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Does p really not read music? As Prince allegedly doesn't read music and doesn't really play any horn instruments, how do you think he teaches the parts for the horn lines to his band members? Does he play the lines on a synth or guitar and then ask them (the sax, trombone,trumpet players)to organise the arrangement? Just curious to see what the musicians on here think he might do? | |
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He still knows his chords, scales and notes so yeah, he probably just plays it to them on the keyboard. For the most part though I reckon Prince tells them to learn their parts as heard on the record before rehearsal. Any changes in arrangment or parts will then be explained by Prince at the rehearsal. I got two sides... and they're both friends. | |
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Well... we actually have an org member who would know what Prince has done in many cases. . So, maybe Mr. Moops will give us a little insight. . I would guess that he's not completely incapable of reading music, by the way. He very well might not be able to play immediately what you put in front of him, but I'm guessing he could work it out. But I'm sure he's rarely had any reason to do so. As far as horn parts, I think a lot of that's actually done initially by the studio players themselves, with Prince approving or disapproving or tweaking what they bring to the table. But again, Mr. Moops could really tell us his experiences. | |
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He knows chords, keys, scales and understands how they work in relation to each other. The rehearsal recordings we have from various stages of this career prove this. He's often telling the band members what to play ("play G" when someone's playing something else etc.). So in other words, he knows what the names of the notes, for example, on a piano are. Maybe he just never just took the time to actually learn how to "read" music from paper. Knowing the stuff that Prince seems to know more than makes up for it though, because "reading music" doesn't mean that you'd actually understand how music works. | |
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Maybe he does it the way James Brown used to do:"I want you to go:duh-duh-duhduh-duuuhhh!" | |
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SuperSoulFighter said: Maybe he does it the way James Brown used to do:"I want you to go:duh-duh-duhduh-duuuhhh!" Prince can sing anything. What? | |
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According to previous statements by bandmembers he would either record/play the parts on keys, or sing it, or allow the horns player to compose their own arrangements (they would usually embelish P's original idea anyway). Eric for example said the main melodies on 8 were originally recorded on keys (can't remember which interview, sorry) and obviously the solos were left to him, but on some songs he'd just give the track to Eric and ask him to add whatever horn arrangements he'd like, then P would possibly edit the result to fit his view, the same way he'd sometimes edit some parts of Clare Fischer's orchestra out. What is certain is that under no circumstances P would write down a music sheet for his musicians, it's all by ear or the horn players would write down their parts for memorizing them (I think Greg said he would do that for the other horn players in 02-04, as the line-up wasn't always stable between Maceo, Eric and Candy, so whoever was there would know their parts). A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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prince can likely read music .. even before PR movie .. how could he not .. probably cant play perfect on sight for the first time like someone classically trained, but can certainly figure out what notes are what, memorize them and then play fluidly
however .. what is most likely is that the horn players write most of it .. he may have a simple melody they work off of or actually come up with the whole part themselves
p fans tend to credit prince with writing everything .. which is a joke .. at this point prince barely even writes lyrics that he sings, let alone any of the music
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Trevor this claim isn't backed-up by any fact, it's just you hallucinating out loud. Please don't do that, it's wrong and you know better. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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There is no way in hell Prince can't read music. I'm sure he can if he really needed to. It's just not something generally necessary in the creation and performance of rock music styles. [Edited 12/27/14 14:05pm] | |
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One of the reasons why Prince has hit a brick wall is because he does not know music theory. acting as if not knowing how to read music is "cooler" than learning how to do so. One of most of them had a strong foundation in music theory. over and over again. This is the case for pop musicians who do not know music theory (McCartney, | |
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> I think you're onto something there.
