independent and unofficial
Prince fan community
Welcome! Sign up or enter username and password to remember me
Forum jump
Forums > Prince: Music and More > Why do people think Prince should have charting songs in 2014?
« Previous topic  Next topic »
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
Author

Tweet     Share

Message
Thread started 08/21/14 10:06am

MotownSubdivis
ion

Why do people think Prince should have charting songs in 2014?

I've read through several threads on here and habe seen many say that Prince should be topping charts or telling what he needs to do in order for that to happen/ why he should be. My question is why? Why isn't Stevie Wonder, EWF, Diana Ross, Janet Jackaon, Chaka Khan, Madonna, Bruce Springsteen, Phil Collins, Huey Lewis, Kool and the Gang, Van Halen or any other of my favorite stars from the 60s-80s topping the charts now?


The answer? Because they already have... a long time ago. These artists including Prince have hit their commercial peaks already and whether or not they produce new material, they are nostalgia acts in this day and age. They are legends/ icons that have long since left their marks on music and have nothing more to prove in that regard other than maybe showing that they can do live. Chart-topping songs though? That should be the last thing they worry about since they've each done it countless times before each in their own ways, broke countless records, and sold millions and millions of albums which have received critical acclaim and have set the standard for what today's music is on a grand scale.


Prince is included in this count of excellence so why are their those that believe him having chart topping songs 30 years afters his commercial peak as an artist when his resume is already extremely decorated and one that these so called "stars" of today would die for (assuming they care about their music in the first place)? And why should P even stoop to the absurdly low level of today's music scene just to be scoring hits alongside today's crop of artists? On rare ocasions, certain acts from the past will score a hit or to in the present day (i.e. Lionel Richie, Daft Punk, Weird Al, Madonna). It makes no sense and I honestly want to know why people are so adamant about someone who was a star mainly in the 80s having mainstream hits as though this were the decade he was most relevant in. Prince is touring and making beaucoup bucks selling out arenas worldwide, the ultimate fanservice. Would him having another hit really matter? I do not think so.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1 posted 08/21/14 10:48am

Identity

At this juncture, I wouldn't care if he bundled copies of Plectrum Electrum with boxes of Kellogg's Frosted Flakes, and it sold 500 copies. I'm just plain tired of the multiple delays concerning the new album. confused

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #2 posted 08/21/14 11:28am

morningsong

Identity said:

At this juncture, I wouldn't care if he bundled copies of Plectrum Electrum with boxes of Kellogg's Frosted Flakes, and it sold 500 copies. I'm just plain tired of the multiple delays concerning the new album. confused

At least majority of the fans would have access to it on their own.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #3 posted 08/21/14 11:33am

lagantest

MotownSubdivision said:

I've read through several threads on here and habe seen many say that Prince should be topping charts or telling what he needs to do in order for that to happen/ why he should be. My question is why? Why isn't Stevie Wonder, EWF, Diana Ross, Janet Jackaon, Chaka Khan, Madonna, Bruce Springsteen, Phil Collins, Huey Lewis, Kool and the Gang, Van Halen or any other of my favorite stars from the 60s-80s topping the charts now?


The answer? Because they already have... a long time ago. These artists including Prince have hit their commercial peaks already and whether or not they produce new material, they are nostalgia acts in this day and age. They are legends/ icons that have long since left their marks on music and have nothing more to prove in that regard other than maybe showing that they can do live. Chart-topping songs though? That should be the last thing they worry about since they've each done it countless times before each in their own ways, broke countless records, and sold millions and millions of albums which have received critical acclaim and have set the standard for what today's music is on a grand scale.


