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Hm... not sure I hear that. Which moments are you thinking of? The latest tour isn't bad, by any means. But I don't think Prince sounds more inspired than he did at the Melkweg show or the Conga room, to name but a few examples. The wooh is on the one! | |
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He's probably both. So what? The wooh is on the one! | |
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Many times but usually he just won't do most of what he says he's gonna do and do something else instead A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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The wooh is on the one! | |
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OldFriends4Sale said:
Not at the time he was famous, probably now yes
* I mean was Jimi an artist with a huge or predominate 'Black' audience and then at some point, "white" people caught on? Or was the group he had to cross over to a "black" audience, because he was already accepted by a more "white" audience... Jimi had a pretty hard time when he was playing in r&b bands. He didn't become famous until he went to England. He crossed over the Atlantic. | |
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Good information * I know that people catagorize artists as Black or white, but Dylan as a Folk artist, in my opinion fell into a different catagory, there were also many 'black' folk artists that didn't or wouldn't have that 'crossover' affect either. * Tracey Chapman is considered a Folk artist, and I doubt anyone will say she is predominately listened to by 'black' americans. She had that 1 period of 'crossover' appeal in the 1980s with her song:Fast Car. * If we go by Dylans most active time period, Black americans should be very knowledgable about him. Many of his songs directly speak to situations events and people connected to 'Black Americans' * He's someone who heard Dr Martin Luther Kings speach on Washington and performed there, and lives to see a African-American president and sings for him too | |
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Dylan in the 1960s into the 70s was into politicle activism, and connected to the Civil Rights Movement.
I guess we could say he had his crossover in the 1960s during the Civil Rights movement
But I don't think Dylan, had a push for that kind of wide audience acceptance. His style and motivations, I don't think could be compared to what Hendrix or Sly were doing. And definately Prince, I don't believe had the same motivations as Dylan to be compared to.
He has a pretty interesting career, and I don't believe he looked for a 'crossover' effect, that Prince did.
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Hi Paul,
Can I possibly ask you, or someone, to post the setlist of Melkweg? I am familiar with the Conga (and associated shows) and whilst I agree that that was spectacular and not-to-be repeated, I also believe they were somewhat out of the blue/one off concerts at the time, so whilst for rarity value during that era, they are to be prized, I do think the new 3rd Eye Girl setlist demonstrates a consistently ballsy gusto that, as hardcore fans, we haven't seen from Prince for the main shows/setlists in a long time (hence, I reminisced about the early Gold era gigs). In terms of spine tingling touches, I personally feel them throughout the whole show, interspersed in moments admittedly, but typically featuring on Let's Go Grazy, Endorphinmachine, She's Always In My Hair, Liathach, I Could Never Take The Place Of Your Man, I Like It There, and Cause and Effect, as well as a few lesser played additions such as Crimson and Clover, Dolphin and The Love We Make.
Spirit [Edited 5/15/13 11:21am] | |
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True, and since Prince supposedly isn't into the bigness of superstardom, he should have praised Dylan & Hendrix for their stance and parts in music history. * Dylan was in a league by himself | |
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I'll be talking about my 2-hr-plus interview w Prince on @chadhartman show on @wccoradio at 2:35 pm today. Tune in 830 AM
http://betaplayer.radio.c...r/830-wcco
[Edited 5/15/13 11:23am] | |
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Set list for the Melkweg shows, taken from PrinceVault. The 26 july show, especially, was spectacular, based on the boots I've heard. http://www.princevault.co...y,_2011-am http://www.princevault.co...y,_2011-am
The wooh is on the one! | |
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Except for Larry Graham. And so prince once again contradicts himself, saying he just talks with young people, but Larry is still around. | |
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Thanks, Paul! Oh my word - they do look like rather good shows indeed. I will need to see if I can still track them down...
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Love the groovy Picture! Shut up already...Damn! | |
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SpiritOtter said: Thanks, Paul! Oh my word - they do look like rather good shows indeed. I will need to see if I can still track them down...
