independent and unofficial
Prince fan community
Welcome! Sign up or enter username and password to remember me
Forum jump
Forums > Prince: Music and More > New interview with Susan Rogers regarding the Vault
« Previous topic  Next topic »
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
Author

Tweet     Share

Message
Thread started 04/25/16 2:58am

KoolEaze

avatar

New interview with Susan Rogers regarding the Vault

http://www.dailymail.co.u...eased.html

-

-

Working for him in 1983 was "my dream come true," she said.

His capacity for work was prolific. They could be in the studio for 24 to 48 hours at a time, even 96 hours on one memorable occasion.

Prince did not use music notation or write music formally. Instead, he would work through his ideas by recording.

"If he wasn't taking care of conducting business... or if he wasn't dating or seeing someone socially, which would be less often than you might think, for the most part, Prince had an instrument in his hands and he was playing music," she said.

On tour, he would sound-check for hours, perform, then play a secret all-night after-party or go into a studio or a mobile truck and record all night.

"Four hours of sleep in those days was a full night's sleep to him." She silences any suggestion that Prince ever used recreational drugs.

- Make you laugh -

"Prince was philosophically, morally and physiologically opposed to recreational drug use," she said. He coped through any bout of illness by taking medicine and never pausing to rest or to stop work.

If he was taking pain medication as reports suggest, Rogers said it would have been only so he could continue to work. "That may have covered symptoms of just how ill he actually was."

She remembered him as compassionate and warm, and while he worked quickly and efficiently, he could "really make you laugh."

Rogers recalls a time when the crew was talking about someone being "an asshole," when Prince walked in.

"And Prince said let's get something straight, there's only one asshole around here and it's me!"

-

- I hope someone listens to her and Alan Leeds and people like Lisa and Wendy, Jimmy Jam and the original NPG...Michael Bland, Morris Hayes or Sonny Thompson. Don´t get me wrong folks but in my opinion it would be a shame not to let them have a say in what is going to happen with what is in the Vault. I wouldn´t want to see the Vault in certain other people´s hands in the near future.

I hope Prince made plans for the future use of his archived material and chose the caretakers wisely. Regardless of how his relationship with Susan Rogers and Alan Leeds was in the last couple of years, I think they definitely ought to be involved in any future projects.

As far as I´m concerned, I am still so devastated that I don´t even think about the Vault and his legacy that much but if anyone is capable of preserving those old archive contents and releasing them with style, class and dignity and a profound understanding and respect, it is those people I mentioned above.

" I´d rather be a stank ass hoe because I´m not stupid. Oh my goodness! I got more drugs! I´m always funny dude...I´m hilarious! Are we gonna smoke?"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1 posted 04/25/16 3:05am

McD

avatar

Let's not give it to anyone 'too' creative. The engineers can finish it off, not some fancy dan producer.

What about Michael Koppelman? He was the engineer for Prince's 2nd great period. Bring him back ASAP I say.

It's funny that we get all these barrel-scraping albums from other artists who have passed, with dubious credentials on whether the artist was fully aware of the finished material. Here we have the opposite problem.

We could all be a hundred years gone before the 'Thunder: Deluxe Edition' comes out featuring all 28 version of the track.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #2 posted 04/25/16 3:16am

KoolEaze

avatar

McD said:

Let's not give it to anyone 'too' creative. The engineers can finish it off, not some fancy dan producer.

What about Michael Koppelman? He was the engineer for Prince's 2nd great period. Bring him back ASAP I say.

It's funny that we get all these barrel-scraping albums from other artists who have passed, with dubious credentials on whether the artist was fully aware of the finished material. Here we have the opposite problem.

We could all be a hundred years gone before the 'Thunder: Deluxe Edition' comes out featuring all 28 version of the track.

Exactly.

I think the future of his archived material depends immensely on who is going to take care of his estate, and whether he has made plans for it, which I hope he did.