Prince is included in this count of excellence so why are their those that believe him having chart topping songs 30 years afters his commercial peak as an artist when his resume is already extremely decorated and one that these so called "stars" of today would die for (assuming they care about their music in the first place)? And why should P even stoop to the absurdly low level of today's music scene just to be scoring hits alongside today's crop of artists? On rare ocasions, certain acts from the past will score a hit or to in the present day (i.e. Lionel Richie, Daft Punk, Weird Al, Madonna). It makes no sense and I honestly want to know why people are so adamant about someone who was a star mainly in the 80s having mainstream hits as though this were the decade he was most relevant in. Prince is touring and making beaucoup bucks selling out arenas worldwide, the ultimate fanservice. Would him having another hit really matter? I do not think so.
so david bowies last album hit number 1 and the two before were top 10 albums?
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #4 posted 08/21/14 11:37am

MotownSubdivis
ion

lagantest said:

MotownSubdivision said:

I've read through several threads on here and habe seen many say that Prince should be topping charts or telling what he needs to do in order for that to happen/ why he should be. My question is why? Why isn't Stevie Wonder, EWF, Diana Ross, Janet Jackaon, Chaka Khan, Madonna, Bruce Springsteen, Phil Collins, Huey Lewis, Kool and the Gang, Van Halen or any other of my favorite stars from the 60s-80s topping the charts now?


The answer? Because they already have... a long time ago. These artists including Prince have hit their commercial peaks already and whether or not they produce new material, they are nostalgia acts in this day and age. They are legends/ icons that have long since left their marks on music and have nothing more to prove in that regard other than maybe showing that they can do live. Chart-topping songs though? That should be the last thing they worry about since they've each done it countless times before each in their own ways, broke countless records, and sold millions and millions of albums which have received critical acclaim and have set the standard for what today's music is on a grand scale.


Prince is included in this count of excellence so why are their those that believe him having chart topping songs 30 years afters his commercial peak as an artist when his resume is already extremely decorated and one that these so called "stars" of today would die for (assuming they care about their music in the first place)? And why should P even stoop to the absurdly low level of today's music scene just to be scoring hits alongside today's crop of artists? On rare ocasions, certain acts from the past will score a hit or to in the present day (i.e. Lionel Richie, Daft Punk, Weird Al, Madonna). It makes no sense and I honestly want to know why people are so adamant about someone who was a star mainly in the 80s having mainstream hits as though this were the decade he was most relevant in. Prince is touring and making beaucoup bucks selling out arenas worldwide, the ultimate fanservice. Would him having another hit really matter? I do not think so.
so david bowies last album hit number 1 and the two before were top 10 albums?
I don't follow?
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #5 posted 08/21/14 12:00pm

databank

avatar

MotownSubdivision said:

I've read through several threads on here and habe seen many say that Prince should be topping charts or telling what he needs to do in order for that to happen/ why he should be. My question is why? Why isn't Stevie Wonder, EWF, Diana Ross, Janet Jackaon, Chaka Khan, Madonna, Bruce Springsteen, Phil Collins, Huey Lewis, Kool and the Gang, Van Halen or any other of my favorite stars from the 60s-80s topping the charts now? The answer? Because they already have... a long time ago. These artists including Prince have hit their commercial peaks already and whether or not they produce new material, they are nostalgia acts in this day and age. They are legends/ icons that have long since left their marks on music and have nothing more to prove in that regard other than maybe showing that they can do live. Chart-topping songs though? That should be the last thing they worry about since they've each done it countless times before each in their own ways, broke countless records, and sold millions and millions of albums which have received critical acclaim and have set the standard for what today's music is on a grand scale. Prince is included in this count of excellence so why are their those that believe him having chart topping songs 30 years afters his commercial peak as an artist when his resume is already extremely decorated and one that these so called "stars" of today would die for (assuming they care about their music in the first place)? And why should P even stoop to the absurdly low level of today's music scene just to be scoring hits alongside today's crop of artists? On rare ocasions, certain acts from the past will score a hit or to in the present day (i.e. Lionel Richie, Daft Punk, Weird Al, Madonna). It makes no sense and I honestly want to know why people are so adamant about someone who was a star mainly in the 80s having mainstream hits as though this were the decade he was most relevant in. Prince is touring and making beaucoup bucks selling out arenas worldwide, the ultimate fanservice. Would him having another hit really matter? I do not think so.

