NY Times review is spot-on: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/01/arts/prince-releases-art-official-age-and-plectrumelectrum.html?_r=0 | |
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funksterr said:
I said the fact that no one slammed the album was a good sign, but since they were careful to insert, what I feel was the harsh truth, at the end of those reviews, it tells me they wanted to play ball with Prince and WB, by parroting the press release, but really wasn't feeling the album, and wanted to make that known. Okay, sorry. I misunderstood what you were saying. My apologies! "Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry | |
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http://www.nytimes.com/20...ctrum.html" Looking at Two Sides of Rock Royalty " | |
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http://www.billboard.com/...wBillboard Review " Prince's First Two Albums In Four Years Are a Mixed Bag " | |
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MendesCity said: NY Times review is spot-on: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/01/arts/prince-releases-art-official-age-and-plectrumelectrum.html?_r=0 My man JP said that Breakfast Can Wait was the best song on AOA...Aint nothing spot on about that review...lol | |
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murph said:MendesCity said:NY Times review is spot-on: http://www.nytimes.com/20....html?_r=0 My man JP said that Breakfast Can Wait was the best song on AOA...Aint nothing spot on about that review...lol lol | |
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I guess you think the Vibe review was the most accurate..lol | |
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http://www.allmusic.com/album/art-official-age-mw0002731049
http://www.cleveland.com/music/index.ssf/2014/09/prince_unleashes_art_official.html
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/music/cdreviews/11124601/Prince-Art-Official-Age-review.html
http://www.vibe.com/photo-gallery/review-15-thoughts-princes-gloriously-vital-and-refreshingly-weird-art-official-age
http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/music/prince-back-times-2-article-1.1956949
http://www.pastemagazine.com/articles/2014/10/prince-art-official-age-review.html
http://www.npr.org/2014/09/30/352754425/two-princes-the-purple-one-returns-in-stereo?utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=music
Tom Moon is a tough cookie and he likes it. All you others say Hell Yea!! | |
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Onion AV Club has a GREAT positive review of AOA. Find the link yourself; I gotta take a piss. "Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry | |
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It was entirely predictable that not everyone would come out with a 5 stars review and that there would be your fair share of mixed reviews. I just don't remember Musicology, 3121 or TRC getting five stars or even four -- for me that is proof positive that he's getting a good critical reception overall and there is no place for the "complete rubish" reviews being posted on the Org... not for anyone with a iota of credibility and balance. | |
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http://soultrain.com/2014/10/02/album-review-princes-art-official-age/
Art Official Age is experimental and quirky, yet enticing. With the perfect blend of old and new, familiar and explorative, it harkens a new era for one of the most prolific, innovative, and imaginative musicians of all time. | |
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Hey...At least I know when to call a track a "love song"...lol....I'm usually a fan of JP's work....But that review was obviously rushed.... [Edited 10/3/14 6:21am] | |
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https://www.gp.se/kulturn...ial-ageAOA 4/5 PE 3/4 [Edited 10/3/14 6:34am] | |
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2020 said: OperatingThetan said: Well, Jon Bream thinks 'Way Back Home' could be considered 'romantic', so that means his opinion means less than two shits to me and is about as credible.
Breams review is so lazy and ill considered I won't even bother linking to it here. I'm not completely sure why anyone thinks this man matters or is at all influential. He appears utterly mediocre. Totally agree. He's got as much musical taste as a shit sandwich. don't play me...i'm over 30 and i DO smoke weed.... | |
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Mintchip said:
ex speed freak here, and bingo, i thought the same. Not that Prince would know the lingo...although those aftershows do go pretty late Prince doesn't know the lingo? Don't bet on it. Whilst Prince has obviously never been an addict or shit he has definitely dabbled and he's always had a curiosity. He's coked up off his dial in the JB, Jacko video. Then there's his E escapades that led to Lovesexy, his reluctance to deny drug rumours during the Gold era NME interview, his employment of Big Chick and Prince's delight when he regaled his drug-running stories. Listen to Now, he may not have been smoking joints but he certainly knows how to roll them. The reason his voice was so clear is cos there was no 'smack' in his brain. His cousin tried a reefer and progressed to 'horse'. The lyrics to Superfunkicalifragisex"E". I agree that Clouds has a double meaning and drugs inference. don't play me...i'm over 30 and i DO smoke weed.... | |
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I see some of you guys shitting on the most well respected critics because you don't agree with them. They are the most respected for a reason. Lol | |
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I can't speak for other people because I'm sure they all have their reasons for doing so...
But when u actually know said critics, it's not so much "shitting" on them....It's just making a comment about a peer's work......
Also, it's not about them liking/disliking the album. It's the specifics they give in their actual reviews....JP, who is cooler than a fan BTW, called "Clouds" a ballad...He also said "Breakfast Can Wait," probably the most safe, conventional song on AOA, is the standout on AOA...Even if you think that AOA is a mediocre album, calling "BCW" the best song on this album is dubious at best...