His legacy is rock solid and can´t be jeopardized but the future of the vault material and how his legacy can be solidified for generations to come depends a lot on how it is going to be managed. I would not want to see his whole body of work tarnished because of petty disputes , publishing rights, money etc. etc.

Prince is too important for that, and as much as I don´t care that much about the Vault while I´m grieving, I wouldn´t want to see it sold cheaply or mismanaged or even destroyed.

-

Think of Franz Kafka, one of the most brilliant writers of the 20th century. He wanted all his material to be destroyed and wrote so in his will. And he wanted his best friend to be in charge of destroying everything he wrote except for the few released books that were already out there. But his best friend Max Brodt ignored Kafka´s will and that´s the reason why the world is able to appreciate Kafka´s art.

It´s a double-edged sword, really, but from what I remember Prince definitely wanted his archivee material to be preserved for future generations. Thinking of it, in hindsight it looks like he was aware that he might die soon because unlike in the late 90s where he talked about releasing vault material he no longer seemed to be interested later and said it would be released after his passing.

" I´d rather be a stank ass hoe because I´m not stupid. Oh my goodness! I got more drugs! I´m always funny dude...I´m hilarious! Are we gonna smoke?"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #3 posted 04/25/16 4:38am

databank

avatar

I believe the material should be left untouched. It doesn't have any sense to me to have people, whoever, working on the tracks. There's a lot of material that's ready for release anyway and whatever is in more demo-like state should be made available as such for the hardcore fans if not for the masses.

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #4 posted 04/25/16 4:43am

KoolEaze

avatar

databank said:

I believe the material should be left untouched. It doesn't have any sense to me to have people, whoever, working on the tracks. There's a lot of material that's ready for release anyway and whatever is in more demo-like state should be made available as such for the hardcore fans if not for the masses.

Agree 100%. There are many rehearsals and rawer, unpolished versions of songs that I love listening to. No need to tamper with what´s already recorded and archived, even if it´s just instrumentals or basic stuff or demos, or even rehearsals.

When I mentioned the people I mentioned above , I meant that if anyone should be involved, it should be them. And I didn´t necessarily mean musically, but also in terms of archiving, releasing, commenting and documenting. Alan Leeds is the perfect person for liner notes, and so is Susan Rogers.

But....if anybody is to work on them tracks and add anything to them, I´d love to see the people mentioned above and not some random people or people who weren´t around when those songs were made.

" I´d rather be a stank ass hoe because I´m not stupid. Oh my goodness! I got more drugs! I´m always funny dude...I´m hilarious! Are we gonna smoke?"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #5 posted 04/25/16 5:26am

databank

avatar

KoolEaze said:

databank said:

I believe the material should be left untouched. It doesn't have any sense to me to have people, whoever, working on the tracks. There's a lot of material that's ready for release anyway and whatever is in more demo-like state should be made available as such for the hardcore fans if not for the masses.

Agree 100%. There are many rehearsals and rawer, unpolished versions of songs that I love listening to. No need to tamper with what´s already recorded and archived, even if it´s just instrumentals or basic stuff or demos, or even rehearsals.

When I mentioned the people I mentioned above , I meant that if anyone should be involved, it should be them. And I didn´t necessarily mean musically, but also in terms of archiving, releasing, commenting and documenting. Alan Leeds is the perfect person for liner notes, and so is Susan Rogers.

But....if anybody is to work on them tracks and add anything to them, I´d love to see the people mentioned above and not some random people or people who weren´t around when those songs were made.

...until 1986 and 1992 respectively. They could of course do research and interview people but for most of P's career they simply weren't around. Now they have love and respect for the material, this I know, so at least they wouldn't have Akon sing a duet with Prince on a remix of Moonbeam Levels.