I'd temper ur remark about today's music scene by saying "the absurdly low level of today's music mainstream scene", because overall there are still hundreds of delightful records being released every year, the main difference between 2014 and 1984 being that nowadays you'll never hear any of those new talented artists on a mainstream radio station, nor see their music videos on TV, while at the time major record companies would invest a lot of money in promoting very talented and creative artists (alongside crap as well, though, crap's always been there, but now it's all they're willing to invest in).

.

As for your question I honestly have no fucking clue as to why would anyone care about his favorite artist being a top-seller, unless u're 16 years old and eager to prove your social value by defining yourself as a person mainly as being a fan of an artist and in need of other people to like said artist so they will automatically like you as well. The main issue being that most of the orgers u speak about are waaaaay past their high school years.

.

Most of the artists I listen to are acts that no one save hardcore music afficionados have ever heard of and so what? Actually if we're talking social value I find it much more rewarding to be the hipster kind music fan who will make people discover rare, precious gems by underground artists all the time, but honestly I'm getting a little bit too old for this to be a daily preoccupation of mine anyway.

.

Apart from the "if they love him they'll love me because I love him too" theory, the only other idea I have about this is that many of those people are actually clueless when it comes to music, and have been brainwashed by the media with the "success = quality / lack of success = mediocrity" equation to such an extent that they feel that the fact that prince isn't in the Top 10 is yet another proof of his alleged current artistic mediocrity, an alleged mediocrity many fans here obviously resent him for. While I respect people not enjoying prince's recent output (it's a matter of taste after all), I fail to see how they could take this particular element as being a proof of it when, in the world we now live in, being in the Top 10 is actually proof of an artist's mediocrity in 99% of the cases, while 99% of the good ones now remain underground things. But once again when u've been through 30 or 40 years of TV and radios repeating over and over that the crap they feed you with is the good stuff and that the vacuum cleaner sellers they feature every day are the most talented musicians in the world, I guess u end-up believing it. I've met quite a number of people in my life who genuinely believed that, who accepted the likes of Stock, Aitken and Waterman or Céline Dion as being the most talented people and violently rejected anything that wasn't a 3 minutes-long verse/chorus/verse/chorus/bridge/verse/chorus pop song as being mediocre, pseudo-intellectual, elitist, ununderstable bullshit. I've read such things here too as well.

.

Apart from those 2 theories I can't see what else it could be, and honestly not a single one of those guys have been able to give me a decent explaination about their wish to see prince be in the Top 10 again, so I guess there's no other...

.

And this is the sorry state of the world we live in sad

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #6 posted 08/21/14 12:27pm

Lockwood88

lagantest said:

MotownSubdivision said:
I've read through several threads on here and habe seen many say that Prince should be topping charts or telling what he needs to do in order for that to happen/ why he should be. My question is why? Why isn't Stevie Wonder, EWF, Diana Ross, Janet Jackaon, Chaka Khan, Madonna, Bruce Springsteen, Phil Collins, Huey Lewis, Kool and the Gang, Van Halen or any other of my favorite stars from the 60s-80s topping the charts now? The answer? Because they already have... a long time ago. These artists including Prince have hit their commercial peaks already and whether or not they produce new material, they are nostalgia acts in this day and age. They are legends/ icons that have long since left their marks on music and have nothing more to prove in that regard other than maybe showing that they can do live. Chart-topping songs though? That should be the last thing they worry about since they've each done it countless times before each in their own ways, broke countless records, and sold millions and millions of albums which have received critical acclaim and have set the standard for what today's music is on a grand scale. Prince is included in this count of excellence so why are their those that believe him having chart topping songs 30 years afters his commercial peak as an artist when his resume is already extremely decorated and one that these so called "stars" of today would die for (assuming they care about their music in the first place)? And why should P even stoop to the absurdly low level of today's music scene just to be scoring hits alongside today's crop of artists? On rare ocasions, certain acts from the past will score a hit or to in the present day (i.e. Lionel Richie, Daft Punk, Weird Al, Madonna). It makes no sense and I honestly want to know why people are so adamant about someone who was a star mainly in the 80s having mainstream hits as though this were the decade he was most relevant in. Prince is touring and making beaucoup bucks selling out arenas worldwide, the ultimate fanservice. Would him having another hit really matter? I do not think so.
so david bowies last album hit number 1 and the two before were top 10 albums?

