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Reply #30 posted 08/12/15 2:29pm

Aerogram

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KingSausage said:

Look, I really liked AOA and all. But you have to be living in such a Prince bubble to think it was the best album of 2014. That's just crazy.

Sure but it's not the craziest thing said on this thread by any measure. The thread itself is a vehicle for Violet's idée fixe, which is itself a vehicle for her need to condescend.

She should just put it in her signature that she hates AOA, sounds important to her.

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Reply #31 posted 08/12/15 2:54pm

V10LETBLUES

.
[Edited 8/12/15 15:22pm]
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Reply #32 posted 08/12/15 4:08pm

laurarichardso
n

tricky99 said:



V10LETBLUES said:



Prince is a legend. Prince is known for his talent not only as a musician but his artistry as a composer and the artistry of crafting sonic recordings as a producer. In the begging of his career, he was treated like any new artist. Reviewed critically by the top music critics at the time. And back then, before everyone and anyone was able to post an opinion, and music was a lucrative industry, and newspapers and magazines paid for the top talent, top music reviewers were know by name. Sure there were a lot of bad ones too, but it was all more condensed so the bad ones were easily picked out by other critics and readers alike.

Fast forward today where sensationalism, lack of editorial moral grounds and the amounts of literal holes all pointing at you and shooting at you in the "everyone has one" when it comes to opinion. Some of the holes less A-holey than others, and some more serious and clinical to dissecting media, enough to call them anal, instead of A holes in the care they take in informing readers.

Which brings me to current music reviews. Yes we still have good ones, but we have far more of the ones who have no business reviewing music. And especially when it comes to reviewing Prince's current output, new music from a "legend", it seem like editors at music desks, look around the office to see who is a Prince fan, the gossip writer, anyone who likes them qualified or not and asks them to review the new Prince Album. Not, not the young guy, reviewing the latest music, but the girl or old dude who consider themselves knowledgeable about Prince and Shalamar and Peaches and Herb.

Take a look at some of these on Metacritic, these are REAL! The scores are based off of these crackhead reviews.

Observer Monthly Music- MPLSound
MPLSound could be a thank-you note to those Parade-era purists patient enough to have stuck around.


Do you think this person even listened to the record, much less Parade?


Billboard


Mplsound is sometimes stronger still [than "Lotusflow3r"], with the party whoop of '(There'll Never B) Another Like Me,' the delicious dirty mind of 'Chocolate Box' and 'Ol' Skool Company,' which will have you partying like its 1985.




Holy cow. And let's remember that the Metacritic average for worst Prince album ever made MPLSound, is higher than LotusFlow3r. An Album the gossip lady who is a music critic because she loves Peaches and Herb could not get into because it's not funky-fresh like No Parking On The Dance Floor by The Dazz Band.

This brings me back to his current failure. Art Official Age, an album that no one but a hack with absolutely no critical criteria could possibly recommend but as torture. So badly put together that anyone would hang their head in shame in recommending it. Breakfast Can Wait.

Take this one for example. While the Reviewer only gave it a grade of 60, there is this whopper.


The New York Times-AOA


While the production details of each track are full of lessons in musicianly ingenuity



Enough said. And what the fuck is “musicianly” . This here is both the why AND the result of today's sad state of the music industry.








[Edited 8/11/15 14:29pm]




For some reason you seem to think your opinion is the only valid one. You basically just insulted all your fellow prince fans who got any enjoyment from AOA. You seem to be unable to grasp the reality that different people like different things. I certainly don't see AOA (or any Prince album as a failure). That is completely over the top and is not objectively true.



