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Thread started 07/06/14 7:13pm

Shawy89

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Overproduced Prince songs?

Songs you feel are oversung, in which there are some sequences that deal with many instruments that it makes it unbearable for another listen. Or funk songs that share a bad mix of audio effects.... where you feel like lol :

Seriously.. cool

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Reply #1 posted 07/06/14 7:26pm

thebanishedone

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Whole Emancipation album.

Lots of songs with horns .

Whole LoveSexy album.

Studio version of Adore was too glossy for my taste i like voice and piano only versions better.

Now days his live shows with 20 horns players kill the music with non stop horn soloing fiesta ,more people

on stage less music you get.

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Reply #2 posted 07/06/14 8:15pm

bonnie184

TGE

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Reply #3 posted 07/06/14 8:31pm

BigChick

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Any studio version of "Soulpsychodelicide". There's at least 2 versions where Prince threw everything but the kitchen sink into the track. Then the track was passed off to George Clinton for additional over production. There's just way too much going on. And the one sample that sounds like a straw moving up and down in a soda cup is so annoying .Cool title and concept but the execution of the song never lived up to the idea.

Big Chick

"Security Ensuring Thee"

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Reply #4 posted 07/06/14 11:19pm

fabriziovenera
ndi

saviour

and god creates woman

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Reply #5 posted 07/06/14 11:41pm

bluegangsta

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Somewhere Here On Earth could have done with a more normal vocal ending...

Always cry 4 love, never cry 4 pain.
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Reply #6 posted 07/07/14 1:54am

thedance

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I like heart the way Lovesexy and The Gold Experience is produced. music

Those 2 albums are some of my fave Prince-albums and they're in my top 10, both,

Prince is such a great producer, I see nothing wrong with Lovesexy & Gold Experience..

Emancipation is not produced that good I agree on that one.. too sweet and sacharrine.

wink

Prince 4Ever. heart
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Reply #7 posted 07/07/14 3:42am

Replica

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I actually think Prince is so fast sometimes, that even songs that he's been using a couple of hours making can sound over produced to us "normal" people. Production is not only the engineering and creative part that is done after the recording. It's also the recording itself. If Prince has a vision that it's supposed to sound sterile, clean and "perfect", I'm pretty sure that's not a big deal for him actually. I wouldn't be suprised if alot of his so called over produced songs were done pretty damn fast. Often we think of over produced songs like if they've been working too long with the product, making it sound dead and auto pilot in the end. That's often the result of a singer singing the song for the millionth time trying to nail that one note without punching in digitally. You'll get technically better after a while, but alot less inspired. All the emotion is gone.

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Reply #8 posted 07/07/14 4:15am

SuperSoulFight
er

thedance said:

I like heart the way Lovesexy and The Gold Experience is produced. music

Those 2 albums are some of my fave Prince-albums and they're in my top 10, both,

Prince is such a great producer, I see nothing wrong with Lovesexy & Gold Experience..

Emancipation is not produced that good I agree on that one.. too sweet and sacharrine.

wink


I agree with you on Lovesexy, but not on Gold. Compare the original version of Beautiful Girl to the album version. The song really is better without all those sound effects.
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Reply #9 posted 07/07/14 5:05am

callimnate

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The man KILLED Endorphinemachine ans Zannalee. mad
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Reply #10 posted 07/07/14 5:33am

databank

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BigChick said:

Any studio version of "Soulpsychodelicide". There's at least 2 versions where Prince threw everything but the kitchen sink into the track. Then the track was passed off to George Clinton for additional over production. There's just way too much going on. And the one sample that sounds like a straw moving up and down in a soda cup is so annoying .Cool title and concept but the execution of the song never lived up to the idea.

Big Chick

"Security Ensuring Thee"

lol lol lol

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #11 posted 07/07/14 5:34am

databank

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Usually I love "overproduction", the only case I'm really annoyed with are the horns and some keys on Chaos & Disorder, great job by MBN as usual but those songs should have been barebone like The Undertaker.

