Author | Message |
How did Prince get his music to sound different from everyone else's I was listening to Parliament's Knee Deep, and I was comparing it to Prince's, and thought although it is funky, it just doesn't reach Prince's sound. Seems Prince did something to his music to make it stand out. I don't know what it is about it, but it is different, and sounds so much better, that is why I was so attracted to his music. But I can't figure out why. Do any of you know why Prince's music stood out among everyone else's? Was it the instruments he used? | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
sharonbell said: I was listening to Parliament's Knee Deep, and I was comparing it to Prince's, and thought although it is funky, it just doesn't reach Prince's sound. Seems Prince did something to his music to make it stand out. I don't know what it is about it, but it is different, and sounds so much better, that is why I was so attracted to his music. But I can't figure out why. Do any of you know why Prince's music stood out among everyone else's? Was it the instruments he used? Great question, but it was cuz he was different and unique, we all have different internal rhythems and no matter how hard we try to copy someone else we still have to contend with ourself. The sounds and synths account for maybe 15 percent of the package, the other 85 percent is command of voicings, pitch perception, speed and articulation but esp rhythmic feel! I mean, you can take two musicians who are both expert sight readers and have perfect pitch and good intonation read the same score but somehow it will sound different. It's the internal rythem that makes the differnce that why you can listen to a jazz pianist and within a few seconds know whos playing. Go to you tube and listen to Oscar Peterson then go listen to Art Tatum, although their are some similarities Oscars music swung harder than any jazz pianist before or after him. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Some of his uniqueness and genius lies in his vocal arranging. Of course, he could do things vocally that not many could (I mean, how many men have you heard that could sing in a high falsetto and then effortlessly drop four octaves to a deep growl?) But I always especially took notice of his skills in using unique harmonies amongst different instruments and the harmony arrangements of his stacked vocals. It gives the sound that extra something that you don't usually find in popular music. Maybe it stems from his father's jazz influence. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
^^^ The vocal arranging was major. Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
For me, when I was actively looking for different things 'outside' my usual choice of rock music, it was the vocal arrangements more than anything that caught my attention. . I'd never heard anything quite like it. Away from the vocals, it was his apparent ability to just throw everything into a song, including the kitchen sink (maybe it was Martika's??) that also appealed to me. . My first purchase was D&P when it was released, and I know it doesn't get a whole lot of love around these parts, but the variety on that album just blew me away. Prince's uses several different voices by himself (Thunder, D&P, Willing Able etc), while the use the Rosie and Tony M (sorry!!) was the icing on the cake. . Again, I'm just describing what stood out for me in my own personal early days of being a Prince fan. . | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Umm...he could sing and I mean that man could sang! | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Prince's sound changed so much because he changed his band and others he worked with very often. . By changing the influences to his music, kept his music changing. . However, there is very much a single Prince sound that goes through everything he does. . | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Well. Vocally he could sound like the whole animal Kingdom in one song. I'm not talking about the song with the title. I'm talking about songs like God, temptation,international lover, solo. Bon fans could easily think he sounded like a cock doing the falsetto and some of his screams would resemblance a monkey or horse. International lover has those sounds. My Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/tundrah | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
I know everyone kinda ignores me on this board, maybe 'cause I haven't been around in a long time, but, does anyone know if P has ever had two drummers in concert. I mean two drummers, not a drummer and a percussionist, because that, I know I'm asking because I think that the thing that made his music (or at least the music he did that I like) very outstanding, apart from the synth sounds and vocals, is the complexity of rhythm patterns, complexity that you can't reproduce with just one drummer. In fact in the PR tour, and in others, he used both a drummer and the Lynn drum machine. Thank you in advance for your kind answer "No one plays the clarinet the way U play my heart" | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
The source escapes me right now, but one explaination I heard about the sound of earlier recordings was that Prince grew up listening to AM radio & there was more trebel or high end or whatever because of that. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
rightbluecheek said: I know everyone kinda ignores me on this board, maybe 'cause I haven't been around in a long time, but, does anyone know if P has ever had two drummers in concert. I mean two drummers, not a drummer and a percussionist, because that, I know I'm asking because I think that the thing that made his music (or at least the music he did that I like) very outstanding, apart from the synth sounds and vocals, is the complexity of rhythm patterns, complexity that you can't reproduce with just one drummer. In fact in the PR tour, and in others, he used both a drummer and the Lynn drum machine. Thank you in advance for your kind answer I don't think he ever used two drummers in concert. Rather he combined live drums and drum machine and/or percussions. The wooh is on the one! | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
"Parliament's Knee Deep"...I always thought "Billy Jack Bitch" was a tip to the hat of Funkadelic's "Knee Deep"..The synth bass line, the beat, the vocal melody..it's very close.............."picture Funkadelic trying to cover "Oye Coma Va"....My buddy said he saw Santana open for P-Funk back in the 70's. He said it was one of the best concerts he ever went to. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |