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What was your first Prince bootleg and what made you buy it? My first Prince bootlegs were Welcome 2 the Beautiful Experience (audio from the TV event) and Now's the Time (a stellar live rehearsal for SOTT tour). At the time, I had no idea about the extent of Prince's unreleased studio and taped live shows. I used to do all my music shopping through Best Buy and music clubs like BMG and Columbia House. But I was staying with a friend for a few days in Madison, WI to get over a bad breakup. I got bored one day and stopped by an indie record shop. It was a goldmine of unreleased Prince material. I only had enough money for two sets. This was before I knew any other Prince fans or had connections. Also before I knew where to look for shit on the Internet (for context, this was pre-Napster). When I got home, I did some searching on my trusty Altavista (?) search engine and got myself copies of The Jewel Box and The Jewel Box II. It was all over. Note: Please abide by bootleg discussion rules. Thanks! "Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry | |
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Lovesexy live, Dortmund on 2CD, [Edited 10/20/14 3:39am] Prince 4Ever. | |
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on vinyl I started in April 1989, with Camille's Crystal Ball Live Vienna at U4
then of course there was Small Club and the Black Album
[Edited 10/20/14 3:56am] Vanglorious... this is protected by the red, the black, and the green. With a key... sissy! | |
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Charade, Fall 1991, because I was a Prince fan and I already had all the official albums. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Prince - Stagetronic - Rotterdam Holland 1992 was my first bootleg, I bought it around 1993-94 Welcome 2 The Dawn | |
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My 1st boot was a cd called A Better Place 2 Die that I stumbled upon in this indie record shop in downtown Omaha. Up until that point I had no clue what bootlegs were or how they existed. I just knew that every time I entered a record store I would immediately check the Prince section, but this time I walk in & find none of the normal (official releases) and a plethora of things I had never heard of. What I also wasn't prepared 4 was the insane mark up on unreleased material (26$ per single disc) which 4 a high school freshman (in 93) was quite a bit of work 2 acquire, but damn those records changed my life. After that I was there every week 2 check out the new selections or just absorb the material while I saved up money. Jewel Box, Yellow, Platinum, chocolate box, Neon, New Power Soul (alternate version of Exodus are all still part of my collection & were purchased there. Side note...I also got 2 grab an interesting little disc by a group called"Y Kant Tori Read" which made me quite appealing 2 the alt chics of the day. | |
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Charade on tape and sex machine on vinyl.
Can i ask anybody been ripped off with any boot? I once got another charade tape and it was just some random shit of the radio [Edited 10/20/14 5:50am] | |
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After lots of tapes, my first bootleg on CD was Posessed. | |
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I think it was these two within a week or two of each other - Big Tall Wall (awful quality from what I remember) collection of out takes, and 'The Black Album & More' - which was pretty good quality and had a batch of top notch out takes along with the album. A very good set that did me well till 1994. . Soon after I bought the Chocolate Box 3LP set, the New Power radio show thing from 1990 on LP, a bunch of live stuff, I remember a round tin called ____ quake. I forget if it was just Housequake, but it was something-quake and I think the tin was a very dark green colour. I just begged, stole and borrowed as much as I could and found every record fair I could get to every week end travelling by bus, coach, train and then eventually trading live tapes etc. I was literally hooked from the first time I saw a bootleg on a CD rack! | |
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In 1986 I knew the guy at the local wrekka store, as I'd order back copies of The Time, Vanity and pre-Pruple Rain Prince albums & he was interested. These albums weren't stocked in small town UK at the time. Anyway, this guy gave me a cassette of 'Charade', the alternative version of Parade. Tracks like 'Others Here With Us', 'Old Friends...' & 'My Dreams' were on there.
I never knew this stuff ever got out of the studio, so was wowed by it. Especially as there were quite personal songs on there. I even like the tape hiss and not being able to hear it in perfect quality. I still like the hiss on my original version of Expert Lover (aka Crystal Ball).
There was a network of people who used to trade bootlegs. You'd send photocopied lists of what you had and copy cassettes and post them. It was a nice way to trade as no money was exchanged, but you had to get some rarities to trade with. The internet's better, but it was fun.