[Edited 7/7/14 5:56am]

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #12 posted 07/07/14 6:30am

EyeHatechu

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I cant stand the horns especially at his live performances. The only exception is the Come album. The horns on that album ate flawless.
This Could Be Us But U Be Playin...
You Can Call It The Unexpected Or U Can Call It WOW
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Reply #13 posted 07/07/14 7:24am

databank

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EyeHatechu said:

I cant stand the horns especially at his live performances. The only exception is the Come album. The horns on that album ate flawless.

eek eek eek

Eric Leeds?

The Hornheads?

Candy Dulfer?

Maceo Parker?

Wow!

OK.

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #14 posted 07/07/14 7:55am

EyeHatechu

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databank said:



EyeHatechu said:


I cant stand the horns especially at his live performances. The only exception is the Come album. The horns on that album ate flawless.

eek eek eek


Eric Leeds?


The Hornheads?


Candy Dulfer?


Maceo Parker?


Wow!


OK.


I was reffering to the NPG Hornz they have now at his live shows. Everyone you listed was actually really good and I liked their contributions to his vibe at those times.
This Could Be Us But U Be Playin...
You Can Call It The Unexpected Or U Can Call It WOW
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Reply #15 posted 07/07/14 7:56am

hopefularrange
r

BigChick said:

Any studio version of "Soulpsychodelicide". There's at least 2 versions where Prince threw everything but the kitchen sink into the track. Then the track was passed off to George Clinton for additional over production. There's just way too much going on. And the one sample that sounds like a straw moving up and down in a soda cup is so annoying. Cool title and concept but the execution of the song never lived up to the idea.

Big Chick

"Security Ensuring Thee"

That "sample" is actually not a sample. It's a Brazilian percussion instrument called a "Cuica" (played famously by musicians like Airto Moreira on Miles Davis's "Bitches Brew"). P-Funk's former percussionist, Larry Fratangelo, was also known for playing one on many classic P-Funk recordings (a fact which probably inspired Prince to include it on this one). In all likelyhood, Sheila E. performed the cuica part on "Soul Psychodelicide" as she also played it on a few other Prince recordings (notably "Alphabet Street" and "Glam Slam").

hijacked

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Reply #16 posted 07/07/14 8:46am

BigChick

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hopefularranger said:

BigChick said:

Any studio version of "Soulpsychodelicide". There's at least 2 versions where Prince threw everything but the kitchen sink into the track. Then the track was passed off to George Clinton for additional over production. There's just way too much going on. And the one sample that sounds like a straw moving up and down in a soda cup is so annoying. Cool title and concept but the execution of the song never lived up to the idea.

Big Chick

"Security Ensuring Thee"

That "sample" is actually not a sample. It's a Brazilian percussion instrument called a "Cuica" (played famously by musicians like Airto Moreira on Miles Davis's "Bitches Brew"). P-Funk's former percussionist, Larry Fratangelo, was also known for playing one on many classic P-Funk recordings (a fact which probably inspired Prince to include it on this one). In all likelyhood, Sheila E. performed the cuica part on "Soul Psychodelicide" as she also played it on a few other Prince recordings (notably "Alphabet Street" and "Glam Slam").

hijacked

Thanks for the info on that. I wasn't sure what the instrument was called or if it was played live on the track or from a sample. It didn't annoy me on "Alphabet St" or "Glam Slam" but on one version of "Soulpsy" it was just way overused and becaming irritating.

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Reply #17 posted 07/07/14 9:14am

hopefularrange
r

You got it! Friendly neighborhood music nerd at your service! biggrin

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Reply #18 posted 07/07/14 9:28am

databank

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EyeHatechu said:

databank said:

eek eek eek

Eric Leeds?

The Hornheads?

Candy Dulfer?

Maceo Parker?

Wow!

OK.

I was reffering to the NPG Hornz they have now at his live shows. Everyone you listed was actually really good and I liked their contributions to his vibe at those times.

