I have this image in my head of rubbing a flower on a showering woman's back like it's lotion or something. Petals all wet and mashed, falling apart, pollen stained skin, and the poor girl like "what the...hey, stop that!!!" My Legacy
http://prince.org/msg/8/192731 | |
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NDRU said: I have this image in my head of rubbing a flower on a showering woman's back like it's lotion or something. Petals all wet and mashed, falling apart, pollen stained skin, and the poor girl like "what the...hey, stop that!!!" Chicks dig botulism "Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry | |
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So what do you think about Artificial Age? We in the thread are a little fuzzy about how you feel about it? You're being so vague and not the least bit redundant. | |
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MugginsXO said: I have listened to this a few times now and I really like it quite a bit. I think it is quite difficult at this stage in Prince's career to really have an album that is going to be received anywhere close to how he used to be treated, regardless of how good the quality of material. I also believe that as with anything creative that covers many years, many people are going to in lesser or greater degrees find their preferences and stick to them. At this stage of my love of Prince, having heard and bought everything that exists and consuming a very large quantity of material recorded over several decades, it is a process to get back to a place to hear what inexperienced or casual listeners might like. Or what a certain kind of nostalgic Prince fan might enjoy.
With a musician as versatile and prolific as Prince it should be understood that an individual is capable of engaging entirely different tastes. He mixes genres, between albums, between songs and often mashing things up on one track. Looking at the resurgence of R&B in the last few years and in particular the ability of artists like The Weeknd, Drake and Frank Ocean to make music that does not adhere to many of the unhelpful cultural expectations around the genre. Prince - along with Michael Jackson - are still hugely important figures, not just for their music they made but for the fearless breadth of their music. I suspect many folks arrive at a point where they feel one side of Prince is more in line with their tastes. I know I have. It is a mistake though to believe that these tastes determine what is or is not “authentic”. In some cases it is true that , as with certain examples of Prince failing to understand Rap. Often though I feel this is of the same kind of insularity that Prince has suffered from through his career.
For instance, I love the 90s R&B production on Emancipation and reject entirely those kind of gripes that surround music he makes that fits into a more relevant style. (To say for instance that the live band version of “Somebody’s Somebody” is more authentic because it has a live drummer or was recorded in one take is definitely arbitrary. Considering the sheer volume of classic Prince tracks created on the back of studio techniques, it is also strangely hypocritical.) I have seen a lot of chatter here and elsewhere which dismisses this track or that track on the basis that it is “just” modern R&B or modern Rap and that Prince is above that. Here as with the bias against that 90s R&B sound there is an implicit understanding that of course modern R&B and Rap has no worth!
Here’s the thing though: the best music being made today is being made in R&B and in Rap, with both genres very often overlapping. Somebody mentioned Kanye West a few pages back as being one of the most important producers of the last decade and I absolutely agree. If R. Kelly brought Rap to R&B, Kanye brought R&B to Rap. The unsightly cultural and genre limitations imposed were greatly reduced by Kanye West. I don’t think you’d see people like ASAP Rocky doing love tracks like Fashion Killa without Kanye. I don’t think Kendrick Lamar would be dropping a beautiful chorus on a song called Bitch Don’t Kill My Vibe.
It is a comforting thought for one out of step with popular music to believe that they are the last island of “real music,” removing the need to confront the possibility that perhaps being so out of step is a sign of artistic failure. It is similarly comforting for a listener to believe that their taste is the last bastion of critical flavour. It doesn’t make it any less problematic, or depressing, or solipsistic. There is great music being made now and I have wanted Prince for a long time to embrace that and step his game up in response. He was best when he was competitive.
One of the reasons why I really like Art Official Age is because of how he has started to engage music that is happening now. Lianna La Haves is on the record: a new, vital musician who is not just a bloody protégé. She is her own thinking person, making great music that people actually care about in 2014. This is a great sign. It also helps that Clouds is a killer track. It was likewise brilliant to see Prince pop up on Janelle Monae’s last album to help the track. Not to dominate it, not to insist on control but to help the album. Seeing Kendrick Lamar do something with Prince gives me some hope too that he is actually engaging with the world and not shutting it out to live happily in his purple bubble. Hell even though I wasn’t crazy about the song, his duet with Zooey Deschanel can go in that category too.
There are some very good songs here. The Gold Standard as has been said many times has a real spirit. I love the goofy/vulgar outro. U Know particularly for the judicious use of a sample will continue to resonate. My favourite on the album is Time and the way it goes into Affirmation III with that LoveSexy/I Wish U Heaven ambient flavour. I am suspicious of any and all reviews that use the phrases "back to basics," "return to form" or "best since some album in the 80s," not because the quality on Art Official Age isn't up there but because it is such hackneyed cop-out for mediocre writers. It is however definitely a work that shows positive engagement with music as it exists in 2014. I hope Prince continues to live with us in the world and not retreat to the one he has made for himself.
