They should've focused on getting some music out there to bring in revenue first, rather than hastily trying to open Paisley as a museum just months after Prince's death. They're sitting on a mine of recordings, which I gather, they haven't even started archiving. | |
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This is the same version of Glam Life, he just added Sheila's vocals & percussion, Jill Jones & Prince can still be heard in Sheila's version & that's why Jill said he could have given it to her. But she was on damn near evertyhing back then, esp. Sheila, Vanity & Apollonia's stuff | |
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. Jill is not on this particular demo, even though most of what you say above is correct. And I'd be inclined to advocate for her if she had been. | |
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The quote from Jill suggests she was doing work with Prince on the song, and then Sheila E was coming in later and doing the lead on the song. That is why she said Prince could have given it to her. She talked about G-Spot as well that she did the backing vocals with Prince, and then it was going to Vanity 6, but that she liked it and asked Prince for it for her album.
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On this particular demo (at its stage of development), or the released version on the TGL album? I am going to take the attribution with a grain of salt, given her Sinead-grade loopiness and instability in the past 10 to 15 years. .
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I believe 'G-Spot' was first recorded with V6 specifically in mind (although his demo vocal is good enough on this one to make it work as a P release), and recorded soon thereafter with Vanity vocals (circulating among elite traders, possibly seguing with 'Vibrator' on a very rough early mid-1983 sequencing of a proposed V6 follow-up), then temporarily reclaimed, as it was liked by Magnoli as prospective song for the movie project (and, of course, is mentioned as a Kid/Revolution performance in early drafts of the script, and rehearsed with the Revolution in the late Summer and early Fall of '83), and then abandoned after 'Darling Nikki' was recorded, and never slated for A6, as he decided to tone down the *6 idea and move it slightly in the direction of a PG-13 teen bubblegum 'concept album'. At that point, it was one of the better, more recently Vaulted tracks when P had time to devote to the long-deferred JJ album in Spring 1985. It's quite clear that Jill is influenced by or emulating some of Vanity's particular vocal shibboleths on her take of it (listening to it on monitor phones). It's also possible that Jill is present on the V6 recording of it, for that matter, as well. .
[Edited 10/4/16 18:57pm] | |
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on the demo, which mostly likely translated to the album cut. She and Susannah were used vocally a lot for sessions work. She's on this. | |
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The early draft of the PR movie script described G Spot as more upbeat song, I wonder if there is a different version
The CLUB erupts in CRIES! Prince hits | |
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. At what particular time periods in the recently leaked demo are you hearing her? Any particular moment that stands out? I hear only Prince and falsetto Prince. Why wouldn't he have her vocals consistently spread out in the same role as his falsetto, which clearly stands out as being the only thing in the background at certain moments. [Edited 10/4/16 19:02pm] | |
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Maybe he intended to re-record it before filming. Or maybe the screenwriter is hyperbolizing a bit and going off of very limited information from a list of some very salacious titles P proposed as possible soundtrack entries. .