BTW I got a copy of the Black Album because it was reviewed in the press. On cancellation, my brother wrote to a journalist who had written a review, with a blank tape and SAE. He copied it and sent it to us, I never thought that would work. [Edited 10/20/14 6:01am] | |
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The Black Album. Cindy Crawford mentioned her song and I was curious. What? | |
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1988 or 1989 was given The Black Album on cassette from my cousin who taped it from the album that somebody she knew had gotten somehow. It was terrible quality sound, but we still jammed to it all the time back then. I had to get it because of the mystery surrounding it. | |
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In 1989/90... I was around 13... Had been a Prince fan since I took notice of him via my mom and sister being big Purple Rain fans. It rubbed off on me... Got a bootleg trading list from Linda Everett (likely connection from Controversy fanzine or Rolling Stone magazine ads)... 1st bootleg was a cassette of SOTT outtakes from her. 1st vinyl was Club U4 Vienna (from Wynnco enterprises mail order). | |
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I started buying bootlegs in 1990 on record fairs. I spent a LOT of money for bootlegs in the 90ies. But I don't remember my first one. I was more in interested in outtake collections than live bootlegs, except for soundboard recordings. One of my first bootlegs was that fake black album bootleg, which was recorded by another band and had that "I own the black album" sticker. | |
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September/October 1988 I was at the flea market. Some guy was selling bootleg live recordings on cassettes, mostly rock and roll stuff 90min tdk tapes, no tracklistings, Just a name and date on generic covers Obviously he had nothing of interest. I was like you got any Prince ? He was like "yeah i got The Black Album, its some unreleased shit" I was only 15 years old, but i knew exactly what the black album was and how it wasnt release I was hesitant to pay 7 dollars for a cheap $1.50 TDK cassette tape
It was like having the coolest thing ever
[Edited 10/20/14 7:00am] I will take my place, In the great below | |
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The Black Album (The Hype) It's Tight, But I Think I Could Fit U In! | |
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In 1987, my best friend's dad was a cop and must have had some kind of connection becuase my friend always seemed to have all this unreleased Prince stuff. One day in early 1988 he laid a copy of The Black Album on cassette on me. Needless to say, I was quite pleased! I'm just saying... | |
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haha I remember in Musikexpress/Sounds there was this ad "Da wird der Frosch zum Prinz - Endlich im Handel, das legendäre Black Album" or something like that... the add didn't say anything about being from a cover band.. a cousin of mine called them and they still didn't say anything about a cover album... it was still pretty obvious to be fake, so we did not order it in the end (at that time before teh original BA bootlegs became available we had the recording of the radio show on WDR from Ruth Rockenschaub anyway) [Edited 10/20/14 7:03am] Vanglorious... this is protected by the red, the black, and the green. With a key... sissy! | |
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Live: Small Club or Lovesexy 88' Detroit Halloween shows. Can't remember which one was first. -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Still it's nice to know, when our bodies wear out, we can get another -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- | |
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The greatest live performer of our times was is and always will be Prince.
Remember there is only one destination and that place is U All of it. Everything. Is U. | |
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I live in Los Angeles. A friend and I were standing in line for tickets to the Lovesexy show that was coming up in November 1988. Got to talking to the guy in line behind us. He asked if we heard the Black Album yet? And offered to make me a copy on cassette. Sometime in early 1990, I found a record store in Redondo Beach near my work that was supposed to have lots of import cd singles from various artists that I followed. Went in there and they had about a dozen different bootleg prince CDs mixed in with the official stuff. I bought a cd boot of the black album and one other that I can't remember exactly which one. I was clueless. I thought that anything on CD was going to be "perfect cd quality". The black album was in very good sound quality, the other cd, not so much. That began my quest to search every record shop that I could find. Found a lot of stuff on Melrose. | |
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My vinyl contact at my flea market would put official Prince vinyl stuff aside for me as he knew I was collecting Prince official stuff I did not have in my official collection. One weekend I went and he showed me some official stuff he held for me, I picked what I wanted at that time. Then he showed me this bootleg "The White Album" cd and told me that it was a bootleg and if I wanted it I said sure! and all I had to pay was $5.00. Ohh purple joy oh purple bliss oh purple rapture! REAL MUSIC by REAL MUSICIANS - Prince "I kind of wish there was a reason for Prince to make the site crash more" ~~ Ben |
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I went to a record store in Springfield, Illinois to buy Batman in 1989 and got to chatting with one of the guys working there about Prince. I mentioned that I had every album except The Black Album and he told me he knew someone who had it - and that he could get a dub for me. I went back in a week and he handed me a cassette. The sound quality was ass - but I was over the moon, anyway. We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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I didn't buy my first bootleg.
In 1987 I got a cassette tape from a friend of a friend that supposedly worked with Prince. The tape was two full sides of Purple Rain rehersals. [Edited 10/20/14 7:44am] "So strange that no one stayed at the end of the Parade..." - Wendy & Lisa's "Song About" on their 1987 self-titled album.
RIAA 'nuff said. | |
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My first bootleg was the Black Album in 1988. A guy at a local record store made me a cassette copy for $20. TRUE BLUE | |
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I love how 90% of your answers are the Black Album. Maybe this is why Prince put that "Don't buy the Black Album" message in things -- he knew it was a gateway drug to the magical world of Prince bootlegs! "Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry | |
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Live: Small Club
It was my first time visit in Utrecht to a recordstore. They had all kind of goodies. I found a 12" that I hadn't seen before, not in my small hometown anyway. The big guy behind the counter said something like.."you like Prince huh?" And he showed me that bootleg. "You won't be sorry if you buy it!"
So I did...and I wasn't sorry.
I was hooked. "Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence." - Carl Sagan | |
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I found Crucial and the White Album at a great little store called Penny Lane on Queen St here in Toronto. I'm guessing it was early 92, but I'm a bit foggy on that. | |
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My first bootleg was 'From 1999 till now' Why? Because it was the first bootleg available and I collected everything! . | |
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The Black Album. I'd never heard of "boots" until the Fall of 1987. It was on after that. FOOLS multiply when WISE Men & Women are silent. | |
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