[Edited 10/3/14 12:04pm] [Edited 10/3/14 12:07pm] Great insight. Thanks! [Edited 10/3/14 14:01pm] | |
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Won't write a review, but will say "Thank you, Prince!" I love this more than anything he's done in a long, long time. "Gold Standard" is so close to being "crazy amazing!" I love everything but the chorus, which feels a bit lacking. My true obsession is "Way Back Home/Affirmation III." Just so fascinating and beautiful to listen to. My two least favorite tracks are "Breakfast Can Wait" and "Breakdown," which I already heard so the new material did not disappoint. And, don't hate on me, but I love the "Funknroll" on AOA more than the "Funknroll" on PE. I just love it!! That's all. "She made me glad to be a man" | |
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Absolutely... im with you there. | |
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Oh My Goodness.....This Could Be Us is on REPEAT!!! This Could Be Us But U Be Playin...
You Can Call It The Unexpected Or U Can Call It WOW | |
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I accept that. And while I'm posting, just a friendly reminder to everyone that there would be no Affirmation III without Way Back Home. "The password is what." | |
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AOA is #1 PE is #14 on iTunes Worldwide Charts http://kworb.net/aww/
Tremendous accomplishment for Prince and 3rdeyegirl hopefully he knows that his fans support him and are still as active and eager for his music as ever. | |
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Rebeljuice said:
Absolutely... im with you there. Me too! | |
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I'm still busy "absorbing" this album a week later.
I'm not sure I can coherently provide my thoughts on each of it's 13 individual parts BUT... as a whole I find this album to be his most cohesive and enjoyable long-player since "Come" which has always occupied a special place in my music library as one of the few albums I enjoy listening to all the way through as opposed to picking out favorite tracks.
TGE and 3121 may have some stronger songs, and I like much of MPLSoUND too, but AOA seems to rise above just about everything else in the last 20 years.
So far I'm loving "AOC", Clouds, Breakdown, U Know, Way Back Home. Least favorites are The Gold Standard and Breakfast Can Wait (they just sound like more of the same old, same old to me...) and What It Feels Like.
It, also, sounds like a very "mature" album. Prince has finally managed to grow out of the rut I think he's been spinning in for a couple of decades. Major points for having the least number of embarrassing moments in a quite a long while, as well.
The "Vanilla Sky" style storyline and narrator work so much better than any other concept album style wankery he's released too. So surprised! [Edited 10/3/14 21:22pm] | |
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It's true. "Not everything that is faced can be changed; but nothing can be changed until it is faced." - James Baldwin | |
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Love it ❤️ So far 👍 No justice, No peace | |
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I think we need to also give credit to the unsung hero of AOA: Mr. Joshua Welton. With Josh on board I predict Prince's next album is really going to blow our minds. (If The Excess Space and Revelation are any indication.) [Edited 10/4/14 7:58am] "The password is what." | |
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Let me have a try.
The coda of Funknroll is either the most stupidest use of Eurodance synths and an insult to 1999, or the baddest live studio take he's done in years. This is a Science-Fiction album. A Spiritual-Fiction album. Soul spread over dead beats. [Edited 10/4/14 8:09am] The Colors R brighter, the Bond is much tighter
No Child's a failure Until the Blue Sailboat sails him away from his dreams Don't Ever Lose, Don't Ever Lose Don't Ever Lose Your Dreams | |
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bonatoc said:
Let me have a try.
The coda of Funknroll is either the most stupidest use of Eurodance synths and an insult to 1999, or the baddest live studio take he's done in years. This is a Science-Fiction album. A Spiritual-Fiction album. Soul spread over dead beats. [Edited 10/4/14 8:09am] Shit. I was going to say the same thing, but you beat me to it. "Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry | |
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Art Official Cage:4/5
Social commetary. Love it .. Instrumentation is top notch with some serious rhythm guitar work thrown in for good measure. This song purveys a new energy for Prince without sound silly as he can sometimes get in songs like this.
Clouds: 5/5
LOVE THIS SONG!!! Cool the way Prince should be. Background vocals, bass, and drums well laid out. Lyrically perfect with perfect timing. This would be my first release from this LP hands down especially this time of the year. Thanks Prince for the end guitar run that harkens back to "My Love is Forever." That's from 1979 for the children. It just works
Breakdown: 3/5
I dunno if its the fact that I've been hearing it for 1/2 a year or the fact that it really is the "saddest story I've ever been told." This song is lyrically compelling and the music is top notch.. I'm just not into it.
Gold Standard: 2/5
Fun Song, but I heard this before from Prince in 2000 with Rave. It almost sounds like a combo of Rave, Pretty Man and Strange But True. THe fun is only reason I'd click on it but then I'd get bored and skip.
U Know: 5/5
Cool as $hit. This is absolutely slick. No pretense of trying to be a rapper, but absolute voice control. Sexy and this is a song for sex. The rhythm. The rhythm.The rhythm.. I'm ready to F***
Breakfast Can Wait: 4/5
Cool ass song and despite hearing it for quite a long time it holds up better than Breakdown, despite being almost a year older. The bass line is intoxicating, and the lyrics are 100%
This Could Be Us 4/5
Soulful and suprising. The hook is unbelievable. "bing bing bing." Beautiful opening. Down to Earth. He actually could have created a whole different song from the first 30 seconds. I mean it could have went a different direction and still been slick. It could actually be another situation where I wish Price would have contiued onward in that other direction Sorta like in 1992's Continental at the very end when he makes the call to Carmen. Either way I could see this as a new late nite classic. A Stand Out
What it Feels Like: 4/5
Another Soulful song. Its a Hidden Gem because U have to get bast the first minute to understand the complexity of the song. And Andy Allo comes off as so smooooooth and as sexy as she looks. Y'all kno that she is the reason why Prince went back to an Afro after 30+ years right?