I just hope Prince's later catalogue isn't ignored or treated with less care than the WB years work. + while we already have been exposed to a large quantity of WB era material thx to bootlegs, what remains in the vault since 1996 is virtually unknown to us. I can't think of how many gems are to be discovered nod

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #6 posted 04/25/16 5:54am

leadline

avatar

If music from the vault is released, it needs to released AS IS. If there are unfinished, untouched up songs, we don't need anyone who is not Prince putting touches on it, or adding things that they feel Prince would have approved of. The whole notion of that is ridiculous to me and would taint the historical and personal value of that music. We can't let others make assumptions as to what Prince might have wanted any unfinished or demo like song to sound like. I think any fan would be absolutely fine with anything from the vault being released in the form Prince left it.

[Edited 4/25/16 5:55am]

"You always get the dream that you deserve, from what you value the most" -Prince 2013
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #7 posted 04/25/16 6:02am

gollygirl

avatar

leadline said:

If music from the vault is released, it needs to released AS IS. If there are unfinished, untouched up songs, we don't need anyone who is not Prince putting touches on it, or adding things that they feel Prince would have approved of. The whole notion of that is ridiculous to me and would taint the historical and personal value of that music. We can't let others make assumptions as to what Prince might have wanted any unfinished or demo like song to sound like. I think any fan would be absolutely fine with anything from the vault being released in the form Prince left it.

[Edited 4/25/16 5:55am]

I would want it as it is, authentic - even if not polished or unfinished, it would actually mean more to me with it being no so perfect.

Thank you Prince for every note you left behind 💜
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #8 posted 04/25/16 6:10am

BanishedBrian

leadline said:

If music from the vault is released, it needs to released AS IS. If there are unfinished, untouched up songs, we don't need anyone who is not Prince putting touches on it, or adding things that they feel Prince would have approved of. The whole notion of that is ridiculous to me and would taint the historical and personal value of that music. We can't let others make assumptions as to what Prince might have wanted any unfinished or demo like song to sound like. I think any fan would be absolutely fine with anything from the vault being released in the form Prince left it.

[Edited 4/25/16 5:55am]

I agree with that, except that I think it's fine if additional Kirky J remixes are made. Prince would have wanted that.

No Candy 4 Me
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #9 posted 04/25/16 6:17am

kapo74

I read on Dutch news site nu.nl that Prince did not have his estate in order at all. Too many different juridical advisors over the past few years and he fired the ones who didn't agree with him.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #10 posted 04/25/16 7:47am

leadline

avatar

kapo74 said:

I read on Dutch news site nu.nl that Prince did not have his estate in order at all. Too many different juridical advisors over the past few years and he fired the ones who didn't agree with him.

His estate will be a mess for quite some time unfortunately imo

"You always get the dream that you deserve, from what you value the most" -Prince 2013
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #11 posted 04/25/16 7:48am

paulludvig

databank said:

I believe the material should be left untouched. It doesn't have any sense to me to have people, whoever, working on the tracks. There's a lot of material that's ready for release anyway and whatever is in more demo-like state should be made available as such for the hardcore fans if not for the masses.

Agreed!

The wooh is on the one!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #12 posted 04/25/16 7:50am

paulludvig

KoolEaze said:

databank said:

I believe the material should be left untouched. It doesn't have any sense to me to have people, whoever, working on the tracks. There's a lot of material that's ready for release anyway and whatever is in more demo-like state should be made available as such for the hardcore fans if not for the masses.

Agree 100%. There are many rehearsals and rawer, unpolished versions of songs that I love listening to. No need to tamper with what´s already recorded and archived, even if it´s just instrumentals or basic stuff or demos, or even rehearsals.

When I mentioned the people I mentioned above , I meant that if anyone should be involved, it should be them. And I didn´t necessarily mean musically, but also in terms of archiving, releasing, commenting and documenting. Alan Leeds is the perfect person for liner notes, and so is Susan Rogers.

But....if anybody is to work on them tracks and add anything to them, I´d love to see the people mentioned above and not some random people or people who weren´t around when those songs were made.

No, it should be a musical historian. Leeds and Rogers should be two of many sources. I don't want just their perspectives.

