Awesome list, my friend! I'm not too crazy about "Annie Christian" personally but Prince was definitely flexing his "experimental" muscles on that track. | |
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If I had to make space for All That Dreams, I'd kick out Play in the Sunshine yesterday. There is no way it's experimental in the vein of CB, AMD or Batdance. | |
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Great List . I would add the 14min version of Computer Blue in place of Play in the Sunshine, or along with it. some recordings from the Flesh sessions are definately experimental Up From Below I love Positivity is another that stretches in different directions/sounds . I love the various versions of Around the World in a Day, love the background story the feel the freedom | |
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* Cool list. Like others, I could add this or that, but your concept or discussion is what's most important. As such, this is a damn good list to begin a discussion about what makes Prince special, and it is quite timely for the ongoing AOA debates. For instance, when I hear "AoC," "U Know," and "FunknRoll," I hear quirky, experimental Prince, but others hear out of ideas sell-out Prince. So, the question arises when is experimentation visionary and when is it selling out by chasing trends? I love "Batdance," but it's really just Prince experimenting with sampling, which, by then, was not new. And while I do think that "Bob George" is pure genius because of the psychological insight Prince brings that is years before "My Mind Playing Tricks on Me," along with the excellent musical layering, it wasn't the first time anyone had embraced psychological realism with rap; see "The Message." Nor was it the first time sampling had been fused with musical dexterity; see "Rock Box" and others. So, what makes his process with "Bob George" and "Batdance" artistic wizardry whereas many see what he's doing on AOA as dated and stale? So, yeah, your list/discussion adds to, if not contextualizes, the ongoing AOA discussions. | |
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Sorry for the delayed response, my friend. You present some really good points, especially on fans' perception of his latest work. I think most fans have such high expectations for Prince that it can sometimes warp our opinions on his recent efforts. Albums like Musicology, 3121, Lotusflow3r, Art Official Age and PlectrumElectrum are better than most of today's artists yet they get overshadowed by his '80s output in people's eyes. | |
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Wow, you definitely know your stuff! The 14-minute "Computer Blue" is a classic; you could count the Hallway Speech as experimental for sure. | |
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I'm really enjoying these 'great eight' topics and it's really refreshing to see the replies not descend into petty arguments. I have to agree with the 'Annie Christian' promoters; I think it is one of his greatest experimental tracks, but I can't disagree with the op's list apart from that. | |
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I'm a little surprised that "Rave Un2 the Joy Fantastic" hasn't come up (unless I missed it somewhere). Easily one of my favorite experimental pieces from the 1980s, particularly the original version with all of the great synths that were cut from the '99 release.
Love your 8 choices, and I'm also one of the "Annie Christian" fans. | |
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I think Condition of the Heart is way more "experimental" than Around the World in a Day. I mean...an Impressionistic intro that clocks in at almost three minutes? Who else was doing anything like that? [Edited 1/9/15 13:53pm] We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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I really appreciate your comment. One of the best things about discussing music (especially Prince) is getting other people's perspective on why he/she feels a song or an album is great. That being said, I'll give "Annie Christian" another listen since there have been quite a few singing its praises. | |
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"Batdance" is one of those songs that took time to grow on me, believe it or not, but I hope my explanation above did the song justice because it is undoubtedly a great track. It's been a while since I've listened to "In This Bed I Scream" so I'll dust off my copy of Emancipation and give it another listen. | |
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No Condition of the heart? | |
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