Lovesexy was the end of his imperial phase....he's done some great stuff post '88 but he's not achieved the level of consistant greatness that characterised his 80s work...
...but "2nd rate Prince" is better than a lot of artist's best! | |
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rusty1 said: soul alive is 100% on the money As usual, Soulalive nails it. "Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry | |
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After Lovesexy much of his music was still amazing, but he lost a level of playfulness, innovation, and sheer disregard for genre. Lovesexy and the slbums before it can be classified only as Prince. After that, he had many more songs that neatly fit into existing genre categories. Still fantastic music, but not on the same level. But let's not lose perspective. His 1980-1988 peak is virtually unrivaled. Nobody can fuck with that streak! 1989 to present is like the cherry on top. The only other mainstream artists whose total catalogs compete with Prince are Bowie and Dylan. "Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry | |
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You're pretty good at "nailing it", yerself, Sausage. | |
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SuperSoulFighter said: You're pretty good at "nailing it", yerself, Sausage. That's what she said? "Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry | |
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lol you made me laugh that is actually good I think so too, I think after Lovesexy the vision that helped define the 1978-1988 period was shaken that 'Find me a style of my own and I'm hi' of Purple Music wasn't there anymore For many different reasons, His world was too changed | |
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. I'd say I fall more in the "1982 to 1988" camp with regards to what I consider his most fertile, amazing, inspired period. "Sign 'O' The Times" is still my favorite, though, partially because of the music, and partially because it was the album that "converted" me into a Purple Believer. . Just popping through the discs in "The Work 2.0" that cover those years, you can hear that he was firing on all cylinders. And, to be honest, he was still in a more collaborative mindset, with Wendy and Lisa as his fellow musical explorers. . I loved "Lovesexy", I really enjoyed "Batman" (I guess being a comic book geek helped), but then every album since that one has been "oh, I like 1 or 2 songs", and then after a while the others go unplayed. And to me, everything from "Musicology" on has been a snooze-fest. | |
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Truth
| |
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*****
And years later, after we hear all the urnrel stuff from that period and can look back at what was happening, it just drives me crazy | |
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Paisley Park Studios is the fault. and kept on recording between New York, L.A. and maybe Paris. to have some low-end. all bathing in a shitty shitty sound that has aged too much. "Lovesexy", and "Positivity" for the most part.
P.S. : And then he wrote Slave on his face, and reinvented himself entirely. [Edited 2/11/15 15:50pm] 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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Now, when I listen to Batman or Graffiti Bridge, I really enjoy them but back at the time of release it definitely felt like something had gone wrong. | |
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hes not better or worse ..just different since then | |
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1980-1988. Prince will be remembered for the work he done in that timespan. One of THE best runs in popular music, second only to The Beatles. [Edited 2/11/15 17:14pm] I got two sides... and they're both friends. | |
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I got two sides... and they're both friends. | |
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I imagine that if there was a retirement home exclusively devoted to Prince fans (ex or not), they would have a discussion like this on Lovesexy every month.
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Aerogram said: I imagine that if there was a retirement home exclusively devoted to Prince fans (ex or not), they would have a discussion like this on Lovesexy every month.
I would be up for that. "Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry | |
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Meanwhile, Prince will still be touring and releasing music.... | |
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but in truth he's just sampling his own works, he is his own influence. It clearly shows in AOA, he's covering "Creep", and everyone goes "Aaahhh".
[Edited 2/12/15 3:40am] 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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And you'd still be there with your nose pressed up against the window whilst we're playing NPG Bingo and eating meals on wheels served by Tony M. | |
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I strongly disagree. Nothing on Lovesexy sounds like anything else recorded before or after either by Prince or anyone else. Lovesexy is that rare thing - a completely original work of art. The wooh is on the one! | |
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[Edited 2/12/15 7:34am] | |
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The only drastic change musically was after Emancipation/Crystal Ball, when he switched to a much more mellow/blues/jazz/horns period with Vault, Rave, Rainbow, News and Musicology. "Never let nasty stalkers disrespect you. They start shit, you finish it. Go down to their level, that's the only way they'll understand. You have to handle things yourself." | |
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Holy Crap! Bonatoc really laid down some much needed truth and science in this thread.
