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Thread started 04/24/16 6:30am

lwr001

petty, winwood and lynne didnt think prince was good enough to join them for the tribute,

ock hall folks had to demand his inclusion hence the shade prince threw there way and apparently his solo has suppose to be short yet he kept going....doope

TheW00denLeg said:

lwr001 said:

apparently, petty, winwood and lynne didnt think prince was good enough to join them for the tribute,, rock hall folks had to demand his inclusion hence the shade prince threw there way and apparently his solo has suppose to be short yet he kept going....doope

Is there a source for that?

http://www.vox.com/2016/4/23/11489542/prince-covers

Prince was being enshrined, getting in his first year on the ballot. His inductee class included several mainstays of classic rock radio: Bob Seger, Jackson Browne, Traffic, ZZ Top. And, less than three years after he died of a brain tumor, George Harrison was inducted for his solo career.

As part of the banquet celebrating the inductees, always featuring an all-star lineup playing the inductees' greatest hits, Tom Petty and Jeff Lynne were organizing a tribute to their pal, the quiet Beatle.

Before the rest of the band is done, he frees himself from his guitar strap, tosses the Telecaster to a roadie in front of him, and just struts off the stage

The way I've heard it, Petty and Lynne included Steve Winwood as part of the band, but they wouldn't let a game Prince join in the tribute. Like somehow he wasn't good enough to stand with Jeff Lynne, Zeppo Wilbury.

At the last minute, someone at the Rock Hall realized, for the love of God, put Prince in there. They thankfully relented.

I've never understood why they played "While My Guitar Gently Weeps," a song that, after all, wasn't a song from Harrison's solo career, a song featuring not Harrison on the guitar solo but Eric Clapton.

And for the first half of the Rock Hall performance, it's exactly what you would expect or fear: a droning, stoned-out, boring cover.

Then you see someone. Off to the right, in a red … fedora? Cowboy hat? Sombrero? Squint and you can recognize him: tiny Prince, strumming guitar, off to the side, hidden from view.

And then: It's his turn to solo. And almost immediately, he wails, playing one of the best solos I've ever seen.

Dhani Harrison, George's son, playing with the band that night, has an enormous grin on his face, like it's exactly how he'd want his dad to be remembered.

Then something happens. Prince doesn't stop.

Petty and Lynne keep trying to wrap the song up


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Reply #1 posted 04/24/16 6:32am

alphastreet

I don't think prince could have worked how they did either though he still nailed it. He does what he wants with his own team and likes calling his own shots, not others.
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Reply #2 posted 04/24/16 6:34am

lwr001

alphastreet said:

I don't think prince could have worked how they did either though he still nailed it. He does what he wants with his own team and likes calling his own shots, not others.

this is more about the air that they held that they were better musicans

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Reply #3 posted 04/24/16 6:37am

Guitarhero

Prince obviously thought fuck them and did his thing yes

[Edited 4/24/16 6:37am]

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Reply #4 posted 04/24/16 6:41am

lwr001

Guitarhero said:

Prince obviously thought fuck them and did his thing yes

[Edited 4/24/16 6:37am]

hyep,, backstories are always important..i remember when it haqappened that some were appalled at shpwmanship[ and they even made mention at Petty's disapproving face ( as if he matters) now it makes sense why he did what he did and threw the guitar up, pimped walked off like fuck you guys

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Reply #5 posted 04/24/16 6:47am

mightycow

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prince made that song come alive indeed

great solo

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Reply #6 posted 04/24/16 6:52am

jaypotton

And if Prince ever needed credit to diss those guys then it came from Eric Clapton in the mid 80s

He was asked by a journalist

"What's it like to be the best guitarist in the world"

To which Clapton replied

"I don't know, ask Prince"

So stick that in yo ass Petty and Lynne!
'I loved him then, I love him now and will love him eternally. He's with our son now.' Mayte 21st April 2016 = the saddest quote I have ever read! RIP Prince and thanks for everything.
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Reply #7 posted 04/24/16 6:56am

TheW00denLeg

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I don´t know if they really did consider him "not good enough". They didn´t live behind the moon, did they? Maybe they just didn´t like him. Or was one of them part of this ´We are the World´ thing? lol

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Reply #8 posted 04/24/16 7:00am

nursev

Guitarhero said:

Prince obviously thought fuck them and did his thing yes

[Edited 4/24/16 6:37am]

basically.....and he was the whole show cool

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Reply #9 posted 04/24/16 7:02am

NorthC

Or maybe they were afraid he was going to steal the show. In which case, they were right of course.
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Reply #10 posted 04/24/16 7:09am

dJJ

That is a nice story.


He totally outplayed them. He is so cheecky.



I didn't know it was George his son, but I love how he laughed.




