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Something In The Water - In defense of the phonetical lyricist
and I'm baffled but how modern it still sounds, not to mention no one has ever sounded that sexy on tape, since.
It's like a deliberate decision to KISS. but loooong and syllab-overcrowded songs like "Sad-Eyed Lady of the Lowlands". The title only sounds like something coming from the class dork, not a Rock'n'Roll star. with the least amount possible — and don't start me on the music : in these blessed times, 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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Never really looked at it that way. Compared to Dylan, everybody is a lame lyricist, but maybe he my made music critics look at the words a little too much. As if you're only a good writer if you're eloquent with words. (Yeah, let me throw in a big word myself.) If Bob was the class dork, then he made dorkiness cool. Prince lacked the cultural baggage to write another Desolation Row, but he is also showing that you don't really need it. And I like the imagery here: why would a woman treat a man so bad? It can't be my fault!! Must be something in the water they drink that makes 'em so crazy. Yeah right, brother. You really are a little self-centered, are you? It also shows his obsession with water once again.
I'm not sure if Prince wanted to be Elvis because he liked 50s rock & roll so much or if he just meant: as famous as Elvis. James Brown is another example of someone who could say a lot with just grunts and groans and we all know Prince learned from him. Prince's lyrics can be great.( Or silly, but a song like Poom Poom isn't meant to be taken seriously anyway.) [Edited 7/23/16 5:56am] | |
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So much of Prince's great music sounds "modern" and remarkably ahead of its time. Most of 1999 would still sound contemporary if released today. | |
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great review...this is the Prince song i always felt the most connected to, emotionally...the lyrics almost mirrored what i was going through with my very first serious girlfriend, that same year...SITW is a monumental song in my life... | |
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I like every live version I've heard but have never been able to get into the album version at all. RIP | |
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Briliant post! Hundalasiliah! | |
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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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Thanks for the link. I just bought the vinyl version of Blood on the Tracks so I'm rediscovering that album and it surely has a fascinating history. Starting in New York and then rerecorded in the same studio as where Prince did some of his early recordings. When I saw Bob in 2013, he still played Tangled and Twist of Fate and, yep, with new lyrics once again. And you just reminded me that I saw Prince play Teddy Bear in 98, so yeah, Elvis is one of his influences too. | |
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Great thread! I would say Prince was a great lyric writer for the pop song format, he painted brilliant images and invented fantastic phrases (endorphinmachine! Days of Wild, hell, Purple Rain) that don't always read great but work perfectly with the music. In the same way his music meshed a whole blend of styles together to the point where you can no longer see (hear!) the joins, his lyrics are tied to the music. To compare him to Dylan or Leonard Cohen is to miss the point to an extent, his lyrics are much more intuitive and instinctive than the great lyric writers before him. His use of colours (purple, gold, red etc.) add a flavour that you can't fully work out without sounding like a conspiracy theorist.
I agree what you're saying about early rocknroll, if you read about Elvis or Little Richard or whoever, half the time they weren't really sure what they were doing, they just knew it felt right. I think his failures (to whatever extent you think they exist) from the 90's onwards show that instinct can't rule forever, at some point you have to start thinking about it again. He tended to write more genre specific songs and while there are obviously reams of amazing ones you do miss the seamless splicing of styles from earlier. I wish in later years he'd done a bit of more formal study beyond the bible to recharge his ideas bank and maybe help him absorb some more ideas into his subconscious, imho it would have only done him good. [Edited 7/24/16 4:44am] | |
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^ Another good post, especially that last part. Yes, I think it would have done Prince some good if he had broadened his horizon, but... It was his choice to be so totally involved with the Bible in his later years... So be it... | |
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