Alright, that's enough. This is ridiculous. I will not have this thread derailed. This blatant sexism is not acceptable. If anyone wants to contribute anything else, please keep it relevant to the topic of discussion. | |
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Thank you to everyone who has posted links and/or contributed meaningful anecdotes/observations regarding Prince's music. | |
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. Uhh, I hate "Dark Side Of The Moon." "Animals" is their only album worth owning. . But you wouldn't know about "Animals" because you obtain your music "knowledge" from the whacky, crazy guys on your Morning Zoo radio show. "Whoo Hoo, here's the latest from Prince! It's called "Raspberry Beret." You know, Moondog, I prefer myself a strawberry beret." Yuk yuk yuk... . Hey, kid, time for you to step away from the simplistic, mainstream music scene you follow (your "Dark Side Of The Moon" reference was the clear giveaway) and maybe give some interesting music a listen. Three chord I-IV-V song structures are not very inventive, kid. I was playing that stuff when I was twelve. Maybe one day you'll move past music made for 12 year olds. | |
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Once again, we don't give a shit about your musical preferences.
[Edited 6/1/16 13:22pm] The Colors R brighter, the Bond is much tighter
No Child's a failure Until the Blue Sailboat sails him away from his dreams Don't Ever Lose, Don't Ever Lose Don't Ever Lose Your Dreams | |
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. Not sexist at all. . Until you provide a list of twenty exceptional female composers, then you can not call what I said sexist. . I'll even help you out and name a few. Chrissie Hynde Carole King Joni Mitchell Uhh, and that's all. Good luck coming up with the next 17. . (And if someone adds Madonna to the list, then I give up.) | |
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Use the damn Google. Or Wikipedia. [Edited 6/1/16 13:26pm] The Colors R brighter, the Bond is much tighter
No Child's a failure Until the Blue Sailboat sails him away from his dreams Don't Ever Lose, Don't Ever Lose Don't Ever Lose Your Dreams | |
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Cloreen said:
. Not sexist at all. . Until you provide a list of twenty exceptional female composers, then you can not call what I said sexist. . I'll even help you out and name a few. Chrissie Hynde Carole King Joni Mitchell Uhh, and that's all. Good luck coming up with the next 17. . (And if someone adds Madonna to the list, then I give up.) Chrissie hynde Carole King Joni Mitchell Madonna..... ...see ya. [Edited 6/1/16 13:26pm] | |
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. I did contribute to this thread regarding a study of Prince as musician. Only one here who noted his real strength lies in the sonic composition of his tunes. . And maybe instead of playing Koln Concert part I when you were 8, you should have played a little Chuck Berry or James Brown or Keith Richards. You would then have a better understanding of what great music is. You missed the boat, kid. | |
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Chrissie hynde Carole King Joni Mitchell Madonna..... ...see ya. . . Alright. I give up. No way in heck I could ever explain to someone why Madonna is not an all time great musical composer. One top song ("What It Feels Like For A Girl") does not make an artist. | |
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Cloreen said:
. Not sexist at all. . Until you provide a list of twenty exceptional female composers, then you can not call what I said sexist. . I'll even help you out and name a few. Chrissie Hynde Carole King Joni Mitchell Uhh, and that's all. Good luck coming up with the next 17. . (And if someone adds Madonna to the list, then I give up.) Man, you're covering yourself in glory on this thread no doubt.You've outdone yourself with that one. Sexist, smug, and patronising in spades. Why don't you just give up. | |
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Did anyone see my comment above where I asked everyone to take the arguments elsewhere? I'd like this thread to be about Prince's music, not pointless bickering. | |
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. Shhh, don't tell anyone but it's all in fun. . .
I do wonder how some of you here are Prince fans. His sly, provocative, devilish humor clearly was well above your heads. | |
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. Got it.
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The most interesting period is maybe 1984-1985 for total, absolute originality.
[Edited 6/1/16 14:19pm] [Edited 6/1/16 14:22pm] [Edited 6/1/16 14:23pm] [Edited 6/1/16 14:24pm] [Edited 6/1/16 14:26pm]
[Edited 6/1/16 14:36pm] The Colors R brighter, the Bond is much tighter
No Child's a failure Until the Blue Sailboat sails him away from his dreams Don't Ever Lose, Don't Ever Lose Don't Ever Lose Your Dreams | |
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Oh so it's all Satire is it? Oh how silly of us...Just one thing mate, you're no Jonathan Swift.
As far as your contribution to smoothcriminal12's thread I'd say it started terribly, tailed off somewhere in the middle and the less said about the end the better. I haven't been great on it either but I'd like to arrogantly put that down to being transfixed by your utterly glorious Wildean observations.
Sorry smooth. Right then. I off now. If I ever say anything else on this thread again you can happily ban me. | |
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Last digression, smoothcriminal12, I promise. The Colors R brighter, the Bond is much tighter
No Child's a failure Until the Blue Sailboat sails him away from his dreams Don't Ever Lose, Don't Ever Lose Don't Ever Lose Your Dreams | |
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mtlfan said: I agree with most of what you said but "Prince did not really push new boundaries with his music as the Beatles did."