Affirmation I, II, Way Back Home, and Affirmation III 6/5
As a collective, and how I REARRANGED them along with AOC starting it off. It just sounds like they should have been together. I really don;t have words for this very personal sounding and uplifting song(s) It truly is a journey of sorts that many of us can possibly relate. This might be the most genuine sounding spiratual and personal song Prince ever produced in his almost 4 decades in the business.
FunknRoll: 3/5
Music is effin SWWEET the entire song. Perfect in fact, and why I think Prince has completely solidified his place in music history. It's the vocals that screw me up, but only for the first 2 minutes. It's the voice from 1998's "Mad Sex" that I'm talking about. Then around minute 3:00 they come back and redeem the song when it sounds like he's underwater (Cindy C when he's asking does she wanna play). I could have listened in that fashion the entire song.
Time: 5/5
Another Prince Classic. Sly Stone/Chaka Khan-Rufus reimagined. Prince is in the background layer the entire time. Rhytm guitar is on point!!! Cool as ice water the way it fades out lathered in horns. Wow Andy. Beautiful vocals.
This is a song that makes me say again that some one else should be in charge of releases from his LPs. This song would blow up the airwaves. Truly hard to believe that the guy is a 56.
I gotta tell U that this LP might possibly be my favorite, and most consistent single LP in the last 10 years, with exception to LotusFlow3r. Better than Musicology, 3121, and Planet Earth.
I have taken the liberty of adding a few tracks on to my AOA Playlist, including Give 'Em What they Love, That Girl Thing, Groovy Potential, Fall in Love Tonight, and Ain't Gonna Miss U When U're Gone.
Give 'Em sits after U Kno and What it Feels Like
U couple this with the PLectrum Electrum experience and this is the restoration Age of Prince. Unfortunately the world does not revolve around artists.
[Edited 10/4/14 9:00am] | |
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Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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Josh is a pretty good introducing Prince to new styles. However no matter how much I like this album, I hear ALOT of presets and cheap over used "modern" drum samples. If he worked with Flying Lotus on the mix and sounds, then we'd probably see a modern classic. He'll probably do the opposite though. Ever since the late 80s, Prince has been in love with bad digital sounds and samples. Thankfully alot of the songs are so good, that it makes up for bad choice of sounds. In the early to mid 80s, Prince was teaching everyone how to make cool sounds. My Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/tundrah | |
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Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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I'll try to explain it as easy as possible... My Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/tundrah | |
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I was listening to this thing again in the car the other day and wished it was spring/early summer. This feels like a "put the top down and blast that bitch" type of record. | |
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Can some kind person who has access to the liner notes/credits for the album please type it up here? I am curious as to who is doing what, especially around backing vocals and such like. | |
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I get what you're saying but what would happen if he did that is very predictable : any success with be attributed to the other big name. So many have said that his best years were due to Wendy and Lisa being around, he knows his worst critics would feel vindicated he did have a hit record with well-known programmer -producers.
Choosing someone like Josh ensure at least some insurance people won't conclude he needs the help that much. Having fooled around with drum machines for many years, I can see how someone like Prince would get bored with all the work it takes to do it well nowadays and indeed just let someone else do the tedious tweaking under his general direction.
The album is not sonically perfect from beginning to end but it holds firm to one unifying sonic vision, gehuine care seems to have been taken in creating a sonic journey. I hear songs like What It Feels Like and it's even better than I thought it would be from all the reviews I had read. And it's just that one song among many others on the album that seem to be a thoughtfully put together soundscape -- despite the things people complain about, you have to reckon the lasers and chipmunk voice make way more sense in the context of the album.
As it turns out, listening to AOA the first few times has turned out to be very much like putting the pieces of puzzle together. Suddenly the things I found odd sounded just right -- and it actually got better. It's fun to have this experience again about a whole album. | |
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[Edited 10/4/14 13:49pm] [Edited 10/4/14 13:57pm] The Colors R brighter, the Bond is much tighter
No Child's a failure Until the Blue Sailboat sails him away from his dreams Don't Ever Lose, Don't Ever Lose Don't Ever Lose Your Dreams | |
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True what you're saying. Actually I think he would be able to do it himself if he just wanted to spend some time on it. Actually I enjoy this album very much despite what I'm noticing. And that's saying something. I'm not a purist when it comes to tweaking your own sound at all. I'm just noticing that he doesn't care about it as much these days, probably because those parts of song writing is not what he is focusing on. I'm not hating, just observing. And yeat, you're probably right with Josh. He is not very known, and people won't say he is the reason why Prince is sounding so good now. When Prince is sounding good on top of hit and miss production, has written some pretty damn good songs. My Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/tundrah | |
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Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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