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no he does not. Check old interview. "I don't make the rules. I just play" | |
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Yeah this is a pretty interesting idea However IDK whether musicians with a background in music theory are so much more capable of renewing themselves: people like Björk, Danny Elfman, Ryuichi Sakamoto, Steve Reich, Philip Glass, Jon Hassell, Keith Jarrett, Herbie Hancock, George Duke, Wayne Shorter, Branford Marsalis or Harold Budd (names that come to mind on top of my head) have a musical theory background and have been also continuously re-exploring the same musical territories over the second half of their careers (i.e. past their prime). I may be wrong, though, but that's my impression. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Reading sheet music and understanding music theory are two separate things. Most guitarists don't develop strong music reading skills. It can be done, but sheet music is counter-intuitive for guitar, where there are different positions for the same note. That's why tablature is so popular with guitarists. Reading music is more of a choral, classical or orchestral thing. Not something a self-taught guitar-playing singer/songwriter performing original rock-based material would find much use for. Even a lot of jazz players didn't need it for composition, only for working in big bands. With that said...I doubt he knows a lot of music theory, or would have a lot of use for it even if he did truly apply himself to learning it. He works off of feeling. For a pop/rock guy, Prince has been extremely successful with the skills he does have. I'm not sure any criticism of his methods is truly valid given his level of creative accomplishment. | |
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to read charts and scores. But nobody said anything about reading music. I'm talking about learning the fundamentals of western music, which is what music theory offers. Yes, of course learned how chords are constructed; how modes are utilized; how progressions are created; which scale to use with any particular key/mode, then I'm willing to suggest that his musical play with feeling. This is how my favorite musicians (jazzers and classical composers) progressed you will definitely fall victim to what has befallen Prince. Learn theory, dude. It won't kill you together. If you truly care about your craft, shouldn't you learn EVERYTHING about it? | |
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teresting then, in my opinion. I'm not saying that learning music theory will automatically make one an amazing musician. There is something to be said for imagination, creativity, feeling, and intrepidness (rebelliousness?) that can assist a musician in pushing the boundaries of their genre further. Prince appears to have been blessed with these things, but sadly, did not learn the science of music, and therefore, his imagination, creativity, feeling, and intrepidness have | |
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I call bullshit on the bulk of your post. I can't be assed to go brickwall to brickwall with you, but:
- George Benson DOES NOT read music: http://www.popmatters.com...ge-benson/ "He doesn’t much read music, but he manages to feel his way into nearly every setting presented to him. His singing—which would ultimately bring him more fame and cash than his playing—mirrored his playing: sweet and soulful, natural, maybe more pop than jazz." Back in the day everybody had to read charts to work in big bands. That shit was old-school in the 70's and it's really out of practice in modern pop music. Are you saying if Prince read charts better or knew more about music theory he would have more recent hits than Miley Cyrus and Taylor Swift? Because I don't think anyone in modern pop/rock/r&b reads music well either, so.... I mean Prince isn't even that into it, and yet he's probably as good as everyone else charting in pop and rock these days. - You don't play ANY instrument with the level of skill that Prince does, so come the fuck off of the bullshit. You don't play guitar. You may dabble with it, but you are not even commonly proficient on guitar. If you were, you would know sight reading music for guitarist singer-songwriters performing their own material, is a virtually useless skill. Maybe you play clarinet and sax and fuck around a bit on piano, but definitely you aren't much of a guitarist, because you clearly don't know some of the more basic challenges of learning the instrument. | |
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Prince may not know music theory in any formalized way, in terms of what to call things, how they are named, or how they are classified. But he absolutely has demonstrated his knowledge of how music works (the practice of theory), and it is quite possible to practice something without having to or being able to theorize about it.
That said, I would agree with duccichucka that Prince's musical vocabulary seems to have reached certain limits. One of the reasons why many of us became die hard fans, was that we witnessed the expansion of Prince's vocabulary right along with him. Every new album/project had something different or more complex than the previous. More developed. More sophisticated.
I don't think it's so much that Prince needs to learn music theory, as much as it is that he needs to expose himself to more diverse musical influences. Writers become better writers the more that they read. There was a time (that we know of) when people would bring him things to listen to. The Leeds brothers, the Melvoin & Coleman clan, they introduced Prince to music that he had not paid much attention to prior. I don't know who is around him now. Who is introducing him to new music. "That...magic, the start of something revolutionary-the Minneapolis Sound, we should cherish it and not punish prince for not being able to replicate it."-Dreamshaman32 | |
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Prince can probably read a basic chart sort of half assed, if he needs to, but that it's not his prefered method to communicate ideas. He could finger one note at a time, on very basic sheet music, but if you handed him sheet music for horn players to a random song from Parade, probably couldn't identify it. Doesn't matter. He's worked with horn players, and communicated his ideas, and he knows basic note structure. | |
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Would Prince even need to read music at this point? My impression is that he and whoever musicians he works with are past that. | |
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Don't forget that Prince is working in the POP music genre which was never all that much about musical theory anyway. Pop music has always been about feelings and a rebellious spirit. It makes no sense to compare Prince to Beethoven. You don't need to study classical music in order to write a 3 minute pop song. Neither The Beatles nor The Stones nor Dylan were the best musicians, they're the best songwriters. That's what pop music is all about. Prince doesn't need to study music, he needs something to write about and on the best songs onAOA, he's found it. | |
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Now, if you mean to say that writing a symphony is like writing a novel in that both have a story line that must be developed and that certain rules apply (music theory or grammar, as the case may be), then I'm with you. But thinking that learning more words makes you a better writer is just incorrect. After all, all musicians work with a very limited set of notes (A-G, plus sharps and flats). It's what a person (writer or composer) does with them that makes them middling or magnificent.
[Edited 12/29/14 8:03am] We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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Prince can read music. He took music classes in high school. Did anyone ever consider that "he can't read music" is part of the myth of Prince when he first came out to build on his mystique? They lied about his age and this so people would think he was an uber musical wunderkind that can do everything with no formal training. Yeah, right! Prince is self taught, but over the years, he learned through some formal training. As he says in his latest leak, Don't Let Him Fool Ya! __________________________________________________
2 words falling between the drops and the moans of his condition | |
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Academic music theory is piss poor for discussing the use of space, distortion, different "colours of sound" of electronic instruments from different eras and so on.