So it was number 1 it must of been absolutely brilliant then (sarcasm). It is below average i have it.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #7 posted 08/21/14 1:21pm

MotownSubdivis
ion

databank said:



MotownSubdivision said:


I've read through several threads on here and habe seen many say that Prince should be topping charts or telling what he needs to do in order for that to happen/ why he should be. My question is why? Why isn't Stevie Wonder, EWF, Diana Ross, Janet Jackaon, Chaka Khan, Madonna, Bruce Springsteen, Phil Collins, Huey Lewis, Kool and the Gang, Van Halen or any other of my favorite stars from the 60s-80s topping the charts now? The answer? Because they already have... a long time ago. These artists including Prince have hit their commercial peaks already and whether or not they produce new material, they are nostalgia acts in this day and age. They are legends/ icons that have long since left their marks on music and have nothing more to prove in that regard other than maybe showing that they can do live. Chart-topping songs though? That should be the last thing they worry about since they've each done it countless times before each in their own ways, broke countless records, and sold millions and millions of albums which have received critical acclaim and have set the standard for what today's music is on a grand scale. Prince is included in this count of excellence so why are their those that believe him having chart topping songs 30 years afters his commercial peak as an artist when his resume is already extremely decorated and one that these so called "stars" of today would die for (assuming they care about their music in the first place)? And why should P even stoop to the absurdly low level of today's music scene just to be scoring hits alongside today's crop of artists? On rare ocasions, certain acts from the past will score a hit or to in the present day (i.e. Lionel Richie, Daft Punk, Weird Al, Madonna). It makes no sense and I honestly want to know why people are so adamant about someone who was a star mainly in the 80s having mainstream hits as though this were the decade he was most relevant in. Prince is touring and making beaucoup bucks selling out arenas worldwide, the ultimate fanservice. Would him having another hit really matter? I do not think so.

I'd temper ur remark about today's music scene by saying "the absurdly low level of today's music mainstream scene", because overall there are still hundreds of delightful records being released every year, the main difference between 2014 and 1984 being that nowadays you'll never hear any of those new talented artists on a mainstream radio station, nor see their music videos on TV, while at the time major record companies would invest a lot of money in promoting very talented and creative artists (alongside crap as well, though, crap's always been there, but now it's all they're willing to invest in).


.


As for your question I honestly have no fucking clue as to why would anyone care about his favorite artist being a top-seller, unless u're 16 years old and eager to prove your social value by defining yourself as a person mainly as being a fan of an artist and in need of other people to like said artist so they will automatically like you as well. The main issue being that most of the orgers u speak about are waaaaay past their high school years.


.


Most of the artists I listen to are acts that no one save hardcore music afficionados have ever heard of and so what? Actually if we're talking social value I find it much more rewarding to be the hipster kind music fan who will make people discover rare, precious gems by underground artists all the time, but honestly I'm getting a little bit too old for this to be a daily preoccupation of mine anyway.


.