The wooh is on the one!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #13 posted 04/25/16 7:53am

paulludvig

databank said:

KoolEaze said:

Agree 100%. There are many rehearsals and rawer, unpolished versions of songs that I love listening to. No need to tamper with what´s already recorded and archived, even if it´s just instrumentals or basic stuff or demos, or even rehearsals.

When I mentioned the people I mentioned above , I meant that if anyone should be involved, it should be them. And I didn´t necessarily mean musically, but also in terms of archiving, releasing, commenting and documenting. Alan Leeds is the perfect person for liner notes, and so is Susan Rogers.

But....if anybody is to work on them tracks and add anything to them, I´d love to see the people mentioned above and not some random people or people who weren´t around when those songs were made.

...until 1986 and 1992 respectively. They could of course do research and interview people but for most of P's career they simply weren't around. Now they have love and respect for the material, this I know, so at least they wouldn't have Akon sing a duet with Prince on a remix of Moonbeam Levels.

I just hope Prince's later catalogue isn't ignored or treated with less care than the WB years work. + while we already have been exposed to a large quantity of WB era material thx to bootlegs, what remains in the vault since 1996 is virtually unknown to us. I can't think of how many gems are to be discovered nod

Agreed! This is really unexplored territory. Could be lots to discover. Don't think the crew from the 80's would be interested in exploring this part of Prince's creativity because it wouldn't promote their own careers.

The wooh is on the one!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #14 posted 04/25/16 8:38am

databank

avatar

paulludvig said:

databank said:

...until 1986 and 1992 respectively. They could of course do research and interview people but for most of P's career they simply weren't around. Now they have love and respect for the material, this I know, so at least they wouldn't have Akon sing a duet with Prince on a remix of Moonbeam Levels.

I just hope Prince's later catalogue isn't ignored or treated with less care than the WB years work. + while we already have been exposed to a large quantity of WB era material thx to bootlegs, what remains in the vault since 1996 is virtually unknown to us. I can't think of how many gems are to be discovered nod

Agreed! This is really unexplored territory. Could be lots to discover. Don't think the crew from the 80's would be interested in exploring this part of Prince's creativity because it wouldn't promote their own careers.

I don't think they'd think of careers - both have had great ones and are near retirement age now, + they seem to be very honest, decent people. More like they'd mostly be interested in what they know, and probably also sharing the common opinion that what came later was less interesting - Alan Leeds at least was pretty clear about his opinion in that regard.

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #15 posted 04/25/16 8:50am

KoolEaze

avatar

As far as the post-Revolution and post-Lovesexy years are concerned, I´d love to see more involvement from Sonny Thompson, Morris Hayes and Michael Bland.

Sonny´s influence and honesty with regards to Prince and his music can´t be stressed enough, he´s been there since the very early years, and Morris Hayes is someone I have a very high opinion of as a person and as a bandmember, and Michael Bland is from Minnesota, just like Sonny, and all three know his early to mid 90s, even his 00s music very well and are the link between the decades, know the material, its history, and they all are more or less familiar with the Paisley Park camp.

-

-

And of course the ones I mentioned previously, such as Alan Leeds, Susan Rogers, Wendy and Lisa, etc. etc.

Add Kirk Johnson somewhere, he´s been through the thick and the thin with Prince and probably wouldn´t allow to see Prince´s legacy tarnished or sold cheaply.

.

[Edited 4/25/16 9:01am]

" I´d rather be a stank ass hoe because I´m not stupid. Oh my goodness! I got more drugs! I´m always funny dude...I´m hilarious! Are we gonna smoke?"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #16 posted 04/25/16 9:22am

paulludvig

databank said:

paulludvig said:

Agreed! This is really unexplored territory. Could be lots to discover. Don't think the crew from the 80's would be interested in exploring this part of Prince's creativity because it wouldn't promote their own careers.

I don't think they'd think of careers - both have had great ones and are near retirement age now, + they seem to be very honest, decent people. More like they'd mostly be interested in what they know, and probably also sharing the common opinion that what came later was less interesting - Alan Leeds at least was pretty clear about his opinion in that regard.

