngest, but Prince was never on my radar as a kid and I didn't start seriously listening to his stuff until... I'm not sure, 2009, maybe. | |
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That's a tough question, because no artist has sucked me in and totally dominated my listening habits as much as Prince, but there's lots of music that moves me in a different way... I guess COIL is a good example. I never want to listen to coil over and over again, but I think a lot of their music is incredible, and I feel it in my gut, how good it is. I'd say Prince is the most addicting, but not necessarily the best or the most moving.
The Beatles are great, but they're like cotton candy to me. I can't eat too much cotton candy because it's all sweet and nothing else. Prince is like cotton candy that doesn't make me sick. His music has an addictive property but there's enough savoury stuff to chew on and digest that it doesn't wear itself out too quickly. | |
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He has blown my mind a lot since 1995, as much as before actually. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Barney Hoskyns (the writer of that review) was actually the first person I ever heard cite the 1980-1987 period as Prince's golden age. That was back in 1993. Nineteen years later he hasn't changed his mind.
Come wasn't considered a masterpiece in 1994 and it's not considered a masterpiece now. There's been no change there.
The 80s were Prince's peak but that doesn't mean everything he did then was perfect. Yes, there were some disgruntled fans when he went all psychedelic. That review actually makes some valid points (although it's completely unbalanced). Some of that shit on Parade and ATWIAD was kitsch and forced. But for every "Life Can Be So Nice" there was a "Kiss" or a "Raspberry Beret" (unarguably great songs) to balance it out, and even the songs that were misguided were at least interesting. There is something to be had from listening to them. Nowadays there's no reason to listen to new Prince stuff except to enjoy the echoes of what used to be. And that's fine by the way; if Prince never writes another song he has already given more than most people could ever dream of.
To sum up - his 80s work wasn't flawless (with an artist that prolific and adventurous it never could be) but it was frequently inspired and it excited a lot of people at the time and now. There has not been any revisionism there. Just check out what serious artists like Miles Davis, Eric Clapton, Randy Newman, etc were saying. These were older, musical snobs who worshipped him then and there, not years later. Needless to say he was also selling a lot more records back then so his work was reaching the man on the street more too. “The man who never looks into a newspaper is better informed than he who reads them, inasmuch as he who knows nothing is nearer to truth than he whose mind is filled with falsehoods and errors.”
- Thomas Jefferson | |
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I know what you mean. I feel bad saying this stuff sometimes too. No artist intends to go downhill. I'm sure Prince is doing his best with every album. I try and balance it out by pointing out how great his overall contribution to music has been.
I also feel he could still make great music even now if he learned to collaborate more. That's the irony- he's actually still better now than most other artists out there but most other artists don't compose, produce, arrange and perform their music by themselves: therefore they're able to put out better albums than Prince despite being less talented than him. “The man who never looks into a newspaper is better informed than he who reads them, inasmuch as he who knows nothing is nearer to truth than he whose mind is filled with falsehoods and errors.”
- Thomas Jefferson | |
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In a word, yes. I tuned out from Prince after NPS in 1998. It was about a year after that that I got seriously into Bob Dylan. A few years after that I got seriously into Bruce Springsteen. I love their music just as much as I loved what Prince was doing in his heyday.
More recently, there have been younger artists like The Kings Of Leon who I've enjoyed just as much too. Bat For Lashes, Alanis Morisette..... the list goes on. “The man who never looks into a newspaper is better informed than he who reads them, inasmuch as he who knows nothing is nearer to truth than he whose mind is filled with falsehoods and errors.”
- Thomas Jefferson | |
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I became a enthisiast of Prince during the 'God Experience' Era or 'Emancipation' Era and I missed out on the 'hey-day' of Prince video, radio and the like ( vision and sound ). Personally speaking I cannot say if he's done as a 'studio act', per-se because he's went the 'independent artist' route and if he puts out another album in say Indonesia only, I'm still gettin' it. There bound to be at least THREE songs on the album I'd like almost instantly and the rest will have to grow on me.
Albums haven't blown my mind but, the last album I liked from first to last track was 'The Rainbow Children', not to say any other album before or after that wasn't up good. Peace ... & Stay Funky ...
~* The only love there is, is the love "we" make *~ www.facebook.com/purplefunklover | |
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I hear you and agree with a lot of what you are saying.
My point is that, everyone has different ideas of when "Prince's golden era" was. Some say everything before 1985. Some say everything up to 1995. Some say, everything was good until he stopped swearing/met LG, etc.
What is problematic about the entire thing is that these "eras" must always be categorized retroactively. It's easy enough to say Prince of (insert current year here) is shit, but the fact is that people often view/frame things differently in a a few years time. Mr. Barney Hoskins would be a prime example of this. [Edited 6/22/12 7:27am] "New Power slide...." | |
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Good analogy! | |
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That's cool. I think a lot of it depends on the listener. I'm just not sure if I have it in me to be moved like that again. | |
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If Prince "is done as a studio act", as you say, it has NOTHING to do with his material. I've been more excited about Prince's releases since 2000 than I ever was in the '90s.