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"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 | |
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Interesting. The ending on Vibrator has the same beat as the beginning of the released G-Spot. i heard that song was supposed to segue into G-Spot for the proposed second Vanity 6 album Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records. | |
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yeah,I have that same bootleg as "Vibrator" ends,we hear the beginning beats of "G-Spot" which makes me wonder if there is a Vanity 6 version of this song.I have always imagined that the second Vanity 6 album would have included "G-Spot". | |
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. The early-1990s DAT, from which the circulating 'Vibrator' we all have heard was taken, is indeed said to have a Vanity vocal 'G-Spot' on it. . We have come to associate 'G-Spot', to a certain extent, as a Purple Rain outtake of sorts, even though independent rumor that it was recorded for the second V6 album has long been circulating. We, of course, have two or three rehearsal recordings of it from approximately the late Summer or early Fall of 1983, which may tend to encourage this view. . It is most likely due to Magnoli's liking the track, when listening to the tapes of accumulated 1979-1983 material P was presenting him to screen for potential songs, that this song was reclaimed. . At that point, it was briefly considered as song to be released or performed by Prince (and his semifictional band), up until the late pre-production stage of the film. It was determined unfit for the film or album, either by management, for logistic/pacing purposes, or because it was replaced by newer material (perhaps 'Darling Nikki'). . Also, not long after resuming work on the *6 album, now with an Apollonia 6 billing, he decided to go for more of a PG-13, slightly 'concept album', slightly bubblegumy approach. More pop-oriented, and more suggestive and playfully risque than forthrightly obscene (which is a shibboleth of early/mid 1983 Prince). . I speculate this is how 'Sugar Walls' came to be 'vaulted', making it an available outtake to send to Sheena Easton in January 1984, months after it had been initially tracked, most likely for the second *6 album. . [Edited 11/2/16 16:10pm] | |
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Thank you for your wonderful insight and information. Always wondered about the history of Sugar Walls, such a fantastic track with wild embelleshments of synths, drums and guitar work. Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records. | |
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Question: So the Gspot that's circulating now isn't Vanity on backing vocals? | |
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Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors. | |
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Are you saying that Susannah sings background on TGL? The wooh is on the one! | |
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. No. . I believe he is referring to a general practice increasingly from about mid-1984 until late-1986 of having Susannah perform b/g vocal duties ('Play in the Sunshine' being the latest recording on which Susannah makes an appearance on backing vocals). More specifically, though, he means to say 'Blue Limousine', on which Susannah Melvoin substituted for and imitated an absent Susan Moonsie for the session. . These romantic-working relationships create a lot of mystique, but the reality of what was recorded and how is a bit more mundane. . I don't believe there are any female backing vocals on the recently leaked late-1983 TGL demo (they're all P's falsetto), however, and possibly none on the final album release excepting anything Sheila stacked in the mix, even though many on here are insistent that Jill is on this very demo. . [Edited 11/3/16 16:33pm] | |
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. The quality of the outtake is muddled. It may be all Prince, or mostly Prince with a little bit of Jill and/or Lisa. It most likely also is older by a few months, and effectively the 'demo' Prince assembled for Vanity 6's follow-up album. . Almost assuredly no Vanity involvement on this circulating outtake version. . However, I do believe Jill is specifically basing her vocal inflexions on her released 1987 version on Vanity's, as such a version is presumed to have been recorded, and she is most likely using it as a guide vocal (Jill laid down her vocals in Spring 1985, at which point she was most likely simply replacing Vanity's, and the song was basically as we know it from the outtake, and more than a year away from being reconfigured into the sultry saxophone, embellished one that made the her album). . [Edited 11/3/16 16:37pm] | |
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imprimis said:
. The quality of the outtake is muddled. It may be all Prince, or mostly Prince with a little bit of Jill and/or Lisa. It most likely also is older by a few months, and effectively the 'demo' Prince assembled for Vanity 6's follow-up album. . Almost assuredly no Vanity involvement on this circulating outtake version. . However, I do believe Jill is specifically basing her vocal inflexions on her released 1987 version on Vanity's, as such a version is presumed to have been recorded, and she is most likely using it as a guide vocal (Jill laid down her vocals in Spring 1985, at which point she was most likely simply replacing Vanity's, and the song was basically as we know it from the outtake, and more than a year away from being reconfigured into the sultry saxophone, embellished one that made the her album). . [Edited 11/3/16 16:37pm] I see, thank you. | |
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(Admittedly, I'm not sure this is new, but I'm gonna post my question about it here, hopefully that's okay ) "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 | |
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CandaceS said: (Admittedly, I'm not sure this is new, but I'm gonna post my question about it here, hopefully that's okay ) That's an 84 rehearsal that's been around for years. A bit more info here: https://www.discogs.com/P...se/8666336 | |
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OK, thanks! Sorry I spammed the thread with something old, but I'm sure this will be useful for others like me who aren't so well informed about all this stuff! [Edited 11/9/16 20:44pm] "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 | |
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I prefer the Vanity version its funkier Keep Calm & Listen To Prince | |
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You shOUld always be aware of where To find good fUnk By princE "The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves. And wiser people so full of doubts" (Bertrand Russell 1872-1972) | |
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