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Reply #30 posted 10/31/16 10:03am

OldFriends4Sal
e

Iamtheorg said:

JudasLChrist said:


I think SOTT was a Wendy and Lisa record as well.

Nah because he erased most of their contributions

just because U erase someones contributions doesn't remove the energy and synergy that created it.
Plus they weren't full removed from Strange relationships, and perform on IGBABN and Slow Love
Susannah Melvoin in on Play In the Sunshine Ballad of Dorothy Parker Starfish & Coffee (Rock Hard In A Funky Place) those are just the obvious

My dream band is Bobby Z Dr Fink BrownMark (I love the Mark Andre double bass at that last show though) Dr Fink Lisa Coleman Wendy Melvoin Dez Dickerson Eric Leeds Eddie M Atlanta Bliss Juan Escovedo Cat Jerome( and Kimberly Ann Delfin(dancer from Raspberry Beret video) 4 the 3 dancers)) David Coleman Novi Novog & Suzi Katayama on live strings

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Reply #31 posted 10/31/16 10:07am

donnyenglish

OldFriends4Sale said:

donnyenglish said:

Lovesexy the Album was great and is almost universally loved by his hard core fans. SOTT is clearly his most critically aclaimed album and is always at the top of any polls amongst fans. The fact that he made that album after The Revolution, in fact, immediately after The Revolution era really debunks any notion that he lost his creativity after they broke up. In fact, his best live performance and band was immediately after the Revolution broke up.

most hardcore fans I've talked to even here have always expressed a weird reaction to it. From questioning the cover to the intent. I love it too,.

What album are you saying that he made after the Revolution? Lovesexy or SOTT. 95% of the SOTT music was done way before the Revolution was departed ie Dream Factory. The SOTT band did not work on that music outside of Dr Fink Atlanta Bliss & Eric Leeds

Also the fullness of creative energies can pass easily into a few following years.
Again my favorite years and people with Prince are 1978-1989 forever...

Did The Revolution have any input on the SOTT album? If so, which tracks did they help write or play on?

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Reply #32 posted 10/31/16 10:14am

OldFriends4Sal
e

donnyenglish said:

OldFriends4Sale said:

most hardcore fans I've talked to even here have always expressed a weird reaction to it. From questioning the cover to the intent. I love it too,.

What album are you saying that he made after the Revolution? Lovesexy or SOTT. 95% of the SOTT music was done way before the Revolution was departed ie Dream Factory. The SOTT band did not work on that music outside of Dr Fink Atlanta Bliss & Eric Leeds

Also the fullness of creative energies can pass easily into a few following years.
Again my favorite years and people with Prince are 1978-1989 forever...

Did The Revolution have any input on the SOTT album? If so, which tracks did they help write or play on?

we can go into that but

and some of the best Graffiti Bridge tracks (along with Theives in the Temple)
I mean It's Gonna Be a Beautiful Night is the Revolution on the Parade tour...

I love Lovesexy as being a part of that period I love the tour the look etc but the album is never on the high scales of the albums for me, and I do like the album

I know a lot of people don't care for it by musically Rainbow Children hearkens back to a mix of musical style from the 80s period. It sound closest to the 'Prince sound' out of most of his post 1989 albums for me

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Reply #33 posted 10/31/16 10:42am

ladygirl99

Wendy and Lisa are very musicians and I am a huge fan of theirs and they inspired me of getting into music scoring and to experiement sounds and music. But I am also a logical thinker and Prince had good creative and added into his music before and after they came along.

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Reply #34 posted 10/31/16 10:56am

MendesCity

avatar

Feel like so much of the key to the Revolution stuff was about the Middle Eastern influences (and Clare Fischer strings) they were incorporating. IMO it was more that than any individual contributors that made those albums so unique.

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Reply #35 posted 10/31/16 11:18am

Poorlovelycomp
uter

Those two factors added brought that colour he spoke of SOTT is from the knowledge we have a pieced together double album from 3 projects WB and personnel changes made SOTT what it is like it's been said after 86 no one challenged him to come up with something like ATWIAD or Parade solo prince got lost in grunge and hip hop movements all his musicians were top notch
"love's the only drug we do in here"-Prince
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Reply #36 posted 10/31/16 11:22am

petalthecat

avatar

rob1965 said:

Poorlovelycomputer said:

Did the departure of Wendy and Lisa hurt or help Prince artistically after the breakup of the Revolution in 86? I feel it was still amazing but it lost something after they left? Any thoughts on the subject?