---- Exactly some people liked AOA it stayed on the r and b chart for a few months with no radio air play or promotion somebody liked that CD and even the Lotus Flower stayed on the album chart for over a year with again little promotion and no radio play. It is bit much to imply the crtics and some fans are all wrong.
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Reply #33 posted 08/12/15 4:21pm

pureTsexy

I have heard more positive reactions to AOA, than negative... from both Prince fans, and the casual listener.
I personally love AOA, and think it's his most enjoyable album since The Gold Experience.
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Reply #34 posted 08/12/15 7:48pm

CharismaDove

Few artists get the respect from the media that Prince recieves, which is cool. And yeah, I agree with the statement about his "diminutive" height. What's up with articles always referencing it? Prince has been short for 57 years, ain't nothin' new. What does it got to do with the article lol

Maybe eye do, just not like eye did before pimp2
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Reply #35 posted 08/13/15 10:41am

V10LETBLUES

So today once again Prince was named in another top artists list. The 100 best writters of ...ling Stone. At #18 he is listed ahead of almost everyone in pop music since the start of whatever their history is defined as.


That's the Prince I consider him to be. I am not berating anyone for liking his newer lesser music. Enjoy! I have said that from the start. Enjoy what you like. I only mentioned AOA among others such as 20Ten and MPLSound as one of the examples becasue of the sillyness employed by some in today's media when mentioning a legend such as Prince.
Yes he deserves incredible respect, and a condesending patronizing attitude such as praising him in one sentence, then in the next sentence calling him a purple midget is not respect. Sending out an unqualified person to/or demand a fluff patronizing review is not respect. WIth his status he does deserve a hell of a lot respect as an artist.


My opinion matters no more than anyones, I have mine and you all have yours. Mine has just happens to allign with what the aggreagte of greatness is defined as.
I am highly critical. Let me repeat. I am highly critical. I love and listen to music all the time.

Again, I am highly critical when it comes to music and art in general. That's why I became a Prince fan.

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Reply #36 posted 08/13/15 12:16pm

databank

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More than once I've read supposedly professional critics writing nonsense about a Prince album, or totally missing the point of said album. As a Prince fans I often read approximations or reviews so superficial that they make no sense at all to me, because I have a much greater knowledge of P's work than the writer.

The problem I think is that critics are supposed to comment on music by all kinds of artists, some they know well and some they know only vaguely if at all. To some extent I believe to be able to understand a work of art and have something relevent to say about it you must have some true insights about either the artist's approach and past career AND/OR about how that work fits in the context of its contemporary scene. Either that or being able to tell a very personal relationship/story that ties the writer and the record that's being reviewed.

Critics should also be able to explain why they believe a work of art works or not. The capacity to develop their analysis is crucial.

I know I'm often tempted to review albums or movies on my blog and then I think "OK, what do I have to say that's really unique or relevant about this album/movie, that goes beyond description and my personal opinion and will give the reader an insightful analysis of the work I'm talking about?", and most of the time I give-up on the idea because unless I find a truly original angle, I realize there's no point in wasting the readers' time.

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #37 posted 08/13/15 12:38pm

V10LETBLUES

databank said:

More than once I've read supposedly professional critics writing nonsense about a Prince album, or totally missing the point of said album. As a Prince fans I often read approximations or reviews so superficial that they make no sense at all to me, because I have a much greater knowledge of P's work than the writer.

The problem I think is that critics are supposed to comment on music by all kinds of artists, some they know well and some they know only vaguely if at all. To some extent I believe to be able to understand a work of art and have something relevent to say about it you must have some true insights about either the artist's approach and past career AND/OR about how that work fits in the context of its contemporary scene. Either that or being able to tell a very personal relationship/story that ties the writer and the record that's being reviewed.

Critics should also be able to explain why they believe a work of art works or not. The capacity to develop their analysis is crucial.

I know I'm often tempted to review albums or movies on my blog and then I think "OK, what do I have to say that's really unique or relevant about this album/movie, that goes beyond description and my personal opinion and will give the reader an insightful analysis of the work I'm talking about?", and most of the time I give-up on the idea because unless I find a truly original angle, I realize there's no point in wasting the readers' time.



I get what you're saying, but critics can and should rise above pure opinion, and present from the point of veiw as someone who knows and cares about the arts or whatever they are writing about. Someone saying the direction in Superman III is on the level of Kubrick's best is an opinion as good as anyone elses, but can that opinion be put to scrutny? I think it definitly can.

