No, your use of the word "breakthrough" doesn't make sense in the context you've used it. (from Google's own dictionary) breakthroughˈbreɪkθruː/nounnoun: breakthrough; plural noun: breakthroughs; noun: break-through; plural noun: break-throughs
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You really want to go in circles about semantics? Just stop. There's no issue or contradiction, you're just lacking a better angle to get dismissive of my observations and opinions. . What genre do you think Pheremone is, New Jack Swing or something? Cool, but trivial. I clearly said the idea was the same. I didn't say they were identical note for note, you just wish that's what I said. I'm not going to break down the structural similarities, but we're talking about groove based songs with a sexual themes, a repetitive falsetto, some looping stabs, often with horns, call and response chorus (sometimes without the response), and a rapsodic element (it's in Pheremone too, listen closely). Disagree about Pheremone? Aw well, that leaves the other examples. And if it's not Le Grind, it's Cindy C or maybe you can argue another earlier song, I'm game for that. Again, because I clearly need to spell it out (dictionaries don't seem to help you) he got stuck on an idea and it became the foundation he fell back on for a bunch of songs he had success with. It marked a creative personal breakthrough, meaning it was fruitful for his writing to see all these elements working together, but it also marks him getting stuck and returning to that 1987 well one too many times during the 90's and beyond. Even Laydown is reminiscent. | |
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You seem to think that groove based song are all the same. The wooh is on the one! | |
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I think it's because he was young and was willing to go further than his contemporaries, who were making commercial pop for the radio, what came after was him getting older exploring other avenues. I still think 92 - 96 was great, tight band. They all had something to give. She Believed in Fairytales and Princes, He Believed the voices coming from his stereo
If I Said You Had A Beautiful Body Would You Hold It Against Me? | |
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[Edited 5/21/14 9:24am] | |
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. Not at all. Just when they're based around the same ideas, and musical elements. | |
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. Say what? I can't unravel the mental gymanstics you're using to purposely misundstand my post or fixate on my choices of words like "stuck", "Breakthrough", or whatever other linguistics you're hanging on like you think we're debating Chomsky. I'm clearly talking about Prince's creative breakthroughs. It's the idea. It's the sittting in the studio and hitting on a new formula. . Many artists will tend to get stuck on these ideas, which were once creative breakthroughs for them, and then default to the formulas again and again. If he's also happened to have had chart hits, in this case while rehashing some of those past ideas, it validates things, and creates a tendency to revisit the formulas rather than grow from new creative breakthroughs. Sometimes it's just a breakthrough to an old formula, but they're still stuck on writing the same song, making the same painting, creating the same cheoreography, making the same artistic statement, again and again. A lot of artists will start writing songs out of the same chord progressions when they're having trouble. This is no different. . I'm done steadily repeating myself for you. Nothing I'm saying is very advanced, but I can't hold your hand, and we've established that you disagree from the get go. | |
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There aren't many similar elements in Le Grind and Pheromone, unless you think that both song having a beat make them sound the same. The wooh is on the one! | |
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I gave some reasonings why, and none of them were the beat. And that's only one of the songs I named. . If someone said Autobahn, Tour De France and Musique Non Stop were the same idea, you'd say "not unless you think having an electronic beat make them sound the same"? Maybe you would but trust me, there's a deeper conversation to be had there. .
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I just don't think Le Grind and Pheromone sound anything alike. If you had compared Le Grind to a song like Partyman I would have been able to see your point. You mentioned She's Always in My Hair in an earlier post. Whichs song do you think repeat ideas from that song? The wooh is on the one! | |
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. Okay, take Partyman if you rather. It doesn't bother me if you find some examples stronger than others. I'm sure collectively we could all come up with an even longer list. . She's Always in My Hair...that's about the tempo, with the blues guitars, for a ballad. I can't think of a song like it on For You, Prince, Dirty Mind, Controversy, or 1999 prior to writing that song. | |
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Yes, but what about after? Did he repeat the idea? The wooh is on the one! | |
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. . Isn't that my point? Yes. I think he has. | |
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But Le Grind was a breakthrough in the fight against AIDS! It was withdrawn from circulation and replaced with Lovesexy! Don't Die of Ignorance. Bit late off the bat considering we'd all been scared shitless by UK Public Health announcements since Sign O The Times by then but hey.
In defence of the LeGrind/Pheromone comparison, there is none. Maybe conceptually relating the colour of the album cover to the overall dark tone of Come like a bad JJ Abrams TV plot as a underlying sarcastic reference to a WB contract signed in weaponised alien jizz might hold some weight, but they are two completely different songs. [Edited 5/22/14 13:42pm] | |||||
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Sorry but I was there and the average age of the crowd was mid-40s. There were some but very few people in 20s and I didn't spot any teens. Certainly people there in their 50s too. So very easy for it to be nostalgia! 'I loved him then, I love him now and will love him eternally. He's with our son now.' Mayte 21st April 2016 = the saddest quote I have ever read! RIP Prince and thanks for everything. | |
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As I said THAT is why being a Prince fan is so cool. Like Prince's music we are such a diverse group so it is inevitable that none of us will agree on all the songs (we may on some/many). Jusst as there are those who prefer rock Prince vs RnB Prince vs funk Prince vs soul Prince etc. So if you love those songs that is cool. I don't particularly. 'I loved him then, I love him now and will love him eternally. He's with our son now.' Mayte 21st April 2016 = the saddest quote I have ever read! RIP Prince and thanks for everything. | |
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I'm not disputing if you were there or not Just because someone is hardcore doesn't mean they were where at 1st Avenue in 1983 when it was performed. Many people have seen video clips or heard the mp3s/boots only but are still hardcore or excited. So it's not really connected to nostalgia... You are assuming that by age and excitement that all those people were there in 1983
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The main reason? Wendy & Lisa. It was never the same after they went. | |
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That about sums it up. We are all so full of here | |
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