There are other respected critics that gave AOA mixed to very good reviews. And I have no issues with their comments because they seem to be judging the music on its own merits....
On the real, I would have liked to see my man John Caramanica over at the Times review AOA..His ears are much more up-to-date than JP's and Bream....These are folks that are more impressed with Prince's rock pursuits and at times imply that R&B is much easier genre to pull off if u get my drift... | |
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Tom Moon prefers Plectrum. All you others say Hell Yea!! | |
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plectrum is way better than aoa BOB4theFUNK | |
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People can shit on some respected critics? Like people can shit on Prince a respected musician. [Edited 10/3/14 13:21pm] | |
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WorldofPeace said:
People can shit on some respected critics? Like people can shit on Prince a respected musician. [Edited 10/3/14 13:21pm] Lots of people shitting on people. Shit's getting weird. Shit. "Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry | |
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the soul train review has to be the best one i've read so far and that line when it said the old prince fans always complaining that it's not as good as his old stuff... hit the spot right on.
appreciate the new music or keep living in the 80s.
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For the past year or so, Prince and his all-woman collective, 3rdEyeGirl, have been teasing us mercilessly with one-off singles, live video clips, and promises of a new album “soon.” The quartet offered audiences a taste of their new material during ferocious live shows in tiny venues, turned it all the way up on the now-defunkt but fun while it lasted ‘Arsenio Hall Show,’ and turned heads at the Brit Awards by snapping a cheeky selfie as they ascended the stage. At long last, Prince, in typical Prince “I’ll tell u what u need 2 no when u need 2 no it” fashion, announced just weeks ago that he would, in fact, release not one but two new albums on September 30: a solo project entitled Art Official Age, and 3rdEyeGirl’s debut,PLECTRUMELECTRUM. With life-long, die-hard Prince fans on pins and needles waiting for the albums to come, and legions of “I liked his old stuff better” folks on the fence about whether a new Prince album would be worth the hype, the build-up to the release brought healthy servings of both excitement and scrutiny. As Prince and 3rdEyeGirl wrecked the stage at this year’s Essence Festival, I was not surprised that my (and a few others’) excitement for deep album cuts like “Sometimes it Snows in April” and rare party anthems like “Days of Wild” was met with shouts from the audience to “sing ‘Adore!’ ‘Adooooooooooore!’” I mean, really? But the truth is, there are two camps of Prince fans—the ones who’ve been down to ride since his debut release, ‘For You,’ in 1979 and have remained loyal through some admittedly rocky and uncertain years (cuz we can’t ever quit him!), and those who pretty much changed the channel shortly after his so-called mid-80s golden era. My wager is that the latter group far outnumbers the former, but maybe, just maybe, not for long. After multiple listens—the first one being as I drifted off to sleep the night before the album’s official release (that was trippy and magical), it is safe to say that Art Official Age is the bridge that will unite these two classes of Prince fans. Thematically, the album follows a singular thread throughout; not since 2001’s The Rainbow Children—a regrettably slept on album—has Prince committed so wholeheartedly to one specific story or idea to tie an album together. With no breaks between tracks, the songs segue—sometimes smoothly, other times abruptly—into one another. Even the album’s artwork, featuring the Prince of now wearing those iconic round shades from back in the day augmented with an additional lens (his third eye, bien sur), positioned stoically before platinumPurple Rain albums, points to this sonic experience that will connect the dots between the past and the present. Actress/writer/activist Anna Deavere Smith teaches the concept of interrupted sentences, describing the natural flow of human conversations as something that is less about solid, linear thoughts followed by solid, linear words, but rather as disjointed, ruptured ideas and musings that eventually lead to a point. In its essence, this is what Art Official Age brings to mind, especially as it deals with the ways in which technology and lives played out on the “digital stage” disconnect us more and more from one another and, more significantly perhaps, from ourselves. The opening track, “Art Official Cage,” is a funk/EDM mash-up featuring a Nicki Minaj-esque rap verse that quickly dissolves into yet another incarnation of Prince’s manipulated voice. With little warning, the song morphs into “Clouds,” by far one of the more “Prince-y” tracks on the album, and featuring British chanteuse Lianne LaHavas. As the song’s story unfolds, we learn through LaHavas’ buttery monologue that “Mr. Nelson” has been in suspended animation for forty-five years; throughout the remainder of the album, LaHavas guides her patient through a series of affirmations. The vibe is akin to Spike Jonez’s filmHer, where a quiet, lonely, unassuming man falls in love with his artificial intelligence companion whose soothing voice and easy conversation provide a strange yet familiar comfort. It is clear that a journey to love in all its forms is at the heart of the album. “The Gold Standard” is old school Prince, but whereas in decades of yore the lyrics may have been more along the lines of “DMSR,” new-age Prince invites us to act like we have some couth and behavior so we don’t end up with wasted crotch shots on Instagram and YouTube. Ever the master of the sensual slow jam, Prince imbues “U Know” with the now-familiar monotone speak/singing employed by his current chart-topping contemporaries, all the while keeping the groove true to the Minneapolis sound (and, hallelujah, without the Autotune). Truth