Most of Prince's songs are fiction.
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wtf??
this is some dumb ass shit..you are trollin right? | |
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I pretty much agree- Most of his stuff since the 90s sounds like someone i can't relate to on a human level wrote it.
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There was something that i really liked about the self deprecating Prince of the early days.. These days- would Prince sing a lyric about not being Handsome and Tall like his brother? or- "I aint got no money.. I aint like those other guys you hang around" or - "I might be small but so is Dynomite"
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I love that stuff | |
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^^^ Me too- | |
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And while I understand and agree with your right to feel this way, your assertion shows just how subjective all of this is because I clearly relate to a great deal of the songs Prince has written over the past thirteen years. Now, I'm not saying that the songs are great because I relate to them, but I am saying that Marrk seems to be using a personal preference of the perspective from which he likes artists to create as an "objective" measurement of whether or not a song is "deep" or "interesting".
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Ultimately, I understand that what Marrk and others seek from the “personal” story in lyrics by Prince and similar artists is some greater appreciation of the message being delivered, and I don’t discount the use of the personal. It’s just that for some reason I’ve never needed that personal background to connect with a song. That is—I’ve never been more moved or felt more connected to a work of art if I knew the real-life backstory that inspired the work. Additionally, I think that far too many people are unable to exercise objectivity, which causes them to celebrate a work more for its subject or backstory rather than for how well-crafted the work is. So, Marrk’s denouncing Prince as a writer and asserting that his songs are not “deep” or “interesting” because they lack being filled with Prince’s personal experiences just seems overly myopic in its attempt to make a subjective preference an objective measurement, especially when I have been exposed to so many works of art about personal experiences that suck because they are not well-crafted.
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Prince has the strength of being a mix between true, character, real, fiction. His way of filtrating his emotions are often blown out if proportions and heavily exaggerated at the same time as it's real to me. He is simply choosing what to focus on in every story, and both sex and vulnerability is two if his main ingredients in a somewhat theatrical setting. Do me baby is a perfect example. I can't imagine someone mixing vulnerability with overly sexual instincts and behavior in on song. Both vocals and instruments portray this rare combination. He is taking the animal kingdom to church at the same time as he is dominating emotionally while letting his girl think he is the vulnerable part. That shit is ART. I don't really care if some people don't think this is real. He is being the ultimate playa through his music. My Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/tundrah | |
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This is a very odd statement. When you go into Prince's biography you come to realize that most of his songs are VERY personnal, either in terms of personnal experiences or personnal philosophy. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Obviously you ain't familiar with Prince's life story and his songs' background. Please go read a few books about him first and then come back on this forum to discuss what you'll have learnt. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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1725topp, thanks for some very incisive observations. I have no strong opinions on this, but funnily I did happen to have an internal dialogue a few days ago about the fact that Prince does write quite obtusely compared to some other artists where it's quite explicit that the song is about bereavement or divorce etc.
He's been through alot of life events but he hasn't done anything like, for instance, Kate Bush's 'A Coral Room', or Sam Brown's 'One Candle'. Not explicitly, anyhow, and maybe I've just missed some of the finer lyrical pointers.
