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Thread started 10/10/16 3:41pm

wildgoldenhone
y

Whut whut

.
[Edited 8/29/19 0:16am]
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Reply #1 posted 10/10/16 3:52pm

TrivialPursuit

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Honest to God, where do y'all get these things? lol

You can always reference PrinceVault.com about these things, of course.

It's just a religious song, and oddly when you google the lyrics, a lot of JW references come up. It's probably just a religious song within the sect itself.

"eye don’t really care so much what people say about me because it is a reflection of who they r."
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Reply #2 posted 10/10/16 4:13pm

EddieC

I see themes he used--ones he used long before he became involved with the Witnesses specifically--but not in any remarkable way that strikes me as "Princely." There were rumors that he'd recorded guitar for some Kingdom Songs recordings a few years back--I can't remember titles, but I know there were videos of them out there. I didn't hear anything distinctively him on those either. But that doesn't prove anything either way--he could I'm sure perform and write capably but "anonymous-sounding" if he wanted to.

But I doubt he had anything to do with this.

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Reply #3 posted 10/10/16 4:57pm

wildgoldenhone
y

.
[Edited 8/29/19 0:16am]
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Reply #4 posted 10/10/16 4:59pm

wildgoldenhone
y

.
[Edited 8/29/19 0:17am]
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Reply #5 posted 10/10/16 9:39pm

EddieC

It would only appear on the Princevault site after it had been pretty well established that he was involved (whether the contribution was officially credited or not). There have been things where others involved in a recording have explicitly said he took part in the creation of a track that still haven't shown up there. That's not a complaint--they just want to be conservative in their attributions in order to keep things from getting out of control. But it's always a good place to start when you have this type of question (if only so you can say at the beginning of the question, "I looked on Princevault and it didn't say anything, but...").

The idea that he would write something for the Witnesses to use makes sense to me. As a fan, I'd certainly be interested in hearing anything that could be confirmed to be his. That said, people hear Prince in lots of things he doesn't seem to have been part of.

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Reply #6 posted 10/10/16 9:47pm

LBrent

Hmmm

Is there anyway to hear the song being sung/played?
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Reply #7 posted 10/10/16 10:00pm

jaawwnn

wildgoldenhoney said:

All the songs in the JW song book are written anonymously by various witnesses. But it's just the timing of it. Previous to this new book coming out (maybe a year or so before it came out in 2009) Prince visited the JW headquarters in Brooklyn and 'dropped something off'. I never thought anything about that visit but when the song book came out, this song made me wonder since it's a bit different than other songs in the book. If he wrote it, he definitely wouldn't leave his signature on it but would write it with the fact that we sing this in our Kingdom Halls in mind. And i figured that since he writes love songs that if anything, he would write a live song for the book. Idk, I just thought that Prince fans would be able to recognize his style of writing, maybe? And why would it be in the Prince vault if he wrote it anonymously? . [Edited 10/10/16 20:46pm]


It would make sense that he wrote something for them considering how strong his faith was, and this is the guy who wrote Purple & Gold so he could go for old timey-stately if the mood took him. It'd be kind of cool if he had written a few hymns anonymously for the JW.

Listening on the website there its not a million miles away from some of the stuff he's done in the 2000's, but it's also similar to hymns i'd know in general. What makes it a bit different to the other songs sung by the JW? I'm not a member so wouldn't have a clue how/if their hymns differ musically to other christian denominations.

[Edited 10/10/16 22:01pm]

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Reply #8 posted 10/10/16 10:43pm

wildgoldenhone
y

Found this on YouTube of someone singing it...



And these are some of the other songs in the song book listed here (with links to the lyrics of each song).


I really don't know/think that he recorded it... maybe just wrote it for the JW society?

Anyway, still appreciating all the comments and points of view here! Thank u!