No, I don't think it did. It was his choice to end with The Revolution and he was still growing artistically back then. He kept re-inventing himself year after year and for me, he reached his first, ultimate peak with Lovesexy. Then, years later, he reached another peak with TRC. Maybe not in album sales, but artistically he kept on growing. A lot of his work from 2009 up to his last album showed he had enough up his sleeve to go on for years.

It all made sense when I read an interview with P explaining why he moved on from the Revolution. He said they were a tight band who he could give songs to rehearse and they would perform them to perfection. But, he wanted to evolve, to have a band he could jam with onstage, a band that could improvise..Here's another quote from last year; "You know people ask me...'Why don't I get the Revolution back together?" Prince pauses, then turns and smiles. "But,I mean...for what?"
There's always a rainbow 🌈 , at the end of every rain ☔️
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Reply #37 posted 10/31/16 1:54pm

jaawwnn

Edit: ugh, never mind.
[Edited 10/31/16 13:59pm]
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Reply #38 posted 10/31/16 1:58pm

jaypotton

paulludvig said:



jaypotton said:


paulludvig said:

SOTT was not a W&L/Revolution album. That's a myth. There's some minor contributions from W&L, but really very little, and nothing in the song writing departement. I know that SOTT "grew out of" the Dream Factory sessions, but the songs that W&L contributed to did not make the cut.



I don't think anyone is saying SOTT was a W&L album (well I am not anyway) but the evolution of the album that became SOTT had its roots in recording sessions heavily involving W&L. It is also reported that Prince removed W&L from some of the songs that did make the final cut. There is no doubt they had a positive influence on Prince but there is also no doubt Prince would have been BIG without them. And of course Prince had a massive MASSIVE impact on the musicians he worked with. He was the master and all of them were the students! [Edited 10/31/16 6:40am]

I think that refers to Strange Relationship (and only that). W&L's contribution was burried in the mix.



Ok I have no idea if quoting from PrinceVault is allowed so this might get snipped but here goes...

"In early July 1986, Prince recorded Train for the album, and in mid-July, he recorded The Cross and Sign O' The Times, and revamped the 1982 track I Could Never Take The Place Of Your Man to complete the album. The final double LP configuration containing 18 tracks was compiled on 18 July 1986. When Wendy Melvoin and Lisa Coleman told Prince they wanted to leave his band in late July, however, the album was abandoned. Prince instead decided to eliminate most of the Revolution's input on tracks and to expand on the project by incorporating other tracks recorded later in 1986, resulting in the three-disc set Crystal Ball (which eventually was pared down to become Prince's next officially released album, Sign O' The Times).

Although many of the tracks were solo recordings by Prince, several include other members of the Revolution.

Many of the tracks considered for the Dream Factory album have been released in one form or another. The Ballad Of Dorothy Parker, Strange Relationship, Starfish And Coffee, It, Slow Love, I Could Never Take The Place Of Your Man, Sign O' The Times and The Cross were all included on the Sign O' The Times album."

I suggest you have a read about Dream Factory and see the different track lists/configurations and you will see just how many songs ended up on SOTT. While Prince no doubt recorded some fully solo (he always did during the Revolution era) it is pretty safe to assume many of the original versions of the songs had the band or some of the band on them.
'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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Reply #39 posted 10/31/16 2:08pm

bonatoc

avatar

NouveauDance said:

Duck for cover.


biggrin

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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Reply #40 posted 10/31/16 2:26pm

babynoz

Poorlovelycomputer said:

Those two factors added brought that colour he spoke of SOTT is from the knowledge we have a pieced together double album from 3 projects WB and personnel changes made SOTT what it is like it's been said after 86 no one challenged him to come up with something like ATWIAD or Parade solo prince got lost in grunge and hip hop movements all his musicians were top notch



I loved Parade, but I love 3121 just as much. And I sure as hell did not want anything else like atwiad, but that's just me. I don't consider Prince or any other artist lost for outgrowing one influence in favor of another...they should have that freedom.



Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise.
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Reply #41 posted 10/31/16 2:56pm

Iamtheorg

avatar

OldFriends4Sale said:

Iamtheorg said:

Nah because he erased most of their contributions

just because U erase someones contributions doesn't remove the energy and synergy that created it.

Geezus. Will you please get your tongue off of their clits? lol

come on of4s stop the worship

.

[Edited 10/31/16 14:58pm]

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Reply #42 posted 10/31/16 5:13pm

JudasLChrist

avatar

rob1965 said:

He said they were a tight band who he could give songs to rehearse and they would perform them to perfection. But, he wanted to evolve, to have a band he could jam with onstage, a band that could improvise

That quote needs to be taken in context. Prince when he said that was trying to put people's attention on his new album and 3rd Eye Girl. The idea that The Revolution couldn't improvise is absurd, and he knew it.

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Reply #43 posted 10/31/16 7:15pm

Poorlovelycomp
uter

I agree prince knew how to promote new projects and musician he was a veteran in the business 3rd eye are talented players but the revolution was just as versatile.
"love's the only drug we do in here"-Prince
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Reply #44 posted 11/01/16 2:37am

paulludvig

donnyenglish said:

OldFriends4Sale said:

most hardcore fans I've talked to even here have always expressed a weird reaction to it. From questioning the cover to the intent. I love it too,.

What album are you saying that he made after the Revolution? Lovesexy or SOTT. 95% of the SOTT music was done way before the Revolution was departed ie Dream Factory. The SOTT band did not work on that music outside of Dr Fink Atlanta Bliss & Eric Leeds

Also the fullness of creative energies can pass easily into a few following years.
Again my favorite years and people with Prince are 1978-1989 forever...

Did The Revolution have any input on the SOTT album? If so, which tracks did they help write or play on?

The band played on Slow Love, W&L on Strange Relationship (although burried in the mix). No writing credits for the band on these songs. It's Gonna Be A Beautiful Night. Based on a live recording with the Rev. Leeds and Fink got writing credits on this one. That's all.

[Edited 11/1/16 2:42am]

The wooh is on the one!
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Reply #45 posted 11/01/16 2:41am

paulludvig

jaypotton said:

paulludvig said:

I think that refers to Strange Relationship (and only that). W&L's contribution was burried in the mix.

Ok I have no idea if quoting from PrinceVault is allowed so this might get snipped but here goes... "In early July 1986, Prince recorded Train for the album, and in mid-July, he recorded The Cross and Sign O' The Times, and revamped the 1982 track I Could Never Take The Place Of Your Man to complete the album. The final double LP configuration containing 18 tracks was compiled on 18 July 1986. When Wendy Melvoin and Lisa Coleman told Prince they wanted to leave his band in late July, however, the album was abandoned. Prince instead decided to eliminate most of the Revolution's input on tracks and to expand on the project by incorporating other tracks recorded later in 1986, resulting in the three-disc set Crystal Ball (which eventually was pared down to become Prince's next officially released album, Sign O' The Times). Although many of the tracks were solo recordings by Prince, several include other members of the Revolution. Many of the tracks considered for the Dream Factory album have been released in one form or another. The Ballad Of Dorothy Parker, Strange Relationship, Starfish And Coffee, It, Slow Love, I Could Never Take The Place Of Your Man, Sign O' The Times and The Cross were all included on the Sign O' The Times album." I suggest you have a read about Dream Factory and see the different track lists/configurations and you will see just how many songs ended up on SOTT. While Prince no doubt recorded some fully solo (he always did during the Revolution era) it is pretty safe to assume many of the original versions of the songs had the band or some of the band on them.

Not at all. We know who recorded what. Of the songs that ended up on SOTT only Slow Love, Strange Relationship and IGBABN features members of the band. There aren't alternative takes of others songs with the band.

The wooh is on the one!
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Reply #46 posted 11/01/16 2:44am

paulludvig

OldFriends4Sale said:

paulludvig said:

I think that refers to Strange Relationship (and only that). W&L's contribution was burried in the mix.

the vibe and flow of music was with the Revolution. So even though it was released after the band was departed, it still came out of the Dream Factory sessions.
Not to mention they the Revolution Susannah were on songs on the SOTT album etc etc etc

But the songs that made the final cut weren't recorded with the band or W&L.

