Bought a copy of The Black Album from a record fair in 1989. Thought it was an official copy until I got it home and saw the label! But I wasn't disappointed. Went on to buy a few other bootlegs from record fairs or Plastic Factory in Birmingham, UK, including By Invitation Only, Charade, Crucial, Gotta Stop Messin' About / Horny Toad, and Red Box. Happy days! | |
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It started with The Black Album in the summer of 88. That same day, I also bought "The Regent of First Avenue" (1987 1st Ave show), both on wax... Make it so, Number One... | |
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Being a 70's child growing up in the 80's I was of course very aware of Prince and enjoyed his music (and after the fact realised that a lot of tracks he gave to other artists were favourites of mine at the time) but I wasn't really into buying music until my mid teens.
A friend later introduced me to some of his albums when as an older teen I was paying more attention to music. Shortly after I met a girl who was a huge Prince fan and we started to date. I was exposed to the Prince world and realised how prolific he was. She had a vinyl copy of The Black Album that she taped for me which is when I discovered the world of bootlegs.
I have quite an analytical mind and when I find a subject of interest I like to research the hell out of it. I learned about Prince, his career and his vault. I was hooked, and I had a keen interest in collecting circulating studio outtakes especially. I began making weekly trips to Camden Market and usually coming back with a boot on CD. I then started to explore record fairs which were great because I could expand my collection of official material (especially 12" vinyl and picture discs) and bootlegs at the same time.
In later years of course, the internet took over as a source and quite frankly I just could not keep paying those prices forboots. Although I would not pay for boots now I've got to say nothing beats browsing through a music collection at a market stall or an independent record store...
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Second hand stores in NZ - my first boot was Wonderboy :-D I used to have really vivid dreams about trawling through racks of vinyl and CDs and stumbling on a bunch of rare Prince bootlegs - I always used to be really pissed off when I woke up and it wasn't true | |
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suomynona said:
That was awesome! '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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1988 Camden Market in London UK a cassette tape of The Black Album and another with a red cover (can't remember name, it is in loft) that had songs like Ratrace and Expert Lover on the list (In A Large Room With No Light and Crystal Ball respectively). Soon after I got a vinyl Wonderboy (live SOTT show) and a vinyl Black Album and so it went on. Once internet arrived I got songs from there (a huge download from Napster gave me around 600 tracks) but I still visited Camden Market to get DVDs on live shows and compilations of TV appearances. '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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I was a freshman in college in 1992 & visited Revolver Records, at 45 West 8th Street in NYC. I had my mind set on The Black Album & was blown away when I found both that & He's Got The Look, but they were LPs & this was the CD era. I bought them anyway. Had I been less of an excited imbecile, I might have turned around & saw that there was a substantial collection of CDs available right behind me. Eventually, I'd go back with my issue of Uptown, or a list of things I'd wanted from the Internet & spend a small fortune.
That store was quite popular for several years, until they finally closed . I'd also hit Golden Disc Records & Generation Records, which were all within a few blocks. | |
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mynameisnotsusan said: Second hand stores in NZ - my first boot was Wonderboy : Love it! I got that one too. My original username was princefan319 but the org stopped letting me use that name a long time ago. I changed it to Wonderboy because of my appreciation for SOTT. | |
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2freaky4church1 said: I wasted a lot of fucking money. Same "Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry | |
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I didn't know anything about Prince bootlegs until one day I went to a used music store in Madison while visiting a friend for the weekend. I went to see what Prince they had just in case they had any rare CD singles. I came across a treasure trove of bootlegs. It almost melted my face off like the Ark of the Covenant. I had to pick only two for financial reasons, so I chose Now's The Time and Welcome To The Beautiful Experience (?). I came back the next day to buy Small Club and Chickengrease. I was hooked. I spent the next several weeks spending lots of money I didn't have (thanks, student loans!) on boots from eBay. Jewel Box 1&2. 12 Inches to a Yard. A bunch of City Lights and Studio Nights. About 90% of them were CDRs, but I didn't know any better. "Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry | |
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madison said:
record store was called bills !!
I was at that concert with my girlfriend ... seniors in high school !!!
[Edited 6/9/16 13:34pm] I didn't discover Bill's until much later...this was Forever Young when it was across the Hwy from Crystal's Pizza in Irving. ::Official Member of the 1978-1995 Club:: | |
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1988, I had read about The Black Album in Rolling Stone magazine, and then heard it was a bootleg... then in the dorm a student that was a DJ came in with a cassette and said we could borrow it to listen but had to return it to him. (He also brought in the vinyl of "Lovesexy" one week before it's release. I remember we put that on, and he was so disappointed by the sound of "Eye No"... "Why'd he use that old beat?"
But anyway, I soon tracked down a vinyl record of The Black Album at a indie record shop, then ran into "Chocolate Box"... then "Charade".... all on vinyl. My art book: http://www.lulu.com/spotl...ecomicskid
VIDEO WORK: http://sharadkantpatel.com MUSIC: https://soundcloud.com/ufoclub1977 | |
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An orger and I started talking back in the early 2000s. I had read Prince A Portrait as a teeen and was shocked at all these songs I never heard of. He sent me a cassette tape..and I was in love with bootlegs ever since.