.
[Edited 10/10/16 22:45pm]
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Reply #9 posted 10/10/16 10:48pm

wildgoldenhone
y

And I see where u guys r coming from on the prince vault thing, but I'm thinking that if he wrote it anonymously and not for commercial, how would the folks at the vault know about it? It's not like Prince reports to them, is it? confuse


.
[Edited 10/10/16 22:49pm]
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Reply #10 posted 10/10/16 11:36pm

gollygirl

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I have always wished he did as some of the new songs were not so good. I did read somewhere where he re-worked them then got into trouble due to copyright.

I also used to wonder if he cringed when he heard some of them and was re-arranging them in his head? He said once he cannot listen to someone else's song without doing that.

I bet there are some lovely Kingdom Melodies he did do though in that vault.........

[Edited 10/10/16 23:37pm]

Thank you Prince for every note you left behind 💜
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Reply #11 posted 10/11/16 12:59am

databank

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After reading the lyrics and listening to the YT video, I can't possibly see any reason in the world why this could, or should, be attributed to Prince any more than any other random gospel song.

Could he have composed it? Well I guess anything is possible, after all he did write Purple & Gold.

Is there anything in that song that suggests he did compose it? No.

Some people have way too much imagination.

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #12 posted 10/11/16 1:46am

OperatingTheta
n

I was once given an album in the early 2000s that included Prince covering the JW song 'Life Without End At Last' as an instrumental. It was unmistakeably Prince and utilised many of his sounds at the time.

The entire album seemed to have been organised by George Benson & friends, and Prince reportedly also guested on other tracks, though this was not obvious to me.

The album was never released as the Watchtower Society didn't approve of the new versions.
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Reply #13 posted 10/11/16 3:17am

databank

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OperatingThetan said:

I was once given an album in the early 2000s that included Prince covering the JW song 'Life Without End At Last' as an instrumental. It was unmistakeably Prince and utilised many of his sounds at the time. The entire album seemed to have been organised by George Benson & friends, and Prince reportedly also guested on other tracks, though this was not obvious to me. The album was never released as the Watchtower Society didn't approve of the new versions.

U still do have it, don't u?

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #14 posted 10/11/16 6:28am

pah

I don't know much about what JWs sing, but I have spent my life singing traditional Protestant hymns. There are two things that stick out to me as being different from traditional (and most contemporary) Protestant music and also from the random sampling of JW hymns I looked at.

First, the rhyming structure is uneven. That is very unusual in hymns, but very common in Prince's music. If you simply read the lyrics of many Prince songs, they wouldn't seem to "work" as poetry. Both the rhyming patterns and the meter are frequently odd when read aloud, even though they sound great when sung. Very few hymns deviate from a regular meter, and the ones with imperfect rhymes stick out like sore thumbs.

Second, this piece is heavily (and very specifically) arranged. Older hymns tend to be written in four part harmony. New hymns/contemporary music tend to be written as just a melody, sometimes with a simple harmony line, as this one is. But the bass line here is so specific and different, with all of those sweeping eighth note runs. It looks different from pretty much any other hymn I've seen. Usually you would have a more regular (read: boring and predictable) accompaniment part which the instrumentalists could embellish as they saw fit. The recorded arrangement on the site, by the way, is not the same as the sheet music shown. While the recorded arrangement sounds similar to many things our choir has sung, the sheet music is very different from what I regularly see in hymnals.

All that said, this music really doesn't "sound like" Prince to me, but does that mean anything? Sometimes I think he just sat down and said, "I feel like writing a reggae song," and did, just because he could. It may not be in the big leagues as far as reggae music is concerned, but it would still be respectable enough. If he did decide to write a hymn, especially an anonymous one, I don't know that we'd ever be able to predict what that would sound like. As someone else mentioned, who could've predicted Purple & Gold?

And given his personality, even if he wasn't required to remain anonymous, he very well might have done so in order for the praise to go to the right place.

I don't think you're likely to ever find out if he wrote it, but it is a unique (to my perspective) hymn. Perhaps the OP can give some insight into whether it seems unique from a JW perspective. And regardless of who wrote it, enjoy it. It's a beautiful hymn.
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Reply #15 posted 10/11/16 6:36am

cb70

It's got to be Prince based on the sexual nature of the lyrics:

"Bone of my bone"

"provided a partner"

"now we can be... together"

"Seasons of joy, may we come/cum"

Yep, subtle nasty Prince to the core.