The wooh is on the one!
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Reply #47 posted 11/01/16 2:53am

dodger

OldFriends4Sale said:

donnyenglish said:

Did The Revolution have any input on the SOTT album? If so, which tracks did they help write or play on?

we can go into that but

and some of the best Graffiti Bridge tracks (along with Theives in the Temple)
I mean It's Gonna Be a Beautiful Night is the Revolution on the Parade tour...

I love Lovesexy as being a part of that period I love the tour the look etc but the album is never on the high scales of the albums for me, and I do like the album

I know a lot of people don't care for it by musically Rainbow Children hearkens back to a mix of musical style from the 80s period. It sound closest to the 'Prince sound' out of most of his post 1989 albums for me

So are you saying W&L wrote or played on Thieves In The Temple?

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Reply #48 posted 11/01/16 4:30am

FUNKNROLL

Well if you go by what Prince thinks, the mural on PP's wall is very clear about his own influences and the people he believes he influenced. As the tour guides explain - The mural shows W&L to the left as persons he influenced. Whereas Stevie Wonder and Chaka Khan are on his right, indicating they inspired him.

Runs away...
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Reply #49 posted 11/01/16 5:11am

OldFriends4Sal
e

Iamtheorg said:

OldFriends4Sale said:

just because U erase someones contributions doesn't remove the energy and synergy that created it.

Geezus. Will you please get your tongue off of their clits? lol

come on of4s stop the worship

.

[Edited 10/31/16 14:58pm]

I'm not talking about W & L if you read back I'm talking about a bigger community

Yeah

In this bed I scream
Lonely nights I lay awake thinking of you
And if I'm cursed with a dream
A thousand times I feel whatever I've put you through

Tell me, how're we gonna put this back together?
How're we gonna think with the same mind?
Knowing all along that life is so much better
Living and loving together all the time

Living and loving

In this bed I, in this bed I, in this bed I scream

In this car I drive
I'm looking for the road that leads back to the soul we shared
With my very life
I'd gladly be the body upon the cross we bear (Cross we bear)

How did we ever lose communication? (How did we?)
How did we ever lose each other's sound? (I don't know)
Baby, if you wanna, we can fix the situation
Maybe we can stop the rain from coming down

just because U erase someones contributions doesn't remove the energy and synergy that created it.

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Reply #50 posted 11/01/16 5:12am

OldFriends4Sal
e

dodger said:

OldFriends4Sale said:

we can go into that but

and some of the best Graffiti Bridge tracks (along with Theives in the Temple)
I mean It's Gonna Be a Beautiful Night is the Revolution on the Parade tour...

I love Lovesexy as being a part of that period I love the tour the look etc but the album is never on the high scales of the albums for me, and I do like the album

I know a lot of people don't care for it by musically Rainbow Children hearkens back to a mix of musical style from the 80s period. It sound closest to the 'Prince sound' out of most of his post 1989 albums for me

So are you saying W&L wrote or played on Thieves In The Temple?

no, I'm saying Theives in the Temple is one of the best tracks on Graffiti Bridge

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Reply #51 posted 11/01/16 5:51am

OldFriends4Sal
e

FUNKNROLL said:

Well if you go by what Prince thinks, the mural on PP's wall is very clear about his own influences and the people he believes he influenced. As the tour guides explain - The mural shows W&L to the left as persons he influenced. Whereas Stevie Wonder and Chaka Khan are on his right, indicating they inspired him. Runs away...

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Reply #52 posted 11/01/16 5:52am

Poorlovelycomp
uter

They were talented musicians before they met prince just as he was working with other talented people (Pepe,andre,morris,fink etc.) before them. Lisa came before Wendy so she obviously had the stamp of approval he wouldn't have brought them on board if he didn't think they could bring something to the table. I think the mix down was prince excluding any trace of them but on SOTT the influence is still there
"love's the only drug we do in here"-Prince
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Reply #53 posted 11/01/16 6:27am

NouveauDance

avatar

We're splitting hairs about what tracks on SOTT had input and which didn't, but you look back through the 3 'official' Revolution albums and it's still largely Prince; rarely with the full band, sometimes with input from one or two people (like W&L, or Sheila, or with vocals from Jill, Susannah etc). But it's still very much The Prince Show except for those few full band performances. All the band members and people around, their influence is important and can definately be felt, but that's not always found in 'tangible' credits, it's more about that interplay of the girls voices with his, or that cocky and playful, imaginative edge Prince had at the time because he was in a good place creatively. That's the magic, it's not just about liner note credits of who wrote and played on what and who didn't before and after 1986.