Apart from the "if they love him they'll love me because I love him too" theory, the only other idea I have about this is that many of those people are actually clueless when it comes to music, and have been brainwashed by the media with the "success = quality / lack of success = mediocrity" equation to such an extent that they feel that the fact that prince isn't in the Top 10 is yet another proof of his alleged current artistic mediocrity, an alleged mediocrity many fans here obviously resent him for. While I respect people not enjoying prince's recent output (it's a matter of taste after all), I fail to see how they could take this particular element as being a proof of it when, in the world we now live in, being in the Top 10 is actually proof of an artist's mediocrity in 99% of the cases, while 99% of the good ones now remain underground things. But once again when u've been through 30 or 40 years of TV and radios repeating over and over that the crap they feed you with is the good stuff and that the vacuum cleaner sellers they feature every day are the most talented musicians in the world, I guess u end-up believing it. I've met quite a number of people in my life who genuinely believed that, who accepted the likes of Stock, Aitken and Waterman or Céline Dion as being the most talented people and violently rejected anything that wasn't a 3 minutes-long verse/chorus/verse/chorus/bridge/verse/chorus pop song as being mediocre, pseudo-intellectual, elitist, ununderstable bullshit. I've read such things here too as well.


.


Apart from those 2 theories I can't see what else it could be, and honestly not a single one of those guys have been able to give me a decent explaination about their wish to see prince be in the Top 10 again, so I guess there's no other...


.


And this is the sorry state of the world we live in sad

I was talking about mainstream music but I guess for the sake of semantics I should have mentioned mainstream music. Indeed, crap always existed but I dare say that crap music of the past craps all over crap music today because (mainstream) music then was held at a much higher standard than today where someone had to at least be able to sing, dance, play an instrument, write music, produce, or perform any combination of these things in order to have anything close to a career in music. Now its possible for many an uneducated person who has a basic grasp on how to use Fruity Loops to get called up as a producer and actually make it BIG. Those people would have been ignored back in the day! There are indeed some good albums to be heard today even in the mainstream (though they are less so) but while I do pay attention to music today to a certain extent, its usually what's presented and being an old soul who largely listens to music from the 60s to the 90s, I find it easier to discover music from those decades than having to dig for the good underground music of today and risk not liking it. That's not to say I like every single song that was made before 2000 but overall, there's more old music than new and it's easier to access so I just go with that. Also, most of the old school things I listen to were from the mainstream artists of the time with a good mix of unsungs/ lesser knowns but mostly top stars at some point or another. I am aware that not every single talent gets their big break but I think that for the most part, if the music is not promoted to me then I don't bother with it even if I should think the opposite for today's music scene.


I agree with you about it being better to be a hipster-esque music fan aince that's largely how these underground acts gain a following is via the traditional word of mouth which unfortunately isn't very effective in music today though that probably doesn't matter on a personal level to most. I'm really just getting into Prince despite hearing some of his hits throughout my 20 year life and I'm more familiar with classic, commercial peak 80s Prince than I am with 90s Prince and definitely more so than I am with 21st century Prince and with the mixed/ negative reviews across the board for Prince's 2000-present material, I'm proceeding cautiously. I don't let reviews dictate what I listen to but a good review certainly gets me to check something out quicker than a mixed or negative one my ultimate views on the music notwithstanding.


Back to Prince; as far as those go that think he should be charting as though it's the 80s, I think it's a sense of desperation from the fans. They don't think Prince has it in him anymore artistically so their only hope is that he makes up for it commercially which they think should be easy given the mediocre-at best state of mainstream music. Even if music is a joke nowadays and having a chart-topping song is no longer an accomplishment and an artist who is making similarly mediocre music (or crap music that still craps over the music the radio plays) it's just stupid to hold your breath expecting someone who was a key pkayer in the music scene decades ago to be anywhere near the charts in any era of music. Sure you have your rare comebacks or occasional spikes of popularity but to expect that sort of thing regularly for an artist who hasn't been a big time star for about 3 decades is just asking for disappointment.


Things are so miserable nowadays sad
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #8 posted 08/21/14 1:30pm

Militant

avatar

moderator

Prince should have, because unlike the other artists you mentioned, he actually could do it. He has the ability to still be on top of current trends and actually do them better. For example, "Black Sweat" was him doing the "Neptunes" sound better than The Neptunes themselves.