Maybe not their career, but their legacy. All of them have used every opportunity to talk about how much they influenced Prince. Give them he keys to the vault and they will have more opportunity to do so. Their contributions should be acknowledged, but I would prefer someone more objective to gather information from several sources. W&L, Susan Rogers and the Leeds brothers perspectives on Prince's career are already well known.

The wooh is on the one!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #17 posted 04/25/16 9:24am

OldFriends4Sal
e

paulludvig said:

databank said:

I don't think they'd think of careers - both have had great ones and are near retirement age now, + they seem to be very honest, decent people. More like they'd mostly be interested in what they know, and probably also sharing the common opinion that what came later was less interesting - Alan Leeds at least was pretty clear about his opinion in that regard.

Maybe not their career, but their legacy. All of them have used every opportunity to talk about how much they influenced Prince. Give them he keys to the vault and they will have more opportunity to do so. Their contributions should be acknowledged, but I would prefer someone more objective to gather information from several sources. W&L, Susan Rogers and the Leeds brothers perspectives on Prince's career are already well known.

I think you're blowing that up a bit to much. I've never heard them use EVERY OPPORTUNITY to talk about how much they influenced Prince. That is not even true.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #18 posted 04/25/16 7:55pm

CandaceS

avatar

databank said:

I believe the material should be left untouched. It doesn't have any sense to me to have people, whoever, working on the tracks. There's a lot of material that's ready for release anyway and whatever is in more demo-like state should be made available as such for the hardcore fans if not for the masses.


yeahthat

"I would say that Prince's top thirty percent is great. Of that thirty percent, I'll bet the public has heard twenty percent of it." - Susan Rogers, "Hunting for Prince's Vault", BBC, 2015
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #19 posted 04/25/16 9:05pm

TrivialPursuit

avatar

databank said:

I believe the material should be left untouched. It doesn't have any sense to me to have people, whoever, working on the tracks. There's a lot of material that's ready for release anyway and whatever is in more demo-like state should be made available as such for the hardcore fans if not for the masses.

I'd tend to agree. For the stuff that is completed, maybe a remastering on the sound of it, but leave the production end alone. Put it out, and let it be that nugget of time as is. I think anything that was close to finished, but not quite is where Wendy, Lisa, or Dez would be workable, or Sheila depending on the time period and if they were there to begin with.

.

To oversee everything, I'd be quite comfortable with Jimmy Jam and ?uestlove working together as Executive Producers. They both have Prince history, but in very different ways, both are accomplished producers and musicians. They'd be more like a guide through it, overseers, but hands off unless really necessary to drop in for something. Keep things coordinated, on track, etc.

"eye don’t really care so much what people say about me because it is a reflection of who they r."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #20 posted 04/25/16 10:55pm

jaypotton

Personally apart from a bit of sound and tape hiss clean up and sound levels balance (engineer stuff) then leave the production alone. Prince was his own Producer so only he knew what he wanted no matter how close the musicians were.

Maybe one exception is Wendy & Lisa but only on the 84-86 recordings.
'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.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #21 posted 05/16/16 6:56pm

FGVibes

TrivialPursuit said:

I think anything that was close to finished, but not quite is where Wendy, Lisa, or Dez would be workable, or Sheila depending on the time period and if they were there to begin with.

I'm gonna be contrarian and say it's actually might be better to keep them away from this process. For the simple reason that it is in almost every musician's nature to reassess their work and want to "improve" on it by doing new or "better" takes and rerecording material if given a chance, and I really have no interest in hearing this material with overdubs added 30 years after the fact. Anybody hear remember what Alan Douglas did with Hendrix's stuff after his death? It's different, because he brought in musicians who had never even played with the man to "complete" those tracks (and was loathed for it for years), and not the original band(s). Or Frank Zappa re-recording drum tracks for 20-year old albums in the 80s because he decided he didn't like the sound of the original tapes? Again, different, but I think "doctoring" the tapes in the Vault would result in a similarly odd-sounding end product.