be told, if you can listen to this song without dropping at least one body roll…nevermind. You can’t. “Breakfast Can Wait,” one of the album’s early singles and the toast of winter 2013 with a slick video directed by dancer/choreographer Danielle Curiel, finds itself right at home on Art Official Age as one of its stand-outs. Despite numerous proclamations that “the Internet is dead,” Prince is ever with his finger on the pulse of pop culture. Hence, the seriously delicious “This Could Be Us,” inspired by a meme featuring a still from ‘Purple Rain’ of him and Apollonia intertwined on The Kid’s motorcycle, bearing the caption, “This could be us…but you playin’.” The sublime Andy Allo, whose 2012 sophomore releaseSuperconductor made major waves and was largely produced in collaboration with Prince, brings her lush vocals and guitar mastery to “What It Feels Like” (a sweet extension of her song “When Stars Collide,” wherein she repeats “what it feels like/this is what it feels like” throughout the vamp). One of the most poignant and, perhaps, telling songs on the album is “Way Back Home.” Speaking directly to the loneliness, isolation, and different-ness any one of us has experienced in our lives, “Way Back Home” is almost like a companion to “Moonbeam Levels (Better Place to Die),” one of Prince’s most beloved rarities that paints a similar yet slightly more dissonant picture. The song plays like a reintegration of sorts, beginning with LaHavas explaining that “any person or object whatsoever that requires your attention is something that has veered from its path and pre-ordained destiny of total enlightenment,” as the exaggerated sound of a human heartbeat leads into the lyric. “FunkNRoll” is probably the most energetic track Art Official Age has to offer, with Prince once again bringing the party home and suggesting that, “the only way to last til the break of dawn/is put your phone down, get your party on.” He’s so right. Why are we still trying to snap shots when it’s nothing but strobe lights and sweat? Andy Allo returns for “Time,” the song you turn on when the party’s over, and it’s just you and your soul lover, and it’s time to get serious about what happens next. The album closes with a final interlude featuring Lianne LaHavas and what appear to be Allo’s and LaHavas’ vocals repeating the chorus from “Way Back Home.” The story ends with this gentle meditation. Art Official Age is experimental and quirky, yet enticing. With the perfect blend of old and new, familiar and explorative, it harkens a new era for one of the most prolific, innovative, and imaginative musicians of all time. Art Official Age is available on iTunes, and CD copies can be ordered throughartofficialage.com. Follow Prince on Instagram @Prince for the fun of it. —Rhonda Nicole | |
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Take into account that some of these critics may only give AOA one listen in the interest of meeting a deadline, etc. Some of these tracks take multiple listens to sink in. I remember literally laughing out loud at Housequake and saying to my friend, "What is this shit?" Now how stupid do I feel? "The password is what." | |
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Q Magazine gave AOA a 40 so the overall Metacritic ranking went from a 76 to 72. Who peed in their Cheerios? [Edited 10/3/14 19:29pm] All good things they say never last... | |
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It's hilarious, the same album getting scores of 100, 90, but also 60, 40. I can understand the criticism, but most of the time the critics don't agree on which tracks are the stand-outs and which are the stinkers. I've read some reviews stating Breakfast can wait is the best track, and Way back home is the weakest. Some praise Gold Standard as the best one, some name it a Prince-by-the-numbers funk track. | |
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I don't feel a need to disparage a critic because he didn't like a Prince record, neither do I feel a need to put the critic on a pedestal and act as if a verdict had been handed. So far, AOA has garnered some of the best reviews Prince has received in a mighty long time. He's getting mixed reactions too as is fitting for a guy that's been called a genius for too many years and albums.
Prince has one advantage in the long term. As one of the most prolific musicians ever and with his hoarder-like recording habits, Prince is a musicologist/pop historian's dream. It won't matter in 50 years that this and that supposedly sounded dated at the time. Eventually, everything becomes dated, then it's either forgotten or it becomes history.
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I don't think too many of listened to the entire record more than once or twice. One of them said Janelle was more successful and while I love her album it's not as cleverly sequenced or executed. For me AOA is like a one track cd à la Lovesexy, it's meant to be listened to as a complete album, and it reveals its clever soundscape over multiple listening sessions only the critics who are also fans will consider doing. | |
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http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0...z3FAcw685y"Prodigal Prince marks his rehabilitation with the simultaneous release of two new albums; the bounty is a mixed blessing" aoa 4/5PE 3/5 | |
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http://www.sandiegoreader...ial-ageem/" On deep cut “Way Back Home,” Prince follows his own advice to slow the roll. Set to a haunting piano melody and a thrumming beat, he shares his vulnerabilities and sensitivities, and his hope as an artist searching for peace and the perfect riff." | |
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Critics who deem Way Back Home the weakest need a colonic between the ears, probably like most music listeners. The world's problems like climate change can only be solved through strategic long-term thinking, not expediency. In other words all the govts. need sacking!
If you can add value to someone's life then why not. Especially if it colors their days... | |
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