That second night was BY FAR the best Prince concert I have EVER witnessed! Nothing can beat that! . | |
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ROLLING STONE (1985)
PRINCE TALKS BY NEAL KARLEN
Prince is fiddling with the tape deck inside the T-Bird. On low volume comes his unreleased "Old Friends 4 Sale," an arrow-to-the-heart rock ballad about trust and loss. Unlike "Positively 4th Street" -- which Bob Dylan reputedly named after a nearby Minneapolis block -- the lyrics are sad, not bitter. "I don't know too much about Dylan," says Prince, "but I respect him a lot. 'All Along the Watchtower' is my favorite of his. I heard it first from Jimi Hendrix."
Although Bob Dylan gained a superficial political worldview through Woody Guthrie's musical influence back in Minneapolis, when he arrived in New York in January 1961, he had no stance on the issues. By all accounts, it was Dylan's girlfriend, Suze Rotolo, that nudged him down the road as an activist singer. The daughter of union organizers, and a volunteer for the Congress of Racial Equality, Rotolo encouraged Dylan to perform at political rallies. At a February 1962 CORE benefit, he introduced his just-written broadside, “The Death of Emmitt Till,” his very first "protest" song.
A Songwriting Activist Emerges Rapt with newfound idealism and hitting exciting new plateaus with his craft, the next 18 months became a songwriting bonanza as the young lyricist scratched out a raft of his finest topical songs. Recorded between April 24,1962 and May 27, 1963, Dylan's second album, The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan, only catalyzed the 21-year-old's plunge into politics and his growing allegiance with the civil rights movement.
While “Oxford Town” examined the September 1962 clash between federal marshals and the Mississippi National Guard over James Meredith's right to attend the all-white university, it was “Blowin' in the Wind” that put Dylan on the map as a folk activist and popular musician. Already popularized by Peter, Paul and Mary, this career crown jewel quickly became one of the movement's principal anthems.
The Real Deal or Fame-Seeker? Throughout 1962, Dylan had been performing benefits regularly around New York with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), the grassroots group he most firmly aligned himself with, along with Joan Baez, Pete Seeger, and The Staples Singers. While Dylan's detractors claim he was a fame-seeker, posturing to cash in on the folk movement, this was untrue. Dylan was a bona fide believer in the power of song to create change. When he was invited to promote Freewheelin' on the Ed Sullivan Show on May 13, he chose to play “Talkin' John Birch Society Blues,” a track that lampooned the ultra-conservative reactionary group. When the producers got nervous and asked him to change songs, Dylan stalked away and his appearance was canceled.
Deeper Involvement Enter the 1963 Newport Folk Festival. Pretty much Pete Seeger's showcase, Dylan's debut appearance was more than just an initiation into the club, but another shove toward the throne as the movement's celebrity poster boy. Joined onstage by Joan Baez, Pete Seeger, Peter, Paul and Mary, and the SNCC's Freedom Singers, Dylan wrapped up his set with “Blowin' in the Wind.” And for an encore, the group held hands, invoking the audience in a singalong of "We Shall Overcome"
Caught in the whirlwind, on August 28, Dylan and Baez would soon perform at the Freedom March in Washington, D.C., when Martin Luther King Jr. gave his legendary “I Have a Dream” speech. Introduced by actor Ossie Davis, Dylan performed “When the Ship Comes In,” and “Only a Pawn in Their Game,” also joining Len Chandler for the song “Hold On.”
In late fall, Dylan finally got his baptism into the everyday realities of southern blacks when he performed the Greenwood, Mississippi voter registration rally, where he played “With God on Our Side” to around 300 black farmers. He also did “Only a Pawn in Their Game,” a freshly-penned song about the slaying of civil rights leader Medgar Evers that occurred weeks earlier. Both of these tracks would appear on his next album, the socially critical January '64 release, The Times They Are A-Changin'.
Political Disenchantment While 1963 was Dylan's most active year in politics, it was also his most disillusioning. Feeling co-opted by white movement leaders and despising their expectations of him to become its star champion, Dylan began his retreat. Although he never stopped supporting the black struggle, becoming a Pied Piper for liberal guilt-afflicted whites was a hypocritical role he was unwilling to play. He voiced his disenchantment with the movement during his acceptance speech at the lavish December 1963 award ceremony for the Emergency Civil Liberties Committee, when Dylan alienated the mostly white audience, criticizing the recent freedom march on Washington: “I looked around at all the Negroes there and I didn't see any Negroes that looked like none of my friends. My friends don't wear suits.” Obviously addressing his own suit-wearing audience, he then shocked the crowd further by saying he and Lee Harvey Oswald had a lot in common. As the booing started, he walked off.