Ah OK, well I don't have an opinion yet about this horn section, so far I've found them technically excellent (of course) but quite unimaginative by comparison to the Hornheads but I'd have 2 c what they're able to do in the studio and in terms of arrangement and composition to really know, + I literally worship the work of MBN so well, you know...

I think overall this is part of a very retro "soul" sound prince has when playing with the whole NPG with the girls and horns and all. I'm not very sensitive to that overall, i'm a funk addict not a soul addict, I've never been into vocal soul, Aretha Franklin, The Commitments, The Blues Brothers, that kinda stuff. But I know many people who are (the success of the 3 artists/soundtrack I've mentioned is proof in itself) so while it's unsuprisingly unappealing to us (after all originally many of us are barebone electrofunk fans and that's why we love prince in the first place I guess) this band configuration may be appealing to the casual listener, the same way playing mostly old hits is boring to us and cool to them. In the studio I find that prince remained close to his roots all along (I know many don't share my opinion but nonetheless minimalist electrofunk is a constant genre prince comes back to regularly) but his live show have been sounding more and more "generic" ever since the Musicology tour if not earlier. The 3EG configuration brought some raw freshness back in the mix, thanks God for that, let's see how this evolves but I guess at least a good half of the show may still have this soul/broadway feeling in the future sad

The question is whether prince can go though a new music phase once more or not. If you cut down his career in phases there's been the Mpls sound years (78-85), the expansion of his musical vocabulary (85-91), a certain return to his R&B roots (91-96), the so-called plastic years (96-01), his short jazz interlude (01-03) and ever since 04 we've been in some sort of a neo-classicist era where he's been reexploring his own past. It's been 11 years and it's by far the longest phase in his career, one that I'm starting to think may last forever. I thought 3EG may be the beginning of something else, but the recent studio recordings (while being very much to my taste) don't show any real evolution in his sound save maybe the garage feel of a very few studio tracks (but a few tracks aren't enough to show anything, prince has always been going in many directions at once through a few isolated songs here and there without it becoming a direction in itself).

In the end I think he needs to go somewhere radically different from what he's done b4. It may be garage rock or it may be (God forbids) radio-friendly dance music with Josh becoming the new Kirky J, IDK, or it may be something totally unexpected. Back in the days, with records such as The Undertaker, Kamasutra, The War, Xpectation or N.E.W.S. prince led me to think he could suddenly embrace a true new direction in his music but the past 10 years have consistantly contradicted me. Not that I'm complaining: I've loved the studio music as consistantly, but I like an artist to surprise me and while prince could keep doing the same thing for the next 40 years and keep me happy doing so, I'd love him to just go wild and try something radically new.

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #19 posted 07/07/14 9:53am

treehouse

I think Paisley Park is in large part to blame for the overproduced sound. I hate to say it, but it's not a good studio for Prince's work. Ever hear Myspace demos from a teenager or some upstart artist singing into a Macbook in their empty bedroom? Same problem. The room is dead, vocals are too up front, or suffer from too much or not enough life. They're missing an organic quality. Instrumentation sounds like it's recorded at a session, rather than a band playing. Then he's overlayering and adding in all kinds of dated effects to make songs sound bigger. He's got great songs he butchered in the recording.

.

Lovesexy makes my skin crawl.

The horns? He's abused them. Even when they're good, they're too heavy handed. It makes me think he didn't understand the Family Stone at all. I think they expose one of his biggest musical weaknesses, but he keeps dipping into that well.

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Reply #20 posted 07/07/14 10:26am

JoeTyler

Eye No

We Can Funk (GB version)

the entire MPLSound album

tinkerbell
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Reply #21 posted 07/07/14 11:46am

thebanishedone

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I agree with every single word Data Bank said.even early on Prince abused horn section.i remember listening to Sheila E slbum with non stop sax solo by Eric Leeds
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Reply #22 posted 07/07/14 12:09pm

SuperSoulFight
er

^Do U mean that as a positive or a negative thing? Marvin Gaye's What's Going on has a Wild Bill Moore sax solo all over it.
But I get what Databank is saying. I used to be into the funk big time as well, but these days it/s more soul and blues that I like.
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Reply #23 posted 07/07/14 2:12pm

thebanishedone

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SuperSoulFighter said:

^Do U mean that as a positive or a negative thing? Marvin Gaye's What's Going on has a Wild Bill Moore sax solo all over it. But I get what Databank is saying. I used to be into the funk big time as well, but these days it/s more soul and blues that I like.

