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Prince was so much more than just his 80's hits With the upcoming Prince 4ever album being announced, I feel like Prince's commerical success during the 80's is overshadowing his true legacy. The brilliance or his entire catalogue cannot be understated, yet money talks and those who stand to profit from Prince's legacy are missing a golden opportunity to open Prince's vast catalogue to the masses. After the the early 90's, Prince released so many masterpeices that I listen to every week even today. I understand the average fan will buy an album with "Kiss" on it, but with clever marketing, they could sell Prince as the ultimate misunderstood genius by shedding light on his more recent releases. We all know he didn't play "the game" when it came to releasing new albums. Now is the chance to sell that story. Sell Prince as someone who lost popularity in the 90's due to his eccentricty and now we all love him for it and want to listen to everything. Start promoting Prince as the king of hidden gems. He was someone who didn't want to be popular after his peak. Paint Prince as the modern day Mozart and stir up a yearning to go through his entire catalogue and search for masterpieces to appreciate. With careful planning, there is long-term money to be made with this type of strategy, whereas it might be counterintuitive to play it safe with his chart success in the 80's and miss out on this opportunity to influence public opinion. Those in charge have a golden opportunity to create a legacy for Prince that transcends that of any other artist of the past 100 years due to his mysteriousness and seemingly constant obsession for recording thousands of unreleased songs. [Edited 10/25/16 6:07am] Nobody I know gun' bite | |
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Prince is a musician's musician.
[Edited 10/25/16 6:26am] 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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"4ever" is a Warner Brothers release, they don't have access to much of his post 90's stuff. Making love and music are the only things worth fighting for. | |
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GoldStandard said: With the upcoming Prince 4ever album being announced, I feel like Prince's commerical success during the 80's is overshadowing his true legacy. The brilliance or his entire catalogue cannot be understated, yet money talks and those who stand to profit from Prince's legacy are missing a golden opportunity to open Prince's vast catalogue to the masses. After the the early 90's, Prince released so many masterpeices that I listen to every week even today. I understand the average fan will buy an album with "Kiss" on it, but with clever marketing, they could sell Prince as the ultimate misunderstood genius by shedding light on his more recent releases. We all know he didn't play "the game" when it came to releasing new albums. Now is the chance to sell that story. Sell Prince as someone who lost popularity in the 90's due to his eccentricty and now we all love him for it and want to listen to everything. Start promoting Prince as the king of hidden gems. He was someone who didn't want to be popular after his peak. Paint Prince as the modern day Mozart and stir up a yearning to go through his entire catalogue and search for masterpieces to appreciate. With careful planning, there is long-term money to be made with this type of strategy, whereas it might be counterintuitive to play it safe with his chart success in the 80's and miss out on this opportunity to influence public opinion. Those in charge have a golden opportunity to create a legacy for Prince that transcends that of any other artist of the past 100 years due to his mysteriousness and seemingly constant obsession for recording thousands of unreleased songs. [Edited 10/25/16 6:07am] Good points. I think rehashing another hits release is a mistake. Your strategy makes more sense, musically/culturally and I think commercially. "Love & honesty, peace & harmony" | |
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Yes, but it won't sell enough. They can look into that further down the line. At the moment they want to push his profile up as high as they can to be able to do those things that we as fans want in the future. Well, let's hope so anyway. We can only sit back and see how it goes. He didn't leave a will, so unfortunately his legacy is in the hands of lawyers at the moment. | |
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bonatoc said:[quote] Prince is a musician's musician. | |
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