Another Side of Bob Dylan Ever-evolving as a songwriter, Bob Dylan's dip into politics had always been a segue to greater destinations. During the height of his activism in fall of 1963, he was already soaking up Beat influences and French modernism, and his craft was becoming less literal and much more poetic and literary, as reflected in his next release, the politically vacant August 1964 release, Another Side of Bob Dylan. Reactions to the album from folk purists were immediate and harsh. Bob Dylan was abandoning the cause, they said. He wasn't living up to his responsibilities as a protest songwriter. He'd fallen into the fame trap. Of those who criticized him, to expect a 22-year-old artist at the peak of his creative prowess to remain stationary in dead-end politics was not only foolish, but naïve.
Dylan's Apolitical Future Although Dylan stepped out of activism in 1964, throughout the rest of his career he would make subtle political gestures and write the occasional topical ballad. For instance, 1971 's “George Jackson,” about the militant black Marxist's execution in a prison shootout, followed by the 1976 song and tour championing the release of wrongly imprisoned boxer, Rubin “Hurricane” Carter. More, when Dylan received a Lifetime Achievement Award at the 1991 Grammys, with Desert Storm in full swing, he performed “Masters of War” —the same song he ironically played during a 1990 West Point concert. And on election night 2008, as Barack Obama's victory was announced, Dylan deviated from his usual live encore of “Like a Rolling Stone” to play the rare “Blowin' in the Wind” | |
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Very much around...Larry Graham and GCS will b at the Dakota MPLS May 27th and 28th...4 shows. So... | |
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IstenSzek said:
actually, this is quite a funny tidbit in the interview. who does that, indeed
perhaps the pizza was already cut into little pieces for him by donna, since poor old grandpa prince has difficulty eating a whole slice for fear his dentures might drop out during the interview. so prince just picked up the little pieces with a fork during the interview?
oh the perks of having an entourage of 20 year olds
AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!! Sounds plausible. Poor grandpa Prince indeed From the vineyards of Lavaux back 2 the heart of Minnesota. U R was, and will 4ever B The Purple Yoda.... | |
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Julia Ramadan I don't think is anywhere near "manager" to Prince. Doesn't she work for Controversy music and isn't her main job finding video clips on the net that contain P's music and report them to her boss? I thought Kiran was the one still arranging his interviews and public appearances? | |
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------- I think he just does not answer questions he thinks are stupid or he just does not want to answer at all. The interviews are done via note taking since he will not let his voice be recorded so the interviews may not be completly accurate but in this case some people are reading way to much into this interview. | |
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Really, why should a so called fan be pissed? Doesn't make sense. If you are offended, you are a pussy~1 | |
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No he hired a lawyer to take care of the video clips. Do you not understand the he means he will not be working with older musicians in this group? | |
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Yes, it does seem that is the target audience he is trying to attract with his 'rock' venture right now, but it kind of also plays into the stereotype, that Blacks don't listen to rock music, even though many do. I guess if we went by statistics, it may very well show that more White audiences listen to rock than Black audiences though. So I expect his audiences with this new group, will be more White audience, and younger fans with the rock music, than the more-diverse audience he's had in the past. Nothing wrong with that, if that's what the plan is. | |
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In the black community we respect our elders. I suppose Prince should throw Larry down the stairs despite the fact that he has stated that Larry is like a father to him. In addtion, Larry is not in this band. | |
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Thanx 4 posting the Dylan piece, OldFriend, I remember the Neal Karlen interview and I guess this is all Prince has to say about Bob, but here at least he shows his respect. And if there's one thing Prince & Dylan have in common, it's that you can't pin them down. | |
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]; They have a helluva roster..
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wasn't Kiran Sharma his manager during that LotusFlow3r period
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U mean like the 'brotha' that robbed Rosa Parks, even after he recognized who she was? | |
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What does that have to do with Prince, me or millions of other black people? For the record I would bet that brother got his ass kicked in jail. Picking on old people and children usually get you a butt whipping in jail. | |
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