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Reply #16 posted 10/11/16 7:10am

Noodled24

cb70 said:

It's got to be Prince based on the sexual nature of the lyrics:

"Bone of my bone"


"Bone of my bone/Flesh of my flesh" He used that on "God created woman". They're biblical referrences.

"provided a partner"


How is this prince-related?

"now we can be... together"


Well now I'm sold... unless someone can name another human who enjoys companionship

"Seasons of joy, may we come/cum"


You're re-writing things to try and make it fit.

Yep, subtle nasty Prince to the core.


No.

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Reply #17 posted 10/11/16 8:06am

databank

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cb70 said:

It's got to be Prince based on the sexual nature of the lyrics:

"Bone of my bone"

"provided a partner"

"now we can be... together"

"Seasons of joy, may we come/cum"

Yep, subtle nasty Prince to the core.

Quit trying to force your beliefs over reality, embrace reality as it is instead. This is the key to sanity and happiness.

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #18 posted 10/11/16 8:09am

databank

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pah said:

If you simply read the lyrics of many Prince songs, they wouldn't seem to "work" as poetry. Both the rhyming patterns and the meter are frequently odd when read aloud, even though they sound great when sung. Ve

C'mon man, this vision of poetry by the meter has been given up on a century ago. Poetry isn't even required to rhyme anymore.

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #19 posted 10/11/16 8:21am

pah

databank said:



pah said:


If you simply read the lyrics of many Prince songs, they wouldn't seem to "work" as poetry. Both the rhyming patterns and the meter are frequently odd when read aloud, even though they sound great when sung. Ve

C'mon man, this vision of poetry by the meter has been given up on a century ago. Poetry isn't even required to rhyme anymore.



Let me clarify. Poetry hasn't had to rhyme or have a strict meter for a long time, you're right. But hymns -- and even a lot of contemporary Christian music -- still generally do. They tend to be a lot more traditional, poetically speaking (and, frankly, in most other musical ways). That makes this hymn stand out to me, but it doesn't mean it's Prince. Just something they have in common. Like you say, plenty of other (secular) music doesn't follow traditional rules for poetry.

Oh, and I'm a woman. wink

EDIT: for clarification
[Edited 10/11/16 8:27am]
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Reply #20 posted 10/11/16 11:33am

EddieC

OperatingThetan said:

I was once given an album in the early 2000s that included Prince covering the JW song 'Life Without End At Last' as an instrumental. It was unmistakeably Prince and utilised many of his sounds at the time. The entire album seemed to have been organised by George Benson & friends, and Prince reportedly also guested on other tracks, though this was not obvious to me. The album was never released as the Watchtower Society didn't approve of the new versions.

That was the one I found before! I didn't get a download of it but I did listen a couple of times before it disappeared from where I found it. If he's on it, I'd love to hear it again (well, more than hear, obviously). I wasn't convinced he was on it, but now that you mention the Benson connection, I'm more curious.

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Reply #21 posted 10/11/16 11:49am

OperatingTheta
n

EddieC said:



OperatingThetan said:


I was once given an album in the early 2000s that included Prince covering the JW song 'Life Without End At Last' as an instrumental. It was unmistakeably Prince and utilised many of his sounds at the time. The entire album seemed to have been organised by George Benson & friends, and Prince reportedly also guested on other tracks, though this was not obvious to me. The album was never released as the Watchtower Society didn't approve of the new versions.



That was the one I found before! I didn't get a download of it but I did listen a couple of times before it disappeared from where I found it. If he's on it, I'd love to hear it again (well, more than hear, obviously). I wasn't convinced he was on it, but now that you mention the Benson connection, I'm more curious.



I wasn't convinced he was on all the tracks. I lost my copy in a very messy personal situation, but at least you can verify it existed because otherwise I'll probably be accused of inventing it any minute wink
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Reply #22 posted 10/11/16 12:48pm

databank

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OperatingThetan said:

EddieC said:

That was the one I found before! I didn't get a download of it but I did listen a couple of times before it disappeared from where I found it. If he's on it, I'd love to hear it again (well, more than hear, obviously). I wasn't convinced he was on it, but now that you mention the Benson connection, I'm more curious.