It's cool that people like what they like and opinion is one thing, but then there is also a deeper appeciation of things that some people care about. Details and such that the average person may not care about, it's all good. People are not wrong in liking something, but there is something wrong in any profession when you are a hack and do not care enough about your audience.

[Edited 8/13/15 12:39pm]

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Reply #38 posted 08/13/15 2:33pm

Aerogram

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V10LETBLUES said:

So today once again Prince was named in another top artists list. The 100 best writters of ...ling Stone. At #18 he is listed ahead of almost everyone in pop music since the start of whatever their history is defined as.


That's the Prince I consider him to be. I am not berating anyone for liking his newer lesser music. Enjoy! I have said that from the start. Enjoy what you like. I only mentioned AOA among others such as 20Ten and MPLSound as one of the examples becasue of the sillyness employed by some in today's media when mentioning a legend such as Prince.
Yes he deserves incredible respect, and a condesending patronizing attitude such as praising him in one sentence, then in the next sentence calling him a purple midget is not respect. Sending out an unqualified person to/or demand a fluff patronizing review is not respect. WIth his status he does deserve a hell of a lot respect as an artist.


My opinion matters no more than anyones, I have mine and you all have yours. Mine has just happens to allign with what the aggreagte of greatness is defined as.
I am highly critical. Let me repeat. I am highly critical. I love and listen to music all the time.

Again, I am highly critical when it comes to music and art in general. That's why I became a Prince fan.

Great post, Violet, it clarifies your position quite well. It's just that your description of anyone who happens to like AOA on a different level or through a different perspective than your own greatly contradicts your condemnation of any form of patronizing.

There are so many ways to approach artistry. For me, AOA was a meta-experience. It was like listening to Prince through a prism. You may not like this prism and maybe you don't find it current enough, but I didn't listen to AOA with the mindset that Prince was trying to be the latest of the latest. I listened to it as an exploration of modern styles that suit him to various degrees, sometimes it was greatness (Clouds, Way Back Home, Funkn Roll), sometimes it was maybe not the absolute best he could have done (Gold Standard, Art Official Cage) but I got the message immediately that on that record, Prince was talking through a prism, I guess using elements he happened to enjoy in modern productions.

I guess we'll forever disagree but it's nice to see some effort to rise above the usual tit for that.

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Reply #39 posted 08/13/15 3:11pm

V10LETBLUES

Aerogram said:

V10LETBLUES said:

So today once again Prince was named in another top artists list. The 100 best writters of ...ling Stone. At #18 he is listed ahead of almost everyone in pop music since the start of whatever their history is defined as.


That's the Prince I consider him to be. I am not berating anyone for liking his newer lesser music. Enjoy! I have said that from the start. Enjoy what you like. I only mentioned AOA among others such as 20Ten and MPLSound as one of the examples becasue of the sillyness employed by some in today's media when mentioning a legend such as Prince.
Yes he deserves incredible respect, and a condesending patronizing attitude such as praising him in one sentence, then in the next sentence calling him a purple midget is not respect. Sending out an unqualified person to/or demand a fluff patronizing review is not respect. WIth his status he does deserve a hell of a lot respect as an artist.


My opinion matters no more than anyones, I have mine and you all have yours. Mine has just happens to allign with what the aggreagte of greatness is defined as.
I am highly critical. Let me repeat. I am highly critical. I love and listen to music all the time.

Again, I am highly critical when it comes to music and art in general. That's why I became a Prince fan.

Great post, Violet, it clarifies your position quite well. It's just that your description of anyone who happens to like AOA on a different level or through a different perspective than your own greatly contradicts your condemnation of any form of patronizing.