From the article:

Rogers suggested that musicians with whom he worked in the 1980s and 1990s be allowed to finish unreleased songs in the style that they worked back then. "I think that would be lovely," she said.

See now, I just don't think it is at all possible to finish things "in the style that they worked back then."

I can see all of the musicians above (wendy, Lisa, Dez, Sheila) being tempted by the "I could do that better now" syndrome. And that's not what it's about. There is a spontaneity of the moment in those 80s recordings, back when everything was still on 2" tape, that nobody can recapture no matter how intimately involved. Yeah, Sheila may and Wendy may well have better chops than they did 30 years (or perhaps not) but their *attitude* will be different, the life experience that they bring to their instrument makes them (in a Buddhist sense) a completely different person than on the original recordings. There are technical considerations too: the type of equipment they were using, the microphones and and consoles used to record the material -- all that stuff has changed, and adding new overdubs in 2016, it is going to be mighty hard to mix all that stuff and make it sound cohesive and not like some kind of Frankenstein.

By all means, let them into the control room to work on final mixes for whatever stuff needs mixing. But there is a lot of work that will need to be done first. I would guess nobody here knows how much of the Vault material may exist solely as multi-track tapes, but I wouldn't be surprised if Prince had multiple two-track stereo mixdowns for nearly everything that he used as reference mixes while continuing to compose.

Does anybody know if Paisley Park had a tape archivist for the Vault? Somebody in charge of knowing where and what everything is, and how many versions of it might be around? My own dream would be to hear this stuff in whatever state it was left in whenever possible, but in the event that - for example - the 2-track master isn't in great shape, or perhaps a song has multiple mixes where it is known that Prince wasn't happy with any of them, but it is possible to see what his vision was and where it was going - then I think a good tape archivist would be indispensible. Believe it or not, engineers often took production notes and left them with the tapes, too. Even if the original engineers are brought back in some capacity, they're not going to remember a lot of details without soething (or someone) to prompt them, and that's where a tape archivist and librarian would be playing an important role.

[Edited 5/16/16 19:06pm]

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #22 posted 05/16/16 7:01pm

FGVibes

KoolEaze said:

Think of Franz Kafka, one of the most brilliant writers of the 20th century. He wanted all his material to be destroyed and wrote so in his will. And he wanted his best friend to be in charge of destroying everything he wrote except for the few released books that were already out there. But his best friend Max Brodt ignored Kafka´s will and that´s the reason why the world is able to appreciate Kafka´s art.

I've been thinking about this too lately! But I would phrase the situation a little differently than you did. As far as I know the story, it was that he considered his unpublished (and in some cases unfinished) manuscripts to be of no interest or not as good as his published material, and so - as you said - stipulated in his will that all his notebooks should be destroyed. To me this goes to show that the artist is not necessarily the best judge of what their own best material is, because IIRC some of Kafka's most famous and enduring novels -- for example, The Trial and The Castle, I think - were unpublished at the time of his death. Had his executor and friend actually carried out his will, the world would have been deprived of at least a few bonafide literary masterpieces.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #23 posted 05/16/16 7:19pm

mltijchr

avatar

databank said:

I believe the material should be left untouched. It doesn't have any sense to me to have people, whoever, working on the tracks. There's a lot of material that's ready for release anyway and whatever is in more demo-like state should be made available as such for the hardcore fans if not for the masses.

I agree with this. even those close to Prince - Alan Leeds, Susan Rogers, Jimmy Jam & whoever else - it doesn't make sense to me to mess with what probably is "musical perfection". by the time Prince put (all these) songs in this so-called Vault, they were very likely in the final form in which he wanted them. I don't believe he would have put them there if he didn't think they were ready for release. even if some/all of these songs are of "demo quality" I'd rather have them that way rather than have them produced - or over-produced (by Jimmy Jam?) by someone else. Prince's music is PRINCE'S music. more times than not, his musical instincts were right on point. I wouldnt mess with that..