I wasn't convinced he was on all the tracks. I lost my copy in a very messy personal situation, but at least you can verify it existed because otherwise I'll probably be accused of inventing it any minute wink

I've never heard of it, so I can't verify unless it's listed on Princevault (if not I suggest u contacxt them), but I'm gonna take ur word for it.

A pity u lost it, it would cost a small fortune now on ebay (+ u could leak it for fellow fans)

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #23 posted 10/11/16 12:49pm

databank

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pah said:

databank said:

C'mon man, this vision of poetry by the meter has been given up on a century ago. Poetry isn't even required to rhyme anymore.

Let me clarify. Poetry hasn't had to rhyme or have a strict meter for a long time, you're right. But hymns -- and even a lot of contemporary Christian music -- still generally do. They tend to be a lot more traditional, poetically speaking (and, frankly, in most other musical ways). That makes this hymn stand out to me, but it doesn't mean it's Prince. Just something they have in common. Like you say, plenty of other (secular) music doesn't follow traditional rules for poetry. Oh, and I'm a woman. wink EDIT: for clarification [Edited 10/11/16 8:27am]

wink

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #24 posted 10/11/16 3:56pm

EddieC

Looking around, I see several earlier discussions on Prince.org about Life Without End At Last, going back at least to 2004. And then there are several other places its mentioned (often by JW's who seem to be playing it for each other) There are lots of different versions of its history as well.

I've also found a possible place where some of us might already have it in our collections. According to several tracklistings, it looks like "Life Without End At Last" is on CD 4 (the one with all the Computer Blues) of Vol. 9 of the Expanded edition of The Work. I don't know for sure, because I can't check my drive right now, but I think I have that. So I'll find out later.

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Reply #25 posted 10/11/16 4:15pm

Astasheiks

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wildgoldenhoney said:

All the songs in the JW song book are written anonymously by various witnesses. But it's just the timing of it. Previous to this new book coming out (maybe a year or so before it came out in 2009) Prince visited the JW headquarters in Brooklyn and 'dropped something off'. I never thought anything about that visit but when the song book came out, this song made me wonder since it's a bit different than other songs in the book. If he wrote it, he definitely wouldn't leave his signature on it but would write it with the fact that we sing this in our Kingdom Halls in mind. And i figured that since he writes love songs that if anything, he would write a live song for the book. Idk, I just thought that Prince fans would be able to recognize his style of writing, maybe? And why would it be in the Prince vault if he wrote it anonymously? . [Edited 10/10/16 20:46pm]

Isn't that interesting he actually went to you alls headquarters... eye

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Reply #26 posted 10/11/16 8:49pm

EddieC

Well--my The Work Expanded only has 2 discs for Volume 9, and no sign of Life Without End At Last.

So. That's frustrating.

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Reply #27 posted 10/12/16 5:40am

Noodled24

Astasheiks said:

wildgoldenhoney said:

All the songs in the JW song book are written anonymously by various witnesses. But it's just the timing of it. Previous to this new book coming out (maybe a year or so before it came out in 2009) Prince visited the JW headquarters in Brooklyn and 'dropped something off'. I never thought anything about that visit but when the song book came out, this song made me wonder since it's a bit different than other songs in the book. If he wrote it, he definitely wouldn't leave his signature on it but would write it with the fact that we sing this in our Kingdom Halls in mind. And i figured that since he writes love songs that if anything, he would write a live song for the book. Idk, I just thought that Prince fans would be able to recognize his style of writing, maybe? And why would it be in the Prince vault if he wrote it anonymously? . [Edited 10/10/16 20:46pm]

Isn't that interesting he actually went to you alls headquarters... eye


It'd be interesting to know when that was. It'd also be interesting to know how it's known he "dropped something off". Even more interesting to know why it's refered to as "something" as opposed to "A CD".

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