It's fair to say he's a private person and that's fine, he expresses what he wishes, in the form that he wishes. I do feel, to agree with the OP to some extent, that the Prince of today is certainly less likely to write such a song than he would have been earlier in his career. The reminiscent tone of 'Reflection' or heartfelt yearning of 'The Dance' are about as close as I think we'll get to a truly personal song that's not hidden behind alot of allegory. "I'm much too hot to be cool" | |
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* Scotsman1999, thanks for the kind words, and I agree with much, if not all, of what you say, especially that Prince tends not to be as explicitly personal as those you cite. My only point to Marrk is that we should not make our own personal preferences for the perspectives from which we like our artists to create an "objective" measurement for whether or not a work is "deep" or "well-crafted." A particular perspective may be more interesting to me, but it being more interesting to me doesn't make it great or well-crafted. So, yes, I agree that one can make the argument that Prince is not as personally forthcoming or open in his work as other writers, but I don't think that, in itself, makes his work poorly crafted or less complex or deep. In fact, I think there are very few artists who discuss or engage the complexity or dichotomy of being human as well as Prince. | |
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Sorry for double post. [Edited 5/13/13 7:30am] | |
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I personally admire Prince for portraying sexuality combined with vulnerability. I'm a big fan of rap music, but I rarely hear anything real about how rappers talk about sex. It's usually just observation of striptease and various actions in bed. Sounds more like 90 percent of these are watching a porno rather than having physical and spiritual contact with their partner. Prince is good at balancing this out. His main problem is that he over exaggerates everything, and makes it uncomfortable for listener. I find him to be more uncomfortably real in some of his songs. When he wants to he is the most in your face singer. It's probably realistic though that many if his songs are not very personal, and many are sung without emotions as an expression method. 1999, controversy etc he is using a very cold and robotic style that is more catchy than full of emotions. It does have some serious attitude though. I would also like to say that a music moment can be true and full of life even though lyrics are fictional. And most if the time lyrics are a combination if fiction and experiences. My Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/tundrah | |
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1. Prince, as you/we know him, is a public persona.
2. He is one of the most personal songwriters of all time. "If I was UR Girlfriend" springs to mind.
3. Name me an artist of Prince's caliber/fame that is more personal in their songwriting.
"New Power slide...." | |
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Do you think his most recent releases convey the same kind of personal emotion (whether real or imagined)? "That...magic, the start of something revolutionary-the Minneapolis Sound, we should cherish it and not punish prince for not being able to replicate it."-Dreamshaman32 | |
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I agree but... Man... U look creepy with that helmet on
http://www.youtube.com/wa...kujmRJ-V9w [Edited 5/13/13 8:59am] A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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I know that you were asking this question of Skywalker, but I want to answer and pose a counter notion. So, yes, I think that Prince's most recent releases do convey the same type of personal emotion (whether real or imagined), such as "Dreamer," "Colonized Mind," Reflection," and anything from The Rainbow Children, but many of his fans find his latest work inauthentic because his current ideology and messages seem counter to the ideology and messages that caused many of them to gravitate to and love his work. So, it is not the passion or the preachiness that has changed. Prince has always been single-minded and preachy, but it is the perceived new message that he is preaching that rubs so many fans the wrong way, causing them to view his work as lacking passion and personal emotion,.
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Prince has contradicted himself so often that it's diluted his message, to the point where nowadays he has virtually no credibility. If he took the witness stand I wouldn't believe a word!
the best anyone could do is give him the benefit of the doubt by saying that we all change as we get older, and he's no different.
Back to the thread, yes I'd agree we all have our own frame of reference for how a 'personal' song should be presented. That doesn't make the art itself any less personal for the artist. It's what keeps debate going on forums such as this.
I'd sure like to know the real background to some of his songs, however.
"I'm much too hot to be cool" | |
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Thanks for your response... I guess I'm thinking in terms of personal relationships. I like Dreamer & Colonized Mind but I don't consider those songs about personal / emotional relationships. Political/righteous indignation, yes, but not personal emotive type lyrics.