Prince showed them. evillol evillol

99% of my posts are ironic. Maybe this post sides with the other 1%.
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Reply #11 posted 04/24/16 7:12am

djThunderfunk

avatar

The past few years, every once in a while, some friend who knows I'm a Prince fan has come across this video and contacted me in shock how great his solo was and how he stole the show.

Always mad me smile...

Not dead, not in prison, still funkin'...
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Reply #12 posted 04/24/16 7:16am

DaveT

avatar

Search "greatest guitar solo" on YouTube and this is usually the top result or near the top. Possibly the best I've ever seen certainly. Its not just what he plays, its how he plays it.

Straight after they showed Purple Rain in the Brooklyn Bowl tribute party last night and before the DJ came on they showed this video. There were some people watching who hadn't seen it before, and I watched their jaws drop. Great moment!

www.filmsfilmsfilms.co.uk - The internet's best movie site!
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Reply #13 posted 04/24/16 7:19am

GirlBrother

avatar

lwr001 said:

Prince was being enshrined, getting in his first year on the ballot. His inductee class included several mainstays of classic rock radio: Bob Seger, Jackson Browne, Traffic, ZZ Top. And, less than three years after he died of a brain tumor, George Harrison was inducted for his solo career.


I love what Billy Gibbons of ZZ Top has said about Prince:

http://www.washingtonpost...guitarist/
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Reply #14 posted 04/24/16 7:22am

BobGeorge909

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That vox article harld seems factual to me. It all reads from that guys opinion. The phrase 'the way I heard it' intimates that what happened was far from clear.

The guy wrote an underdog wins story when Prince, a Titan in the business, is hardly ever an underdog... even re Lynn and petty.
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Reply #15 posted 04/24/16 7:24am

funksterr

lwr001 said:

ock hall folks had to demand his inclusion hence the shade prince threw there way and apparently his solo has suppose to be short yet he kept going....doope

TheW00denLeg said:

Is there a source for that?

http://www.vox.com/2016/4/23/11489542/prince-covers

Prince was being enshrined, getting in his first year on the ballot. His inductee class included several mainstays of classic rock radio: Bob Seger, Jackson Browne, Traffic, ZZ Top. And, less than three years after he died of a brain tumor, George Harrison was inducted for his solo career.

As part of the banquet celebrating the inductees, always featuring an all-star lineup playing the inductees' greatest hits, Tom Petty and Jeff Lynne were organizing a tribute to their pal, the quiet Beatle.

Before the rest of the band is done, he frees himself from his guitar strap, tosses the Telecaster to a roadie in front of him, and just struts off the stage

The way I've heard it, Petty and Lynne included Steve Winwood as part of the band, but they wouldn't let a game Prince join in the tribute. Like somehow he wasn't good enough to stand with Jeff Lynne, Zeppo Wilbury.

At the last minute, someone at the Rock Hall realized, for the love of God, put Prince in there. They thankfully relented.

I've never understood why they played "While My Guitar Gently Weeps," a song that, after all, wasn't a song from Harrison's solo career, a song featuring not Harrison on the guitar solo but Eric Clapton.

And for the first half of the Rock Hall performance, it's exactly what you would expect or fear: a droning, stoned-out, boring cover.

Then you see someone. Off to the right, in a red … fedora? Cowboy hat? Sombrero? Squint and you can recognize him: tiny Prince, strumming guitar, off to the side, hidden from view.

And then: It's his turn to solo. And almost immediately, he wails, playing one of the best solos I've ever seen.

Dhani Harrison, George's son, playing with the band that night, has an enormous grin on his face, like it's exactly how he'd want his dad to be remembered.

Then something happens. Prince doesn't stop.

Petty and Lynne keep trying to wrap the song up


No way this is true at all.

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Reply #16 posted 04/24/16 7:28am

BobGeorge909

avatar

funksterr said:



lwr001 said:


ock hall folks had to demand his inclusion hence the shade prince threw there way and apparently his solo has suppose to be short yet he kept going....doope







TheW00denLeg said:



Is there a source for that?




http://www.vox.com/2016/4/23/11489542/prince-covers



Prince was being enshrined, getting in his first year on the ballot. His inductee class included several mainstays of classic rock radio: Bob Seger, Jackson Browne, Traffic, ZZ Top. And, less than three years after he died of a brain tumor, George Harrison was inducted for his solo career.


As part of the banquet celebrating the inductees, always featuring an all-star lineup playing the inductees' greatest hits, Tom Petty and Jeff Lynne were organizing a tribute to their pal, the quiet Beatle.


Before the rest of the band is done, he frees himself from his guitar strap, tosses the Telecaster to a roadie in front of him, and just struts off the stage


The way I've heard it, Petty and Lynne included Steve Winwood as part of the band, but they wouldn't let a game Prince join in the tribute. Like somehow he wasn't good enough to stand with Jeff Lynne, Zeppo Wilbury.


