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Thread started 06/08/14 7:29am

MendesCity

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Bring Susan Rogers Back for Remasters

At least as a consultant - she was definitely key to those albums' successs in my opinion.

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Reply #1 posted 06/08/14 9:50am

funksterr

I agree. Susan Rogers is one of the top 5 most important influences on Prince's music. She should be back in any capacity she's comfortable with, but.... Prince doesn't do things that way.

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Reply #2 posted 06/08/14 10:31am

2freaky4church
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She gave away a lot in that Toure book so he probably hates her now.

All you others say Hell Yea!! woot!
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Reply #3 posted 06/08/14 10:45am

paulludvig

MendesCity said:

At least as a consultant - she was definitely key to those albums' successs in my opinion.

How?

The wooh is on the one!
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Reply #4 posted 06/08/14 10:47am

paulludvig

funksterr said:

I agree. Susan Rogers is one of the top 5 most important influences on Prince's music. She should be back in any capacity she's comfortable with, but.... Prince doesn't do things that way.

What a weird statement.

The wooh is on the one!
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Reply #5 posted 06/08/14 11:22am

SoulAlive

It would be great if the remasters included some lengthy liner notes with insight from Susan Rogers and Alan Leeds.

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Reply #6 posted 06/08/14 11:43am

paulludvig

SoulAlive said:

It would be great if the remasters included some lengthy liner notes with insight from Susan Rogers and Alan Leeds.

Please, not those two AGAIN! We need some new perspectives.

[Edited 6/8/14 11:44am]

The wooh is on the one!
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Reply #7 posted 06/08/14 1:08pm

funksterr

paulludvig said:

funksterr said:

I agree. Susan Rogers is one of the top 5 most important influences on Prince's music. She should be back in any capacity she's comfortable with, but.... Prince doesn't do things that way.

What a weird statement.

Care to elaborate? The recording engineer is an important part of the process. She was the best engineer Prince ever worked with, imo. Even her mistakes sounded good, lol.

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Reply #8 posted 06/08/14 1:46pm

databank

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I don't really care 4 liner notes. If I want 2 read about something I need a book or those liner notes better be a small book in themselves and reveal things that were never revealed b4. Or written by the artist himself. George Duke's "liner notes" about each of his albums on his wesibte are priceless documents.

Technically I doubt Ms. Rogers has anything to offer to digital remasters, technology isn't what it was and in the end it's more about how prince wants the records to "sound" in the end. No disrespect here, she brought her contribution and it was great but then she decided to retire as an engineer adn I'm sure she had her reasons. It's 2014. Everyone involved has moved on.

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #9 posted 06/08/14 2:24pm

ufoclub

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I don't think she influenced his music... She helped record it. She never mastered it either.
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Reply #10 posted 06/08/14 3:01pm

thedance

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well whoever were responsible for the mastering back in the 80ies should be ashamed.

Terrible mastering back then - the CD's are awful........ please don't bring back those people..

Like ufoclub I am not sure Susan Rogers had anything to do with mastering the sound, she was a producer wasn't she?

Ok: School me if I need to be schooled? wink

Prince 4Ever. heart
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Reply #11 posted 06/08/14 3:02pm

funksterr

ufoclub said:

I don't think she influenced his music... She helped record it. She never mastered it either.

You can't record it without influencing it. For comparison I recommend listening to Femi Jiya's Prince records and then his work on Stevie Wonder's "A Time To Love" album. Same sound, even though the artists are very different.

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Reply #12 posted 06/08/14 3:14pm

databank

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thedance said:

well whoever were responsible for the mastering back in the 80ies should be ashamed.

Terrible mastering back then - the CD's are awful........ please don't bring back those people..

Like ufoclub I am not sure Susan Rogers had anything to do with mastering the sound, she was a producer wasn't she?

Ok: School me if I need to be schooled? wink

Don't confuse mastering and transfer ^^ The vinyls were good if we're to believe whoever have them. Bernie Grundman was responsible 4 the mastering. If u really feel u need 2 send him insults emails that's where: [Not cool snip - luv4u]

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #13 posted 06/08/14 4:57pm

V10LETBLUES

funksterr said:

ufoclub said:

I don't think she influenced his music... She helped record it. She never mastered it either.

You can't record it without influencing it. For comparison I recommend listening to Femi Jiya's Prince records and then his work on Stevie Wonder's "A Time To Love" album. Same sound, even though the artists are very different.

Femi Jiya's name conjours up the bad Prince music from the 90's. Hopefully never see his name in anythinfg Prince related again. Even thoe it's from 88, I hate the sound of Lovesexy.

[Edited 6/8/14 16:58pm]

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Reply #14 posted 06/08/14 9:06pm

ufoclub

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thedance said:

well whoever were responsible for the mastering back in the 80ies should be ashamed.

Terrible mastering back then - the CD's are awful..... please don't bring back those people..

Like ufoclub I am not sure Susan Rogers had anything to do with mastering the sound, she was a producer wasn't she?