Shut up, already... damn. Lovesexy. End of argument, and only the tip of the argument as far as Prince and pushing boundaries is concerned. ^ Totally agree, I've noticed that Cloreen will often have some really well thought out and intelligent analysis but then completely undermine it by adding something really incrediblely ridiculous to the mix🙄. Danm!!! | |
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To me the more apt comparison is to Stevie Wonder than the Beatles, and there has been some analysis of Wonder's work too. IMO he was not only a more direct influence on Prince but also comes closest to embodying what made Prince so amazing. Studio wizard, multi-instrumentalist singer-songwriter-composer-producer equally adept at funk, pop and soul at any flavor and tempo.
Aside from Stevie, if you analyze Beatles, Rolling Stones, James Brown, Sly and the Family Stone, Joni Mitchell, Santana, Jimi Hendrix, Parliament-Funkadelic, the Ohio Players, Earth, Wind & Fire and the Isley Brothers that would put in Prince's neighborhood. Then you have to figure out how he seamlessly blended all that together into a completely original mix and sprinkled dollops of magic on it all. If you've got funk, you've got style. | |
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The Colors R brighter, the Bond is much tighter
No Child's a failure Until the Blue Sailboat sails him away from his dreams Don't Ever Lose, Don't Ever Lose Don't Ever Lose Your Dreams | |
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Does anyone know if A is key that works well on the guitar? For example I play the violin/fiddle and keys like D and G are much easier to work with than say C. If A is a key that sits more naturally on the guitar then that might suggest Prince did most of his composing on the guitar rather than the piano. | |
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Exetergirl said:
Does anyone know if A is key that works well on the guitar? For example I play the violin/fiddle and keys like D and G are much easier to work with than say C. If A is a key that sits more naturally on the guitar then that might suggest Prince did most of his composing on the guitar rather than the piano. Yes, A works very well on the guitar. A, D and E are all among the first few chords that beginner guitarists can pick up easily, which already gives you the ability to write a simple three chord song in A. | |
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Hahaha thank you for that. Because this is why I got jokes about this song. And we're not going to talk about the imagery of surgery and sex. In one song. Together. NOOOPE. lol | |
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Traditional analysis of Prince's music is hard, because he often stacks vocal harmonies in ways that don't QUITE fit the progression that's happening. And the "wrong" notes (they're not really wrong -- just defy traditional analysis) aren't voiced like jazz extensions, either.
There needs to be a way to analyze the harmonic progression, melody, vocal harmonies (often a sort of extension of the melody at fixed intervals in parallel motion), rhythm, and texture -- all somewhat independent of each other. Maybe someone has created such a system, but I haven't come across it.
Prince's unique sound (especially in the vocal harmonies), in my opinion, often springs out of his lack of traditional music training/theory comprehension. I am sorry if this rubs some people the wrong way -- he was a natural genius, yes, but there is a lot that's "wrong" about his music in a traditional sense. I don't object, though, either; it's all part of the sonic tapestry he created.
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I've noticed that. Prince does some very interesting things with his music that wouldn't traditionally "fit" but work very well in context. | |
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May you give some examples? it sounds quite interesting. | |
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. A pretty famous example is the chord change from A to Bbsus2 in the second half of the "Sometimes It Snows In April" chorus. Listen to that chorus: . "Sometimes it snows in April. Sometimes I feel so bad, so bad. Sometimes I wish" . That chord change on the "wish" is really jarring and "not right." It is not a "normal" traditional chord progression for a popular music tune. It's wrong according to all who would write that song, but Prince goes from the A to that unsettling B flat chord...and it works. . Even if you don't know a thing about musical composition, you can hear the song takes a sudden discordant turn at that point. | |
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Prince was the greatest genius of the last 50 years. his music has elements of all the music that came before him. He had the genius to incorporate all that into his own music and make a new sound that everybody copied. | |
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. Yeah thanks. I was more asking in reference to Robert3rd's comment and specifically what he meant about what Prince was playing, not music theory in general but no sweat!
...every night another symphony... | |
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That's my case, give more examples please. | |
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Well basically what I'm getting at is that if you study harmony and counterpoint in a classical or jazz sense, you learn certain "rules"; for instance, you learn about how harmony is "voiced" -- not necessarily for singing, but "voices," as in, distinct members of the harmony. One way to do it is four-voice "chorale"-type harmony, which is used for theory exercises among students all over the place. Generally the lowest voice would be the bass note (typically the root of the chord, but not always), the highest voice is the melody line, and the two inner voices fill out the other notes in the harmony based on the proper chords. The hard part is making it all move from chord to chord in a cogent way (the "counterpoint" part). If you do it wrong, you risk having some awkward intervals or transitions that just don't sound right (even though the notes might technically fit). You can make sure you're doing it right by scanning your music for certain transgressions -- parallel fifths or octaves between voices, parallel fourths (better, but still jarring), etc. You can use certain tricks to make things sound good -- parallel thirds or sixths between chords where applicable, contrary motion between lines, voice exchanges, etc. These are all guidelines because they WORK -- that is, they help the melody, bassline, and inner voices transition between chords in an elegant way.
Prince broke these rules all the time. He probably didn't even care, but there are examples in nearly every song where he densely stacks his own voice into a chorus. Beyond that, he would add in notes that don't even fit with the underlying chord happening at the time. I would never have "corrected" him, exactly, but I am sure that if he had more formal training, he could have built more rock-solid arrangements for his voice and the whole ensemble of instrument lines. As it was, he was probably more interested in texture than harmony in a traditional sense, and in that regard I think he was quite extraordinary. | |
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