Most of the other artists you mentioned aren't artists who evolved their sound over the years. Janet and Madonna could still have #1 hits with the right material and right push, and of course, Michael is still having #1 songs posthumously, and would be if he was alive too.

With the right song, the right video and the right label push, there's absolutely no reason why he couldn't. Don't forget, Carlos Santana had a #1 at the age of 52 with "Smooth". It was #1 for 12 weeks. And, Debbie Harry was 54 when Blondie released "Maria" which was #1, at least here in the UK, and a huge hit.

Prince is a global pop icon, it's a fallacy and a complete disservice to him to refer to him as a "nostalgia" act. Is Paul McCartney "a nostalgia act", is Michael Jackson "a nostalgia act"? The Rolling Stones? U2?

Gaga is one of the biggest pop icons in the business, her new album is an album of duets with Tony Bennett, who is 88 years old. It'll sell like hot cakes. Wouldn't be surprised if a single from it hits #1.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #9 posted 08/21/14 1:38pm

RodeoSchro

Because neither Prince nor the other artists you mentioned will lower themselves to produce the kind of "music" that tops the charts these days.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #10 posted 08/21/14 1:57pm

MotownSubdivis
ion

Militant said:

Prince should have, because unlike the other artists you mentioned, he actually could do it. He has the ability to still be on top of current trends and actually do them better. For example, "Black Sweat" was him doing the "Neptunes" sound better than The Neptunes themselves.



Most of the other artists you mentioned aren't artists who evolved their sound over the years. Janet and Madonna could still have #1 hits with the right material and right push, and of course, Michael is still having #1 songs posthumously, and would be if he was alive too.

With the right song, the right video and the right label push, there's absolutely no reason why he couldn't. Don't forget, Carlos Santana had a #1 at the age of 52 with "Smooth". It was #1 for 12 weeks. And, Debbie Harry was 54 when Blondie released "Maria" which was #1, at least here in the UK, and a huge hit.

Prince is a global pop icon, it's a fallacy and a complete disservice to him to refer to him as a "nostalgia" act. Is Paul McCartney "a nostalgia act", is Michael Jackson "a nostalgia act"? The Rolling Stones? U2?



Gaga is one of the biggest pop icons in the business, her new album is an album of duets with Tony Bennett, who is 88 years old. It'll sell like hot cakes. Wouldn't be surprised if a single from it hits #1.



Like I said, there are those rare exceptions where stars from decades past have a hit in the present day scene to varying magnitudes. And I don't know how referring to Price as a nostalgia act is a bad thing. Is he a lot more than that? Yes. Is he a musical icon? Yes. Is he still extremely talented? That depends on who you ask but at the base of it all, he is still a nostalgia act even if he is a legend. That includes Paul McCartney, Michael, the Stones, and U2. Even if that isn't all they are, that doesn't negate the fact that's what they are. By the logic that Prince should be topping charts, then the same can be said for all the people you mentioned but whether or not they should doesn't matter since they won't.


As far as MJ (who I am a very huge fan of) having a chart topping hit and Prince not, I think it has more to do with what Prince is or isn't doing that's keeping him from this, the very things many on here blame him for when it comes to the average person this day and age not knowing who he is (which is sad to put it very nicely). However despite all of that, it's just a lot to expect for artists who were in their commercial prime in decades past to be a relevant force in the current music scene no matter how talented they may still be or how much they change their style up and that includes Prince who can be described as a simple nostalgia act moreso than the stars you and I mentioned due to being comparatively lesser known due to his alleged ineptitude and ego.
[Edited 8/21/14 14:22pm]
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #11 posted 08/21/14 2:01pm

funksterr

The old Prince is "too old" to have mainstream commercial success argument is back. That theory has been around since Prince turned 30!! It wasn't true then and t isn't true now. Make some hot music, properly promote it and release it on a major and it will sell. Prince's problem is that he is a pop star releasing bland, self-indulgent, snooty material. Of course that ain't gonna sell well.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #12 posted 08/21/14 2:33pm

MotownSubdivis
ion

funksterr said:

The old Prince is "too old" to have mainstream commercial success argument is back. That theory has been around since Prince turned 30!! It wasn't true then and t isn't true now. Make some hot music, properly promote it and release it on a major and it will sell. Prince's problem is that he is a pop star releasing bland, self-indulgent, snooty material. Of course that ain't gonna sell well.

I guess but that doesn't mecessarily guarantee chart success or good album sales. MJ's Invincible sold 11 million and while that's still pretty good especially compared to the abysmal album sales of today, it was cited as a commercial failure in comparison to his previous 5 albums although there are various circumstances for why Invincible didn't do as good as it could have, the main issue to my understanding was the lack of promotion it received which was pretty stupid. Who's to say that just because you're with a major label that you're going to be successful? If Sony did that to Michael who made much more money for them than Prince did for WB, then any label can do that to anybody. Even with adequate promotion some albums can still sell poorly though those cases are rare.

The bottom line I'm making is that why are fans fixated on Prince having chart success now? Would it be awesome if he did? Absolutely but to dwell on that is nonsensical.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #13 posted 08/21/14 3:02pm

jaawwnn

To be honest, until Prince actually does have a hit again, his potential to have a hit doesn't amount to much more than wishful thinking.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #14 posted 08/21/14 4:40pm

Militant

avatar

moderator

Essentially I find the term "nostalgia act" to be condescending and dismissive, it reads as if Prince can't have a hit. I believe that he can.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #15 posted 08/21/14 4:40pm

MotownSubdivis
ion

jaawwnn said:

To be honest, until Prince actually does have a hit again, his potential to have a hit doesn't amount to much more than wishful thinking.

This too. Not that people should be doting on that to happen anyway.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #16 posted 08/21/14 4:44pm

MotownSubdivis
ion

Militant said:

Essentially I find the term "nostalgia act" to be condescending and dismissive, it reads as if Prince can't have a hit. I believe that he can.

We have different definitions of nostalgia acts though I know where you're coming from with your scorn for the term. I view a nostalgia act as someone who simply had a career in happier times of music that still performs or has a catalog of hits that many remember fondly. This can range from one of the many one hit wonders of the 80s to MJ and Prince.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #17 posted 08/21/14 5:02pm

SuperSoulFight
er

The thing is, Prince himself keeps trying to have a hit single. Rock & Roll Love Affair, Breakfast Can Wait, Don't U Wanna Fall In Love 2Nite are all begging to be hit singles. beg
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #18 posted 08/22/14 12:03am

Rebeljuice

Things like Idols, X Factor and The Voice have decimated what was already a crappy music scene. Napster was also critical in ensuring the bottom fell out of the industry, followed very closely by iTunes. Its all about quick success these days. Win a talent competition, cut a single, get it on iTunes, milk it for what its worth, move on.

.

Prince and many of the acts mentioned here work differently. Prince especially, avoids all of the mainstream outlets like iTunes and because none of these artists are on TV every night competing with other artists for a record deal, they are not easily noticed by the public. Why would a record company (or radio station) push an artist not in the public eye when they can push one that millions voted for on a talent show?

.

Anyway, I actually wish Prince would stop trying to write what he thinks would be a hit and start pushing the envelope again. Create something new and never-before-heard and create for the love of creating, whatever that creation be.

.

At the end of the day, once all of the big selling artists of today that predate Napster and Idols (Beyonce comes to mind) also become nostalgia acts, we will end up with a music industry completely dictated by public phone-ins on talent shows. Labels know the surest way to make a buck from an artist is to sign one that is already in the public eye because the promotion has already been done. No need to promote an unknown artist from the start, just let the talent shows do it and sign them at the end.

.