There are so many ways to approach artistry. For me, AOA was a meta-experience. It was like listening to Prince through a prism. You may not like this prism and maybe you don't find it current enough, but I didn't listen to AOA with the mindset that Prince was trying to be the latest of the latest. I listened to it as an exploration of modern styles that suit him to various degrees, sometimes it was greatness (Clouds, Way Back Home, Funkn Roll), sometimes it was maybe not the absolute best he could have done (Gold Standard, Art Official Cage) but I got the message immediately that on that record, Prince was talking through a prism, I guess using elements he happened to enjoy in modern productions.

I guess we'll forever disagree but it's nice to see some effort to rise above the usual tit for that.

Cool.

And yes we will not agree, yet I feel strongly you will side with me on this in the years to come depending on how deep into music you become.

And I also feel you can fill a room with music producers today and not one will call whatever the hell the AOA sound is as "modern", but the word "bad" or something much worse will definitly be thrown around.

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Reply #40 posted 08/13/15 3:50pm

Aerogram

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V10LETBLUES said:

Aerogram said:

Great post, Violet, it clarifies your position quite well. It's just that your description of anyone who happens to like AOA on a different level or through a different perspective than your own greatly contradicts your condemnation of any form of patronizing.

There are so many ways to approach artistry. For me, AOA was a meta-experience. It was like listening to Prince through a prism. You may not like this prism and maybe you don't find it current enough, but I didn't listen to AOA with the mindset that Prince was trying to be the latest of the latest. I listened to it as an exploration of modern styles that suit him to various degrees, sometimes it was greatness (Clouds, Way Back Home, Funkn Roll), sometimes it was maybe not the absolute best he could have done (Gold Standard, Art Official Cage) but I got the message immediately that on that record, Prince was talking through a prism, I guess using elements he happened to enjoy in modern productions.

I guess we'll forever disagree but it's nice to see some effort to rise above the usual tit for that.

Cool.

And yes we will not agree, yet I feel strongly you will side with me on this in the years to come depending on how deep into music you become.

And I also feel you can fill a room with music producers today and not one will call whatever the hell the AOA sound is as "modern", but the word "bad" or something much worse will definitly be thrown around.

The thing is: modern producers are only modern for a while until they become yesterday's wizards. That's why I'm not particularly interested in finding out what the producer du jour thinks about Prince's body of work and its recent additions.

I'm a big film buff and I remember what some critics said about movies like Fanny and Alexander. Reading the reviews at the time, you'd think Bergman totally went crowd-pleasing, many purists call this movie a sentimental rehash of many Bergman movies before but today you barely can fin d anyone who thinks that movie is not classic.

Anyhoo, we'll see in a few years who is right. Does this mean you're putting the topic to rest?? smile

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Reply #41 posted 08/13/15 4:23pm

V10LETBLUES

Aerogram said:



V10LETBLUES said:




Aerogram said:




Great post, Violet, it clarifies your position quite well. It's just that your description of anyone who happens to like AOA on a different level or through a different perspective than your own greatly contradicts your condemnation of any form of patronizing.



There are so many ways to approach artistry. For me, AOA was a meta-experience. It was like listening to Prince through a prism. You may not like this prism and maybe you don't find it current enough, but I didn't listen to AOA with the mindset that Prince was trying to be the latest of the latest. I listened to it as an exploration of modern styles that suit him to various degrees, sometimes it was greatness (Clouds, Way Back Home, Funkn Roll), sometimes it was maybe not the absolute best he could have done (Gold Standard, Art Official Cage) but I got the message immediately that on that record, Prince was talking through a prism, I guess using elements he happened to enjoy in modern productions.



I guess we'll forever disagree but it's nice to see some effort to rise above the usual tit for that.







Cool.

And yes we will not agree, yet I feel strongly you will side with me on this in the years to come depending on how deep into music you become.

And I also feel you can fill a room with music producers today and not one will call whatever the hell the AOA sound is as "modern", but the word "bad" or something much worse will definitly be thrown around.




The thing is: modern producers are only modern for a while until they become yesterday's wizards. That's why I'm not particularly interested in finding out what the producer du jour thinks about Prince's body of work and its recent additions.