At the last minute, someone at the Rock Hall realized, for the love of God, put Prince in there. They thankfully relented.


I've never understood why they played "While My Guitar Gently Weeps," a song that, after all, wasn't a song from Harrison's solo career, a song featuring not Harrison on the guitar solo but Eric Clapton.


And for the first half of the Rock Hall performance, it's exactly what you would expect or fear: a droning, stoned-out, boring cover.


Then you see someone. Off to the right, in a red … fedora? Cowboy hat? Sombrero? Squint and you can recognize him: tiny Prince, strumming guitar, off to the side, hidden from view.


And then: It's his turn to solo. And almost immediately, he wails, playing one of the best solos I've ever seen.


Dhani Harrison, George's son, playing with the band that night, has an enormous grin on his face, like it's exactly how he'd want his dad to be remembered.


Then something happens. Prince doesn't stop.


Petty and Lynne keep trying to wrap the song up





No way this is true at all.


Tell me about it...lol.
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Reply #17 posted 04/24/16 7:29am

lwr001

GirlBrother said:

lwr001 said:
Prince was being enshrined, getting in his first year on the ballot. His inductee class included several mainstays of classic rock radio: Bob Seger, Jackson Browne, Traffic, ZZ Top. And, less than three years after he died of a brain tumor, George Harrison was inducted for his solo career.
I love what Billy Gibbons of ZZ Top has said about Prince: http://www.washingtonpost...guitarist/

thanks this quote here : There are a few repeatable examples that were fortunately caught on film or record that will settle the score once and for all

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Reply #18 posted 04/24/16 7:32am

lwr001

funksterr said:

lwr001 said:

ock hall folks had to demand his inclusion hence the shade prince threw there way and apparently his solo has suppose to be short yet he kept going....doope

http://www.vox.com/2016/4/23/11489542/prince-covers

Prince was being enshrined, getting in his first year on the ballot. His inductee class included several mainstays of classic rock radio: Bob Seger, Jackson Browne, Traffic, ZZ Top. And, less than three years after he died of a brain tumor, George Harrison was inducted for his solo career.

As part of the banquet celebrating the inductees, always featuring an all-star lineup playing the inductees' greatest hits, Tom Petty and Jeff Lynne were organizing a tribute to their pal, the quiet Beatle.

Before the rest of the band is done, he frees himself from his guitar strap, tosses the Telecaster to a roadie in front of him, and just struts off the stage

The way I've heard it, Petty and Lynne included Steve Winwood as part of the band, but they wouldn't let a game Prince join in the tribute. Like somehow he wasn't good enough to stand with Jeff Lynne, Zeppo Wilbury.

At the last minute, someone at the Rock Hall realized, for the love of God, put Prince in there. They thankfully relented.

I've never understood why they played "While My Guitar Gently Weeps," a song that, after all, wasn't a song from Harrison's solo career, a song featuring not Harrison on the guitar solo but Eric Clapton.

And for the first half of the Rock Hall performance, it's exactly what you would expect or fear: a droning, stoned-out, boring cover.

Then you see someone. Off to the right, in a red … fedora? Cowboy hat? Sombrero? Squint and you can recognize him: tiny Prince, strumming guitar, off to the side, hidden from view.

And then: It's his turn to solo. And almost immediately, he wails, playing one of the best solos I've ever seen.

Dhani Harrison, George's son, playing with the band that night, has an enormous grin on his face, like it's exactly how he'd want his dad to be remembered.

Then something happens. Prince doesn't stop.

Petty and Lynne keep trying to wrap the song up


No way this is true at all.

whys that

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Reply #19 posted 04/24/16 7:37am

djThunderfunk

avatar

GirlBrother said:

lwr001 said:
Prince was being enshrined, getting in his first year on the ballot. His inductee class included several mainstays of classic rock radio: Bob Seger, Jackson Browne, Traffic, ZZ Top. And, less than three years after he died of a brain tumor, George Harrison was inducted for his solo career.
I love what Billy Gibbons of ZZ Top has said about Prince: http://www.washingtonpost...guitarist/


Billy, that was so touching... First time I've cried since Friday.

Not dead, not in prison, still funkin'...
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Reply #20 posted 04/24/16 7:40am

BobGeorge909

avatar

lwr001 said:



funksterr said:




lwr001 said:


ock hall folks had to demand his inclusion hence the shade prince threw there way and apparently his solo has suppose to be short yet he kept going....doope







http://www.vox.com/2016/4/23/11489542/prince-covers



Prince was being enshrined, getting in his first year on the ballot. His inductee class included several mainstays of classic rock radio: Bob Seger, Jackson Browne, Traffic, ZZ Top. And, less than three years after he died of a brain tumor, George Harrison was inducted for his solo career.