.

You can see the amount of crossover there is between Dream Factory and SOTT, and the only difference in the shared tracks is, what, some of the stuff on Strange Relationship is buried deeper in the mix on SOTT than it was on Dream Factory? Had DF come out he might've made those changes any way - the idea that it was solely done to purposefully remove W&L's input after they left seems weak to me. Since Strange Relationship was held over for Camille, it's just as likely he felt the sitar sounded a bit too flowery for that batch of songs which harks back to the sparser synth-funk of pre-Revolution 80s sound - which does seem purposeful and a precursor to what he was trying to achieve with the Black Album also.

It seems as the Dream Factory tracklist evolved, he was already removing certain tracks whilst still working on it as a Revolution record. So had SOTT (or DF) come out as a Revolution album - and still had the same mix of band/non-band songs, would there still be this discussion? Lovesexy is a Prince "solo" album, but I still hear Sheila, Cat, Boni, Eric, Atlanta all over it, and yet it's not credited to 'Prince & band'.

.

In other words: Whether it says "and the Revolution" or "and the NPG" or just "Prince" - it's still the same combination - it's Prince's vision, shaped with various collaborators yes, but Prince is the captain of the ship. Always.

.

If you think Prince "lost" something at a particular point in his career, I don't think you can put it down to one specific reason, like a band member's departure. For a start all artists have that golden period, and if Prince's lasted 'only' two thirds of a decade, that's a lot longer than most.

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Reply #54 posted 11/01/16 7:10am

Poorlovelycomp
uter

Nicely put
"love's the only drug we do in here"-Prince
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Reply #55 posted 11/01/16 7:11am

jaypotton

paulludvig said:



jaypotton said:


paulludvig said:


I think that refers to Strange Relationship (and only that). W&L's contribution was burried in the mix.



Ok I have no idea if quoting from PrinceVault is allowed so this might get snipped but here goes... "In early July 1986, Prince recorded Train for the album, and in mid-July, he recorded The Cross and Sign O' The Times, and revamped the 1982 track I Could Never Take The Place Of Your Man to complete the album. The final double LP configuration containing 18 tracks was compiled on 18 July 1986. When Wendy Melvoin and Lisa Coleman told Prince they wanted to leave his band in late July, however, the album was abandoned. Prince instead decided to eliminate most of the Revolution's input on tracks and to expand on the project by incorporating other tracks recorded later in 1986, resulting in the three-disc set Crystal Ball (which eventually was pared down to become Prince's next officially released album, Sign O' The Times). Although many of the tracks were solo recordings by Prince, several include other members of the Revolution. Many of the tracks considered for the Dream Factory album have been released in one form or another. The Ballad Of Dorothy Parker, Strange Relationship, Starfish And Coffee, It, Slow Love, I Could Never Take The Place Of Your Man, Sign O' The Times and The Cross were all included on the Sign O' The Times album." I suggest you have a read about Dream Factory and see the different track lists/configurations and you will see just how many songs ended up on SOTT. While Prince no doubt recorded some fully solo (he always did during the Revolution era) it is pretty safe to assume many of the original versions of the songs had the band or some of the band on them.

Not at all. We know who recorded what. Of the songs that ended up on SOTT only Slow Love, Strange Relationship and IGBABN features members of the band. There aren't alternative takes of others songs with the band.



How do "we know who recorded what"? Do you have access to studio session logs? Do you know who was actually IN the studio when some of the other songs that made SOTT were first recorded? How can you definitively say there aren't band recordings of any of the songs. What you mean is none have surfaced (perhaps there aren't any but how do you know that for sure?)

Let me refer to "The Bible" AKA "The Vault" produced by the Uptown Team. Page 68 has an entry referring to the Dream Factory sessions starting in earnest. Let me quote one of the lines from that entry...

15 March 1986

"Although Prince, as usual, handled most of the recordings by himself, the Dream Factory project did involve Wendy, Susannah and Lisa to a large degree."

Also...

"Prince still staged occasional recording sessions at the Washington Avenue warehouse...he could record with his band before or after rehearsal [for the Parade tour] and then take he tapes home to add overdubs and continue work."

So it remains quite plausible that the original recordings of several songs that were eventually included on SOTT did in fact have their basis on band contributions. Unless you were there how do you know?

At the end of the day I do not really care but if you are going to state something as fact then you need a source to corroborate that fact. I don't claim any inside knowledge at all. My "knowledge" of Prince is based on having read everything I could get my hands on for over 30 years and quoting or paraphrasing that back.

Back on topic though... I do not think Prince's creative output was any worse or better post Revolution. It was just different and wildly interesting and entertaining. I loved the journey he took us on and loved the array of musicians he worked with.
'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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Reply #56 posted 11/01/16 8:57am

Se7en

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I think a lot of the W&L credit is just plain ole coincidence - they were around during his absolute commercial and critical peak. Keep this in mind: Lisa was around a LOT longer, so why doesn't she get more credit?

Are we really saying that things really changed when Wendy and Wendy alone came around?

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Reply #57 posted 11/01/16 9:12am

OldFriends4Sal
e

Se7en said:

I think a lot of the W&L credit is just plain ole coincidence - they were around during his absolute commercial and critical peak. Keep this in mind: Lisa was around a LOT longer, so why doesn't she get more credit?

Are we really saying that things really changed when Wendy and Wendy alone came around?

probably not, especially since we know that being female helped...
it was bigger than those 2 though
Prince himself in a 1998 interview called that period a 'community' for himself...
That he talked about it, looking back, say a lot about the periods of 1982-1986

the community changed, it shrunk considerably, he no longer had what he called his mirror competitions via the progete bands like with the Time Sheila E (and others)...

When Lisa came Uptown and Morris Day(the Time) were there, we see a huge change/opening in style and much more music over the years...
Dez had a huge affect on Prince's fashion too

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Reply #58 posted 11/01/16 11:11am

MD431Madcat

avatar

THE REVOLUTION
WERE THE ONLY PRINCE BAND

THAT THE GENERAL PUBLIC

EVER KNEW OR CARED ABOUT.

And the entire band/vibe/music/look

elevated 'Prince' to heights he hadn't seen before or after them.

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Reply #59 posted 11/01/16 11:49am

sonshine

avatar

OldFriends4Sale said:



donnyenglish said:




OldFriends4Sale said:




Ok the Lovesexy era was not because of the album, but the visual tour
Even EYE NO came from Ball(Dream Factory sessions)


No one has every said SOTT Black Album Lovesexy were his most critically acclaimed era since the Black album officially had no era


Personally I tend to go 1979-1989


BUT as far as serious PRINCEd out era/scene 1982-1987





Lovesexy the Album was great and is almost universally loved by his hard core fans. SOTT is clearly his most critically aclaimed album and is always at the top of any polls amongst fans. The fact that he made that album after The Revolution, in fact, immediately after The Revolution era really debunks any notion that he lost his creativity after they broke up. In fact, his best live performance and band was immediately after the Revolution broke up.




most hardcore fans I've talked to even here have always expressed a weird reaction to it. From questioning the cover to the intent. I love it too,.


What album are you saying that he made after the Revolution? Lovesexy or SOTT. 95% of the SOTT music was done way before the Revolution was departed ie Dream Factory. The SOTT band did not work on that music outside of Dr Fink Atlanta Bliss & Eric Leeds


Also the fullness of creative energies can pass easily into a few following years.
Again my favorite years and people with Prince are 1978-1989 forever...






+1 i woukd also add when the gals from 3rdeye csme to be it gave me the same thrill for his music again that i hadnt felt since the revolution snd pre-revolution days. Im probably one of the rare fans who was never that crazy with the NPG years but that doesn't necessarily mean I think he should have kept the revolution intact. Everything happens for a reason and it was all meant to be in prince land.
It's a hurtful place, the world, in and of itself. We don't need to add to it. We all need one another. ~ PRN
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