I'll be damned if the org still has a bit of intelligent life in it yet. | |
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Prince albums prior to Lovesexy: if there were 10 tracks...8 were the BOMB, 2 were so-so. . 10 track album after Lovesexy: 1 great track, 2 ok tracks, 7 garbage tracks. Make it so, Number One... | |
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Hmmm, Good Question I can agree with but Dale Bozzio and Three O'Clock were established acts before they were signed to Paisley Park. If anything they are two acts on Paisley Park who should be looked at as a positive for the label since they were the only ones at the time I think who weren't protege acts produced by Prince. Mavis Staples and George Clinton also. | |
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Nonsense. Rainbow Children Exodus C&D Gold AoA ......................and a host of other projects are just as good if not better. FOOLS multiply when WISE Men & Women are silent. | |
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Once again I disagree with the sentiment of this thread. I finally have figured out what the reason is. Prince, unlike other musicians to me, is very very personal and generous with his music. I truly get the impression that he pours his life into his music and shares it with the world. The reason I am saying this is because I appreciate and like many other musical artists but I have never gotten the impression that they are as involved emotionally as Prince is. I mean you know whats going on his life from a broad stroke perspective by closely listening to his music. When he's in love his music reflects that. When is angry so his music. And when he's searching for life's meaning he music comes out very reflective. The point is for me I have enjoyed Prince's journey. What everyone points out is the obvious. He climaxed at Lovesexy for very personal reasons and the music built up to a cresendo of sorts. He came on the scene as a precocious talent. Became a very rude boy with a dirty mind and started a lot of controversy. He partied like it was 1999 and wanted to find the purple rain. He celebrated with with a long vacation by going around the world in a day and having a parade. I enjoyed each chapter of his life and he expressed it musically and allowed the world into his musical world. But after the parade he became very introspective. So did his music. He experimented with Sign of the Times and put out a very wide assortment of songs on that album. He responded to the backlash of the rumors he wasn't funky with the black album. But of course he settled down and went on a spiritual journey that culminated with lovesexy. Yes I love Lovesexy but what I loved most is that it found Prince finding himself and finding peace by coming to terms and making sense of his lust and love. Of course do I love the funkiness and creativity of Lovesexy as well? Of course. But by that time I had been given so much by Prince's music I wasn't sure what to expect next. I had gone to his concerts. Played out his cassettes and vinyl and cds thousands of times. In other words I had had so much fun with his music by then I was like how does one top having a religious epiphany that ends with the plea to "hold onto your soul, we got a long way to go!"? So when I heard about his drop in sales on the charts and finacial trouble with the lovesexy tour I kinda felt bad. Also there was talk about his loss of relevance on the music scene at large. That he had lost it, the magical touch. Furthermore the talk about his wanting to put out more music than the record company WB would allow and his wanting more say about his career was coming out. I honestly felt bad for the guy although I have never known him personally. So I listened to his music as I have always done. Out came Batman which I know was a needed success for his financial stabilty. Yeah it had gems on it but I was glad to see him reach #1. Then came GB which found him at the crossroads. Chase the charts or continue down the spirtitual path. Hence it was a mish mash of this and that. I could go on and on with each album but you all here know the story as well as I do. Diamonds and Pearls, a true commercial attempt to capture the large audience again. But then came the biggest struggle of them all. Control. For a guy who as a child went from house to house and cried in a phone booth trying to go home and his dad telling him no these were tough issues. So out came Symbol and all the fighting with his contract. Figthing for his very life as he saw it. For control of his masters. For control of his out put. In the end he was no longer a struggling artist that needed WB. And the music reflected all of that. In the ensuing albums there was struggle, anger, hostililty, love and lost love and demons all over the place. What I am trying to get at is that yes I liked Lovesexy for what he did musically. But I feel that it was because it found him personally inspired and in euphoria. But but to say he went down musically in my eyes is unfair. It's just that he is as flawed as all of us here. His musical output may not have been as good but it's merely because he was not as happy and inspired as he once was. He went through a dark era. I don't think it has much to with his production equipment or production style. So with each album that came out I could see and almost feel what was going on. With emanicipation-Love. With crystal ball-look what I got in my vault. Rave-I am not sure what I want out of life. There was that years of experimental music with NEWS and the music club cds. But then came Musicology a return to form that reminded me of his glory years. And I wasn't surprised by his huge concert year in 2004. He was happy again and had nothing to prove. And in the last decade he has relaxed and released a variety of music ranging in all sorts of styles. I get the impression he no longer needs charts. And contrary to what many people here think I do not feel that he is chasing money. He is comfortable once again in his place in the world. He tours all over the world and you can just tell he is in a good mood. He has nothing to prove to anyone in the music or entertainment world. The reason he gets a standing ovation for not even performing is because all people who are smart enough know that he has given more to the musical world than other musical act out there for so many years and is still doing it today. He pours his heart into his music and his performances and people know that. It doesn't matter whether it charts well now. He is beyond that. He has captured the hearts and minds of many people because he is a true talent that cannot and wont be denied. He gets respect! And that is rare these days. In the end I think the answer to your question is hard to answer. I would say no. No artist is the same with every album. You grow and mature and get more experienced. Prince's albums are ususally very different. He had an epiphany personally around the late 80's and it was reflected in Lovesexy. But musically he is capalble of doing what ever he wants or desires. He is that good and that talented. Yes some albums I like more and some I like less. But the one thing I have always enjoyed is him sharing his music that is so personal with him. [Edited 2/12/15 10:37am] [Edited 2/12/15 10:54am] | |
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Well, one thing for sure is that Skipper put up a fight. he worked hard to stay afloat. Since he's the musical prodigy we all know, he got out of it OK, and my guess is, he always will.
Good thing for us, all of his fiascos were flamboyant. "Poor Goo", "The Exodus Has Begun", "Shhh" (the song that maybe bears the greatest number of brilliant live versions), plus it was fun to be on his side, the 100 million bucks Poor Goo, with "everybody tryin' to break his heart".
I wouldn't trade "'What's My Name", or the Mashed Potatoes Girl segue for anything in the world. This is wha t the situation has offered us, and it's funny, interesting, witty, sometimes sheer genius. grab this acoustic, sing your heart, fuck your schmaltzy decorum, get down to the bone. If "Love is God, God is Love, Girls and Boys love God above" means something to you, how can you be so closed, selfish, egotistic and not embrace the world and collaborate with your fellow musician ? because I want all the world to know that the stuff is there, but no one can touch it but me. He can't stand contradiction (controversy?) no more. the apple worm also squiggles in this Small Club cry : "Who's the fool saying 'will'? ". How could you turn from someone utterly generous into a preacher who has this precise agenda on how we should view our lives? In the end, my guess is that it's just paranoia. 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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I was gonna say that. "Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry | |
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I wholeheartedly agree with this. Just repalce 3121 with Musicology "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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