A friend of in Saudi Arabia as well I met on here sent me some tunes I never heard of and the High album tracks, but he has dissappeared Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records. | |
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For me it started in the 80s with a friend who was a few years older and a dj. He was also a huge Prince fan so he had just about everything that at the time was hard to get but would later be pretty ubiquitous to fans. Never asked him where he got his shit, but dude made me mix tapes out the wazoo because he knew I had Prince on my walls. That lead me to record conventions and vhs tapes, which lead me to snail mail trading with phishhook peeps and then the digital thing happened. | |
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DarkKnight1 said: I ran into a record store in Tulsa that sold bootlegs. That visit started a very expensive and rewarding hobby. Yes Tulsa!!same here! & then traveling record conventions that came thru were a gold mine. | |
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There was an orger by the name of Harlepolis. She gave me her copy of the "Dream Factory" album and the Can't Stop This Feeling/We Can Funk songs sparked my hunger to look for the rest. Unfortunately, I lost both, the CD and lost her contact | |
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When I came back to Princeland after an absence of years, I tried to get my hands on everything I could to satisfy my re-discovered Prince addiction. "Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato
https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0 | |
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About 20 years ago I came across bootleg cds of live performances by Madonna, MJ, Whitney and Prince 1987-1990 time period produced by Joker Productions in a second hand music shop called CD Revolutions (which has since closed in 2004). I also sometimes find live cds at the Annual Lifeline Bookfairs and at some local fetes. Finally the amazing peeps here have led me to a treasure trobe of Prince music online that I listen to everyday so its Prince day everyday for me [Edited 7/10/16 22:33pm] Keep Calm & Listen To Prince | |
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LittlePurpleYoda said: I was a freshman in college in 1992 & visited Revolver Records, at 45 West 8th Street in NYC. I had my mind set on The Black Album & was blown away when I found both that & He's Got The Look, but they were LPs & this was the CD era. I bought them anyway. Had I been less of an excited imbecile, I might have turned around & saw that there was a substantial collection of CDs available right behind me. Eventually, I'd go back with my issue of Uptown, or a list of things I'd wanted from the Internet & spend a small fortune.
That store was quite popular for several years, until they finally closed . I'd also hit Golden Disc Records & Generation Records, which were all within a few blocks. I forgot about Revolver! I got tons of DVD's and Cd's from there. But my first was I think I was visiting my mom in Greensboro, NC and I went into a record shop and saw the Crucial cassette. Introduced me to my all time P song, Power Fantastic. 1980-Present
First album bought: Controversy | |
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After hearing (parts of) the 'Paard van Troje' gig on the radio... Pills and thrills and daffodils will kill... If you don't believe me or don't get it, I don't have time to try to convince you, sorry. | |
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Wow exact same story for me too.....I'm a Preston boy and this was our only outlet. I bought "Yellow" from there, fell in love with "I Wonder" and the rest is history! | |
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I was asking myself this question the other day! Probably on here or in NPGMC in the early-mid 2000s I befriended someone and got some copies of boots that I heard people raving about. I somehow determined I was not a real "hardcore" Prince fan since I did not have these "bootlegs". The quality was terrible and I'm pissed that I wasted my money. I haven't even listened to half of them because Prince has enough "official" to keep up with. I also have some magazines, "Uptown", that I have no idea how I got them. I stopped trying to get bootlegs after my experiences here and on NPGMC. It was just simply too much to keep up with. I do hate that I never got a copy or a copy of a copy of the Black Album. The whole bootlegger thing is a little above my head so I will just stick to what I know. I'm more interested in stuff from the 80's/90's that he did release that I did not get copies of -or the record broke and I never replaced it.
I figure now that he's gone we (fans) will eventually connect with the right people as our numbers are few, and I will hear or get whatever I'm meant to hear. | |
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I was 14 (1991), moved to a new city (France), saw boots by many acts including P in a wrecka stow, was intrigued, didn't know that boots even existed, asked the clerk what is this, he says these are imports, I says huh, how come I never knew those albums existed, guys repeats these are imports, after a few more questions and the guy repeating these are imports I realised I wouldn't get any proper explaination from him. Few days later thanks God I see a TV program about boots and I'm like oh OK now I understand. Soon after I bought Charade. The sound quality was quite awful but hell, was I happy to hear those tracks just the same. Then I bought Crucial, Lisa Your Love Is So Hard, Shockadelica (mostly b-sides) and finally my first live, a soundboard SOTT Tour. 4 years or so later I had maybe 30 or 40 P boots on CD + more cassette copies by fellow fans. Then boots disappeared from the market and then came the interwho. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors. | |
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got a really crappy copy of the black album from someone at work in the late 80s
then got some albums - dream factory & high from an orger whose details i've now lost..
got a copy of the boot of the ONA Apollo gig that I went to in 2002..
and that was it.. until i found a new source and am now madly downloading boots like no tomorrow..
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Did u ever face someone like me who didn't know about boots and was like WTF I'd know it if those records existed even as imports? A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors. | |
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~Shakalaka!~..... ~Mayday!~ | |
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