Prince should not be trying to be part of that. And as Databank said, indie artists and the real talent will still be there for us to find if we want. We just have to look for it and not expect an advert or radio station to point us in the right direction. Outlets for real music will gain in popularity the more the industry ignores that talent. It is inevitable. Prince should be trying to pioneer that side of the industry instead of trying to break back into the mainstream. NPGMC was ground breaking at the time, he should have stuck with it and expanded upon it. THATS what annoys me about Prince. Not his lack of hits but his lack of sustaining an innovative idea.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #19 posted 08/22/14 1:51am

lagantest

Lockwood88 said:

lagantest said:

MotownSubdivision said: so david bowies last album hit number 1 and the two before were top 10 albums?

So it was number 1 it must of been absolutely brilliant then (sarcasm). It is below average i have it.

Bowies album - THE NEXT DAY was great. Great songs, interesting melodies etc and great lyrics. No way below average. What about Heathen? Number 5 i believe that got to. WHat a grand magnum opus that album is. I want an experimental album from prince, showing off his skills, i dont care about chart positions. I am just saying that vetrens can pull it out of the bag if they are not so self absorbed. quite like your response i guess.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #20 posted 08/22/14 2:55am

NouveauDance

avatar

Delusion.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #21 posted 08/22/14 6:46am

Lockwood88

lagantest said:

Lockwood88 said:

So it was number 1 it must of been absolutely brilliant then (sarcasm). It is below average i have it.

Bowies album - THE NEXT DAY was great. Great songs, interesting melodies etc and great lyrics. No way below average. What about Heathen? Number 5 i believe that got to. WHat a grand magnum opus that album is. I want an experimental album from prince, showing off his skills, i dont care about chart positions. I am just saying that vetrens can pull it out of the bag if they are not so self absorbed. quite like your response i guess.

Bowie's new album just don't do it for me , sorry , you right am wrong, its totally boring to me , chart success means shit nowadays. To me that is. Chart success don't mean it is brilliant , sorry. And i see you can't have your own personal opinion on this forum about anything that some don't agree with. Am wrong everybody else is right , ok ok.

[Edited 8/22/14 6:48am]

[Edited 8/22/14 6:58am]

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #22 posted 08/22/14 8:05am

lagantest

Lockwood88 said:

lagantest said:

Bowies album - THE NEXT DAY was great. Great songs, interesting melodies etc and great lyrics. No way below average. What about Heathen? Number 5 i believe that got to. WHat a grand magnum opus that album is. I want an experimental album from prince, showing off his skills, i dont care about chart positions. I am just saying that vetrens can pull it out of the bag if they are not so self absorbed. quite like your response i guess.

Bowie's new album just don't do it for me , sorry , you right am wrong, its totally boring to me , chart success means shit nowadays. To me that is. Chart success don't mean it is brilliant , sorry. And i see you can't have your own personal opinion on this forum about anything that some don't agree with. Am wrong everybody else is right , ok ok.

[Edited 8/22/14 6:48am]

[Edited 8/22/14 6:58am]

nah you are good to have an opinion that is why music is created. its art. art is there to be made into your own thoughts and opinions. I think the album is great and i am still listening to it 18 months after release. when did you last say that about a prince album?

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #23 posted 08/22/14 8:23am

Lockwood88

lagantest said:

Lockwood88 said:

Bowie's new album just don't do it for me , sorry , you right am wrong, its totally boring to me , chart success means shit nowadays. To me that is. Chart success don't mean it is brilliant , sorry. And i see you can't have your own personal opinion on this forum about anything that some don't agree with. Am wrong everybody else is right , ok ok.

[Edited 8/22/14 6:48am]

[Edited 8/22/14 6:58am]

nah you are good to have an opinion that is why music is created. its art. art is there to be made into your own thoughts and opinions. I think the album is great and i am still listening to it 18 months after release. when did you last say that about a prince album?

Np, i think 1988 was the last time i could say a Prince album was brilliant and i still love it to this day, i did like some of D&P and Musicology. I await the creative juices of Prince to hopefully come alive again.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Forums > Prince: Music and More > Why do people think Prince should have charting songs in 2014?