I'll see you tonight..
in ALL MY DREAMS..
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #24 posted 05/16/16 7:23pm

RiotPaisley

Can you imagine how many hours of just him playing piano alone there are? Or hours of endless solo guitar/bass/drum work?

I would LOVE a cd of just him playing the piano.
Surprise, surprise.
Another treat. Another trick.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #25 posted 05/16/16 7:32pm

RiotPaisley

FGVibes said:



TrivialPursuit said:



I think anything that was close to finished, but not quite is where Wendy, Lisa, or Dez would be workable, or Sheila depending on the time period and if they were there to begin with.


I'm gonna be contrarian and say it's actually might be better to keep them away from this process. For the simple reason that it is in almost every musician's nature to reassess their work and want to "improve" on it by doing new or "better" takes and rerecording material if given a chance, and I really have no interest in hearing this material with overdubs added 30 years after the fact. Anybody hear remember what Alan Douglas did with Hendrix's stuff after his death? It's different, because he brought in musicians who had never even played with the man to "complete" those tracks (and was loathed for it for years), and not the original band(s). Or Frank Zappa re-recording drum tracks for 20-year old albums in the 80s because he decided he didn't like the sound of the original tapes? Again, different, but I think "doctoring" the tapes in the Vault would result in a similarly odd-sounding end product.



From the article:




Rogers suggested that musicians with whom he worked in the 1980s and 1990s be allowed to finish unreleased songs in the style that they worked back then. "I think that would be lovely," she said.





See now, I just don't think it is at all possible to finish things "in the style that they worked back then."



I can see all of the musicians above (wendy, Lisa, Dez, Sheila) being tempted by the "I could do that better now" syndrome. And that's not what it's about. There is a spontaneity of the moment in those 80s recordings, back when everything was still on 2" tape, that nobody can recapture no matter how intimately involved. Yeah, Sheila may and Wendy may well have better chops than they did 30 years (or perhaps not) but their *attitude* will be different, the life experience that they bring to their instrument makes them (in a Buddhist sense) a completely different person than on the original recordings. There are technical considerations too: the type of equipment they were using, the microphones and and consoles used to record the material -- all that stuff has changed, and adding new overdubs in 2016, it is going to be mighty hard to mix all that stuff and make it sound cohesive and not like some kind of Frankenstein.





By all means, let them into the control room to work on final mixes for whatever stuff needs mixing. But there is a lot of work that will need to be done first. I would guess nobody here knows how much of the Vault material may exist solely as multi-track tapes, but I wouldn't be surprised if Prince had multiple two-track stereo mixdowns for nearly everything that he used as reference mixes while continuing to compose.



Does anybody know if Paisley Park had a tape archivist for the Vault? Somebody in charge of knowing where and what everything is, and how many versions of it might be around? My own dream would be to hear this stuff in whatever state it was left in whenever possible, but in the event that - for example - the 2-track master isn't in great shape, or perhaps a song has multiple mixes where it is known that Prince wasn't happy with any of them, but it is possible to see what his vision was and where it was going - then I think a good tape archivist would be indispensible. Believe it or not, engineers often took production notes and left them with the tapes, too. Even if the original engineers are brought back in some capacity, they're not going to remember a lot of details without soething (or someone) to prompt them, and that's where a tape archivist and librarian would be playing an important role.

[Edited 5/16/16 19:06pm]



I don't think they would be tempted to re-record anything. I think they understand that the magic of playing in a room with Prince should go unaltered. The memories would be there on the tape. I would hope they wouldn't try to fix it. Besides Prince worked them to perfection as it was. They would just need to clean it up.