Ok: School me if I need to be schooled? wink



Susan Rogers was a recording engineer, not a producer or arranger, and had no input as to the sound Prince was creating unless it was with the types of coloring the recording flow through the consoles and effects boards created. She did not master anything either. And as far as Femi goes, I remember him working as an engineer as well for two periods: Lovesexy era and then the npgmc era. They sound nothing alike! I had the chance to speak to Femi one on one at the Xenophobia celebration. He did say that he would try to influence Prince on the mixes, but Prince never listened. He did however sneak in some of his level adjustments of certain instrument or vocal tracks (down lower) when prince wasn't looking. Or so he joked.
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Reply #15 posted 06/08/14 11:12pm

udo

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databank said:

Technically I doubt Ms. Rogers has anything to offer to digital remasters,

She was there when the historic stuff happened.

She recorded it. She knows how it was done, how it sounds and what they were aiming for.

Digital is not the magical stuff anymore and dismissing Susan on just that is a bit too fast.

Pills and thrills and daffodils will kill... If you don't believe me or don't get it, I don't have time to try to convince you, sorry.
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Reply #16 posted 06/08/14 11:44pm

SoulAlive

udo said:

databank said:

Technically I doubt Ms. Rogers has anything to offer to digital remasters,

She was there when the historic stuff happened.

She recorded it. She knows how it was done, how it sounds and what they were aiming for.

Digital is not the magical stuff anymore and dismissing Susan on just that is a bit too fast.

Exactly! I can't believe that some fans are dismissing Susan Rogers and downplaying her role in these recording sessions.

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Reply #17 posted 06/09/14 12:03am

funkaholic1972

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paulludvig said:

SoulAlive said:

It would be great if the remasters included some lengthy liner notes with insight from Susan Rogers and Alan Leeds.

Please, not those two AGAIN! We need some new perspectives.

[Edited 6/8/14 11:44am]

Who do you have in mind then? You can't get much closer than them, and besides, the other people who worked with Prince have not been talking (to great length) about working with him.

RIP Prince: thank U 4 a funky Time...
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Reply #18 posted 06/09/14 3:41am

paulludvig

funkaholic1972 said:

paulludvig said:

Please, not those two AGAIN! We need some new perspectives.

[Edited 6/8/14 11:44am]

Who do you have in mind then? You can't get much closer than them, and besides, the other people who worked with Prince have not been talking (to great length) about working with him.

Those people are exactly the people I want to here from. The story about Prince has so far been shaped almost entirely by a handful of people willing to talk to great lenght (mostly about their own influence on Prince sound)

The wooh is on the one!
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Reply #19 posted 06/09/14 3:42am

paulludvig

funksterr said:

paulludvig said:

What a weird statement.

Care to elaborate? The recording engineer is an important part of the process. She was the best engineer Prince ever worked with, imo. Even her mistakes sounded good, lol.

She wasn't the only engineer Prince worked with, even during the golden age were talkning about. Susan Rogers herself has gone on record saying that Prince never asked for her advice.

The wooh is on the one!
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Reply #20 posted 06/09/14 4:19am

OperatingTheta
n

ufoclub said:

I don't think she influenced his music... She helped record it. She never mastered it either.

Agreed. She's no more an influence than say Femi Jiya or Tom Tucker. Though I think Tucker did help with the clean, rounded, contemporary sound of the 94-95 recordings.

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Reply #21 posted 06/09/14 4:54am

ufoclub

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SoulAlive said:



udo said:




databank said:


Technically I doubt Ms. Rogers has anything to offer to digital remasters,




She was there when the historic stuff happened.


She recorded it. She knows how it was done, how it sounds and what they were aiming for.


Digital is not the magical stuff anymore and dismissing Susan on just that is a bit too fast.




Exactly! I can't believe that some fans are dismissing Susan Rogers and downplaying her role in these recording sessions.


Her role was a recording engineer. And Prince would often go through a few different ones working in shifts on the same song or album. In her detailed interviews she clearly describes the sessions of a few songs, and even there her influence is not on the arrangement or mastering or structure of any of the songs. In fact she liked some songs and didn't like others, but still wired and plugged in the machines and mics, loaded the reels, etc.
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Reply #22 posted 06/09/14 4:59am

udo

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ufoclub said:

but still wired and plugged in the machines and mics, loaded the reels, etc.

That does not negate what I wrote.

Pills and thrills and daffodils will kill... If you don't believe me or don't get it, I don't have time to try to convince you, sorry.
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Reply #23 posted 06/09/14 6:04am

databank

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I don't dis Susan or anything. But she's long gone + we're talking remastering not engineering, whoever is responsible to the "sound" of Prince's classic albums in terms of mastering is Bernie Grundman and his staff, not the engineers, their impact was different, so if someone has to try and be faithful to the spirit of the original analogic mastering process it's Grundman, no one else.

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #24 posted 06/09/14 6:31am

udo

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databank said:

I don't dis Susan or anything. But she's long gone + we're talking remastering not engineering,

Who agrued that?

She was a witness to it all!

whoever is responsible to the "sound" of Prince's classic albums in terms of mastering is Bernie Grundman and his staff, not the engineers,

So? And what then is don at recording time?

their impact was different, so if someone has to try and be faithful to the spirit of the original analogic mastering process it's Grundman, no one else.