'The Rainbow Children' 'N.E.W.S.' 'Musicology' '3121' 'Planet Earth' 'Lotusflow3r'
All fantastic albums. 'MPLSound' and '20ten' were also slammin'.
We all know he said he's "in recording rehab", and won't release another album until the state of the industry changes, with regards to piracy of music, etc.
I think that he has lost interest in sharing his new creations with a laregly unappreciative fan base. Perhaps he is planning on yet another distribution method.
Who knows... maybe all of this touring is creating enough revenue to fund his own distribution. Previously, he relied on others for distribution of his label. He could have a plan to devise a massive independent distribution. Possibly the plan is to raise global awareness of his music, then release something on a global level.
Of course, there's always the argument of: "Why doesn't he just create a website, and let folks order new albums?"
I would say that would limit the buyers to mainly just his fanbase.
Others may say: "Why not just charge for a download, and therefore he would have no material costs?"
Personally, I prefer a physical format with artwork and credits... Vinyl or CD... and no, I don't want to make my own CD inserts.
I'd say he is disgruntled with both the state of the "single-minded" music trends - All based on singles not albums, and downloading mp3s via iTunes, combined with the constant negativity and bashing he gets from a lot of his so-called fans.
That's all.
Peace. "He's a musician's musician..." | |
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and has been for awhile. | |
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I think among music experts (not fans who think that everything Prince touches is a masterpiece) there's much more common sense about Prince's golden era than you might think.
I myself can live with people saying Prince's golden era would be 1982-1988 or 1980-1987 or 1982-1987 or 1980-1988. Even 1978-1988 would make kind of sense if you consider Prince's musical development. People who go with the first half of the 80s do have very limited musical taste, because there's no way to deny the quality of Prince's later works from 1984/1985-1987/1988.
Viewing things differently in a few years time has to do mainly with the actual value of an album within Prince's ouevre, not so much with its place in music history. A bad album makes you appreciate its better predecessor a little bit more and vice versa. | |
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@midnightmover: More or less the same post as mine, except for the opinion on "Life can be nice". I think it's a very enjoyable piece of work. | |
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hells to the naw, why is this thread still poppin?! the poster who cited Lotus Flower (single disc) as the proper answer to the preposterous assertion of the OP should've deaded this pages ago. Sales notwithstanding, let Clapton (and Miles if he were here), and others who've slept hear it and see if they don't agree, he still has it. these nostalgic mofos KILL me! | |
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BSLADE | |
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If any Prince song blew my mind after The Gold Experience? Yes. The human body (His 90s electronic music statement/response - I love this song!) My computer
-Wtv u heard bout me is true,I change the rules n do what I wanna do.[Im n love w God,He's the only way - NOT!]We know we gotta die some day,so Im gon have fun evr MF night!Im gon 2 another life.How bout u?
-Im wit u...Ur so cool, evrtg u do is SUCCESS. | |
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Agreed. I mean, a person could have hypothetically said "Prince is done as a studio act" after he recorded "Jughead" . IMO it would have been more true then, than it is today. I prefer the 2000's output to the 90's as well. "New Power slide...." | |
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I don't think he'll ever be done until he's in the ground I write off these kinds of things. Duke Ellington was still working his heart out even as he was dying, you can't stop those guys. As far as the quality, opinions are no more than heresay really. I go with what I like and he almost always gives me that. | |
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No, he wouldn't. He's been saying the same thing for at least 20 years now. There's no evidence he's changed his mind about Parade either. Not liking a specific album doesn't mean you don't think the overall work from that period was great. I have mixed feelings about Parade too. Prince himself echoed a lot of Barney Hoskyns' criticisms of that album just a few months later. The point is it's just one album and it's being compared with the other albums before and after it, like PR and SOTT, which most people agree are better.
And the claim that "everyone has different ideas of when Prince's golden era was" is misleading. At least 99% of people think his golden era was in the 80s and perhaps early-mid 90s too. Only a handful of geeks on websites like this would argue that his 00s work can hold a candle to that stuff. I've never met anyone in the real world who would argue that and I doubt you have either. “The man who never looks into a newspaper is better informed than he who reads them, inasmuch as he who knows nothing is nearer to truth than he whose mind is filled with falsehoods and errors.”
- Thomas Jefferson | |
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This isn't the real world? OMG I'm gonna need a pill! 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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Nah, this ain't the real world. That's the reason we all come here. “The man who never looks into a newspaper is better informed than he who reads them, inasmuch as he who knows nothing is nearer to truth than he whose mind is filled with falsehoods and errors.”
- Thomas Jefferson | |
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