I'd also put money on the fact that he already digitized a lot of it. I think he had some down time between 2010-2014 and I think he may have worked on that. I would hope he did anyway. Those were his babies and his life and he wanted us to have it.
Anyone who doesn't agree probably has some stuff in there they might be embarrassed by... For some reason I feel he probably has a lot of women moaning on those tapes.
Surprise, surprise.
Another treat. Another trick.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #26 posted 05/16/16 7:33pm

bluegangsta

avatar

We've seen what's happened to 2Pac's and Michael Jackson's catulogue. Let's hope Prince's estate don't make the same mistakes.

Always cry 4 love, never cry 4 pain.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #27 posted 05/16/16 7:47pm

h4rm0ny

KoolEaze said:

databank said:

I believe the material should be left untouched. It doesn't have any sense to me to have people, whoever, working on the tracks. There's a lot of material that's ready for release anyway and whatever is in more demo-like state should be made available as such for the hardcore fans if not for the masses.

Agree 100%. There are many rehearsals and rawer, unpolished versions of songs that I love listening to. No need to tamper with what´s already recorded and archived, even if it´s just instrumentals or basic stuff or demos, or even rehearsals.

When I mentioned the people I mentioned above , I meant that if anyone should be involved, it should be them. And I didn´t necessarily mean musically, but also in terms of archiving, releasing, commenting and documenting. Alan Leeds is the perfect person for liner notes, and so is Susan Rogers.

But....if anybody is to work on them tracks and add anything to them, I´d love to see the people mentioned above and not some random people or people who weren´t around when those songs were made.

I disagree.


If it's not completed, it should not be released. Prince's Vault has more than enough completed material to fill the need for posthumous releases as it is. Releasing material that is not complete - outside of the context of expanded box sets of previously released material (a la the Nirvana super deluxe box sets, for example) - would tarnish the legacy of Prince and the image of the Prince Estate and everyone involved.

To use Nirvana again: the estate of Kurt Cobain has become a laughingstock because of releases like that. And so have the reputations of the people involved. Words like "vulture" and "milking" get thrown around a lot.

They released stuff like "With The Lights Out" for the fans. Most of the box set was unlistenable, either because the demos they released were bad or because the sound quality was bad. They repeated it with Kurt Cobain's Home Recordings that they released alongside the documentary. That was even worse. They were unlistenable and devalued Kurt's work.

That could even be seen with other artists, like Jimi Hendrix. Releasing and rereleasing the same songs over and over, in increasingly bad quality, despite the fact that they have stuff that people want and haven't released it (like Black Gold).

I don't want them to do that to Prince. That would ruin his image. Even if the superfans would want it.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #28 posted 05/16/16 8:01pm

h4rm0ny

bluegangsta said:

We've seen what's happened to 2Pac's and Michael Jackson's catulogue. Let's hope Prince's estate don't make the same mistakes.

2Pac's unreleased material was a special case. The unreleased material they have from him wasn't taken care of during the tie he was alive and certainly not after he died.

Death Row Records turned all their 2Pac material over, but most of the materials had multiple different problems with them:

1. Much of the unreleased material wasn't taken care of, so a lot of the original reels were lost. For example, the song "Soon As I Get Home" (which was left completely untouched when it was released on Pac's Life) didn't come from masters. It was taken off of a tape.

2. The samples used in many of the songs weren't cleared or would cost too much to clear.

3. The songs were being, literally, stolen out of the vaults even until recently because bootleggers wanted them. Executives tasked with maintaining the vaults for Amaru Entertainment and the remains of Death Row Records (WIDEAwake before it declared bankruptcy, Entertainment One now) were just stealing things out from under the late Afeni Shakur's nose and resold for hundreds, if not thousands, of dollars. And now, 2Pac's material is in the hands of private traders.

4. Afeni did not want references to the various fueds that 2Pac was involved in or to his anti-cop bent. So she had people edit the material when it was released.

A lot of the mistakes made were out of the estate's hands (excluding edits made because of Afeni's wishes). It also didn't help that the estate of 2Pac was, and still is, a mess.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Forums > Prince: Music and More > New interview with Susan Rogers regarding the Vault