As part of the banquet celebrating the inductees, always featuring an all-star lineup playing the inductees' greatest hits, Tom Petty and Jeff Lynne were organizing a tribute to their pal, the quiet Beatle.


Before the rest of the band is done, he frees himself from his guitar strap, tosses the Telecaster to a roadie in front of him, and just struts off the stage


The way I've heard it, Petty and Lynne included Steve Winwood as part of the band, but they wouldn't let a game Prince join in the tribute. Like somehow he wasn't good enough to stand with Jeff Lynne, Zeppo Wilbury.


At the last minute, someone at the Rock Hall realized, for the love of God, put Prince in there. They thankfully relented.


I've never understood why they played "While My Guitar Gently Weeps," a song that, after all, wasn't a song from Harrison's solo career, a song featuring not Harrison on the guitar solo but Eric Clapton.


And for the first half of the Rock Hall performance, it's exactly what you would expect or fear: a droning, stoned-out, boring cover.


Then you see someone. Off to the right, in a red … fedora? Cowboy hat? Sombrero? Squint and you can recognize him: tiny Prince, strumming guitar, off to the side, hidden from view.


And then: It's his turn to solo. And almost immediately, he wails, playing one of the best solos I've ever seen.


Dhani Harrison, George's son, playing with the band that night, has an enormous grin on his face, like it's exactly how he'd want his dad to be remembered.


Then something happens. Prince doesn't stop.


Petty and Lynne keep trying to wrap the song up





No way this is true at all.





whys that


The guy clearly says they way I heard it, which screams rumor mill and telephone game.
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Reply #21 posted 04/24/16 7:47am

alphastreet

lwr001 said:



alphastreet said:


I don't think prince could have worked how they did either though he still nailed it. He does what he wants with his own team and likes calling his own shots, not others.



this is more about the air that they held that they were better musicans



And white English men lol
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Reply #22 posted 04/24/16 7:48am

lwr001

BobGeorge909 said:

lwr001 said:

whys that

The guy clearly says they way I heard it, which screams rumor mill and telephone game.

whatever, we will agree to disagree

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Reply #23 posted 04/24/16 7:54am

thedance

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Jeff Lynne is my hero and a mastermind, brilliant producer and musician and songwriter, remember he created the brilliant band: Electric Light Orchestra... and he adores Prince.....

I don't believe this story at all.. confused

Prince 4Ever. heart
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Reply #24 posted 04/24/16 7:57am

BobGeorge909

avatar

lwr001 said:



BobGeorge909 said:


lwr001 said:




whys that



The guy clearly says they way I heard it, which screams rumor mill and telephone game.



whatever, we will agree to disagree


This isn't a question...that's your strongest argument.
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Reply #25 posted 04/24/16 8:04am

BobGeorge909

avatar

Dhawk said in

another thread:


There's a new book of interviews w/ TP called Conversations with Tom Petty, and, in it, he says that it was cool to play with Prince at the HOF. He said that he doesn't think he ever would've gotten to perform with Prince if not for that event. He said that he's always admired Prince and that he enjoyed meeting him. He seemed surprised to learn that Prince was a big fan of his. The interviewer then mentioned Prince's guitar solo and Petty responded like this: "Oh man! It blew the whole thing right out there!" All in all, it was pretty cool to read this. Petty is one of the all-time good guys in rock music, and I'm glad he has a favorable view of performing with Prince.



U say that...this says this lwr001?...
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Reply #26 posted 04/24/16 8:05am

lwr001

BobGeorge909 said:

lwr001 said:

whatever, we will agree to disagree

This isn't a question...that's your strongest argument.

not here for trolling or arguing, folks like you made this place toxic in tha past not going for it its a posted article ; nothing less nothing more

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Reply #27 posted 04/24/16 8:12am

BobGeorge909

avatar

lwr001 said:



BobGeorge909 said:


lwr001 said:




whatever, we will agree to disagree



This isn't a question...that's your strongest argument.



not here for trolling or arguing, folks like you made this place toxic in tha past not going for it its a posted article ; nothing less nothing more


And I don't believe it and Im showing evidence as to why.
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Reply #28 posted 04/24/16 8:13am

lwr001

BobGeorge909 said:

lwr001 said:

not here for trolling or arguing, folks like you made this place toxic in tha past not going for it its a posted article ; nothing less nothing more

And I don't believe it and Im showing evidence as to why.

Fair enough ,,have a wonderful, blessed Sunday

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Reply #29 posted 04/24/16 8:15am

lwr001

BobGeorge909 said:

lwr001 said:

not here for trolling or arguing, folks like you made this place toxic in tha past not going for it its a posted article ; nothing less nothing more

And I don't believe it and Im showing evidence as to why.

For the record, my sister worked Joel Gallen, the director, as his PM , she says its true

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