I'm a big film buff and I remember what some critics said about movies like Fanny and Alexander. Reading the reviews at the time, you'd think Bergman totally went crowd-pleasing, many purists call this movie a sentimental rehash of many Bergman movies before but today you barely can fin d anyone who thinks that movie is not classic.



Anyhoo, we'll see in a few years who is right. Does this mean you're putting the topic to rest?? smile



It's always about the individual. Max Martin today or Teo Macero yesterday. That's in music, film, or anything else. There is good and great. And there is bad and even atrocious. If it's strictly "trendy" then that's not modern or anything else other than pandering. AOA foes not sound "modern" or contemporary, just plain cringe worthy. Old fashioned and clichéd and amateurish. That's why I kept saying I thought Prince was going deaf.
[Edited 8/13/15 16:29pm]
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Reply #42 posted 08/13/15 5:58pm

Se7en

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Jon Bream is probably one of the best-known reviewers of Prince's music, and he himself admits to not always giving Prince a good review. I respect that from a reviewer.

.

In the past, I always noticed that USA Today would just gush over everything Prince did (Rolling Stone is almost as bad).

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Reply #43 posted 08/13/15 8:59pm

V10LETBLUES

Se7en said:

Jon Bream is probably one of the best-known reviewers of Prince's music, and he himself admits to not always giving Prince a good review. I respect that from a reviewer.


.


In the past, I always noticed that USA Today would just gush over everything Prince did (Rolling Stone is almost as bad).



I think Jon and Prince respect each other plenty. And he doesn't need to kiss ass to be invited to his presence.
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Reply #44 posted 08/13/15 9:28pm

V10LETBLUES

...and it seemed like USA Today wasn't shy to even ask for money in return for a good review. They have always been the most suspect reviews before the Internet age
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Reply #45 posted 08/14/15 8:41pm

Aerogram

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V10LETBLUES said:

Aerogram said:

The thing is: modern producers are only modern for a while until they become yesterday's wizards. That's why I'm not particularly interested in finding out what the producer du jour thinks about Prince's body of work and its recent additions.

I'm a big film buff and I remember what some critics said about movies like Fanny and Alexander. Reading the reviews at the time, you'd think Bergman totally went crowd-pleasing, many purists call this movie a sentimental rehash of many Bergman movies before but today you barely can fin d anyone who thinks that movie is not classic.

Anyhoo, we'll see in a few years who is right. Does this mean you're putting the topic to rest?? smile

It's always about the individual. Max Martin today or Teo Macero yesterday. That's in music, film, or anything else. There is good and great. And there is bad and even atrocious. If it's strictly "trendy" then that's not modern or anything else other than pandering. AOA foes not sound "modern" or contemporary, just plain cringe worthy. Old fashioned and clichéd and amateurish. That's why I kept saying I thought Prince was going deaf. [Edited 8/13/15 16:29pm]

We've gone over the "deaf" thing. It's very possible Prince has some degree of hearing loss, but that's the case for most band who have been touring for years, especially before it was the norm to wear some protection on stage.

I understand you liked his vocals on Hardrocklover, so if he's singing in a way you don't like because he's going deaf, how does he record Hardrocklover?

Most musicians his age have some hearing loss, but he had Josh along so it's not a strong angle on this thing cause that would mean Josh is going deaf too.

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Reply #46 posted 08/14/15 8:54pm

V10LETBLUES

^
You're right, both hardrocklover and Stare do not have that same annoying thin tinny sound. And the tone and timbre of the sounds and instrumentation are not in the same high end that chases kids and dogs away. Both sound much warmer.

Maybe AOA WAS intentionally intended to sound artificial, amateurish and sonically repugnant as an artistic statement? I don't know? It is a curious thing to note though.
[Edited 8/14/15 21:10pm]
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Reply #47 posted 08/15/15 1:29pm

Se7en

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Here's my attempt at a fake review of any given album, and after a while they all read exactly the same.

.

"The diminutive purple rocker Prince releases his new album this week.

.