And by recent, I'm referring to the last three releases, i.e., 20Ten, Lotusflower set, & Planet Earth. "That...magic, the start of something revolutionary-the Minneapolis Sound, we should cherish it and not punish prince for not being able to replicate it."-Dreamshaman32 | |
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Political stuff does say something about what he cares about, so it does actually add to the portrait of prince. If not very personal, it atleast is personal to some degree. In my opinion if you talk about stuff you're interested in, it does say something about you, doesn't it? Prince talked alot about passionate sex and romance. I'm quite sure it was one of his main interests My Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/tundrah | |
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Okay, I get what you’re saying--a song based on or inspired by a personal relationship. But, I'll only add that I don't hear political/righteous indignation in either "Dreamer" or "Colonized Mind," but moreso a man expressing his personal views, sorrow, anxiety, and hopes for the world. So, in that case, I consider them very "personal" works because I think he is being honest about his ideas and emotions regarding the subjects. Of course, I don't know or can't prove that he's being honest, but we rarely can prove this about any subject or song. Thus, I tend to find an artist's personal expression regarding politics and religion as, if not more, moving than that artist's expression about a personal relationship simply because I find that more interesting. (I’m not saying it’s objectively/definably better but that it’s more interesting to me.) Also, we tend to learn only after the fact if a song has been inspired by a personal relationship, so I find it difficult to even factor that aspect into the equation of whether or not I like a song more or less because of the backstory or personal inspiration because, again, I am usually exposed to the song before knowing the backstory. And, rarely, have I disliked a song only to like it once I learned the backstory. If it sucked for me initially, the fact that it's about a pertinent personal experience rarely, if ever, causes it to suck less. As a creative writing teacher once said to my class: "No one cares if your sucky poem is about your grandmother. In fact, that sucky poem will cause us to like your grandmother even less." So, only time will reveal if any of the songs on the last three releases are about or were inspired by personal relationships, but I doubt if that information will greatly change how I feel about any of the songs because, again, it's the crafting of the songs that most move me. And to that final notion regarding craft, we can never be sure what percentage of the song is inspired by a personal experience and what percentage of the song has been enhanced or fictionalized for the sake of the art so rarely do we get pure personal experience in any art. * And to add with this edit, I can't think of anything more personal or a relationship more personal than one's personal relationship with one's God, which is what's being celebrated in "Future Soul Song": "I hear whispers, but I don't care. This is between me and my [Lord/God]. You can go right on ahead and stare." This seems clearly personal and intensely emotional. Of course, if I have these lyrics wrong, then that may negate my point.
[Edited 5/14/13 10:11am] | |
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"New Power slide...." | |
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Future Baby Mama has two specific instances in which he is definitely singing about someone in particular: *
"I've heard it said my lovers look alike
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"...Yeah, I know U might be fine but I seen it all before [Edited 5/14/13 10:38am] "New Power slide...." | |
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That is why Im a fan. Prince has his most profound and successful songs, when he is speaking from the heart. This thread makes no sense. He is definitely one of the most personal song writers in history. This is what makes him an authentic artist. | |
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Not lately, but I'd say in his earlier work it seemed more reflective of his personal life and you could tell because Prince sings and performs differently when its personal. Or his latest work is just not as inspired. I liked some of his new releases from earlier this year around the time he released BCW, Girl Thang and Boyfriend. Screwdriver and Rock n Roll Love Affair I could do without, lyrically..... and I agree that he gives some of his best material away to his friends to create distance. I wish he wouldn't do this because this is what makes an artist interesting. I wish he would have kept Long Gone and Shoulda Woulda Coulda (Larry Graham) for himself. | |
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Thanks for the measured replies everyone. Of course Prince has released a helluva lot of songs and i'd agree a lot must be personal to him but unknown to us. We're guessing a lot of the time, you can go by 'The Vault' book and other fans opinions, but really that's all it is, guesswork on how much from his heart and experiences they're from.
Reel off lists of songs all you like, but a good author can create things unconnected to his soul and fool/convince so many people. It's all supposition. Prince is really interesting in this respect. That's what makes him enigmatic. We don't know. If he ever wrote an autobiography, it'd be deep. I don't think we'll ever get one, maybe we will, maybe it's written over the years via song. But which is which? That's why i find him enormously interesting.
This was never disrespectful but merely an interest in his art and thought process.
I'd love him to reveal more one day. His creativity interests me so much, he's constantly had something to say. A lot no doubt non-fictional but so what! his real life experiences too. What's it like to be Prince? What's fact and partial/fiction? What's fiction based on fact? I don't think anyone knows for sure.
Blimey, he's one of the most interesting people going.
[Edited 5/20/13 19:07pm] | |
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Oh there's loads of them. Some are just written so esoterically you'll never know right away. The Come album was a shockingly personal and revealing album for him. | |
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I think if you take the chorus out of Lion of Judah then you have a very vunerable song
Sitting all alone in an all white room feeling like the colour blue - A million mistakes and then some I've made with the ones before - Looking for the energy to take you there, the places that you wanna go
Also Better With Time I think is a lovely personal sentiment about somebody from his past that he holds in high esteem
Colonized Mind given his relationship with his parents could be a very personal statement "No respect for authority/A hard time showing love"
Just my 2cents
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