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Oh please, no offense but cut the crap with the marketing "myth", the fact that P doesn't read music has been attested by various ex collaborators and wasn't ever even officially stated by P himself or any of his PR people or labels. I'm really tired of the conspiracy theories à la "The Black Album was a marketing ploy from the beginning". Stick to the facts. [Edited 12/29/14 15:01pm] A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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I may have missed something, I'll admit it, but save his neoclassical suite, I didn't really hear anything by Duke that was really new for the last 30 years. Same with Herbie once he got past his electronic trilogy with Laswell. Same with Jarrett, I mean of course his improvisations are mindblowing and maybe with a trained musicians' ear (which I ain't got) you can hear stuff he ain't ever done before in them but for me they all sound like more of the same (which doesn't mean I don't like 'em, I like 'em a lot). Shorter I don't know his whole body of work so I may have missed some stuff. Davis, whom you quoted earlier I don't even know, I mean past the electric era he more or less relied on pop music and newly created synth sounds to evolve, not musical theory. Coltrane died too young IMHO for us to really know what could have happened past the experiments he started to toy with at the end of his life. Once again though I think your analysis may be really insightful so I ain't trying to say you are wrong in the idea that musical theory may have allowed P to do many more things (I guess that's pretty obvious at least with Kamasutra, which sounds like a cheap caricature of outdated classical music and ignores the whole body of work of 20th century contemporary music composers), but in the end I don't know that many musicians/composers who really remained truly innovative past the first one or two phases of their careers, or when they did it was more thanks to followings new trends and/or adopting newly created sounds (Davis, Bowie) than to a new theorical thinking of their music. But I may be wrong, for I myself don't master music theory and there may be things that I don't "hear" or realize. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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I agree a lot with that. When you read/hear what new artists P seems to be exposed thru his interviews, covers or the stuff he links on social medias, it's obvious that he is almost only exposed to American R&B and mainstream American pop and folk music. He obviously knows very little about the electronic music scene of the last 25 years, which has most of its roots in Europe, for example, and just because of that he totally missed the last train because I don't know, even if you won't do that kind of music it seems to me that you can't ignore who people such as Aphex Twin are and what they did if you're to stay up to date. He obviously never heard much world music either. Kamasutra shows his ignorance of contemporary "neoclassical" composers and their work: it's like P had no idea of what had happened after 1920 or so. And I could go on like that, etc., etc. My second fave artist after P is Bill Laswell. When you check out the astounding diversity of his body of work, there you can see a guy who managed to expose himself to virtually every possible kind of music and incorporated those influences in his work (even though for the past decade even he started to repeat himself a lot). I mean when I read young fans here writing that P has done every musical genre I can't help but laughing and thinking how little those youngsters know about music: P's body of work is really limited to the most mainstream types of American popular music. He sure is more diverse than most other musicians but there are so many genres he's never even touched at all. IDK maybe he's just not interested anymore but in the 80's it seems he was open to discover new things, he allowed Eric to expose him to some jazz he wasn't familiar with, W&L obviously exposed him to some pop-rock, André to new wave, Dez to hard rock, somehow he got a lot into Kate Bush and classical music at some point, too, then in the early 90's it seems he started to hear just basically what was on the radio and given how what was on the radio became less diverse and more commercial over the years... I mean I'm very impressed by guys such as the YMO trio for example. Hosono and Takahashi were originally folk/rock musicians, Sakamoto had more of a jazz and classical background, yet in the late 70's and early 80's they managed to be on top of innovations and contributed to the early electronic revolution. After that they all did all kinds of things, including some very retro music in the past few years (Hosono's folk albums, Sakamoto's piano albums) but they never lost touch with what was happening: in the mid-90's they did music that matched the best London electronic musicians of the time, in the 2000's they did glitch music that was as subtle, and technically AND esthetically up-to-date as what the new kids on the electronic scene were doing, and when you listen for example to the YMO shows from the last decade or some of Sakamoto's albums from the last decade as well, you can't help but thinking "damn! those guys are 60 years old and they sound like 30 years old undergound, edgy artists!". Now I'm not one to tell an artist what they should do or not, and unlike many here I'm really happy with P's post WB's music, all of it, but when I first heard stuff like The War or N.E.W.S. I was just so happy to hear P going out of his comfort zone (and brilliantly!), so I can't help wondering how far he could have gone if he'd kept exposing himself to lots of musical genres instead of having no clue of what was going on and taking ultracommercial and radio-friendly Josh Welton for an advisor regarding what he should do to sound like 2014! A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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can play what and how well it can be played. Music, for me at least, was never about who had a bigger schlong. I have been playing the guitar for two decades - sorry, bro, but my guitar heros all read music! And so do I! And I never compared my musicianship to Prince, so I don't know what you're getting at by doing so. I would most definitely compare my grasp of music case, that means music theory. And it applies to the board's namesake. | |
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