His latest effort, 'Example', is a true return to form for the tiny Minneapolis genius. Jam-packed with funk grooves, effortless guitar solos, and dance tracks, you'll be partying like it's 1999 all over again.

.

After years of fighting his record label – and a 7-year stint where he notoriously changed his name to an unpronouncable prince – he now enjoys the freedom to record and release music as he wishes.

.

Backed by his current band, 3rdEyeGirl, the 57-year old Artist Once Again Known As Prince has never looked and sounded better."

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Reply #48 posted 08/15/15 1:38pm

Se7en

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Aerogram said:

V10LETBLUES said:

Cool.

And yes we will not agree, yet I feel strongly you will side with me on this in the years to come depending on how deep into music you become.

And I also feel you can fill a room with music producers today and not one will call whatever the hell the AOA sound is as "modern", but the word "bad" or something much worse will definitly be thrown around.

The thing is: modern producers are only modern for a while until they become yesterday's wizards. That's why I'm not particularly interested in finding out what the producer du jour thinks about Prince's body of work and its recent additions.

I'm a big film buff and I remember what some critics said about movies like Fanny and Alexander. Reading the reviews at the time, you'd think Bergman totally went crowd-pleasing, many purists call this movie a sentimental rehash of many Bergman movies before but today you barely can fin d anyone who thinks that movie is not classic.

Anyhoo, we'll see in a few years who is right. Does this mean you're putting the topic to rest?? smile

Great post. Take Timbaland as an example. He worked wonders for Missy Elliott, Justin Timberlake and to a lesser degree Nelly Furtado. They all had hits with Timbaland as producer. When he tried to work the same "formula" for Chris Cornell - it was potentially a career-killing move for Cornell -- epic failure.

.

The same "by-the-numbers" production doesn't always work . . . and now 10+ years later, the music – while still great – does sound dated.

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Reply #49 posted 08/15/15 8:32pm

2020

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V10LETBLUES said:

^
You're right, both hardrocklover and Stare do not have that same annoying thin tinny sound. And the tone and timbre of the sounds and instrumentation are not in the same high end that chases kids and dogs away. Both sound much warmer.

Maybe AOA WAS intentionally intended to sound artificial, amateurish and sonically repugnant as an artistic statement? I don't know? It is a curious thing to note though.
[Edited 8/14/15 21:10pm]

Ya think? Smh
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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Reply #50 posted 08/16/15 2:47am

Aerogram

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V10LETBLUES said:

^ You're right, both hardrocklover and Stare do not have that same annoying thin tinny sound. And the tone and timbre of the sounds and instrumentation are not in the same high end that chases kids and dogs away. Both sound much warmer. Maybe AOA WAS intentionally intended to sound artificial, amateurish and sonically repugnant as an artistic statement? I don't know? It is a curious thing to note though. [Edited 8/14/15 21:10pm]

"Sonically repugnant" no less -- lol. Encyclopedia Dramatica.

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Reply #51 posted 08/17/15 7:34am

awesomeav

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2020 said:


[Edited 8/12/15 7:26am]


Cue ... Jean Luc Picard & I'm out ,,,
All of this and more is 4 u. With <3, sincerity and deepest care, my life with u eye share ~Prince~
Life is time time is space and space is what Eye need ~Awesome A.V~
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Reply #52 posted 08/18/15 8:43am

Genesia

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Sweetie, please look up the word "patronize" before you use it again. And do not, under any circumstances, say "patronize to." Thank you.

We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
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Reply #53 posted 08/26/15 8:00am

V10LETBLUES

Well so far the new tracks being released sound like an invigerated Prince. The amateurish sound is all but gone. He is sounding like the legend Prince that deserves to be on all of "best" lists.

I went in to his new version of This Could Be Us with a lot hesitaion as I find it hard to revisit anything on AOA but damn if it didn't sound fantastic! Gone was the amateurish thin tinny repulsive sound of it's original.

If these tracks are indicative of what's on it, this could be a truly great Prince album. I wonder what those pandering and clueless critics will say when something actually good is released.

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