Who was trying to dismiss Bernie?

And who is trying to dismiss Susan?

Pills and thrills and daffodils will kill... If you don't believe me or don't get it, I don't have time to try to convince you, sorry.
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Reply #25 posted 06/09/14 7:20am

novabrkr

Many here seem to confuse an engineer with a producer.

Prince's classic records have a very appealing sound to them, but that's hardly because they're engineered exceptionally well. You could say that a lot of that stuff has a demo-ish quality and it's hardly like Prince was willing to spend the type of money on the recording personnel that you'd pay for someone like Bruce Swedien.

The overall sound of his later records changed mostly because he switched the gear he was using for things that other artists with a far more polished sound on their records would use. No more LinnDrum, analog synths, DX7, early samplers with analog filters, EMT reverbs etc. I doubt Susan Rogers had any real influence on what type of equipment Prince would use.

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Reply #26 posted 06/09/14 1:37pm

funksterr

paulludvig said:

funksterr said:

Care to elaborate? The recording engineer is an important part of the process. She was the best engineer Prince ever worked with, imo. Even her mistakes sounded good, lol.

She wasn't the only engineer Prince worked with, even during the golden age were talkning about. Susan Rogers herself has gone on record saying that Prince never asked for her advice.

True. But she is also on record saying Prince used a lot of her mistakes in his final releases to add character or creativity to the songs. Prince didn't specificaly say do this or that, but that seems to be because he just assumed she had the answers and didn't need his direction. She was free to kind of do whatever she thought was best in terms of how she recorded him. That is important, because as it turns out Susan Rogers is extremely smart, and what she did come up with, worked out well. As it turns out, she was part of the sound that defined Prince, for most of us diehards that go crazy for the mid 80's outtakes. There are a lot of 90's era Prince songs, imo, would have been better received had they adhered closer to the manner Susan recorded Prince. He had a lot of skilled engineers, but often times, they had preferences that just sound out of place on Prince, imo.

One more thing on Susan Rogers. I forget all the details, but the last time I read anything on her, she was even more skilled today, than when she worked for Prince. I know, I would feel A LOT better about the re-releases to hear she was involved. Not that it matters, because there is no way Prince is going to use the best people on this. No way at all.

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Reply #27 posted 06/09/14 2:02pm

ufoclub

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It doesn't seem like she made any creative choices on recording him. She was a studio engineer, the person that sets up the mics (which he chooses) plugs in and powers stuff up, presses record, loaded tapes. She was not a producer. Sure, some accidents affected the sound, like what, two or three times?

The mastering was sent out elsewhere. She would only know what he preferred to use for a mics, instruments, and recording. I don't think she would be valuable for remastering the mixed and produced song or album. Unless it's something she is known for.

She should be great for liner notes of course! Maybe she even took photos of setups.
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Reply #28 posted 06/09/14 4:49pm

databank

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novabrkr said:

Many here seem to confuse an engineer with a producer.

Prince's classic records have a very appealing sound to them, but that's hardly because they're engineered exceptionally well. You could say that a lot of that stuff has a demo-ish quality and it's hardly like Prince was willing to spend the type of money on the recording personnel that you'd pay for someone like Bruce Swedien.

The overall sound of his later records changed mostly because he switched the gear he was using for things that other artists with a far more polished sound on their records would use. No more LinnDrum, analog synths, DX7, early samplers with analog filters, EMT reverbs etc. I doubt Susan Rogers had any real influence on what type of equipment Prince would use.

Totally true, Susan herself admitted that the recordings were done hastly and didn't fit the usual pro standards of an artist of prince's caliber. On the other hand this "demo" sound contributes the global "atmosphere of those records and all the better for it. It has nothing to do with money, though, money was there (it was WB's for the most part). prince is notorious for being uncomfortable working with total strangers and to favor convenience over anything because of the urgency of his needs (i.e. he needs it done 10 minutes ago, not in a week). Obviously he liked to have his engineers, people he trusted and people he had control on because they needed him for the job, as well as people who were available 24/7, whenever he needed them. Michael Koppleman for example lost the gig for one reason only: after severeal years answering every call (including missing the release party of "his" album with Ingrid because prince had work 4 him 2 finish, and God was Michael pissed on that day!), he was ordered to do some mixing work on christsmas day 4 something that wasn't so urgent, and he wanted to b with his family so he said "the hell with it" and went home. When he returned he was told he was no longer needed. Back then prince also needed a lot of intimacy, he would usually record vocals on his own. So 4 all those reasons he wouldn't call Michael Jackson's engineer, a top dog guy who had many of other gigs and that he'd never met b4, to record a song. He'd use his own staff as much as possible.

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #29 posted 06/09/14 8:21pm

treehouse

Mastering is a separate art from producing/engineerning, especially during the 80's.

As for Susan, she would have been the closest thing Prince had to a consistent collaborator during that period, even if it was simply technical. She seems to claim she gave opinions, and made suggestions. She was in most of those recording sessions, and would be one of the most likely to understand Prince's intentions. She wasn't strictly an engineer.

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