He had no control, he couldn't wait no longer, he just HAD to release it.
It's time had come.
If you don't know what I'm talkin' 'bout, don't even try.
You'll never understand . | |
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funkaholic1972 said:
Exactly. He probably doesn't give a shit the albums doesn't sell. He received his upfront cash and he can blame Josh (whom he appointed the 'real star' of this album) for bad sales if he needs/ wants to. Nothing lost for Prince! Interesting. I seem to recall back in 96 I think, Prince talking to Bryant Gumble about his Emancipation album he said back then he'd already made his money. I assume he's been getting pre paid. For some time now. | |
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I don't think that waiting awhile longer would have made a difference in the sales.Prince is a veteran artist.He's not gonna sell alot of records anymore,no matter what he releases or when he releases it. | |
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I like some of your ideas | |
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I would wager that the number of people that have HNR on their hard drive is around the same number of people that have AOA. But you could pay to download AOA so more sales were recorded. Tidal may seem like a good idea, but its not if your fanbase is on the wrong side of 40 and still very much a buy-it-own-it collective. Its just asking for the torrents to serve up what the artist isnt serving. All Prince and Jay Z have done with this venture is increase Prince's torrent activity for a couple of weeks. | |
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I think the release of the physical album was botched, it felt like an after thought, regardless of whether it was or not. All the press was focused on it being a Tidal exclusive, so likely most people who may have been interested mentally checked out at that point, then seeing it appear in drips and drabs on a non-standard release date in record stores was not going to get people on board.
On Twitter people were posting themselves with the cd and saying "it's here, this town has it in this shop" and people replying "I tried this shop they don't have it until Friday" etc - it was fun for the hardcore but messy as fuck for the mildly interested and that killed its sales.
Then the cover looks identical to the previous album, so that if I was browsing through HMV or Target and saw it out of the corner of my eye I'd unconsciously assume it was AOA and that I already had it on my selves. It makes no sense commercially to have that cover - it's cute for the hardcore and in the knows, or for a remix album like Rave un2/in2, but doesn't do enough to differentiate it from the previous product.
Mixed reviews and a lack of marketing/record company muscle behind it also majorly affected it.
Could have been Prince's greatest album ever, but with all of the above it would have had a hard time making much of a splash.
On the flip side, I have a friend who is a hardcore fan and he actually skipped the physical CD because he's happy with the Prince content on Tidal and will remain a subscriber, so it may have worked from that point of view. | |
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I wonder if the release of a physical CD alienates Tidal / Jay Z at all? Did they think they were going to get HNR exclusively or did they know all along? | |
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It's the horrible music and amature clone beats that killed sales 1000 hugz should have been the lead single with no other singles That would have guaranteed big sales. As is ... No body digs the old guy tries techno and fails sound anymore .. Too much of it on this record drove away the rnb fanbase and the lyrics suck so all u have left is josh beats ... Josh is not timbaland or dre or pharell .. He is a nobody with little originality to bring | |
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i think Prince should have never released HNR [Edited 9/22/15 12:00pm] | |
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