I mean it as a negative thing.i mean Eric Leeds is a great sax player,the best for Princes sound,but listening 7,8 songs with non stop sax soloing os a bit too much

[Edited 7/7/14 14:16pm]

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Reply #24 posted 07/07/14 2:26pm

SuperSoulFight
er

Fair enough. Wild Bill solo'ed on Marvins album, but Marvin only kept the parts that worked. My point was, having a long, long free-form solo can have good effects.
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Reply #25 posted 07/07/14 2:30pm

V10LETBLUES


The term overproduced is the wrong word to use. But BADLY produced is everything from the 90's to now with a few exceptiong here and there,

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Reply #26 posted 07/07/14 2:36pm

fbueller

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Prince could use a Rick Rubin... someone to offer constructive feedback. It's damn frustrating to see an artist of his caliber mostly treading water in the studio for years.

.

In a recent article for the Purple Rain 30th anniversary, Dr. Fink mentioned how the band came up with the groove that became Computer Blue. Dr. Fink played a keyboard line that inspired Prince to do the classic "wooh, wooh" vocals on the end of Purple Rain. Etc. Prince doesn't have that type of dynamic around him now.

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Reply #27 posted 07/07/14 2:42pm

Replica

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fbueller said:

Prince could use a Rick Rubin... someone to offer constructive feedback. It's damn frustrating to see an artist of his caliber mostly treading water in the studio for years.

.

In a recent article for the Purple Rain 30th anniversary, Dr. Fink mentioned how the band came up with the groove that became Computer Blue. Dr. Fink played a keyboard line that inspired Prince to do the classic "wooh, wooh" vocals on the end of Purple Rain. Etc. Prince doesn't have that type of dynamic around him now.

true, however we can't prove that they would have the same creative energy together if they tried to do the same now. Just like everyone else they're all stuck in the past, and if they're trying something new, it often sounds forced. It's pretty normal for people that are past their most curious age. Why is it that parents always look for old recordings while the young ones atleast are curious enough to keep themselves updated and checking out new stuff? Musicians are the same as everyone else. Grandparents are bitter and hate everything new, while alot of young people think everything that is old is out dated. Their golden era was curious musicians that both tried something new, as well as using their knowledge of past music to create something entirly different. I don't really think it matters that much if he started working with his old bandmates again.

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Reply #28 posted 07/07/14 2:59pm

mmart2008

Glad to this thread being discussed, the best version of "gett off"was the urge mix produced by Steve Silk Hurley and that version should have been on the album.I'm not sure of the time difference beetween Princes version of "I feel 4 u" and Chaka's version by the latter blows it away, really jumps off the record at you.I don't know what Prince has against using a producer but until he does nothing will change.
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Reply #29 posted 07/07/14 3:13pm

SuperSoulFight
er

fbueller said:

Prince could use a Rick Rubin... someone to offer constructive feedback. It's damn frustrating to see an artist of his caliber mostly treading water in the studio for years.


.


In a recent article for the Purple Rain 30th anniversary, Dr. Fink mentioned how the band came up with the groove that became Computer Blue. Dr. Fink played a keyboard line that inspired Prince to do the classic "wooh, wooh" vocals on the end of Purple Rain. Etc. Prince doesn't have that type of dynamic around him now.



How do you know? Maybe 3rdEyeGirl are inspiring him just as much. Whether or not we like the end result is up to us. Just like V1oletBlue's post: badly produced? That just means you don't like the sound of his 90s records. At the end of the day, it's all just a matter of taste. I think 3 Chains o'Gold is waaaaay over the top, but other fans like it...
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